Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Year's Eve 2008

New Year's Eve, with Suzanne and Rich, 1998


Ten years have passed since this photo was snapped. Tonight I sit in Philadelphia, my hometown. Martijn expressed a strong interest a few years ago in moving here with me. Now it seems I may make that desire a reality.

Since arriving here in mid-November, my days have alternated between very busy and totally still, drinking in memories and moments of Martijn. I have been blessed by the constant attention and care of many friends near and far, and even of strangers who have morphed into new friends during this transitional stay here in my hometown.

Today I have taken a serious step toward making the transition back to Philly. I have signed an agreement in principle on a lease/purchase of a unique loft/warehouse space in the Overbrook section of the city, directly next to the SEPTA Overbrook Train Station. The place is mine until summer when I will know if I can finance a mortgage. All of my friends who have seen this space agree it's totally 'me' and I know that Martijn would have loved such an original space and location with all its beauty and also its edginess, for edgy it is.

This decision will not come as a huge surprise to most of my friends since I have been talking about where it will be best for me. However, the decision to move still has some uncertainty. Should a concrete job offer occur in the Netherlands that has good promise for me, I will act accordingly. Beyond a doubt, though, it feels as if I will have better options being back in my own country. Hopefully, I can continue to bridge both continents whatever I end up doing.

So, I move forward acting 'as if' as the reigning wisdom recommends to do. Little by little the acting shall become more integrated, hence more authentic. So, I wish you each the brightest new year ever. Please don't allow the grim news to outweigh the positives that are possible. Remember that in America, Barack Obama, has become president. With your imagination, anything and all is possible. Just set your mind to it. 

Thank you for your friendship.

xoxxo, Susan

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Suze in America

Here I stand - a solitary figure in Philadelphia's Old City.
Sandra Kloezen, wife of our beloved Dr. Maurice Bom, has become one of my closest friends. Here she is standing by the River Maas with the Limburg Provincial House in the background during one of our frequent walks. She and the family sent me to America with a traditional Sinter Klaas gift to open on December 5th - a great card with two dancing froggies, a lovely poem, and a cool case for my iPhone cheered me considerably. Thanks!

Here are my beloved Amsterdam friends with a warm send off for this trip. Left to right at the top are Sjoerd Soeters, Herman Rouw, and Merle Soeters. Crouching is Ton Schaap. The Soeters have been kind enough to host me at their lovely canal house and to drive me to Schiphol airport so I could be there at 6AM for my US flight departure! Herman and Ton came for a nice farewell dinner at the Soeters. All four paid frequent visits to us while Martijn bravely battled his cancer, cooking for us and carrying on with great conversations. We have been friends, all of us, for almost 14 years now! 

Talk about old friends, I've know Nancy Carolan since we were 18. Nan has been my constant companion since my arrival here in Philly. She is standing on the bridge to Penn's Landing on the historic Delaware River that separates Philadelphia from Camden New Jersey at this spot.

I was fortunate to spend Thanksgiving with my dear friends, Sara and Allan Crimm at their brother Walt and Deenah's home very near my old neighborhood in West Mt. Airy. Shown here are Sara and Allan's children, Naomi, Ben, and Jeremy in a tender moment.

My second family. Peter and Alison Tasch were chosen by me in 1967 as my official second family. For Peter's 75th birthday, I asked Nan to cater a special meal. Here we all are celebrating this event at Peter and Alison's home in Germantown. Left side of the table is Michelle, Wei Wei and Jeremy. Peter and Alison are at the head of the table. Alex, Kate and Nan from back to front on the right side. It was a glorious feast even though it was the day after Thanksgiving - somehow we all were hungry again!

It has been a bittersweet few weeks here, back in my hometown. Traveling and being without my beloved Martijn remains difficult, sad, unsettling. Often I feel like a ghost who is somehow stuck on earth; other times I am able to focus and be grateful for the bounty of my friends and friendships. Certainly I have been surrounded and supported by my dear friends here. I stayed with Barbara Craig for the first week or so, and as always she was gracious with her home and her love. For the past week I have been with Ruth and Rick Snyderman, enjoying their hospitality and lively lifestyle. This past weekend Bob Ingram visited and we took a very nostalgic stroll down South Street where we used to live and work when we ran the neighborhood newspapaer so long ago. I have seen many other old friends including a wonderful reunion of women from my Girls High class of 1967. But my inner journey is a lonely and solitary one - I am literally reconstructing my life from the ground up. I don't know where my path will lead, but I am trying to keep centered and focused as I move forward. I hope you are all well and looking forward to the holiday season. Soon the days will grow longer and more light will flood the darkness.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Home for the Holidays

My Philadelphia Family, August 2001: Martijn grins (left front) amidst our Philadelphia 'family' - behind him: Mary Grace Gardner, Rick & Ruth Snyderman and Linda Peck; next to me: Sally Eves, Robyn Frenze, Bob Ingram and Barbara Craig; standing: Jeremy, Peter and Alison Tasch, Sara and Allan Crimm.

With great emotional difficulty I depart my nest here in Maastricht, where Martijn's spirit provides a gentle glow, to head to my home town, Philadelphia, for some much needed R&R - rest and reflection in my case.  I arrive in Philly on November 19th and return to the Netherlands on January 7th. My Dutch residency is currently resolved allowing me to stay on here until 2010 and thankfully, the life insurance nightmare has ended. Now I can focus on fully on the depth of my loss and also on the abundance of my life - my friendships are greater than gold. Happily I will get to see and spend quality time with each of the friends pictured above, and many, many more.

My brother, Allen Schaefer, soon to be 81 years young!

I will be able to see my brother Allen, and his wife Beryl, with whom I have grown closer over the past years. I plan to see my cousins as well. It is my hope simply to experience my home town, to feel and to be. Once I am settled, I will write more . 

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Martijn's Wedding Vows

Our romantic London Holiday, April 2005. 
Each day of our life was a celebration of our union.


Our Wedding
St. Valentine’s Day
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
The Whitney Hotel, Salon 2

SUPPORTING CAST:

Parents of Martijn: Gertrude Mullens Hermse & Matthieu Hermse (deceased)

Family of Martijn: Elly & Paul Kerckhoffs-Hermse (Merel, Jony & Jolieke)
Jan Hermse & Irma Timmermans (Tjeu Colijn)
Noel & Lea Hermse-van Engelshoven

Parents of Susan: Emma Schaefer & Jack Schaefer (both deceased)

Officiating: Judge Tony N. Leung

Music: Sir Tim Heitman

Cake: Sir Daniel Hennagir

Flowers: Mistress Betsy Hork

Chariot: Mistress Suzanne Kochevar & Sir Richard Hecht

Guest Book: Mistress Roxanna Rutter

Candles & Ritual: Mistress Suzy Jandl Queen

Circlemakers: Sirs John Cuningham, Daniel Hennagir & David Fey; 
Mistresses Betsy Hork, Suzy Jandl Queen & Roxanna Rutter

