Eulogy
for Peggy Eckert - 1/19/2007
Hello friends,
For those of you who dont know me, my name is Reverend Norma.
Im from the Druid Grove where Peg celebrated the holidays for
the last several years. Ive also been a friend of Pegs for
a very long time. Im here today to talk about Peg and about our
grief. Im going to keep this short and Im going to try really
hard not to burble at you, but please forgive me if I do. I loved Peggy
very much.
We humans take a lot of things for granted. We take for granted that day
follows night and night follows day. We expect the moon to wane and then
wax. We expect the seasons to follow each other in succession through the
year. And we expect to have our friends and family around us. We forget
how fragile our world can be. We forget how frail a human life is until
we lose someone. And today we are all united in shock and grief at the loss
of Peggy.
Margaret Ann Dunn Eckert. Okay, how many of you knew that was Peggys
full name? I sure didnt and Ive known her for over 20 years.
But thats just like Peggy -- she was so full of life and had so
many friends that its like she led several lives at once.
Her great love was her family. She and Chuck -- whose name I just discovered
yesterday, by the way, is Edward -- she and Chuck had dated since they
were teenagers. They married in 1976 and after a big 36 hours of married
life together, moved to Japan and lived there for 9 1/2 months. Did
you know that? Peg and Chuck celebrated their 30th anniversary last
November and after all those years and lots of adventures and trials
and travels and life together they were still best friends. And I know
you knew that.
Peg loved her daughter Jess with a fierce and boundless love. Chuck and
Peg wanted a daughter very much and when Jess came along it was an amazing
and wonderful change in their lives together. I guess most people who speak
of a mother and daughter speak of love. But not all of them speak of pride.
Peggy was really proud of the young woman Jess grew up to be. She was proud
of the fierce love and loyalty that Jess has for her friends and family
and proud of the big-hearted compassion that Jess has for all those around
her.
Peggy loved great big family gatherings. She loved to see her family from
Florida and her family right here in New Jersey. She loved watching the
kids in the family grow up and the next generation starting. A holiday with
everybody together and that great huge loud mass of loving chaos was Pegs
favorite place to be.
A lot of you knew Peggy as a dancer. Her bellydance troupe, Fringe Benefits,
was one of her greatest joys in life. She loved dancing and she loved
teaching and motivating people to dance. Peg loved getting people involved.
And when you were around Peg you pretty much had no choice but to get
involved -- her enthusiasm was so infectious. Pegs bellydance
troupe gave her the opportunity for two things she loved: tribal bellydance
and bending the established rules a little bit. Ive heard about
the year at Rakasa, a traditional tribal bellydance showcase, when you
Fringe Benefits folks danced to Aretha Franklins Respect.
You shocked them, you delighted them, you impressed them. You brought
the house down.
I, personally, knew Peggy most from her time with our Grove and with
the local community. I remember her giving brilliant classes in Tarot
card reading and belly dancing for Rutgers University students. I remember
her downright scary and really beautiful portrayal of Demeter from years
ago. I remember her dressed in green and brown with leaves in her hair
honoring Mother Earth at last Fall Equinox. I remember her helping out
and dancing like a Goddess at last Septembers community picnic.
Most vividly, I remember Peg in a gorgeous red dress and a sexy Santa
hat with black fur trim at our last Yule celebration. She took a part
in our silly Yule play as the Sun and she laughed as we pelted her,
and each other, with pompoms. I know all of us who were there are going
to remember that for a long time.
And there are lots of other friends I havent mentioned. She had
friends from her gaming groups and friends from her work and probably
friends in every supermarket and restaurant she frequented. Peggy was
the kind of person who made friends all over the place. And she took
care of her friends. It was her nature to be the Worlds mom and
to look after everybody she knew. She did that gently, and if you think
she wasnt looking after *you* too, its probably because
she did it so gently that you didnt even notice.
The most amazing thing about all of that, is that shed be astonished
by the number of people who are here today. I think she wouldnt have
expected this at all. Because, as often as we all told her, I think she
never really realized how incredible she was. But we all know that and we
all know how important she was to our lives. And so we all grieve together
and wonder how she could be gone.
We humans take a lot of things for granted. We take for granted that
day follows night and night follows day. We expect the moon to wane
and then wax. We expect the seasons to follow each other through the
year. We forget how fragile our world can be. We forget how frail a
human life is until our hearts are breaking. I wish I could offer some
words, something that could explain why this happened, but I don't have
those words. I don't think they exist. But if we who are here today
can learn the lesson of treasuring each other and our fragile lives:
If we can comfort each other and talk to each other and forgive each
other and appreciate each other and love -- If we can love each other
and love life -- thats the best tribute we could ever pay to Peggy.
And I know its the one she would have wanted most.
Thank you for letting me speak. This service is over - go in Peace and Blessings
and in love.
(Service performed
by Reverend Norma Hoffman, Grove of the Other Gods, ADF, 1-19-2007)