Nearly three and a half years ago, my stepmother - a lady in her 80's, known to her friends and family as Mimi - returned from hospital, where she had been treated for depression, made an appointment with friends to go shopping the next day and sometime during the night, vanished. Â
Mimi lived the Medicine Hat and to give you a picture of the area it is flat prairie, practically desert, at least in terms of Canada. Â When you're out of the city you can see and be seen for miles in any direction. Â The RCMP have never failed to find a missing person on that prairie. Â They failed that July. Â No sign of her was ever found. Her bank accounts and charge cards were never used and there was absolutely no sign of foul play. Â To this day no one knows what happened that July evening or why.
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I am sad to say that Mimi and I were not friends, at least in her eyes. Â I live in Edmonton and hadn't seen her in over ten years. Â Somehow, that does not make a difference in my sorrow that she died alone and only God knows where her body lies. Â Yes, I do believe she is dead - not just legally dead, but actually dead.
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But, I also grieve for her life. Â She was one of those people who could not seem to accept or give love. Â She wanted and needed attention and certainly was jealous of those who had what was missing in her life, but, to her, love was more a matter of a contract than an emotion. Â I do not say this because I don't like or because she didn't like me, I say this because that is what I saw while I was living at home. Â My father said, much later, when I was a mother myself, that she was jealous of me. Â Maybe she was, tho' I have no idea why.
If I have given the impression that life with Mimi was emotionally draining and, sometimes, downright aweful, it is the correct one. Â To outsiders she was the soul of courtesy, to her Canadian family ( she emigrated from Mexico) she was not. So I grieve that she lost so much during her life with us, that she was unhappy and at a loss as how to fix it. Â I grieve for the fact that she will never lie beside my father in the cemetary and that there was no one there to say goodby.
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Mimi was the last of my immediate family to die. Â Both my natural mother and my father suffered long and painful illnesses before they left us. Â But Mimi's story is the saddest. Â
Look at your family today and remind yourself that these are the people who really know you. Â Never forget to show that you love them, never miss that chance. Â A life without love shared is as lost as my poor stepmother. Â May she rest in peace, wherever she is.Â
Tags: Missing Persons Family Life