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Adrian

And So This is Christmas

December 20, 2022 by Adrian 1 Comment

It is Winter Solstice, just a few days before Christmas.

December was Mom’s time of the year. She loved when we would do something to mark the Solstice, to pause and reflect on the ending of one trip around the sun and the start of a new journey around the sun.

It is hard to do any of this right now.

This might be the last post on this website, so please, indulge me a little as I try to wrap it up and send it.

(Not) Like The Ones I Used To Know

A Hard Candy Christmas, Part 1

We participated in the Luciafest at Gloria Dei (Old Swedes’ ) Church in Philadelphia two weeks ago. Luciafest at this church is an 80+-year-old event that I brought my family and Mom to on a random December Sunday in 2008, and we were so amazed by it all that my kids started performing in it the very next year and every year since. Mom loved it so much; she would buy a ticket for all eight shows every year and would cry when it was over.

Luciafest, 2016

In 2018, my oldest daughter performed as Lucia, the hightlight of the show. The following year, my niece was Lucia. And my other daughter was to be Lucia the next year. And then the pandemic stole two years of shows from us. Well, my daughter finally got to be Lucia this year, but it was too late for Mom.

That was not an easy weekend.

A Hard Candy Christmas, Part 2

This past Sunday was our Esposito Family Christmas Party. This party has been going on since 1989 to honor my Great-Grandmother’s legendary Christmas Eve after she passed away in earlier that year. Mom was close with my Great-Grandmother; it was her that Mom was named after. The Christmas Party is a huge event, sometimes over 100 family members, catered with a DJ, an open bar, and Santa.

My Mom’s Dad, my Pop-Pop, organized it for years, and my Mom took over for him and organized it for years after that. Mom stopped planning it several years ago, but it was still as important to her as anything else we did all year.

This year, my Aunts asked me to put together a photo montage of all of the past parties to play on the wall during the party. It was an incredibly cathartic experience, going through 30+ years of party photos, and even the older ones from my Great-Grandmonther’s house.

It helped me realize that these things, Christmas, and all of these traditions, are bigger than Mom. They are sacred and special and need to be protected, even when it is really hard.

The party was great, and the montage turned out wonderfully…but, again, that was not an easy night.

Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

I suspect that Christmas will be the hardest of all the holidays, and we haven’t even gotten things rolling yet!

Christmas Eve, 2021
Christmas Eve, 2021

On every Christmas Eve for the past years, Mom would host a seven-fishes Italian feast at her home. It wasn’t all the traditional fishes (some of them), but it became a sacred tradition for us. All the Spode Christmas China would come out, and the presents for the kids and grandkids would spill into two rooms.

We’ll be doing some things differently this year. We tried hard to re-create Mom’s Thanksgiving, which broke our hearts. We did it perfectly, and all it did was put into sharp relief that Mom was not there.

My older sister did much of the traditional Thanksgiving cooking and said she felt like an imposter in the kitchen the whole day.

So this year, on Christmas Eve, we will eat early and fast, a low-key feast of items that are easy to prep and even easier to clean up, and then we will set out to lean into some traditions with our extended families and some new traditions for us all.

That is the plan. How will it go? I have no idea.

Ghosts of Christmas Past

For me, Luciafest was really hard this year, and especially as we were leaving. It is an ancient church, the oldest surviving brick building in Philadelphia. It is the oldest church building in Pennsylvania. It is the oldest congregation in continuous existence in the United States. The National Park Service protects the grounds. Many of the gravestones in the churchyard date to the late 1600s. It is a place that always feels like the veil is thin between this world and whatever comes after.

Luciafest at Gloria Dei (Old Swedes’) Church

As we were leaving, in the dark, in the rainy mist, walking down the old brick walkway, I kept imagining Mom in all the places she would have stood while we were there for the past 14 years. I kept seeing her all bundled up and in line for the next show, smiling and waving. I imagined her smiling at me, waving, proud of her grandchildren, my daughter who finally got to be Lucia, and proud of us for getting on with life. When I told my wife about it, she said it sounded like I was experiencing the end of an episode of the TV show Cold Case, which made me laugh. Because, honestly, the tears were flowing, and the laughter was welcome.

