We hurt, even momentarily, because our lives had been kissed by their gifts. Unrelated, fictive kinship kicks in. They were ours. They made us lift our eyes and our heads; walk taller; want to do better. They shattered stereotypes and tropes. They never embarrassed us, or "set us back". We never offered to trade them for anyone.
With all of the evil imps around, just wreaking havoc and seeming to prosper, why them?
We claim them, particularly when they make us proud; especially when they demonstrate to us--and the world--the genius, class, dignity, strength, poise, nobility, work ethic, discipline, wisdom, and intelligence that some damnable old narrative says we lack.
We're relieved because we can always reach for a CD, DVD, or log on to some subscription channel and be entertained, applaud, and beam with pride all over again. Hindsight makes us notice things we didn't know before. We view differently, and never see their work the same as the first (or fifth) time. Knowing the obstacles they were facing, and sacrifices they were making to give us their best, we love them even more. But we'll never be able to tell them.
They live on for us in media. We imagine that we knew them. For their loved ones, the grieving is quite different.
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