All We Are Is Dust In The Wind

As I've gotten older, I've noticed that lot of weird stuff goes through my head when I'm laying awake in bed at 4 am; stuff that wouldn't have pinged my consciousness when I was younger. This morning, while still pondering the joint loss of David Bowie and Alan Rickman, I remembered reading somewhere that within 300 years of your death—unless you're someone notable like Bowie or Einstein or Neil Armstrong—you will have been completely forgotten since anyone who knew you directly will have long since passed on as well.

I personally put that time frame at half that—or even less. Think about your grandparents. Now think about your great grandparents. How much do you actually know about them and their lives?

I know more about my material grandparents than my paternal. Even then, that knowledge is woefully lacking, and since Mom was an only child, once my sister and I pass on, that knowledge will vanish as well. I believe my grandfather was a chemical engineer. I know he worked in a white collar capacity at a paper mill for the majority of his life, and was recognized by the company for coming up with a new way of folding napkins for use in fast-food restaurants. Beyond that, I haven't really got a clue. Was he in the army? Did he fight in World War I? How did he and my grandmother meet? Those are some of the things I probably should've asked Mom about when she was alive, but they were also those things that when you're younger you really don't care about. I have no idea if my grandmother ever worked—or if she did, what exactly her profession had been. As far as I know, she was a homemaker for her entire life (as was pretty common for women of that generation).

Going back another generation, I have no knowledge of my great grandparents beyond what I've seen in old photographs. If you even ask me their names I couldn't tell you without having to look it up somewhere. My great-grandfather (or perhaps it was his father) fled Germany because—as family legend has it—he shot a deer in the Kaiser's forest and the penalty if he'd been caught was death.

I know even less about my paternal grandparents. I think my dad's father was a cabinet maker and owned his own business for many years in Safford, Arizona. I have no idea if my grandmother did anything outside the home. Their parents? No clue whatsoever.

About thirty years ago I realized how woefully inadequate my knowledge of even my own parents' lives had been, so I asked them both to write short autobiographies. Dad took to the assignment like a fish to water; Mom never did come through with her story. Dad's revelations and secrets were enlightening and helped explain many major and minor mysteries of his life, but like so many things, his written story has gone missing and I'm left with only my own memories of what he'd transcribed.

I think this lack of proper passing-on-of-the-family-story explains both my folks' interest in genealogy as they grew older. Curiously, at least at this point in my life I do not share that interest. Since my sister never had children, when she and I are gone it will be the end of the line for this particular branch of the family and no one will be asking who my folks—or their folks—were or what they did during their lives.

And also since I have no children, I've pretty much resolved myself to knowing that at some point after I'm gone—like so many people who have come before—all my photographs, art, and possessions will end up at the bottom of a landfill or as curiosities in second-hand stores, offering some rare personal glimpses into life in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

That's why the here and now is so important. It's all we've got.

3 Replies to “All We Are Is Dust In The Wind”

  1. And this is why I started blogging, at least initially. Not that these zeroes and ones will exist forever, but hopefully in some form or fashion they might be out there and available if someone happens to wonder what I was.

    That, or maybe I'm just egotistical.

  2. Genealogists study all family members, even the ones that don't leave kids. So someday someone will be researching you. And if you want to know what your grandmothers were doing, email me.

  3. This was a good read.

    I got into genealogy early in life, on the hopes my aunts (who were 'into this') hoped I would be the next generation of Spos to pass it along. I hope at least one of my niblings is interested. Usually they have to be older to desire such.

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