But after that night, I feel like I came through to the other side of something. I don’t know what or for how long, but I feel different.

I will be devastatingly sad every day for the rest of my life. But I feel like it is time to get on with my life. That is how I feel today, tomorrow is undoubtedly a whole other day, and I am leaving myself space to feel however I feel.

This whole thing has been an ordeal. This year has been exhausting emotionally and physically. Things that happened a year ago feel like five years ago. A photo of me from a year ago looks like I aged ten years. I feel beat up. I have been on ON since Mom got her diagnosis in March. I feel like my sisters, dad, and aunts have all been ON. And then we rolled right into Thanksgiving, and now, Christmas.

I know there will be days in January and February when I can be still and quiet. I know the sadness will be there, maybe even more so when the distractions are gone. Right now, I am looking forward to it. I don’t know how life is supposed to be with Mom, I really don’t, but I am looking forward to having some space to try to sort it out.

Getting Things Put Away for the New Year

It has been a long time since I posted here on this website… honestly, since June. I was so energized and called to be optimistic in the beginning. At some point, it got harder to take the time to sit and write out what I was witnessing, so I switched to just quick updates to the Facebook page. I had bigger plans for this website and kept putting it off.

As my wife and I were talking about Solstice, I mentioned that I didn’t care if we did anything at all, and she reminded me that this was a necessary time. It is time to start putting the old year behind us and preparing for the new year.

And, as always, she is right.

Today I added all the posts I made on Facebook the past few months and backdated them to this website. You can go back and read them all, or not. The important thing for me was making it complete.

Which was hard, lol.

Mom wanted me to write and wanted me to write her story battling this evil cancer, and she never wanted me to stop. She wanted me to write it all down and take all the photos and post them. It was hard, and I did stop. But it is caught up now, at least as much as it will ever be.

Mom’s story is there. I am wrapping up this website with a Christmas bow as this year fades away and the new year approaches.

I don’t anticipate posting anything else here, but you never know. Maybe some new purpose will reveal itself, and maybe not. I will leave it up, regardless.

A Picture Worth a Thousand Words

The picture of Mom at the top of this post is from last year on Christmas Eve.

It was the last big party we had when Mom was healthy.

The cancer was already there, but it was not confirmed, and Mom did not have any significant symptoms yet, so we went all-in on the best Feast of the Seven Fishes we’ve ever had.

Mom knew she had cancer; she told us all last November and most of us (not all of us, I see you!), myself included, blew her off for overreacting. The doctor said no cancer, so, no cancer, is what I said. She let us off the hook, and we had a spectacular Christmas eve.

But that picture… I’ve printed it out and framed it. I see my Mom and think, “There she was, healthy and celebrating.” but then I think, “She knew. She knew this was the last one. It is right there in her face.”

I think Mom knew, and she started to tell us, we pushed back, and Mom let it go until she couldn’t let it go anymore.

Believing her last November would probably not have mattered, really, in her care or her prognosis. Who knows. Maybe it would have, we can’t know. There was never going to be a happy ending to this.

But for one night last Christmas Eve, we had everything. Everything. Mom gave us that, and I will never forget it.

And when I feel like crawling under a blanket this Christmas and waiting until it is all over, I will draw strength from that, and I will show up for my kids and my fam.

Christmas is coming. Life is calling.

We will show up.

Thank You

Thank you all for coming along for the ride, for all of your love and your support, your kind notes and comments, your likes and hearts, your dinners and donations, your visits and your hugs.

One wonderful thing that came out of this ordeal is that our family is closer than ever before. Not just my wife and kids, my sisters, but all of my aunts and cousins who rallied this past year around Mom. We are all so much closer than we have ever been, closer than I could have ever imagined.

