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an everyday life

Tag Archives: Aging

The Final Word?

22 Wednesday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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Aging, Books, Death, Parents, Soul Care

There is something different about daddy. 

 

This week and last, daddy appears sad.   His eyes look sunken.  When I speak to him, it takes a while to capture his attention.  He goes from hanging on, as if he never wants to let go of my hand, to an almost complete withdrawal that is hard to describe.  While he’s there in body, his mind seems far away.  It’s a kind of blowing hot and cold, and I’m not sure if there’s a way to adjust the thermostat or whether we are past the point of fine-tuning.  Is Daddy’s body on its last legs?

 

I am sad.  Yet, I know Dad will be okay.  Not because he will continue to hobble along in this world, but because I possess this abiding sense that Dad’s life will continue in some altered state once his soul flies free of his body.  Daddy may be taking the first steps of his final dance on earth, but there will be other dances with partners more attractive than his much ignored walker and the walls and pieces of furniture he uses as support to shuffle his way around the house.

 

Some will find this all to be just ‘wishful thinking’ on my part.  “If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride.”   Or the cuter variation my friend Ann recited with her daughters, back in the days of young family when her husband Jack was still alive:  “If wishes were Crisco, then beggars would fry.”  In response to either of these proverbs, I would simply smile and echo the words my youngest ‘grand’ so often says.  “That’s otay.”  I’m not too bothered about what other’s choose to think about matters, like life after death, that are based solely on belief rather than first-hand experience.  It’s just as easy to believe as to not.  Or as expressed more eloquently by Blaise Pascal:  “In faith there is enough light for those who want to believe and enough shadows to blind those who don’t.”

 

But there are those near death experiences one reads about.  And those personal stories I’ve heard from others.  One story was from Ann in fact.  Hard to believe it happened almost four years ago now.  Her son-in-law Stuart was on his last legs, after a two year battle with leukemia.  When no more could be done, M.D. Anderson released him to Hospice.  And in an apartment within the Houston Medical Center complex, his wife and children gathered around Stuart to say a month’s worth of final good-byes. 

 

Close to the end, perhaps it was during Stuart’s last days, he shared a final gift with his gathered family.  Stuart told Ann that he had seen Jack, who by that time had been dead fourteen years.  From all my reading on death during my time as a Stephen Minister, this ability for the dying to see the dead is not uncommon.  I read a book written by two hospice nurses that reported case after case of near death experiences like the one Stuart shared with his family.  I pulled it out last night and begin flipping through it, wondering if my sister might like to skim though it as well.  Appropriately, the book is called Final Gifts.

 

This word ‘final’ that weaves through my words — final dance, final goodbye and final gift – I should not have used if death is not the final word. 

Empty Nest

07 Tuesday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care

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Aging, Career, Everyday Life, Prayer, Raising Children, Soul Care, Writing

It’s a rare day at home without plans.  The gorgeous day lies before me with endless possibilities.  What will I do?

 

Whatever it is, the day began on a high note when the phone rang and it was Kate Louise.  Phone calls from my daughter Kate are exceedingly rare as her days and nights are full with new life.  In her first year as a registered nurse, she works for an OB-GYN practice in Norman, and when she’s not doing that, she shares life with her new husband Glen and her new step-children Ryan and Tayler and her own two munchkins, Jackson and Karson. 

 

As I listen to her talk about her busting-to-the-seams life, what with baseball and softball practice and games and gymnastics and devoting Saturdays to caring for her step-daughter’s infant, I am reminded of my own history of career woman by day and Suzy Homemaker-by-night, in those days of young adulthood when anything seemed possible if I only worked hard enough, when I measured fullness of life more by the stuff packed in than the stuff unpacked.

 

As I write this, I realize that even now, life is too full.  Why else would I treasure this rare day of having no plans?  My fullness comes no longer from raising money and children, but raising flowers and God consciousness and maybe helping others to do the same, as I undertake plans toward certification in master gardening and in spiritual direction.