Rings: Sir Alan Heugh

PROGRAM

Prelude: Bach -- Minuet 1 & 2, First Suite

Ceremony: Judge Leung

Vows: Martijn & Susan

Interlude: Bach -- Bourrie 1 & 2, Suite #3

Circle Ritual: Jandl Queen, Rutter, Hork, Cuningham, Hennagir, Fey

Postlude: A Royal Surprise

Breakfast feast: Salon 3

Martijn's Vows to Suze

DEAR SUSATSKA AND ALL OUR GOOD FRIENDS WHO GATHERED HERE:

THE WEDDING OF TODAY IS FOR ME NOT ONLY A FORMAL JUDICIAL PROCEDURE ACCORDING TO THE LAW. IT IS ALSO AN AFFIRMATION OF MY LOVE TO YOU, SUSATSKA, A LOVE THAT STARTED IN A VERY ROMANTIC WAY. NOT VIA ADVERTSIMENTS, NOT PREDICTED, EXPECTED OR SOCIALLY ENGINEERED, BUT BY THE SIMPLE COINCIDENCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES THAT HAVE LED TWO SOULS TO CONNECTING AND INTERTWINING THEIR LIVES. ONE COULD SAY THAT THEIR TWO SOULS ALREADY KNEW THAT THEY WERE BOUND FOR EACH OTHER. THEY DIDN’T MEET EACH OTHER UNTIL LAST YEAR IN THE NETHERLANDS.

AS A BACHELOR I ALWAYS HAVE FELT A CERTAIN DISTANCE TO THE INSTITUTION OF MARRIAGE. NOT ON ONLY BECAUSE MY PARENTS WERE MARRIED IN A NON-PREPARED WAY AND THAT THEIR MARRIAGE WAS NOT SO HAPPY AS IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN, BUT ALSO BECAUSE OTHER FORMS OF STRONG RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN TWO PERSONS ARE STILL NOT SUFFICIENTLY ACKNOWLEDGED BY SOCIETY. ALSO THE MANY DIVORCES WHICH HAPPEN STRENGTHENED MY OPINION THAT THE INSTITUTION OF MARRIAGE IS THREATENED IN SUCH AN UNSTABLE SOCIETY AS OURS.

FROM THE OTHER HAND, THERE ARE THE POSITIVE ASPECTS THAT MADE ME DECIDE TO MARRY SUZY. IN THE FIRST AND MOST IMPORTANT PLACE, IT IS MY REAL FELT LOVE TO YOU, SUSATSKA. APART FROM MY PARENTS AND DOROTHEA, A GERMAN WOMAN I FELL IN LOVE WITH A LONG TIME AGO, I HAVE NEVER LOVED A PERSON SO MUCH AS I DO YOU, SUSATSKA. I JUST HAVE TO LOOK AT YOUR FACE AN THEN I AM IMMEDIATELY AWARE THAT ONLY YOU CAN GIVE ME TH FEELING TO BE FREE AND ACCEPTED THE WAY I AM, WITHOUT SAYING ANY WORDS. IN THE ROMANTIC VIEW, LOVE IS THE EXPERIENCE OF ETERNITY IN THIS LIFE. IT IS A SPECIAL FEELING OF TIME AND SPACE THAT GIVES THE NORMAL REALITY ANOTHER COLOUR AND FACE. THIS WHAT WE PROVIDE FOR ONE ANOTHER.

ANOTHER REASON TO MARRY YOU HERE AND NOW IS THAT WE HAVE REACHED A MATURE AGE. I AM NEITHER AN ADOLESCENT ANY MORE, NOR A GRUMPY OLD MAN YET. SO, THIS IS THE EXACT RIGHT PHASE IN MY LIFE FOR STARTING SOMETHING NEW IN A SERIOUS WAY.

WE KNOW THAT A GOOD AND LASTING RELATIONSHIP IMPLIES HARD WORK, BUT IT ALSO IMPLIES MAINTAINING OF ABILITY OF PLAYING LIKE CHILDREN OR DREAMING LIKE ARTISTS. THIS, TOO, WE BOTH BELIEVE IN.

BEING IN A COUNTY OTHER THAN MY NATIVE COUNTRY MEANS I STILL HAVE TO LEARN MUCH ABOUT PRACTICAL THINGS. SO, WHENEVER I NEED YOUR HELP, I HOPE YOU CAN GIVE ME SOME SUPPORT. AS A PHILOSOPHER AND AS A WISE-GUY I CAN GIVE YOU MY HELP ABOUT THE ESSENTIAL ISSUES AND ENIGMA OF LIFE.

TO CLOSE, I ALSO WANT ON THIS OCCASION TO MEMORIALIZE MY FATHER, MATTHIEU, WHO DIED LAST AUTUMN, AND WHO, LIKE MY MOTHER, GERRY, MY TWO BROTHERS, JAN AND NOEL, AND MY SISTER, ELLY, WOULD LIKE TO HAVE BEEN HERE. AND I ALSO WANT TO MEMORIALIZE SUZY’S PARENTS, JACK AND EMMA -- MAY THEY LOOK AT US AND BLESS OUR RELATIONSHIP.


Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Yes We Can!


YES WE CAN

Many years ago Martijn and I stood proudly before our nation's Capitol (seen just over my head in the background) with our dear friend, Roberta Strickler, and children Aaron and Emily Meyers. Husband David snapped this shot. Aaron and Emily are now adults and probably up celebrating along with a vast majority of Americans on this historic day.

Martijn adored Washington, D.C. and tonight I think he and all the other angels are dancing with President-Elect Barack Hussein Obama's recently deceased grandmother for his, and our, historic victory. Yes, America can change, perhaps better than any nation on earth. Tonight as I stayed up into the wee hours I wished that my beloved Martijn were here beside me to hear and witness greatness. But I know his spirit is soaring, as is mine, over this turning point in world history. Now I can say after so long a time, "I am proud to be an American." I have hope that once again my country can participate with other free people around the world in making decisions that contribute to a better, brighter future for citizens of the earth.

So my sincere congratulations to Senator Barack Obama, his family, his team on this amazing victory. Now, along with that puppy for his daughters we need to see a cat in the White House, too! You can't be the president of all people without representing dog AND cat people! Be well, be wise and laugh often!

Cheers.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Give it all up to be with you

Martijn, Sante Fe, New Mexico, October 1999 

It is November 1, 2008, nine years since our carefree trip to sunny New Mexico, where we spent two weeks in the loving care of our dear friend, Rick Ruff. In the above photo Martijn stands before the Tibetan Rug store, dressed in his Tibetan pants. We intentionally purchased one of our Asian rugs from this store, since proceeds went directly to peace efforts to restore the Tibetan people to their rightful land and culture. This was a most delightful trip for us, with Rick serving as a gallant host while we explored this desert region we both so adored. Martijn and I were truly soul mate travelers. Our countless trips and adventures fill me with joyous memories.

