I walk into the Plaza Jewish Memorial Chapel this afternoon, steeling myself for the premature funeral of one 23-year old Emma Bernstein—an incredibly creative, vibrant spirit I met only twice but whose work affected me deeply. Brilliant, impish, mischievously iconoclastic, Emma had been collaborating with writer Nona Willis-Aronowitz on a blog and book called GIRLdrive, for which I had been interviewed. Emma had taken my picture. On December 20, Emma took her life.
I look around the silent chapel and something feels wrong. I ask the attendant if I’m in the right place. “They all left a while ago,†he says. I’m three hours late.
My heart sinks. Nausea swells. An organized person, how could I have misread the time like that? How could I be so off? Anger. Then, selfish despair. I realize how much I had been counting on this funeral. When my friend Courtney first emailed me the news, I had turned numb. And numb I remained. I needed to witness the sadness in others in order to feel it myself. Mourning is best done in community, and sometimes I think this is why. Catharsis. Collective unloading. Something to help transform robotic shock into something more human. Even for someone I hardly knew.
I collect myself, turn on my heels, and walk back out onto Amsterdam Avenue, where thick snowflakes have begun to fall. It’s New Year’s Eve. Broadway is bussling with people living their lives. But today is the day a 23-year old I knew is being put in the ground. If I can’t mourn Emma properly, communally, I pledge to go home and write something for her instead. So Emma, this is for you.
Dear Emma:
I can’t pretend to understand why you ended your life, but I do understand the impulse. I think that most feeling, thinking beings who’ve experienced deep suffering, if we’re honest with ourselves, can feel at least a tinge of recognition, even if we don’t understand. I can relate to that feeling of wanting to escape, of thinking you will never feel differently than you do. In March this year you wrote, “All inner and outer life finds itself eternally irresolvable.†You wrote, “embrace doom while doom embraces you.†But what I think you might have meant by that last one is something almost Buddhist, as you wrote “don’t just live for the moment, or in the moment, be the moment†in that same sentence too. You wrote, “It is in this beautiful misery of our condition that we must find the seeds of happiness.†Wise words. And yet, tragically, not always enough.
I can’t claim to know much about the misery in which you ultimately found yourself. But I do know something about the beauty. You were in the middle of a beautiful, and much-needed project—many, I am sure, but the one I refer to is the book you were creating with Nona. As someone who shares your interest in intergenerational dialogue among feminist thinkers, activists, artists, and on, I remain deeply moved by—or, more accurately, informed by—your work. For a panel at the Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum in March you wrote:
“[D]ifferent generations of women artists need to choose open communications that commemorate without killing, but that recognize differences and the specificity of historical moments. An attitude adjustment is in order. Mentorship must come without passive aggression. Visible networks of friendly recognition must be initiated. There also needs to be a paradigm shift in our critical framework, so that younger women artists aren’t vilified by the hands that feed them. Objectification and glamour must be re-contextualized. The way we understand influence and imitation must be revised. This time the art world’s marketable revolution and glossy politics must be cracked open from the inside and out. Let feminism be an amorphous conceptual cloud that floats over women’s ideation and visual experience—and that brings us together instead of partitions us off from one another.â€
Wise words, and true. You spoke there of mentoring, and I have to say, through your work you mentored, and will continue to mentor, those of us older than you.
And so, my friend who I barely had the chance to know, I mourn not only the loss of you but the loss of your future oeuvre—your photographs, your insights, your mentoring, your wisdom, your words. I refrain from drawing grand or political conclusions from your death. As Courtney rightly notes, there’s nothing romantic in it. It’s tragic. It is a horrible, awful loss. May you find peace where you are. And may your friends and family—Nona, my dear friend Susan Bernstein, your parents, your brother—may they eventually find peace and comfort too.
I will say Kaddish for you.
Love,
Deborah
Comments
anniegirl1138 — January 1, 2009
Deborah, I am very sorry to read about your loss. Emma appears to have been a special young woman with much promise and idealism. You had a lot of loss this year. Years like that happen and I wish I had wise words to impart that might help, but I don't. Just remember to take care of yourself, appreciate everything and everyone often and breathe.
Deborah Siegel — January 1, 2009
Thank you for your kind kind words, and your wisdom, Anniegirl! You are a gem.
Bob Lamm — January 1, 2009
Deborah--I've been trying for about 24 hours to figure out what to write after reading about Emma Bernstein's suicide. I'm still nowhere. This is a terrible story. I know it must be very, very hard for you and others to accept both that Emma is gone and how she died. I'm sad for her, I'm sad for those of you who are most hurt by this terrible loss, and I'm sad for all of us who might have been lucky enough to come to know her or her work.
All we can do, I'm afraid, is to try to take good care of ourselves, try to take good care of those we love, and try to make a better world that won't crush some of our most special, most sensitive souls.
Kyla — January 6, 2009
Deborah--I'm so sorry you missed the service. I hope you found the catharsis you needed in writing this beautiful tribute to Emma. I believe you've touched on something important here about public mourning. I've been noticing over and over again lately that we don't take care of each other. We don't provide supportive, safe environments for people to express the intense emotions they feel. We ask people to hide these feelings so they won't make others feel uncomfortable. Which is why public mourning is so needed. It's permission to release. Permission we shouldn't have to ask for but seem to seek. I hope that you, everyone who knew Emma, and everyone who has experienced loss recently is making space for mourning and reaching out and finding needed support. And most importantly, not just feeling numb.
Deborah Siegel — January 6, 2009
Thank you for your words, Kyla. I really appreciate this.
Bob Lamm — January 6, 2009
Kyla--I agree entirely with what you wrote above... but I believe our culture has constructed an insidious trap regarding public mourning. Once you have some official type of public mourning after someone's death--whether a funeral, a memorial service, or both--then the pressures intensify for those who are grieving to quickly reach "closure" (a word I utterly detest), stop grieving, and shut up. It's like "Hey, you already had your public mourning, and now you want to KEEP mourning!"
We need to help build a culture and a world where it is widely understood that recovery from any type of serious trauma, including the death of someone we care about, is a longterm process. That grief over the death of a loved one may always be with us, many decades after that person is gone. That all of this is perfectly healthy. And that what is unhealthy is to shut people down a week or two after a serious trauma by acting like (or telling them that) they should now be "over" what happened.
j — September 30, 2009
i attended the service. surrounded by former classmates i'd forgotten (some happily), i was unable to feel much of anything, save an almost desperate desire to escape. emma and i were extremely close in high school despite our age difference. i suppose you could say we struggled with many of the same demons.
she made me a painting when i went off to college, with a message on the back, written, erased and rewritten in pen. after eight years of carrying it with me, only this week did i see the spot where she erased "I LOVE YOU! -emma." she forgot to rewrite that part.
suddenly, finally, the grief is overwhelming. it is almost a relief.