 

What is it with certifications anyway?  I am a certified public accountant, though I no longer practice.  When I did, I found certification did not make accountants better than they were before receiving their certificate.  By the same token, I’ve learned from working the master gardening ‘hope desk’ that certification means very little in the way of practical knowledge.   And I imagine it will be no different in serving as another’s spiritual director.  Maybe certification is merely a sort of good housekeeping seal of intention to practice what cannot lead to perfection.     

 

The practice I most enjoy these days is writing.  It’s one of two daily practices that force me to empty and regularly sort through my everyday life.  Both invite me to tiptoe closer to eternity, where time grows so heavy it stops and where busyness has no meaning.  Maybe if I’m lucky, some of my written words will survive my death, and until then, perhaps the clarity they shed will allow me to live larger than life.    

 

It’s ironic that I most enjoy the practices where certifications are not given.  While certifications have inspired others to listen to my words, and even to pay me for them, the best listening happens without want of certifying, as the words written and prayed just naturally seek the right audience.  And maybe my own audience is the most important of them all, as prayer and writing force me to listen to my own life.   

 

I will leave today empty of plans.  And with this intention written and prayed, already a sense of fullness invades.  I scoot over to make room in my nest for something larger than me.   

A Walk in the Park

01 Wednesday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in Home Restoration, In the Garden, Life at Home, Mesta Park

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Tags

Aging, Dog Tales, Mesta Park, Oklahoma Gardening

This old tree-lined neighborhood is made for walking.  With such a small back yard, our poodles lobby heavily for their daily walks.  They get a bit of restless leg syndrome without one and so do their owners, whether admitted or not.     

 

When I take them, we always walk in the park and then wind around the streets of my favorite houses and gardens.  Like the senior citizens they are, some homes have aged gracefully while others need tending to, as they suffer from a few cracks and sags.  The worst is the poor house missing its front teeth – its chimney has lost its top bricks.  I wish its owners would invite a mason to take care of this poor old snaggletooth.  

 

I am faithful to seek out one old house on every walk.  Its gardens are still neatly outlined in vintage scalloped wire edging, but the plantings they keep are scraggly or overgrown.  The grass resting in front of the gardens has some big bald spots and the bird bath beneath the tree is inhospitably dry.  On the porch sit some vacant melon green vintage chairs.  The closed door and drawn shades shut-in its occupant, who no longer gardens or watches sidewalk traffic.  The house invites me to prayer as I pass by.      

 

Sometimes a house tells a story, to any who attend to its changing condition.  Upon first introduction, the home is in a state of decline.  Then, the house goes up for sale.  An estate sale may follow.  Then big dumpsters appear as the home goes through reconstruction.  With each passing walk, you can detect small changes to the home’s exterior that hints to dramatic changes taking place inside.  Finally, a new family moves in and plants a new garden.  It’s always out with the old and in with the new as landscapers make more money with complete makeovers.  I wish they would hold estate sales for the old surviving plants – I bet they long for a fresh start too.     

 

Three times a year guests descend in mass to visit this old neighborhood.  Later this month, folks will line the sidewalks and curbs to cheer on running athletes as our streets turn into a race course for the city’s annual Memorial Marathon.  In September, the neighborhood hosts a big party they like to call ‘Mesta Festa’.  City residents are invited to drop in and enjoy a little old fashioned hospitality, as Mesta Park becomes a playground for both old and young, with food, drinks and live jazz.  The final mass visitation occurs in early December, when a carefully selected collection of modest bungalows and stately two-stories dress up for the holidays and open their doors for public viewing.  What is officially called the Holiday Home Tour my husband calls ‘Mesta Besta’.    

 

Mesta Park is home to many wonderful people and dogs.  But it’s the old homes, whether on tour or not, that are the best of Mesta.  The rest of us are just passing by.   

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