Right now I am listening to music to heal my soul. This is a song by Donovan that expresses one part of how I currently feel:

"Give it All Up"
from the album, Sutras, by Donovan Leitch

No gold worth digging for
Without your golden love
No treasure rich enough
To be without your love
No sorrow deeper than
To be away from you
No distance farther than
A night not spent with you
No diamond brighter than
The light within your eyes
No star I gaze at
Brighter in these skies
No sadness deeper than
This longing for you
I'd give it all up
To be with you
This night of darkness
I lay upon my bed
All alone and lonely
Remembering words you said
No goal worth striving for
Without your golden smiles
Never again we'll part
No more the lonely miles

Here in Maastricht I continue to heal and grieve. That is the way. I have learned much from the best book for anyone who has lost a love to death: How to Go On Living When Someone You Love Dies, by Therese A. Rando, Ph.D., recommended by beloved friend, Sally Eves, Ph.D., also a psychologist who works with patients in grief occasionally. Since I so depend upon my good friends, and care about how they feel for (and worry about) me, I quote this passage from Dr. Rando, which clearly identifies the need for people to not run from their grief:

Recognize that you must yield to the painful process of grief. ...[T]here is no way to go over, around, or under grief - you must go through it. Grief cannot be delayed indefinitely; it will erupt in some way, directly or indirectly. The inescapable fact is that you have sustained a major loss requiring a painful period of readjustment that demands excruciatingly hard work and causes more pain and trouble if you do not attend to it. If you want to get done with your grief, you must go through the pain. Although the pain is distressing, the experience and release of it is a healing part of the process.

And so it is. It is good for good friends to know and understand the wisdom that grief is hard work. It is work. It cannot nor should not be avoided or it may never be resolved. It is not a condition for which such toss-away sayings as: "Get on with your life" or "Stiff upper lip" are helpful, as well-intended as some may mean these to be. There is a difference between a healthy acceptance of one's loss with its concurrent acceptance of the pain and a prolonged never-ending depression. Good friends of those who have suffered a major loss should rather ask respectful questions regarding how we feel, how we're getting along, what we need. 

So, it was very meaningful to receive the email copied below from one of my cherished friends from my Master's Program here in Maastricht. I respect and care for Anne and was comforted by her text:

Hey Susan,

I hope you are well even though you are going through a difficult time. I can imagine how hard it is to settle in this new situation, even if you knew it was coming. But I am sure you optimism and your curiosity about life and all the new impressions and situations it brings up will help you to find your way.

I sometimes thought in the last weeks, that your emotionality might make it a bit more difficult for you than it would be for others to look ahead, but in the end I believe it is the best way to cope instead of burying unfinished thoughts and unsaid feelings inside. I believe in you :-)
...
All the best
Anne

To all my precious and wonderful friends, thank you for walking this journey with me. Please know how much your love and support means to me. I think about each friend I have often and cherish her/his contribution to my life. I am making 'progress', if you wish to call it that. I am moving toward my future, but only with your love and care, and of course, with the incredible spirit of Martijn that truly communicates with me. Today, he returned as a blackbird, just like he said he would, during a moment of decision-making. I do not make this up!

All my love, Susan

Thursday, October 23, 2008

A year ago

My strong vivid beloved, even after radical surgery, showed such bravery. This photo was taken by dear friend, Carol Malkinson, at the hospital in October 2007, when she came to stay with me and give her love and support. I had been sitting staring at the computer screen the other night hoping, as I sometimes do, that Martijn would talk to me. Whalah, Carol was the messenger and this reaffirmation of our love and connection was the reply. 

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Grieving is a journey not an event

Elegant for our annual New Year's Eve celebration,
December 2000

I savor memories. It is my right. Today is Martijn's 56th and a quarter birthday. It is now almost three months since I last held him in my arms. Three months since his smile lit me into hopefulness even as he lay dying. What is three months? I can tell you time during grief becomes meaningless. Days turn to nighttime and night to day leaving little but a tick on some calendar. I remember vividly the seconds even leading up to Martijn's death; I can draw mentally his expressions, his hidden pain, his constant optimism even on the day of his death. I can feel his bony shoulders still warm under my fingers, and taste his lips, still sweet even as his body became consumed by the relentless tumors. I ache for this man this heart of my heart. My intellect perceives that he is gone but like a severed limb my soul FEELS his presence, yearns for the reality of his touch, his voice, his laughter, his LIGHT. My world is surreal and somehow darker. There are glimpses of light, mind you. I often feel Martijn's spirit working to lift mine. I hear his voice reminding me to take care, to eat right, to take my vitamins, to exercise, to sleep. Sometimes I do.

Martijn's funeral in Maastricht was perfect - he would have loved it. The day was lovely, sunny, not too warm or too cold. The St. Jan's Kerk on the major square of Maastricht was packed full. Herman Rouw and Pia Brand performed live music worthy of a band of angels. There were over 200 people in attendance and this was during the height of Europe's summer holidays. There would have been standing room only if not for this fact. Father Mattie was perfect in his role of spiritual facilitator - a Franciscan monk speaking Hebrew and allowing for the eclecticism of the service that featured Jewish, native American, zen and Catholic traditions. There were elegant testimonials, many of which have been reprinted here in this blog in previous entires, from Martijn and my oldest and dearest friends, as well as from his brother Janus and myself. The burial itself was flawless.

Weeks later I journeyed to Minneapolis, where Martijn and I lived for ten wonderful years. There, the lakeside service was equally perfect. Held on a full moon evening, not even the customary Minnesota mosquitoes dared to ruin the atmosphere. David Fey and Michael Putman performed the music this time, and David, Suzanne Kochevar and Maureen Youngstrom read selections from the Maastricht ceremony. Afterwards, we lit floating candles which were sent like beacons of love out onto Lake Minnetonka, out from Sandy Beach where Martijn and I spent many, many happy hours. The candles drifted out to the lake like fireflies upon the water; others lit candles and held them aloft; our dear John and Sally Cuningham stood on the pier proclaiming proudly when the full moon finally broke over the trees that line the shore. And then, wonder of wonders, Sally pointed to the fireworks that seemingly miraculously appeared on the horizon at the far end of the lake across from Cottagewood.

Weeks later the third and final ceremony took place in the galleries of dear friends, Ruth and Rick Snyderman in Olde City, Philadelphia. That night Hurricane Ike threatened the entire east coast, yet 40 sturdy souls weathered the storm. Nancy Carolan, this time, performed one of the songs, Allan and Sara Crimm, David Meyers, Bob Ingram, Barbara Craig, Kate Tasch and Alison Tasch recreated the readings. Martijn would have loved the storm. He loved nature and admired its ferocity. I remember the first time he ventured out into a real Minnesota blizzard. I warned him not to go walking on the frozen Lake Minnetonka but off he went, a later-day explorer. He made such treks a habit, reveling in the elements.

I returned to Maastricht, flying in on the notorious anniversary of September 11th. It was not easy coming into Amsterdam's Schiphol airport and finding myself alone for over an hour. Martijn would always be there - hours before the flight would be scheduled to arrive, usually with mother and Marcel. Always a warm greeting a reunion. REUNION. A reuniting of two souls destined to be together, as our Kabbalah wedding vow says:

From every human being there rises a light that reaches straight to heaven and when TWO SOULS who are DESTINED to be TOGETHER find each other, their strings of light flow together and a single brighter light goes forth from their united being.

My life has been torn asunder. My string of light struggles to shine with the "Usness" that Martijn believed would continue after he no longer physically was here shining together with me. I have had to weather additional storms alone. My immigration status here in the Netherlands is threatened due to some bureaucratic bungling; the life insurance policy that should have been readily available to me is being held hostage while the faceless monsters who 'regulate' it conduct a criminal investigation to assure themselves that Martijn is truly dead; one of my clients, who owed a final payment for work performed held back for weeks my last invoice; like the rest of world, my hard won savings for retirement dwindled as the greed of more faceless vultures impacted my modest and conservative investments for the future.

