elisem: (Default)
 Ruth, my spouse's mother, my mother-in-law whom I called my mother-outlaw before John and I got married, has departed this world. She died well, in an excellent setting of love and affirmation which she chose.

She and I met at the Science Museum of Minnesota about forty-one years ago, when I was volunteering there in Anthropology Hall. I often say that Juan and I met in a folktale: One day at the hearth, my teacher of spinning and weaving and dyeing called to a passing young man, "Come here, my son, and hold this yarn that Elise might wind it up into a ball." And he and I both thought the other interesting, and that was the beginning.

Early on, Ruth said to him, "Now, when* you break up with her, you make sure to do it in such a way that you can handle running into her around the house, because she was my friend first."

Best mother-outlaw ever.

When Juan proposed to me, I said I needed to go ask his mother for his hand. I went to see her, explained the situation, and Ruth said she had only one question for me.  
"The two of you aren't going to get all conventional on us, are you?"
"Certainly not!" I said.
"In that case, I think it's a fine idea," said she.
And so we did.

It can be very handy, if one is polyamorous, to have a mother-outlaw or in-law who is an anthropologist. "Hey, Ruth," I would say, "We're being exogamous again." Ruth would smile and ask me how many places to set for the next upcoming holiday dinner.

Anyhow, my mother-outlaw has departed this world. There will be many people in many places writing remembrances of her and of fun and adventures they shared. I just wanted to take a moment right now to appreciate the woman who taught me to spin and weave and dye fibers, who told me when and where the good drag performances were and often took me along, who shared a quest with me to eat pho at every place in the Twin Cities that offered it, and who welcomed our otherloves to her table and home. Best mother-outlaw ever. She will be missed, but more than that, she will be gladly remembered as long as stories are told.



*She didn't think we had enough in common, possibly temperamentally, to make a long-term match. It's been 40 years of keeping company this year, 33 of those as married.
elisem: (Default)
Mike wrote "The Declaration" for us in 1998, and a couple of years earlier I wrote a poem for him. Every now and then lines from both of them float through my consciousness. Sometimes, though, I need to go back and let the words pass before my eyes one by one, in their cadences, taking the time it takes to reread something that he undoubtedly knew I would go back to, and something else where I was trying to tell him about time and eternity-in-mortal-time and all sorts of things that I could only say with those lines.

Tonight it was this:

One partner: I stand here with you because together we possess infinity in a finite space of time, and our combined reach surpasses the mortal.

Other partner: I stand here with you because we have seen in each other a shared task: and though the void may separate us, and matter must always fail, we shall never truly be apart, one from the other.

Together we take joint and equal command of the time still before us, to watch and to defend, to endure the cold and the fire, to stand until the last.
For against that power armies are as nothing, and Death itself comes begging and ashamed.


So please be aware that all the CN are in the tags, and here, have a link: https://elisem.dreamwidth.org/1306788.html

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Elise Matthesen

April 2025

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