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an everyday life

Author Archives: Janell

Home Sweet Home

30 Saturday May 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Life at Home

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Aging, Books, Everyday Life, Frederick Buechner, Love, Nursing Homes, Parents, Raising Children, Writing

Dad was discharged from a five-day hospital stay on his seventy-ninth birthday last Wednesday.  It was the best gift Daddy could have received, to be surrounded by the healing comfort of the walls and faces that whisper ‘home sweet home’, though it was clear to most everyone at first glance that as much as Daddy was ready for home, home was not ready for him.  My sister’s bewildered glance at all of us gathered around Daddy’s birthday supper said it all — what are we going to do now?

Right in front of Daddy, we spoke openly of alternatives, including a stay in a nursing home rehabilitation center, while Dad enjoyed his birthday milkshake.  Daddy’s on a pureed diet now — the absolute least of our worries – which had me following a recipe to blend his chocolate birthday cake together with ice cream and milk.  Happy as the proverbial clam, Dad strangled over his milkshake, seemingly oblivious of the serious grown-up talk around the supper table about his future, as Christi and I with others were searching for solutions to shore up Daddy’s frail life.  Of course Daddy knew of what we spoke, though he pretended not to.

Recognizing a need to move quickly, we identified local rehab centers and talked and toured on the next day and by Friday, all that remained was to move Daddy to the center of choice in nearby Seminole, where his great-niece Courtney serves as Director of Rehab.  It’s no small comfort to have family on staff where Daddy is now living, at least for a while, at most for the rest of his life.  And our deepest hope is that it’s the former rather than the latter, that Daddy will regain the necessary strength to return home, to the place where he has lived more than any other in his long transient life.

I was feeding Daddy a bit of yogurt when Christi signaled me that it was time to break the news and Daddy’s heart about his new living arrangements.   I respect Daddy too much to sugar-coat what we all regard as sad news.  And as soon as the few words left my mouth, a large fat tear dropped out of Daddy’s right eye that I don’t believe I’ll ever forget until the day I die.  Maybe because a little part of me died the moment I saw the tender feelings of my dehydrated Daddy exposed, when normally they are kept safe under lock and key.

Daddy is no stranger to adversity.  His childhood could have provided the historical background for the story of Little Orphan Annie without the hopeful inclusion of a Daddy Warbucks figure.  About five years ago, Daddy shared a bit of his sad story, of how his Aunt Edna, his mother’s sister, took in his sister Carol but in front of Daddy, said “I don’t want Jackie.”

Sadder to say, this rejection happened on the heels of his Mother’s death, and still sadder to say, his Mom died on Dad’s tenth birthday.  Almost seventy years later, I’m left to wonder if his aunt’s rejection didn’t just knock Daddy’s breath away.  The quick one-two punch would leave Daddy, a quiet introverted unwanted ten year-old, scarred for life, rarely willing to talk about it, except for a few glimpses here and there.

Daddy and Aunt Carol were kept separated the first two years after Dad’s mother’s passing, with Aunt Carol being shuffled back and forth between her Mom’s sisters and while I’ll never know for sure, Daddy probably followed Papa around upper state New York.  I’m told Papa was always on the move — conventional family wisdom says that Papa was running from the law, as he cooked in many New York restaurant kitchens, never staying too long in one place, using several aliases.  Papa’s money mostly went to booze and gambling, and having served time in prison for insurance fraud, Papa obviously didn’t keep the best of company.  I understand his second ‘wife’ Jean was sent to prison for impersonating a WAC.   Knowing Papa as I did, Papa was probably trying to keep one step ahead of the law to escape deportation back to Greece, because even as a child, he obsessed about getting his annual immigration reporting filed on time.  But who really knows about Papa’s shadowy activities, except for maybe Daddy.  And these days, he’s not talking.

By the time Daddy was twelve, the family was more or less reunited, with Papa still moving from one town to the next, and Daddy and Aunt Carol sometimes enrolling in school and sometimes not.  Papa would line up a job before moving the kids, so sometimes he’d park them at one of his sister’s for a time.  Aunt Carol has no fond memories of these stays.  Enough school was missed from all their many moves that Daddy didn’t graduate from Seminole High School until he was twenty.