This great, magical family I get to be a part of is bigger and brighter to me than it has been my whole life.

I consider it the last, and best, Christmas present Mom ever gave me.

Thanks, Mom. Merry Christmas.

Christmas Eve, 2021

Filed Under: Update

Mom’s Thanksgiving without Mom

November 25, 2022 by Adrian 1 Comment

I hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving.

We all gathered at Pop’s house with the goal of doing “Mom’s Thanksgiving”. My sisters did a TREMENDOUS amount of work, and we pulled it off. But, it was very, very sad at times. I had never before experienced eating my Mom’s stuffing with tears on my cheeks, but I have now.

Mom always read a poem as we sat down and before we ate, and Alia asked me to do it this year… as you can hear in this video, I could not read what I prepared (it is below).

HOWEVER, what happened was, as we were sitting down and as I began to speak, “Ave Maria” started playing — we had been playing Christmas music and this song was often on Mom’s Christmas playlists. So, somehow, it came up next on the shuffle and started playing *right at that moment*.

If you were at the funeral Mass and you heard the singer sing this song for mom, you might never hear it the same again — I know I won’t. To me, it’s become Moms signature song.

Anyway, you can here me say some awkward words, and you can hear the music player start streaming ”Ave Maria” and draw your own conclusions about that (I know what mine are).

Happy Thanksgiving all!

– Adrian


What I Was Going To Read (from Moms favorite poet):

We ignite not in the light, but in lack thereof,
For it is in loss that we truly learn to love.
In this chaos, we will discover clarity.
In suffering, we must find solidarity.

For it’s our grief that gives us our gratitude,
Shows us how to find hope, if we ever lose it.
So ensure that this ache wasn’t endured in vain:
Do not ignore the pain. Give it purpose. Use it.

We’ll observe how the burdens braved by humankind
Are also the moments that make us humans kind;
Let every dawn find us courageous, brought closer;
Heeding the light before the fight is over.When this ends, we’ll smile sweetly, finally seeing
In testing times, we became the best of beings.

— Amanda Gorman
“The Miracle of Morning”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

We Did It.

November 5, 2022 by Adrian Leave a Comment

Everything about Mom’s funeral yesterday was perfect.

After a viewing at the funeral home Thursday night that was wonderful, we pulled out all the stops for Friday morning.

So many people, so much love.

I delivered my words before Mass in church without unraveling (barely) and Mass was extraordinary.

Msgr Lawrence delivered a service and a homily that was so personalized and so sincere and so real… he really gave the family a gift.

The readers Mom selected all delivered.

And the singer was otherworldly. Her rendition of “Ave Maria” was something you gladly pay admission to hear. It was breathtaking.

After Mass we had a luncheon at Spring Mill Firehouse Ballroom, catered by PTG, and it was just beautiful. Great food and some great moments with old and new friends.

There was nothing left, and nothing I wish was done differently or better.

It was a good showing for my Mom, who would have thought it all perfect.

I have more to write, and more people to thank, but I’ll do that later. Right now I feel like I could sleep for November.

I will thank them all again and for the rest of my life, but my sisters, and my Mom’s sisters, went far above and beyond during this whole ordeal, and especially this past week.

We are all exhausted. Proud. Barely able to breathe through the grief. Lonely. Scared. Relieved.

It is over.

We did everything g we could for 7 months right through the funeral.

We did it.

Miss you Mom. Always.

Filed Under: Update

Words of Rememberance (Eulogy) for Maria Hoppel

November 4, 2022 by Adrian Leave a Comment

These are the words I will attempt to read today at Mom’s Funeral Mass:


Selfless.

Right?

Many of you shared so many beautiful words this past week about Mom. You used the word Selfless the most.

Was there another person you’ve met more selfless than my Mom?

She taught me that love, true love, could not have strings attached. It could not have conditions that need to be met. True love meant to be in service, unconditionally, no matter what.

