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Julius, your part of the family tapestry lies
small beneath the stronger threads of your brother George's woven pattern. Your
warp threads continue in a warmer hue, fringed in naive waves. A soft brown
strand of acquisitiveness and red streaks of rage are prominent in your
tapestry. Yet woven across are golden and turquoise threads -- your love of
beautiful surroundings, and your artistic talents. You could paint a watercolor
or design an Art Deco building. However, some of these strands are cut short
because you withdraw, inarticulate, silent.
Julius, your tapestry too has pale pink threads
pulled very tight. "No one appreciates me," you said. Your Aunt Stella
understood, you were the unsure middle child. Vertical strands of ice blue
crossed red threads in your tapestry as anger tightened your breath to asthma.
Julius, you did become a mischievous, bespectacled child, teasing, scheming with
your brother George. Later, as you grew to manhood, you found joy in college
friends and the admiration of girls -- threads of primary colors danced across
your tapestry.
Yet, all these colors swirl into concentric
circles, swirling, swirling inward. You could not perceive the needs and
feelings of others. You thought that your opinion was always right. Yes, you
cared, you admired your wives, but you demanded their complete attention. Did
you really know the best furniture arrangement for your daughter's room, a name
for the new baby, or where your son, and then your grand-son should attend
school? And when your children frustrated you, your anger flared. Sometimes you
indulged in cruel mocking: "Can't the cat look at the queen?"-- a
zigzag pattern
like lightning streaks across your tapestry, taunting, frustrating the eye.
Later in your life, a black weave of tragedy and death haunted you, embittered
you. When your beloved wife Vera died in an accident, your brown hair turned to
white.
As you aged and colors paled; you could not
tolerate any failure of your body or your heart. Like your Uncle Jule, you would
not accept growing old with grace. You too shortened your life, because you
could not accept a slower pace. As your tapestry neared completion, how sad that
gossamer gray threads were woven with red strands of anger and pink threads of
need -- swirling, cutting across the pleasant colors and symmetry of your
tapestry. You demanded -- you condemned. You requested the gray-white ash of
cremation. Julius, you left your descendants a legacy, but at the end instead of
peace and wholeness, you felt despair.
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