Martijn died and my world fell apart.

He who was always there with a joke and a gentleness to assuage even the most critical time is now a spirit whose presence I must allow myself to feel. Grieving, dear friends, is journey not an event. I take one step forward and two back. I sense a future that my beloved wanted for me, for our ethereal "Usness"  but at times all I feel are hot tears that well up unbidden in my eyes and run like streams toward some unknown soul ocean. I will be strong. I will have faith. I am grateful to you, my many angels on earth who lift me, but please don't expect me to move through this loss any faster than I can and than Martijn deserves. Such a love as our is such a loss as time and space must heal. I do not cherish this pain for anything more than an acknowledgment of  how great my joy was when Martijn walked among us.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Brother's Love

Martijn & Jan, Minneapolis, 1999

In the days leading up to, during and immediately after Martijn's death, my brother-in-law, Janus Hermse, has been a godsend to me. Martijn asked Jan to 'take care of me' as he asked me 'to take care of Jan'. Janus has been a rock and I'm grateful not only to him, but to my sister-in-law, Irma for sharing him with me during these trying times. Jan's love for Martijn was passionately matched by Martijn's for him. At the funeral service in Maastricht Janus bravely delivered the keynote memorial, describing in loving yet direct detail his perspective of his beloved brother Martijn. My dear friend, David Fey, graciously read this at the moonlit memorial in Minnesota, now two months ago, and my wonderful ex-husband, Bob Ingram, did so at the service in Philadelphia. I share this speech with you so that you can better know Martijn from Jan's intimate and loving point of view:


Memorial speech by Janus Hermse for the funeral ceremony of his 
brother Martijn Hermse - Maastricht, July 30th, 2008.

My brother was a Minsch. This Limburgian word is clearly related to the German-Yiddish Mensch and difficult to translate. In short, it characterizes a human being that is present, visible as a complete person and expressing this in his way of life. No hero, no idol, no superman but a human being who is standing in his strengths and weaknesses; a human being living his humanness in all its facets. And Martijn did live. Sometimes without any compromise and hard yet more and more often in a gentle, understanding and compassionate way.

Martijn had, particularly in he past, a clear vision on society and was quite opinionated about how people should live. He also translated this to his own life and tried to live according to his principles. Yet, he would also impose his vision on his parents, his brothers and sister, telling them what they should do according to him. His heavy involvement with his environment and family led to quite some confrontations or fights that sometimes ended in periods of hardly a word spoken. His affection for his beloved ones then got lost behind hard “truths”.

When I was between 10 and 14 years old, I saw Martijn as an almost frightening older brother, with a coercive presence in our house when he came home from his studies in the weekends . His room was his sanctuary where nothing could be changed even if he would only come once every six weeks. He determined what we ate and which programmes we watched on TV. The rules of the house were partly made by him. The reasons for this are not fully clear to me. May be he wanted to make the world a better place and struggled with his very rational approach to reality and the powerlessness that he felt in this endeavor.

Martijn was involved in everything and did not circumvent anything on his search for the truth. Over the years, probably due to his growing experience and wisdom, he opened himself to a more loving approach. He had more attention for others and could appreciate them more in their uniqueness. This is also how Susan came into his life en how we got to see more of the other side of Martijn: a gentle, caring and emotionally committed man.

When I was about 16 years old, I got closer with Martijn. We shared a passion for culture and visited concerts, plays and movies together. We had hour-long conversations while enjoying one of the special liqueurs that he had discovered. Through Martijn I got to know Mahler, Wagner and Artimotov, the beauty and consolation of art and the big city of Amsterdam. Partly, I became an artist thanks to Martijn; he introduced me to a world that before had been unknown to me. I understood that Martijn had found a new environment in which he could develop himself further. In Amsterdam and Nijmegen, he built a big circle of friends with whom he is still connected.

In Amsterdam, I got to know him as a gallant host who wanted to please his guests and would entertain them with all kinds of things to know and see. He shared his universe with my father, mother, Marcel and me. He displayed the same hospitality with others. You were always welcome to stay and eat at his place. He entertained his guests with funny stories, humor and sometimes bizarre jokes; A humor that we shared and that became part of our family.

Martijn was also famous for his economical way of living, not in his dealings with people but in daily matters. He would buy bread that was a day old to get a discount. He used teabags twice or three times. He enjoyed it when something was for free. This way he was able to create a quality lifestyle without much money. Particularly, because at the same time he could live like a dandy. If he considered it worthwhile, he would spend money on luxuries goods, such as exclusive liqueurs, perfumes or ingredients for meals.

When he met Susan and moved to the States, these personal characteristics developed further. There, he stole the hearts and minds of many people. This was not only his merit as I also got to know his American friends as open, warm and committed people who created space for uniqueness, originality and love. This is the soil where Martin could grow and develop himself into a complete person.

Martijn was a romantic. We shared the same preferences for movies, literature, music, poems, arts and politics that were emotionally charged, displayed sharp contrasts, had dark sometimes melancholic undertones, expressed the non-obvious, the unspeakable and irrational, the longing for a better world en the search for the overwhelming ardor of existence. Where the world extended beyond the directly visible and nothing was as it appeared. Where we were part of the universe, connected in the big and small. Ratio versus Pathos, Apollo versus Dionysus, light versus darkness. A swirling and moving universe in which nothing is fixed. Contradictions that were unified in Martijn. He did not want to lead an easy life and kept on searching for the truth. This made him a Minsch.

Another aspect of his romantic nature showed in his travels. Martijn started early on to read books about foreign countries, he knew a lot about geography, knew the train schedules by heart and dreamt about all kinds of special journeys. And he did not only dream. Every year he traveled for longer or shorter periods to foreign countries and cities: Morocco, Greece, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, Mexico, and, of course, the US. These journeys were a means to enlarge his cultural but also his human universe. At almost every journey he made new friends. Particularly with Germany and the former Eastern block he developed a special relationship, not surprisingly, as there lies the soil of the romantic spirit. Through his travels and his living in the US, he redeveloped a strong bond with nature. The spaciousness, openness, quietness, and diversity of the landscape spoke to him.

Concern for the body and health were part of this nature. He paid much attention to his own body, his health and the health of others. Mind and body had to be in balance.

Also in love matters he was a romantic. He loved deeply and unconditionally. There was no compromise, when you love you give yourself fully and stay faithful. He did not go for less. He could be demanding but also generously giving. He got disappointed heavily a couple of times. He had to go a long way to finally find the peace and safety in a love that fitted him.

He gave up his life in the Netherlands to build a new existence with Susan in the US. He did this full of love and conviction. Susan and Martijn developed a great love and connection with each other where they both could grow as persons. Martijn found his great love.

At the same time, he stayed faithful to his family and old friends with whom he maintained intense contact.