Maria Hoppel was a nurse for close to 40 years, a Mother for 52 years, a wife for 54 years this month, a sister for 72 years, and the very best friend of my Godmother since the 2nd grade.

Mom gave of herself selflessly; she loved unconditionally because that was what the deepest part of her soul believed. That was what her Faith formed in her.

Over the last few years, Mom and I have loved this parish at St. Johns, especially Monsignor Lawrence. He and Mom had an extraordinary bond.

We’d talk about our Faith often, and there are two Gospel stories that Mom really loved.

The first involved her special relationship with Mary, the Mother of God. Mom loved the story of the Annunciation because of how when the Angel Gabriel asked Mary to be the Mother of God, Mary could have said no. Mary had a choice, and Mary quickly and willingly said yes. Mom said this was one of the most powerful examples in History of a woman using the power of choice. Mary chose, and that choice was essential to Mom. Mom told me every day we get to choose what kind of person we will be — one who is selfish and worries about oneself or one who is selfless and cares for everyone else.

Mom chose a life of service and love every day.

The other Gospel story that Mom loved, one we tried to witness every year on Holy Thursday, was the washing of the feet. Mom taught me that moment when God himself is willing to show his love by being in service represents our entire Faith. By kneeling in front of his people and washing their feet, Jesus showed us that love means being in service. And that is what Mom believed, and that is how she lived her life.

There was not a day in my life that I was angry with my Mom. Not one day. My sisters and I were truly blessed; we’d sometimes cry when Mom would leave to pull the night shift in ICU at the hospital, even though we were supposed to be sleeping, just because we knew she left, and it just felt better when Mom was still in the house.

There are eleven grandchildren here who each believe they were Mom’s favorite because that is how my Mom made them feel every day.

There is a man here who loved her unconditionally for 54 years. There is a friend here that knew and loved her since their pigtail days. There are five sisters brokenhearted, and there is an entire community that lost a champion.

There are so many of you here who turned to Mom in your darkest moments when you needed her strength or her compassion; many of you have shared stories about how when no one else believed in you, it was Mom who stood up for you.

Mom chose to live her life in service to all of us. She loved us all with every breath she had.

Maria Carmine Hoppel was, I believe, the best of all of us.

Filed Under: Update

Memorial Arrangements for Maria Hoppel

October 29, 2022 by Adrian Leave a Comment

Maria has chosen to be cremated and then have a viewing and Catholic funeral Mass; her remains will be interred later.

The family will host the following services with her remains:

Thursday Evening

VIEWING

November 3, 2022

5:30 pm to 7:30 pm

McIlvaine Mundy Funeral Home

7384 Ridge Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19128

Friday Morning

VIEWING

November 4, 2022

9:30 am to 10:30 am

St. John the Baptist Church

119 Rector Street, Philadelphia 19127*

MASS OF CHRISTIAN BURIAL

November 4, 2022

10:30 am to 11:30 am

St. John the Baptist Church

119 Rector Street, Philadelphia 19127*

There will be a luncheon following the Mass

*St. John’s now has a parking lot at 4211 Cresson Street.

Filed Under: Update

Goodbye to the Best of All of Us

October 28, 2022 by Adrian Leave a Comment

Mom left us at 9:44 this morning.

She really didn’t want to leave and kept apologizing to us for going.

The only thing more “classic Maria” than that is that her last meal was an Italian hoagie.

She was the best of all of us.

*sigh*

I’ll post some more things later on; for now, thanks for all of you for sharing this terrible but sacred journey with us.

Filed Under: Update

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Goodbye to the Best of All of Us

October 28, 2022

Memorial Arrangements for Maria Hoppel

October 29, 2022

Words of Rememberance (Eulogy) for Maria Hoppel

November 4, 2022

We Did It.

November 5, 2022

Mom’s Thanksgiving without Mom

November 25, 2022

And So This is Christmas

December 20, 2022




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