And now, fifty-four years later, Daddy again lives in Seminole.  We call it a rehab center — which it is.  But darn if the center’s van that came yesterday to transport Dad in his wheelchair wasn’t labeled Seminole Estates, bigger than Dallas, right on its side, which of course, sounds so nursing home-ish or worse.  And Dad’s nobody’s fool.

To make the transition easier, if such a thing were possible, I spent yesterday morning gathering old photos of us kids and the grandkids, and my brother found a few special ones, like the one of Dad and Mom on their wedding day.  I also gathered up an old quilt that serves as Daddy’s comforter and an odd assortment of furniture and books that would make Dad feel more at home.   But who was I kidding?

Frederick Buechner, a favorite author of mine, wrote these words in his book, The Longing for Home:

“The word home summons up a place–or specifically a house within that place—which you have rich and complex feelings about, a place where you feel, or did feel once, uniquely at home, which is to say a place where you feel you belong and which in some sense belongs to you, a place where you feel that all is somehow ultimately well even if things aren’t going all that well at any given moment.”

For sure, I wasn’t kidding Daddy.  Nor was I kidding myself.  Because Daddy’s childhood taught him the difference between buildings with four walls where a body is parked for a time (even if for a body’s own good) and that of a true home, filled to the brim with love and desire for the return of the one gone away.

Daddy belongs to the home he and Mom built, on a hill off a country road, just as Daddy belongs to us.  Get well Daddy.  Unlike those ghosts of your past, your chips off the old block are nobody’s fool.  We do want Jackie.

Help!

25 Monday May 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care

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Tags

Aging, Everyday Life, Parents, Raising Children, Writing

 “You know I need someone.  Help.”   —  John Lennon

 

CIMG0541aOut walking the neighborhood this morning, the dogs and I came across an orange construction cone.  On top rested a work glove.   A quick look at the road revealed no obvious need for the cone  and as for the work glove, who but God knows.  But the combination was sheer poetry that spoke to my current state.

Until Dad was admitted to the hospital early Friday, I’ve kept a two-person lifestyle afloat while my better half has been hard at work in Beijing.  To be sure, it’s been a tightrope balancing act for these past five weeks, to manage everyday life on the Mesta Park home front while pulled to Shawnee on a host of planned and unplanned emergency trips to help care for Daddy.

One day Dad looks pretty good, the next not so, though his body is all the time being pumped full with antibiotics and steroids to cure this undiagnosed infection.   I look him in the eyes and tell him he’s the best daddy in the world.  And he knows I mean it, as his eyes and my own fill with tears.    

Daddy can’t help that his floundering health comes at a darn inconvenient time.   Nor can I help that my neediness has seeped out in the last few days to impinge on the lives of my children, as they’ve been asked to don a pair of work gloves to help keep the pieces of my life running if not smooth, at least rough.  But, boy do I hate to ask for help, even from those I love best in the world.  Call it pride.  Call it, as St. Paul wrote, ‘regarding others better than myself.’  Maybe its a bit of both.  But as Mama use to say about money, help doesn’t just ‘grow on trees,’  and I wonder whether a true desire of helping can even be sown into the hearts and minds of others.

God knows I tried in my own children, for my own version of a ‘mama use to say’ — Do your best and think of others— was spouted off to the kids so often I bet they just turned off the spigot, back when the boys were still in elementary school and the girls were at the age where they’d begun to realize it was they that ‘knew it all’ while poor ‘ole Mom knew squat nothing.   Perhaps my spouting words merely reflected how I wanted to be myself, for while some people are natural born helpers, the rest of us just flounder amidst inadequacy and confusion. 

And the words we speak to excuse ourselves.  They’d be funny if they weren’t so sad and didn’t hit so close to home. “Well, I would have helped … had I’d known you needed help… if I weren’t so busy and had more time… or…if I knew what I could do.  At one time or another, I’ve worn all these gloves.  I mean hats.  Or in the case of my construction conehead I saw this morning, I’ve worn all these glove -hats.

But I wonder if the best teacher of altruism isn’t  adversity, as several from an older and more gracious generation made a point to let my sister and I know of their willingness to help… however we needed.  I’m told my maternal grandfather began to get his own breakfast — and that of my grandmother’s — after Granny suffered a mild stroke in 1962.   That would be seventeen years of breakfasts, before Granddad passed in 1979.  My mother’s family tend to speak more with actions than words, so I don’t imagine any words related to the new breakfast protocol were ever spoken.  Together they hit a bump in the road and together my grandparents compensated with their own sort of  detour, one that worked for them, even if it meant my grandfather had to do a bit of  ‘women’s work’ in the way of love.  