Martijn had a strong bond with his family. We are not a standard family, were dispersed during our youth and developed separately mainly due to our age differences. Nevertheless, there was a strong connection based on commitment, solidarity and a shared history with love for each other. His relationship with his father was complicated but developed from confrontation to understanding, acceptance and a shared love for music. Each month, Martijn went with his father to the Vara-matinee in Amsterdam to listen to concerts. Martijn had a special connection to his mother. Closely related and open, they could share a lot with each other. Together with Marcel they traveled a lot and Marcel became a sort of brother for Marijn.
Even if the relationship with our brother and Noel and sister Elly was problematic when old demons reappeared, the sharp borders softened and Martijn was able to see his brother and sister more and more. Martijn also became more of an uncle interested in his nieces and nephews. There clearly was more space for the other which enabled him to share more of his love.

In his love, Martijn developed into a complete person, able to give and more and more also able to share and receive. He was able to see the other more fully and could give more space. Confrontation became less important. He learned to love himself more and more and through this the other.

If I look at the life of my brother Martijn, I see a person who really lived. He had to walk many different paths. A person who made many journeys and detours, he got to know beautiful experiences, great love and friendships but also pain, fear and alienation. He could be a wonderfully warm person and at times he was hurtful and hard. He loved life and enjoyed it in all its facets. At the same time he was against soulless consumerism. He was the searcher who would not easily run away with an idea, but was searching for the truth, the unique, the original, that what matters in life. He did not forget his fellow men, was politically aware and felt solidarity with the lower class of society, those who have nothing.

Martijn was a case full of contradictions. In the last years, these contradictions got unified more and more and lived next to each other in harmony in the person of Martijn.

This all is why my brother Martijn was a Minsch. I am proud of him and will miss him.

Monday, October 06, 2008

"We only part to meet again." - John Gay

                                           Photo by Rob Kulisek for The SUN newspaper

Dearest Friends - I take a step toward wholeness and healing each day. My terror and fear have subsided - replaced by a quiet knowing that Martijn indeed is within me, and also nearby many of you. There have been 'reports' of frogs appearing where none have been, of blackbird sightings, and of a general feeling that his spirit has truly taken wing. So many of you have reached out to me in so many ways. As I heal, as I journey forward to my (re)new(ed) destiny, I offer you my gratitude, which seems like so little in the face of what I (and Martijn) have received from you. 

I'll continue to share those blessings, offerings, wishes, that others provide to give me hope and faith. Below is a story, written by my dear ex-husband, Bob Ingram, for "the Sun by-the-sea" newspaper, published by the lovely and dynamic Dorothy Kulisek, in Wildwood-by-the-Sea, New Jersey, where Bob lives. 

Bob took such great care of me during my recent journey back to the East Coast and my home town of Philadelphia. As a surprise, he wrote the following story for the Sun, taking on the persona of 'my brother' in this tale of hope and faith. I hope you are as touched by this story as I am. Please feel free to comment at the bottom of the page of the blog. Blessings for this Jewish New Year - we typically say may your year be as sweet as apple dipped in honey.

Autumn Evening

By Bob Ingram

She came straight from the airport and arrived at his Wildwood cottage in the early evening of a warm, glorious Indian summer day.

“You must be all jet-lagged,” he said. “How long was the flight from Amsterdam?”

“Almost eight hours,” she said, “Can we go to the beach or something? I want to get out. I still feel all closed in. It’s been so long since I’ve been down here, too.”

“Let me take you to my favorite evening spot. It’s really beautiful. And you get the late sun, you know?”

“Good. I could use it. It doesn’t get really hot over there much. I missed the heat here.”

“How long was it?” he asked. “How long were you there? I lost track.”

“Almost six years. God, it seemed like we’d just got settled when it all happened. Where does the time go? It was so nice and then that.”

“I know,” he answered. “I’m sorry I couldn’t come. I really wanted to.”

“I know. But you had your life. And you were there before. Don’t worry. You’ve been a good brother. Now we’re all we have left for each other.”

“Yeah. We’re orphans together,” he said. They laughed, softly. “Come on. You’ll love this spot.”

In the parking lot, she said, “That’s the lighthouse, right?”

“Yep. Hereford Inlet Lighthouse. It goes back to the 1870s, I think. But it’s the gardens that I want you to see. They’re like old English country gardens, sort of all over the place, but when you see them altogether, they’re actually breathtaking. I know the guy who does them. He’s really an artist. Sometimes when I’m here by myself and it’s quiet and I’m listening to Bach or somebody on my Walkman, I think he’s a genius. This has to be the most wonderful place on the island. Exquisite, you know? Like sort of a hidden treasure.”

They were alone there, and the gardens were brilliant in the late sun. Monarch butterflies fluttered through on their fall migration north, and the birds had begun their soft evening songs, adding somehow to the quiet, which was palpable, an actual presence. The world was at one with itself, as if time had slowed to the measure of the light breeze that barely rustled the slowly nodding flowers.

They walked idly, letting their feet take them, and all about them was the silent rapture that the garden could become, each step a further revelation in color and shape and natural design, abetted invisibly by the hand that had guided it. He let the garden’s inner delight again descend on him, while she was newly enraptured, softly struck, awed. She named aloud some of the flowers: holyhocks, day lilies, nicotiana, nasturtium, snapdragons, foxgloves.

He was impressed. “Wow, you know all these.”

“Not all. It’s amazing, really. Do you come here a lot?”

“I do. It’s such a good way to end the day.”

They made their way around the lighthouse and he led her through the small spice garden, and then through the arbor of low trees and shrubs that formed a green tunnel along the board path that led out of the gardens to the sea wall that runs along the inlet.

“I usually sit here for a while,” he said.

They sat on a bench. In front of them was a small lake formed by the tides and beyond that Hereford Inlet stretched past Champagne Island to Stone Harbor in the distance. The ocean was off Stone Harbor, endless. Seabirds sailed to and fro, gulls calling shrilly into the evening air as they made ready for the night. The slight breeze was cooler now.

In front of them was a stone marker with the inscription: “In memory of all those lost at sea.”

“Maybe it would have been better if he’d just been lost that way,” she said.

“It must have been so hard,” he said. “Knowing how it would end.”

“Yes and no. We were able to plan it all: the plot, the coffin, the service. He was involved in everything. I think it gave him some comfort.”

He looked away, then back at her. “You both showed so much courage,” he said.

“Not me, really. He was more than brave. He was almost holy toward the end. He was so much my husband then. We were so close. We shared the last of his life together. It was kind of amazing, now that I think of it. We were almost one those last few weeks. But now, now I worry that I could have done more, made it easier for him. I keep thinking about it.”

“Don’t,” he said. “You did all that could be done. I know you. Don’t even think that.”

“I guess so. But I do, you know.”

“Yes. That’s you, too.”

They sat in silence then, the sea sound a constant echo of itself punctuated by bird cries. The first russet streaks of sunset showed against the blue of the sea and sky.

Presently, she turned to him and said, “Would you mind if I sat here by myself for a while?”

“Of course not,” he answered. “I’ll walk in the gardens.”

When he came back, he paused in front of her before sitting down. Then he said, “You look different somehow. What’s the word? Transcendent. That’s it.”

She smiled at him, and indeed she did look different, as if a weight had somehow been removed.

