Tuesday, January 30, 2018

My Dad

Watching someone die is like giving birth. One of those profound, overwhelming, life-changing experiences that is also absolutely ordinary. Everyone is born, everyone dies. Everyone has lost someone they love.

My dad died a month and two days ago, on October 3. I've learned: death dates are like birth dates. Just like with new babies, you constantly keep track. The baby is a week old. Ten days old. Three weeks old. A month. Four and a half months, 18 months, 26 months. At some point, you begin to feel foolish. You change your unit of measure from hours to days, from days to weeks, from weeks to months, and finally, from months to years. And while you might forget your own age, you never forget your child's. 

So, it's been a month and two days. On Saturday, it was four weeks. On Tuesday, one month exactly. My dad has missed three Michigan games, one Halloween (Sam's first without a costume), the pleasure of comparing this November (sunny, highs in the 70s) with last (frigid at 15 degrees, with a warm winter coat shortage at the mall). Buddy's lame knee, and the decision about a new furnace. He missed some important family events, too, like his memorial service, and the spreading of his ashes. We kept waiting for him to come in off the deck, or out of the bathroom, or in from the garage. 

But of course, that's ridiculous. People don't attend their own funerals. 

Death stories are like birth stories. I remember the first time I was pregnant, mothers were constantly accosting me with their stories. Not having been through it myself, I found the stories - waters breaking in strange places, pushing in taxicabs, home births gone awry, anesthesia plans out the window, Lamaze forgotten - bleak and disturbing, like movies rated R for violence and language. After I went through it myself, I understood the impulse to tell and retell, seeking out young mothers to whisper the bloody details. Vomiting every 15 minutes. Six stitches. Eight hours of pushing (or was it ten?). Bruising. Somehow, the telling lays the experience to rest like a macabre Appalachian song-and-verse lulls the baby to sleep. 

Just like with a birth, when you have witnessed - participated in - a deathbed scene, you want to tell the story again and again. Suddenly you are aware of the brotherhood and sisterhood of people who have lost a parent. You exchange stories. For a little while, perhaps, you were God. You refused the ventilator, or you chose it. You ordered morphine, or administered it, or refused it. You doled it out in small quantities, or you hastened the end with frequent doses. You whispered that it was time to let go, and everything would be okay, or you let your teardrops fall on the closed eyes and mottled skin, whispering "Don't go. I need you."

Alone, or with your brother or child or in-laws or mother or friend or spouse, you listened as your loved one's breathing slowed, listened as the death rattle, that mucos soughing, became more pronounced. You might have watched the seconds pass on a hospital clock, or on your wristwatch, wondering if another breath would come. You might have reared in shock when, after 58 seconds or a minute-and-a-half, you began to relax into the knowledge that he - or she - was gone, only to be startled by another stuttering breath. After a while, you probably got used to that, too. 

And perhaps you looked away, or told a joke, or sent a text, or ran to the bathroom, or noticed the sliver of the moon, or ate a granola bar kindly brought by the hospital staff, remembering that you had not eaten since noon. Maybe you laid your head on your arms on the edge of the bed, noticing that the still hand you held was a little cool, wondering if a warm blanket would help. Maybe someone told a story, reminiscing, and you laughed. And then, perhaps, you noticed the quiet from the bed. Death rattle gone. Soul slipped quietly away.

At 4 pm that last afternoon, the surgeon finally told us that my father had cancer throughout his system. This, after a week in the hospital, after being told each day, in contradiction to common sense and the evidence of our eyes and hearts, that all would be fine. Every day for a week, we heard that everything that was wrong with him could heal. 

In the end, our eyes and hearts were right. He was dying.

"Ow," my father said, hardly able to lift his head, when the surgeon told him the news. "Ow."

"What hurts?" I asked, brushing my hand through his fine hair, turned gray this year with the cancer treatments. 

"My feelings," he said, and asked, for the last time, to move from the chair to the bed.

And so we unhooked all the machinery - all those tubes and tapes and needles and clamps - all those beepers and buzzers and flashers and squeezers - all that beige and gray and plastic and metal - and let my father lie peacefully in bed, like the complete, intact, complicated, hopeful, stoic human being he was. 

My father died at 10:45 pm on October 3, 2015. Love you, Dad.



Saturday, March 21, 2015

The Stuff Project

Day 365: The Stuff Project

FIN!

Today, I'm getting rid of the stuff project, and my blog. I'll have time to knit dishcloths, and make purses out of neckties, and plant tomatoes. I'll have more time for yoga, and cooking, and keeping a journal. Most likely, the level of clutter in the house will gradually creep upwards. In two years, or ten years, or twelve, we may end up right back where we've started.

Or maybe not. I've learned a few things. Like about how merchandizing calls out to you and makes you want to buy stuff. And about how getting new stuff might be pleasing, but it doesn't really make you happy.

I've learned about how we measure a healthy economy in terms of stuff, and how so many objects are made with damaging environmental or social production practices, in the U.S. and abroad...making a healthy economy and a healthy environment incompatible.

The analogy that sticks with me the most from this year is the parallel between eating too much and buying too much. Junk food tastes so good when you eat it, but in the end, it's not very good for you. It makes you sick.

So I'm resolved to be awake. To spend my money on experiences instead of things. To spend good money on good things, instead of buying bargains. To appreciate what I have, so I won't want to reach for the next shiny object. To take care of what I have, so it will last a lifetime.

Now for a glass of champagne (or maybe a cold beer) and a warm bath.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Greeting Cards

Day 364: Greeting Cards

ONE!

The last box, cupboard or shelf I hadn't gone through - greeting cards. 


Monday, March 16, 2015

Ugly Blue Resume Stock from 1985

Day 360: Ugly Blue Resume Stock from 1985

FIVE!



My brother has suggested that starting next week, I could acquire one thing a day and blog about it, every day for a year. By the end of next year, I'll be back to where I was a year ago.

To get a jump on this idea, I've been to my parents house twice in the last two days.  There, I acquired six pink champagne flutes and four pink martini glasses to add to the two pink martini glasses they gave us when we married. Apparently, they offered us this set of glasses soon after we moved back to Ann Arbor. I remember their saying the first two glasses were part of a larger set. I have no recollection of refusing the rest, but they were being stored in a carton with my name on it.  My father is cleaning house.

I came away also with two tiny sherry glasses decorated with cut glass stars. I remember these from my childhood, as doll toys. My father got them in 1962, in Tokyo, when he was in the Navy. He also gave me a bottle of sherry, a bottle of port, several liquors and liqueurs and miscellaneous other beverages to put into the lovely glasses. 

From my mother, a nice sturdy needlepoint frame, imported from England, to replace the flimsy one I bought myself at Joann Fabrics and got rid of earlier this year. Also some leftover beautifully dyed soft wool yarn from my favorite needlepoint kit designer. 

Does this mean I need to extend the stuff project another day, or three?

Not. 

The reverse stuff project won't happen, but I am resolved to be vigilant - or at least thoughtful - about what I do bring into the housen the future. 

I like Sam's idea better.  I eat only whole foods for a year, while he eats only prepackaged foods. 

We'll see who feels better at the end.