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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Life at Home

Travel Light

20 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Aging, Death, Everyday Life, Parents, Soul Care, Travel

My husband is the consummate traveler through life.  He rents his books, buys only the clothing he needs, and rarely makes spur-of-the-moment purchases.  He’s no different when it comes to real traveling; he travels light, packing only the bare bone essentials into a carry-on bag if possible.  

Being his complete opposite, I live a more settled existence, surrounded by a lovely home chock-full of stuff, most of which needs to be washed or dusted.  It’s far too easy for me to accumlate stuff and one look into my library reveals my most glaring weakness for books.  And when it comes to closets, I figure I’m not the only gal in this world to have stored three sizes of clothes for almost ten years in the hope I might one day wear that smallest size again.  Moving to Oklahoma became my day of reckoning, as I came to terms with the likely reality that I will never again wear a size six;  and moving to a historic home with very small closets made those size sixes much easier to part with. 

But my nest is feathered light compared to my mother’s.  Mom always was a pack rat, though once she and Dad settled into retirement, Mom became even more earnest about the business of accumulation.  At the time of Mom’s death, she left the equivalent of two double car garages and one house stuffed to the gills.  And with Daddy’s failing health, I fear my sister and I will soon be forced to reckon with our scary inheritance.  

Sitting with my frail father has instructed me on the art of traveling light as Daddy inches closer to death.  These days, Daddy is not interested in the daily happenings of the world, as reported by the local newspapers.  Nor is Daddy imersed in life as depicted by his once favored television shows.  As Daddy skinnys down his life to the bare bones, Daddy has even discarded a few people that once held importance.  I happen to be one of them.  And while it hurts to unintentionally fall between the cracks of Daddy’s short attention span, I understand that in some godawfulway (yes, one word, said real fast), Daddy is not really Daddy anymore.

More often than not, Dad’s spirit travels as light as a feather to only God knows where.  Our visits of late remind me a lot of my final visits to my mother’s ICU bedside.  And though Dad is not in a coma, Dad is still unaccessible.  At best our visits are a  series of one-side conversations punctuated by golden silence.   Yet at times something mysterious will grab Dad’s attention and Daddy will point his finger to a spot somewhere over my shoulder.  I turn around to nothing, but sense that Daddy is seeing something that only Daddy can see.  Perhaps some spirit from the invisible world has come to help Daddy learn what it really means to travel light? 

Too soon.  Daddy will be traveling toward the light.

Child’s Play

15 Saturday Aug 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Home Restoration, In the Garden, Life at Home

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Books, Cooking, Everyday Life, Julia Child, My Life in France, Play

This week I’ve felt three friendly nudges inviting me to play.  I ignored the first, wondered at the second and am pausing at the third.  Perhaps it’s time to hit ‘Play’?  If only I could fine the right button to push.

Adult play is not that easy.  I’m not even sure what it looks like.  Is it going to the movies, or is it writing, or is it gardening?  I know for sure it’s not housework.  Or driving.  Or going to the grocery store. 

Before entering first grade, I knew exactly what play was.  It was a life of innocence removed from the ticking of clocks or the nonticking of human hearts.  I lived a life ‘below time’, to use a phrase of Frederick Buechner’s.   Mother would tell me, “Hurry up, it’s time to go.”  And I didn’t.  My first grade teacher would yell at me to “Pay attention”.  And I wouldn’t.  Instead, I lived in my own little world of make believe, a place safe from the likes of hurries and grumpies.  

When I was little, no one ever had to tell me:  “Wake-up. It’s time to get out of bed.”  If I was awake, I was out of bed.   That is, until I learned about school.  

At child’s play, I was immersed in my own little world.  My patch of grass was just fine.  I wasn’t worried about keeping up with my neighbors, even if they were playing a nice competitive game of tennis.  

  Janell Yard

At child’s play, I was my own person.  I felt no need to fit in or to fein interest in what was not of interest;  if my cousin Mike was involved in water play, it didn’t mean I had to be.  