“Let me tell you what just happened,” she said. “It was amazing. I’m still not sure it happened. I was just sitting here. I was crying a little bit, you know? After a while, this young couple came along with their little daughter. She couldn’t have been more than three years old. Blond. Beautiful, actually. She was wearing a white sundress and she looked to me like a little blond angel.

“The parents said hello and kept on walking, but the little girl stopped and looked at me. Then she said, ‘Why are you crying?’ Her voice was so clear, like a little bell. I said I was sad and she nodded her head like she understood. Then she came over and put her hands on my knees and looked me right in the face. ‘He’s all right now. Don’t worry,’ she said. Then she skipped away; she actually skipped after her parents.

“And my heart kind of skipped then, too, and then I understood deep inside of me, and now I feel so different, so much better.”

“I know,” he said. “Like I said, it shows.”

“And I still don’t know if was real or not,” she said. “But if you look way down there, you can still see them. You can see her little white dress.” She pointed.

He looked and he could see a small white dot, bobbing along the sea wall. Then it disappeared.

- The End -

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Merci sends wisdom from Rilke

Martijn and Susan enjoy a joyous New Year's Eve (with Suzanne and Rich) 
in Excelsior, Minnesota, ten years ago, 1988.


Dear Susan,

I'm sending along a passage which I read in the last few days, and found very comforting. I like Rilke's poetry a lot, but the book someone gave me is a collection of his correspondence. For the sake of context, I've included the entire passage, though some parts may speak more to you than others (as they did for me). I also took the liberty of adding paragraph breaks...so sue me for my editorial touch! The bolded/italic words were stressed in the original.

Thinking of you, and sending you a warm hug!

Lots of love,
Merci


"My dear S…,
I very much took your letter to heart, and, on the one hand, I wish to encourage you in your pain so that you experience it in all of its fullness, since as the experience of a new intensity it is a great experience of life and in turn leads back toward life, like everything that reaches a certain extreme degree of strength. On the other hand, I am filled with fear when I imagine how you have cut off and limited your life at this point, afraid of touching anything full of memories (and what is not full or memories?). You will freeze up if you keep doing that, you must not, dear, you have to keep moving, you have to return to the things that had been his, you have to lay hand on [your lost one's] things that are also yours due to such complex relations and attractions, S… (this might be the mission assigned to you by this incomprehensible fate).

You have to continue his life within your life to the extent that it had not been completed; his life has now passed over to yours and you who truly knew him can move forward quite as intended: make this the task of your mourning, to explore what he expected of you, hoped for you, wished would happen to you.

If I could only convince you, my friend, that his influence has not left your existence (how much more securely I feel my father's influence and assistance within me since he is no longer with us). Consider how much in daily life distracts, obscures, and renders another's love imprecise. Now especially he is here, and now he has all the freedom to be here and we have all the freedom to feel him… Haven't you felt [your lost one's] influence and affinity this way thousands of times from outer space where nothing, nothing, S…, can ever be lost? Do not believe that anything that is part of our true realities could disappear or cease to exist: that which had so steadily worked its effects on us had already been a reality independent of all our present and familiar circumstances. This is precisely why we experienced it in such a different way and as responding to a completely independent need, because from the beginning it was aimed and determined at something beyond the here and now. All of our true relations, all of our penetrating experiences reach through the Whole, through life and death; we have to live in Both, be intimately at home in both. I know people who are already facing both the one and the other quite intimately and with the same love. And is life truly less mysterious and more familiar to us than that other condition? Are they not both placed namelessly above us, and equally out of reach. We are true and pure only in our willingness toward the whole, the undecided, the great, and the greatest."

--Rainer Marie Rilke. From a letter written August 1, 1913, to Sidonie Nádherny von Borutin, from the book: "The Poet's Guide to Life: The Wisdom of Rilke," edited and translated by Ulrich Baer.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Our "Usness"


Our Parisian Honeymoon, July 1996

We spoke openly of how our love might endure once Martijn was not present in the physical realm. These conversations were difficult, most difficult and touching and wrenching. Martijn found it easier to tell me of his beliefs in the love beyond space and time by quoting from respected authors. Now, as I endure pain sometimes so dark and bleak that I'd rather depart this earth, I try, really try to allow Martijn's love to in fact be transformative, transcendent. When I let myself, I feel this radiance and let it fill me with hope. It will take all my strength to overcome the loss of the physical tenderness,  gentleness,  happiness and even rapture that Martijn's mere physical presence provided. Our "Usness" was integral to our love - it existed not only in romantic embraces, but in the sheer affection and attentiveness we lavished on the other. What, I ask, what can replace this tenderness? How does my soul accept this ethereal, spiritual evolution when as a beating, breathing heart I so crave the warmth of my beloved?

I will take faith from Martijn's beliefs. Here are the two most touching pieces he presented me. The first is taken from a precious handwritten card for my 58th birthday:

Friday, the 4th of april 2008,

To my most beloved wife,

I feel very, very sad to write this down, and I don't know what words to choose. I borrow the words from Elisabeth Barrett-Browning, Sonnet XLI, from the Portuguese:

"Oh to shoot my soul's full meaning in to future years,
  That they should lend it utterance and salute
  Love that endures with Life that disappears!"

From your husband Martijn

This final note was left for me to find, marked in a book 
by the philosopher Binswanger that he was intending to use 
for his work on a thesis about love beyond time and space.

From Ludwig Binswanger, the German philosopher
Grundformen und Erkenntnis menschlichen Daseins. Zurich

But how are things when death does not meet You but Me? 
Even then, as your You, I am not dying; 
even then the Usness in love does not decay. 
I can only die as an individual, but not as the You of an I. 
When I die as an individual, then yet in dying, 
I am more than ever Yours, part of our Usness. 
As I received “my life” from your hands anew – 
from yours as the hands of the lover 
as much as only through you, 
the being in Usness “opened up” for me – 
I put it back into your hands when dying. 
I do not die the “heavy” death of an isolated “I”, 
but say goodbye to you knowing 
that even in this parting is still presence 
because the lover as someone who was here 
is still here in the sense of the existence of the Usness, 
a Here that rips open the depths and abysses of existence even more; 
that calls it even more into the eternal presence of love 
and allows it to exist within that love.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Martijn's Letter to His American Friends


Martijn, summer 2007


Maastricht, Wednesday, 30th of April 2008

To my dear American Friends,

I can tell my deepest emotions in a few words: I really have become to appreciate you and your country. I met a lot of openness, had fun with you, and understand much better how your society evolved from the very beginnings. In these difficult political and economic times for you I want to say that there is quite a difference between a government and the American people. I have got to know you as so much more spontaneous, energetic and even more friendly than my own countrymen. Of course I had and have some serious criticism on how the system works, but I know a lot of you do too. But let me tell you this: almost every American visitor to us in Maastricht got by me the invitation to visit the American cemetery in Margraten (near to Maastricht) and Henri-Chapelle in nearby Belgium, where so many American soldiers died for the cause of real freedom in this continent. Maybe it because I belong to an older generation already, but I have always been aware of the terrible price your country paid on behalf of us. By the way, Maastricht was the first Dutch city to be liberated. I always felt at ease near to the dead in their graves: it is the mix of the consciousness of history, stillness, and the beautiful landscape that gives the feeling that we sense the bigger and sometimes incomprehensible whole around us. I got this same feeling many times when I was very near to nature when living with Suzy in Minnesota: the Indian Summer, the sail boats on the ice of Lake Minnetonka, or sauna near frozen Prior Lake. Thank you for sharing in the beauty of your people and nature!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Martijn's Memorials in Minnesota and Pennsylvania

Martijn gazes from the gate of Palageto,
over the hills of Fiesole to Florence, Italy below, summer 2005. 
This was a time of great happiness for us.

