Cherish what we have in life before its gone

It has been a heavy couple

of days. Sunday morning

as I sat in class, taking notes

on how to become a great

non-fiction writer, my mom

kept blowing my phone up

with call after call. I sent

her a text that I could not

speak so she should just tell

me what she wanted. Then

came the moment of instant

regret as her text message

came in: “your uncle died

last night.” I didn’t have to

ask who and I didn’t have

to ask why. I knew it was my

uncle Jose Mendez, who

lived in Mexico and whom

with I shared some of the

most meaningful conversations

with during a short

period of time. I never grew

up around my uncle Jose

because he never felt compelled

to leave his small

town of Pajacuaran in the

Mexican state of Michoacan.

The man who never

smoked a cigarette in his

life, nor found fun in the

debauchery of alcoholism

and whom loved to take

walks up the mountain

that his hometown found

its shade in, had died from

cancer. The last thing I

remember him telling me

is “take care of yourself and

tell your dad we want to

know when he is going to

come see us.”

After delivering a reassuring

response that I would

deliver the message to my

dad, I gave my uncle a hug.

Today, I wish that embrace

would have lasted at least a

couple of seconds longer;

or maybe that the hug could

have been a little stronger.

But since I was sure I would

visit the family again later

this year, it was an average

going away hug. While

I can never see or hug my

uncle again, I am left with

the memories and stories

of the impact he had on my

dad growing up, which in

turn had an impact on me

growing up. Jose Mendez

married my dad’s second

oldest sister and as the firstborn

male in the family, my

dad was a prince of sorts.

But because of poverty was

the living condition of my

father’s childhood, he was

also forced to grow up fast.

For some reason my dad

took a liking to his older

brother-in-law. Maybe it was

because he always showed

his love and commitment

for my aunt in as way that

few men in that small town

did with their wives. It

could have been because

from the very beginning my

uncle dedicated his life to

providing for my aunt and

the five children that they

would have. Maybe it was

because from nothing my

uncle opened a welding

shop and a hardware store,

which he used to send my

cousins to school. It could

have simply been because

my uncle Jose Mendez was

a kind, thoughtful and honest

man.

Growing up I always

heard about what a smart

man Jose Mendez was and

how hard he worked at

anything and everything.

My dad told stories of him

in the living room while

watching TV, or while fixing

a car that was giving

him a hard time. My uncles

also spoke fondly of their

older brother-in-law, who

was the first in the family to

have a phone line installed

at home, and who without

hesitation made the phone

available to my grandma

and younger uncles to call

my dad in the States. The

committed family man who

never strayed from the

home was a myth to me

until I finally met him in

1986 at the tender age of 5.

It was rainy stormy

night when we arrived

and all I remember is the

sound of the thunder. Like

many of the memories from

that age, the recollection of

that trip is a bit vague. But

I do remember my uncle’s

house and that deep voice

that carried through with

a bass that echoed on the

walls. Years later, when I

was 17 and on Christmas

vacation, he took my cousin

and I for one of his walks

up the mountain and put

us to shame. After begging

long enough he stopped to

give us two breaks during

our journey up that mountain;

both times letting out a

playful laugh asking us how

two 17-year-old kids were

being outpaced by a man

of his age. In 2011, I would

miss his birthday dinner but

would enjoy a few meals

and conversations with

him during my two-day stay

in his home. Less than six

months ago, I stood outside

a church with my uncle,

waiting for the body of his

older cousin to be taken to

its final resting place. “It’s

part of life. What can we

do?” he said.

The rest of the day we

spoke about random things:

family, school, work, politics

and when my dad was going

to come back to visit. It was

a Saturday afternoon when I

hugged my uncle Jose Mendez

for the last time on that

cobblestone-street in Guadalajara.

I asked him to hug

my aunt and that I would try

to come see them before I

came back home. I never did

make it to my uncle’s house

during that trip; nor did I

go back soon enough to sit

and chat with him one last

time. But I was lucky to have

met such a good man that

through my dad’s admiration,

it felt as if he impacted

my life growing up. As an

adult I would be blessed to

spend few but some very

meaningful moments that

confirmed everything my

dad said about Jose Mendez

when I was growing up.

Jose Mendes was a good

man and will be missed.