Sparks at Music City Roots“Daddy haunts this blue beach,” Minton Sparks writes in her poem “Childhood Paints.” Ten lines later she describes his power: “In his palm he held the thin string/ that threaded the pulley of the moon.”

Minton’s late father lives. That "thin string" connects him to her as powerfully as it did in his breathing days. He speaks to her not in a ghost whisper but with the same tones he used in her girlhood.

The dead are alive for those who hear their present voice. I hear my late father’s everyday. His sentences vibrate strong & stern, light & funny.

So many doctors & nurses became caregivers because of the influence of a family member or friend. Long ago teachers continue to shape the behaviors of their graduates.

“My grandfather was a country doctor who took me with him on some of his rounds,” one surgeon told me. “In the middle of a difficult procedure his voice still calms me – as if he were gowned and masked & standing right there.”

“What is the first magic phrase of your childhood?” my Torts professor asked my first year law school class. “Once upon a time,” someone said.

“That is the what you must do with juries,” the professor intoned. "Tell them a story & make it riveting."

We mourn the absence of those shaped us. In fact, they are with us. They are part of our sacred story. 

David Whyte is always on the mark. "To remember/ the other world/ in this world/ is to live in your/ true inheritance."

We live in stories and how we hear them. We tell richer stories when we make past voices present.

 -Erie Chapman

Photo: Minton Sparks with guitarist John Jackson

8 responses to “Days 222-226 Present Voices”

  1. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    We are so intertwined with our family members and they influence our lives. It is comforting to know that those who have gone before us physically are still with us and converses with us. Even though my loving father had already left this earth I know he cares for me and watches over me. You mentioned that our family members influence us with regards to the choice of our career. Now I remember one of my cousin was a nurse and the other was a midwife. My career happen to be a combination of both – nurse/ midwife.

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  2. Terry Chapman Avatar
    Terry Chapman

    Like a stone tossed into a placid lake, whose ripples continue to evolve into endlessly larger concentric circles, so do those we love who have “gone to another shore” speak to us from the very fiber of their being! The circles of their love become more and greater in number as time passes and affects more people!
    My father, my mother, my brother, and yes a few friends’ presence has been real and comforting over the ensuing years. I usually smile but occasionally feel moved to speak out, somewhat humbly, but with sincerity, and tell them I am OK and that so and so is also OK as our Planet Earth tumbles onward to eternity. Thank you God for this miracle of eternal life!

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  3. Chapman Health International Avatar

    Thank you so much for sharing this, Suan.

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  4. Chapman Health International Avatar

    Yes, we both hear voices from those who have “gone to another shore,” Terry. In our case we may actually hear some of the same!

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  5. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Erie, these words and images shared offer a lovely warmth as we are reminded that that our loved ones travel with us. Sharing our stories, their stories, rekindles the gifts they bestowed upon us and in doing so we pass that love on. This is the expansive nature of love, it continues to ripple out exponentially. As the late John O’Donohue once said, “Love is the most beautiful prayer of all…”

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  6. Teresa Reynolds Avatar
    Teresa Reynolds

    “the dead are alive to those who live to hear their present voice”, so incredibly true. I hear my father, and feel his presence every day. Thank you for this wonderful reflection!

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  7. Chapman Health International Avatar

    Thank you for your comments, Liz, and for lifting up O’Donhue’s lovely line that “love is the most beautiful prayer of all…”

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