One journey ends another begins. More than two weeks have passed since I last held my beloved. This is the longest period of time I've ever spent separated since we joined as a couple. The loss is keen and deep. I will try to move forward since that is what Martijn wanted. He saw me with a new beginning; I could never share in this vision with him though I tried to smile and I made promises of things I would do in his honor. Now I shall numbly begin to fulfill those.

Here at home in Maastricht, it seems as if Martijn's spirit worked quickly to send me an angel so that I would not be alone - physically. A dear friend, Johanna, will stay with me for an extended time. Since the funeral, in fact, she has not left my side. Her presence is like a light in the darkness - she is at once lively and lovely as well as comforting and empathetic. We both were in need of someone to share a life transition with, and so she is here and will remain.

On Monday, August 11th, I journey to Minnesota, joining friends who have been a circle of love and support for almost 20 years. I will stay with David and Michael and Suzanne and Rich, seeing and visiting with as many friends as is possible. I hopefully will get to embrace the furry Miss Snoepje and her adopted mother, Stephanie, as I know Martijn would want. He was buried holding in his hands Snoepje's raggedy 'misela', her stuffed mouse which Martijn treasured as much as any of his possessions. A recent photo of her and another treasured stuffed toy also were lovingly placed in his coffin, as I know he would have loved.

A Memorial Service under the full moon will be held in Cottagewood on Lake Minnetonka's Sandy Beach on Saturday, August 16th at sunset. All are welcome to attend and invited to bring a candle to light. We will gather at the home of our dear friends, the Youngstroms, at 8PM - 4230 Mt. Curve, Deephaven, MN.

Then I journey to Pennsylvania to spend time with many lifelong friends, first journeying to the Pocono Mountains with my dear ex-husband, Bob Ingram, to be with my soulmate, Sally Eves. From there I will stay at the New Jersey shore with Bob until after Labor Day when I will go to my dear friend, Barbara Craig, in Center City Philly. Martijn and I always adored staying at Barbara's home. 

In Philly we will hold a memorial service on Saturday, September 6th at 7:30PM at galleries of our dear friends Ruth & Rick Snyderman, 303 Cherry Street, Philadelphia, PA. Again, all are welcome to attend.

Although Martijn was so modest, he would like that others could celebrate his life, and I know, support me as I walk this road without his constant and loyal presence and protection.

Friday, August 08, 2008

When the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance

Photo weaving - "Martijn in Susan, Susan in Martijn" 
 D. Sippel


I deeply miss my soulmate. I feel the loss in my bones; yet there must be a purpose for me ... alone, or anyway, without my better half. Right now it doesn’t feel that way. It feels cruel and terribly unfair. But I have faith, and after all, isn’t that all there is once all the illusions of life are broken upon the reality of death?

Following this brief email note is an excerpt from "The Prophet" by Kahlil Gibran sent to me by Michal Baranowski, one of my University of Maastricht classmates who attended the service and wrote:

Dear Susan,

It was really good to see you again. I wish that the occasion was just a simple visit, and that Martijn could be there, but in some way I think we were able to say hello to Martijn on that day. I wanted to thank you for inviting us, I'm really glad we could come. I wanted to thank you for the service, it was the most beautiful, moving good bye I have ever witnessed. But most importantly it was a great celebration of Martijn's life. Through his friends and family, I feel I have met him closer than possibly anytime before.


From "The Prophet":

Then Almitra spoke, saying, We would ask now of Death
And he said:
You would know the secret of death.
But how shall you find it unless you seek it in the heart of life?
The owl whose night-bound eyes are blind unto the day cannot unveil the mystery of light.
If you would indeed behold the spirit of death, open your heart wide unto the body of life.
For life and death are one, even as the river and the sea are one.

In the depth of your hopes and desires lies your silent knowledge of the beyond;
And like seeds dreaming beneath the snow your heart dreams of spring.
Trust the dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity.
Your fear of death is but the trembling of the shepherd when he stands before the king whose hand is to be laid upon him in honor.
Is the sheered not joyful beneath his trembling, that he shall wear the mark of the king?
Yet is he not more mindful of his trembling?

For what is it to die but to stand naked in the wind and to melt into the sun?
And what is to cease breathing, but to free the breath from its restless tides, that it may rise and expand and seek God unencumbered?

Only when you drink form the river of silence shall you indeed sing.
And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb.
And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance.

Separately a day later came this email from our dear friend John Gjerde:


Susan,
I was gone and just got your email. I am deeply saddened by the passing of Martijn. The realization feels like such a jolt that it affects every feeling in my body. Martijn is a very special person and I would always feel relaxed around him. My conversations with him were like no other - very deep with meaning. I was feeling good today and I willl fight through the sadness to see the sun still shining. I will take the dogs some place where I can feel the wind and sun and view the trees. I know I will see Martijn there somewhere and when I do, I will promise to smile. I will call. You have been wonderful. You and Martijn have a special relationship. When you mention our walks, they seem so simply. Now they seem so special. I would like to do them again and again. My love for you and Martijn can be measured by the sadness I feel. I have now shed a few tears and I would like nothing more than to give you a big hug. My heart goes out to you and family.
With all of my love,
John Gj.

And so Martijn melts into the sun. His breath is now the wind. I shall hope once more to truly dance with Martijn inside me for my remaining days. My friends and family fill my soul with hope.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Trying on His Wings

Martijn Anna Antonius Hermse
July 21, 1952 - July 25, 2008

Martijn passed peacefully at 1:45 AM in our home surrounded by his family and friends. He did indeed die with a smile on his face having spent a day greeting select family, friends and care providers, particularly our beloved Dr. Maurice Bom whose professionalism and personal warmth guaranteed Martijn a safe passage. 

The funeral will be held on Wednesday, July 30th, at the St. Janskerk in the Vrijthof Square here in Maastricht. A coffee table will offered afterwards at the Fort St. Pieter. We invite those of you can to come to the memorial service that Martijn and I together carefully planned. It will be beautiful and befitting his life. All are welcome.

As you can guess I exist now in a suspended state after such an intense period of focusing almost solely on the care of my beloved. Witnessing his death in our own bedroom, surrounded by light and love does make his passing more recognizable but not more welcome. Yes, for him I am so relieved - his pain that was great at the very end is over. But mine in finding a way, a world apart from him now begins. And so it is.

Here is the text I have written for Martijn's service in English and translated into Dutch by his brother, Janus, who has been my rock and support:


MARTIJN HERMSE: A LIFE OF LEARNING AND LOVE

For my beloved husband, Martijn, a true gentleman and scholar, and my best friend

Teaching is more difficult than learning because what teaching calls for is this: to let learn. The real teacher, in fact, lets nothing else be learned than learning. His conduct, therefore, often produces the impression that we properly learn nothing from him, if by "learning" we now suddenly understand merely the procurement of useful information.

