Last
week was our big bi-annual family reunion here in Tennessee. My mother is from a
large family and every other year they come from all over the US to get
together.
Now some people have told me that if their whole
family ever got together, it would probably result in a fistfight as so many of
them don’t get along. Sometimes grudges are so deep that people don’t even
remember why they are feuding.
Our roots go back many years in history to the
time when Tennessee was wilderness and not even a state. We all get along with
each other, more or less - or at least the ones that don’t get along do not
come to reunions. Relatives worry us because they know too much about us;
the family knows all of our problems and mistakes.
There seem to be fewer and fewer of us at each
reunion. The family tree gets more branches, but as the young twigs become
limbs, they are less interested in sharing their acorns. Those
that come are a bit older and their hair a bit whiter each time. There are a few
more wrinkles all around too, but other than that, everyone is pretty much the
same. We just sit around visiting as if waiting for the kudzu to grow and cover
us.
There are so many descendents in our family that
it is probably just as well that they don’t all come, as the hall would not
hold us. We have a hard time even keeping track of living descendants at this
point
We used to meet in the park with our children and
have games and things to do, but now the focus seems to be just on food – lots
of it. Once it was homemade chicken and dumplings, green beans, new potatoes,
and coconut cream pie. Nowadays it is more likely to be Kentucky Fried Chicken
and deli potato salad. Home cooking is going out of style and people tend to eat
out more and cook less. I sure do miss banana pudding - but not enough to make
one.
Reunions give us a chance to catch up on all the
family gossip – who is divorced, who married, who died, who has a new baby,
who is sick, and who is pregnant. We also get to talk about the people that
didn’t show up and speculate on the real reason why.
Family genealogy has become a big thing lately.
Somehow relatives are easier to deal with when they are dead and can’t
embarrass us any more. Their misdeeds are merely colorful anecdotes from the
past rather than skeletons in the closet.
Our family has its share of eccentrics, just as
most families probably do – whether we claim them or not. Watch your purse, as
our cousin is a kleptomaniac. Don’t mention the fact that one ancestor was
illegitimate and some were alcoholics. Forget all the divorces, especially the
most recent ones. Just sweep it all under the rug and pretend you don’t know.
Years from now when our descendants are doing
genealogy and there are enough years between now and then to keep association at
a respectable distance, they will think of it as just another amusing tale.
Family reunions are tolerable. As far as I’m
concerned, anything can be tolerated once every two years. I go mainly because
my mother wants me to, and my kids go because I want them to. Even though we
groan about having to associate with family that was given to us rather than
chosen, imagine how awful it would be to have no extended family.
Be sure to take note of how relatives that are
too involved with other activities or too important to bother with kin are
usually the first to come forward and claim family members that become rich or
famous.
All in all, nobody shot anybody else, nobody
punched anyone else in the nose, nobody’s purse was stolen, nobody got food
poisoning, and nobody got mad or left in tears. I suppose we could say that as
family reunions go, that makes ours a big success.
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