Janell Porch

At child’s play, I was not self-conscious.  If I didn’t have the  the right stuff, that didn’t stop me from jumping in feet first.

Janell Pool

So where is play?  Here’s my answer for now.  I believe play happens whenever we forget outselves and our limitations and the rest of the world and its limitations and the time clock and its limitations.  We get lost and aborbed in another world.  Maybe it’s a good book that we don’t want to end.  Or a good moive.  Or for me, a wonderful renovation project, a garden or prayer or writing.  

For Julia Child it was cooking.  Defying the odds and limitations, My Life in France tells the story of how Julia earned her certificate from Le Cordon Bleu and went on to become America’s First Lady of Food.  I was so inspired by Julia’s autobiography that I promptly purchased Mastering the Art of French Cooking.  I opened the cookbook, found it scary and promptly put it on a shelf, where it has gathered dust every since.   

Mastering the Art of French Cooking was not a waste of money however.  I learned that Julia was a master chef because cooking was pure Child’s play for Julia.  I also learned that I do not wish to master French cooking or any other kind of cooking.  I am happy merely to play at cooking. 

Are We There Yet?

08 Saturday Aug 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aging, Are we there yet?, Death, Everyday Life, Hospice, Nursing Homes, Parents, Prayer, Road Trip

We call something science when the reactive outcome is predictable between types of matter; like when two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen react to form water; and when water, yeast and flour react to form bread dough;d'oh and when…“D’oh!”…a child reacts to a long road trip to form that predictable whiny line:  “Are we there yet?”

This children’s query popped out of my own mouth unexpectedly this week while speaking with the director of nursing at ‘Dad’s’ rehab center.  But in the crazy way that life works out, this question from my past frames so precisely the most nagging question of my present; for in fact, these last two weeks of my father’s life feel a lot like one of  those long and whiny road trip’s of my childhood.

Same as then, Dad is in the driver’s seat, a little blind to all the nuances of the medical calamities he’s running over, to all the danger signs he’s ignoring, to all the exit ramps he’s missing; just like then, Daddy is lost, and I think he’d like one of us kids to take over at the wheel.  My sister and I have the power if not the desire; it’s our hope that Daddy will make his own health decisions as long as he’s able and willing.  But then and now, Daddy shies away from decision making; and so different from then, Dad no longer has Mom to play navigator. 

DSC01674aWhat seems clear to all is that Dad has suffered a major setback.  He’s passed through dehydration, where we found the state of pneumonia and then through dysphagia toward the current state of feeding tubes.  Dad has taken in sights that he hoped to never see.  Daddy is worn out; he sleeps most of the time and when he’s awake he seems far away.  But whether or not he sleeps, Daddy’s sad.  And this makes me sad too.     

So I’m lost.  I confess to not knowing Dad’s current medical state.  Nor do I know in which direction Dad’s heading; is Daddy becoming better, becoming worse, or lost somewhere in between?  I’ve no map, no landmarks, no navigator, not even a hunch.  And while my sister and I talk all around it, the only thing we can scavenge up for sure is that there is something very different about Daddy. 

Looking for that elusive reality check is what took me to the director of nursing.  And not one to beat around the bush, I came right out with my questions:  “Was it time for us to call in hospice?”  “Are we there yet?”

I know these questions are difficult to answer, even for someone who practices in the medical field.  Medical science is not as predictable as the other branches of science since the human element makes all reactions unique.  And even if it were, the nurse doesn’t know Daddy and we who do have no medical background.  So overall, it’s the blind leading the blind. 

For who but God can put together the pieces, to know where Daddy is right now and in which direction Dad is heading.  But it’s the nurse’s sense that we are not yet ready for hospice because we are not there yet.  And so we wait.  We wait to see where Daddy will take us next.  As we wait for the gift of hindsight to inform us later of where we are now.  And for now… I simply pray for travel mercies. 

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