- Martin Heidegger 

On our wedding day, almost 13 years ago, Martijn was called a “real wise guy” by a friend who intended fully the double meaning – signifying both his status as a joker or a trickster, and its ancillary meaning – a truly wise man. My beloved husband was both. He often made others comfortable by making funny jokes, catching his ‘audience’ off guard. I believe he surfaced this version of “the wise guy” because he was, in truth, a bit more intellectual than many of his listeners. So, he gently diffused many situations for them by ‘making light’ of a deep subject.

It took me a long time to appreciate this aspect of Martijn. I so admired and respected his mind that I often grew irritated when he played his verbal tricks. I wanted his intellect to shine, but his modesty prevailed. Thankfully, I grew to understand that this was yet one more aspect of his truly unique and engaging character. Thankfully, also, during our years in Maastricht, I was granted the time to be with Martijn when he was engaged with his family, whom he loved truly, madly deeply, to witness, learn, and come to appreciate his form of gentle wisdom - his “real teacher” self, as Heidegger states.

For myself and many others, Martijn will remain the ultimate teacher - by modest example. He needed no classroom, no lecture hall and no dissertation to shine his incredible intellect on any subject - from economy to environment to gastronomy to human rights to animal rights. He stands apart as a great intellect who required no fame or fortune for his wisdom. Rather, Martijn solidly inhabited a rare universe where his own armchair sufficed, and his many acolytes came naturally, drawn by his warmth and authenticity. Martijn was constant in a world of ever changing attitudes. He held his beliefs as tightly and mightily as he held those lucky enough to find themselves in his vast, loving nature. I am blessed to have been held tightly in his strong and constant arms almost everyday for 13 years. Although this temporal time was far too short, we have promised to each other that a love like ours can and shall shine through space and time to bond our souls for eternity. Those of you who have also been touched by Martijn can hold him – his humor, warmth and wisdom – eternally, and continue ‘to let learn’.

- Forever yours, Susan 

Dutch version:

Onderwijzen is moeilijker dan leren want wat onderwijzen vereist is dit: laten leren. De ware docent zorgt in feite dat er niets anders geleerd wordt dan te leren. Daardoor komt het dat hij door zijn gedrag vaak de indruk wekt dat we juist niets van hem leren, tenminste als wij nu plots onder “leren” verstaan: het louter verwerven van nuttige informatie.

- Martin Heidegger

Op onze huwelijksdag, bijna 13 jaar geleden, werd Martijn door een van zijn vrienden een “echt wijze man” genoemd, hiermee bewust doelend op de dubbele betekenis van zowel Martijns reputatie van grappenmaker en mensen voor de gek houden, als de gewone betekenis van een werkelijk wijze man. Mijn echtgenoot was beide. Hij stelde anderen vaak op hun gemak door grappige dingen te zeggen, waarmee hij zijn “toehoorders” in bescherming nam. Ik ben ervan overtuigd dat hij deze versie van “wijze man” koesterde omdat hij in werkelijkheid intellectueler was dan velen van zijn luisteraars. Op deze manier redde hij menig situatie door een zwaar onderwerp “lichter te maken”.

Ik had enige tijd nodig om dit aspect van Martijn te leren waarderen. Ik bewonderde en respecteerde zozeer zijn intelligentie dat ik mij vaak ergerde als hij weer met zijn woord-spelletjes bezig was. Ik wilde dat zijn intellect laten schijnen, maar zijn bescheidenheid voerde de boventoon. Gelukkig leerde ik mettertijd begrijpen dat dit juist weer een ander aspect van zijn uniek en innemend karakter was. Ook ben ik dankbaar dat ik, gedurende onze jaren in Maastricht, de tijd gekregen heb samen met Martijn te zijn als hij bij zijn familie was, van wie hij intens en oprecht veel hield, om getuige te zijn en te leren van zijn milde wijsheid, van zijn eigen “ware docent zijn”, zoals Heidegger zegt.

Zowel voor mijzelf als voor vele anderen zal Martijn de ultieme docent blijven - als een bescheiden voorbeeld. Hij had geen klaslokaal nodig, geen collegezaal en geen proefschrift om zijn ongelooflijk intellect uit te stralen over alle mogelijke onderwerpen - van economie tot milieuzaken, van gastronomie tot mensenrechten, of zelfs tot dierenrechten. Hij is uniek vanwege zijn grote intellect dat roem noch fortuin verlangde voor zijn wijsheid. Nee, Martijn woonde eerder in een zeldzame wereld waarin hij genoeg had aan zijn fauteuil en waar zijn vele acolieten als vanzelf kwamen, aangetrokken door zijn warmte en eigenheid. Martijn was een constante factor in een wereld van steeds veranderende opvattingen. Hij hield even onverschrokken vast aan zijn overtuigingen als hij vasthield aan degenen die het geluk hadden van zijn liefdevolle aard te mogen genieten. Ik voel me bevoorrecht dat ik gedurende bijna 13 jaar dagelijks door zijn sterke, stevige armen omarmd ben geweest. Ondanks dat deze vergankelijke tijd te kort heeft geduurd, hebben wij elkaar beloofd dat een liefde als de onze kan en moet stralen door ruimte en tijd om onze zielen te verbindenbin voor de eeuwigheid.
Wie van de aanwezigen hier door Martijn zijn geraakt, kunnen - zijn humor, warmte en wijsheid - voor eeuwig bewaren, en verdergaan met “laten leren”.

- Voor altijd de jouwe, Susan



Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Dear friends comfort us both

Rich Heck helps Martijn to eat on his birthday, Sunday, July 20th
Suzanne Kochevar tells Martijn of the Weeping Cherry Tree that she and Rich have named the "Martijn Tree", planted in his honor at their home near our beloved Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota. Martijn and I spent many wonderful times with Suzanne and Rich enjoying the view from their living room to the pond beyond. Now the Martijn Tree will be in full view.

It is now the final days of Martijn's life. He remains vivid at times, but mostly he sleeps. He can no longer turn himself nor eat nor hold a glass of water on his own. On Sunday his mother, Geri, and our Marcel came along with brother Janus and my sister-in-law, Irma, and brother Noel to celebrate Martijn's 56th birthday. It is a milestone he vowed to make back in March when we received the news that the cancer had spread and was terminal. 

I drift in and out of denial and acceptance that my beloved 'frog' will no longer be with me on this fragile plane of existence. Helping me through this period, which has proved to be the most difficult for me, are Suzanne and Rich. Suzanne told me months ago to simply let her know when I needed them and they would come. I did. They came on Thursday the 17th. Along with my brother-in-law, Janus, they are helping us walk this strange, mysterious, frightening path to that place where each and every one of us must go, but yet remains veiled like the fabled mists of Avalon in so much secrecy and awe. 

I am not telling you the half of the story here. We have so many brave souls to thank for providing care and support. That will come. Please read this wise saying sent to Martijn by our friend Jacqueline Braun to understand how I feel:

Friendship is the inexpressible comfort of feeling safe with a person 
having neither to weigh thoughts nor measure words.
- George Eliot (a female 19th century British novelist)