And how is it that, in the mysterious ways of love and of actions speaking louder than words, that I’ve just received word  that my husband is on his way home?  Two days early.  His work has hit an unexpected detour of its own. 

So help is on the way in the best way.  By the one who loves me most, outside of God.  And what more is there to say?  But this.  Thank God. 

A Black & White World

21 Thursday May 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Aging, Babysitting, Everyday Life, Parents, Writing

DSC04476_resizeKarson spent last Saturday night with me, bringing a few clothes tucked into her “Going to Grandma” minature suitcase.  After hurrying through a quick meal from McDonalds — Karson’s gift to  keep me out of the kitchen– we settled into our everyday rhythm of doing what any visit to Nana’s would be  incomplete without.

First, we played house in Karson’s basement stairwell kitchen.  The sign on the wall — “Karson’s Landing” — says it all.  With help from Kara, alias Aunt “KK”, I painted Karson’s Landing a nice ‘Tuscan Tan’ with heavy accents  of black and white.  But from Karson’s vantage point, the kitchen is mostly a world of black and white as the black trimmed white bead board is taller than her.

I created this space especially for Karson three years ago after running onto a rare find– a 1940s vintage children’s kitchen appliance set– at an antique shop in Sulpur.   My sister donated the cute minature drop leaf table and chair — just Karson-sized–and I outfitted her kitchen with a set of toy pots and pans and groceries.    As with many a gal, a little cooking goes a long way, so we soon closed the kitchen to move onto greener pastures.  

But the pastures weren’t green at all.  Instead they were black and white, from a favorite movie that tells the story of a young girl named Dorothy caught up in a twister with her little dog Toto too.  Up until a year ago, I had black Scottie dogs, so I think in Karson’s vivid imagination, I play the part of Aunt Em while she of course is Dorothy.  Karson even has her own pair of ‘ruby red slippers’ — purchased by this Nana Em — that she pulled out of her minature suitcase in anticipation of the big moment when Dorothy receives her slippers from the good witch.      

Karson’s favorite part of the movie is the black and white portion set in Kansas.  Once Dorothy puts on her ruby slippers — and once Karson slips on hers–  Karson and Dorothy part ways.  While Dorothy wanders down the yellow brick road, Karson’s eyes wander to other lands to be explored.  This time it was to another land of black and white, as her eyes fell on an old photo of Dad and Aunt Carol, taken in 1942, when they were just twelve and seven respectively.  Frozen in time and forever young, the two solemn children stand near a big tree and a stark two story house with two other young children.  

Karson picked up the photo and exclaimed, “These children live in the same color of world that Dorothy lives in.”   “Oh, that’s very true,” said this wizened not-so-old Nana.  “This photograph was taken a short while after “The Wizard of Oz”  first played on the silver screen.”  

Karson never asked me to explain what a silver screen was, but she wanted to know all about the children who happened to live in a black and white world like Dorothy’s.  I picked up the old photo and pointed out the oldest boy.  “That’s my daddy when he was twelve.”   Then I told Karson that the girl standing next to him was his sister and that the younger children in front of them were cousins.  I carefully removed the photo from its silver frame, remembering that just three years ago, I had written the names and the year the snapshot was taken, after posing my own version of Karson’s questions to Daddy.  I wish Karson could have known Daddy when he was younger, even just three years ago younger, because like her, Daddy’s just a dreamer, who enjoyed a good escape to the black and white world of old movies. 

My son Kyle wrote a piece about Daddy’s love of vintage movies in his first creative writing assignment, while in high school.  A copy of the short piece — titled “His Old Movie” — now rests on Daddy’s headboard.  As with most writers, Kyle is not especially enamored with his own writing and it took encouragement from others for Kyle to share his tribute with Daddy.  But while Kyle is not so taken with the words, I think Daddy took right to them, since the paper has that crumpled look of being read many times.  

Even now, Kyle’s last paragraph of “His Old Movie” ties up the loose ends of my own writing in a way that only Kyle can do, and in a way I hope Karson will someday echo. 

“Home is good; but, there is something about my grandparent’s house that can’t be found anywhere else.  I always look forward to coming here for Christmas, to the family, to the sirloin steaks, and perhaps to another night in the world of black and white.”

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