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an everyday life

Tag Archives: Death

The Spirit is Willing

30 Thursday Jul 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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Aging, Death, Everyday Life, Parents, Soul Care

Mom was always a little blue on dreary days like this.   But rather than fight it, Mom simply followed the sun by going undercover as she put aside her normal productive activities to stay in bed with one of her treasured Harlequin romances.  Mom’s books were a lifelong passport to happier places, even if only to the land of sleep and dreams.     

What is it about the dark that inspires us to rest, like a bear hibernating for the winter?  Last Saturday I walked into my father’s dark nursing home room in the middle of the day to find him curled up in a recliner sound asleep.  These days our roles are polar opposites; where Daddy once woke me back to life, it is now me beckoning him to do the same.  I reached out my hand to open the blinds to invite in the bright sunny day, then for added insurance, I reached out my hand to turn on Daddy’s bedside lamp to flood the space with soft reading light.  Finally, I reached out my hand to softly touch Dad’s shoulder. But the hand that worked so well to bring light and life from the blinds and the lamp fared less well with Daddy.   

As peaceful as a young babe, Dad’s face was wiped free from the cares of living, where unable to exercise his own free will, Daddy is shuffled and wheeled and carried about like a fragile piece of antique furniture at the wills and occupation of others.  As I remember Daddy trying to wake up, I liken it to the truth of those ancient words–the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak–spoken by someone greater than I who was very much in the know.  While Daddy was glad to see me, he could not will his vacant eyes to stay open.  And rather than helping Dad fight it, I surrendered my father to the healing powers of a warm blanket and the cover of darkness.

As I watched Daddy sleep, I wondered where his dreams were taking him.  I hoped for some happier place, to that mystical font where deepest dreams come true.  Lately my dreams have consisted of unhappy places; I find myself stuck in a turnstile at an airport with heavy luggage that–though too large to carry on board–I refuse to relinquish.  And while I keep missing flight after flight and feel anxious to reach my unknown destination, I am stuck between that proverbial rock and a hard place.  I refuse to give up my precious bags and I refuse to give up my journey.  So I struggle for something to jar me loose, like a needle struck in the groove of a scratched LP record I wait for that helping hand to shove me through the turnstile so that I can play the next ring of the tune, until I know how this dreary dream will end.      

What seeds of experience or longing breed such dreams within us?  And of those of my beloved father, who hopefully sleeps without memory of the clumsy and unsteady feet which hold him back from his own hoped-for destiny of his home on the hill?  Here of late, I’ve been left to wonder whether my recurrent dream has anything to do with Daddy.  While I am no interpreter of dreams, I suspect that those precious bags I refuse to part with are full of my hopes and dreams for Daddy’s recovery.  And that I am in some fruitless tug-of-war for Daddy’s spirit, engaging with the invisible powers who wait for me to graciously turn over my bags to their safe care and handlng.    

Even now, I sense those spirits of the invisible world may be calling Dad’s spirit home, far away from the home that I have in mind.  Like St. Paul, Daddy has indeed fought the good fight; Dad’s past month’s progress is proof of what sheer willpower can do.  And while Daddy may not yet be ready to join Mom in the happily-ever-after, Saturday’s visit was a reminder that the human spirit is both strong and fragile; capable of great hope and susceptible to instant despair.    And though I did not suspect it  at the time, the spirit I called sadness that day was instead a precursor to yet another medical setback, as today, Daddy is resting alongside IV tubes at another hospital in Seminole.   

Whenever Daddy lands on the space called ‘Hospital’, I always fear that the biggest good-bye of them all is waiting just around the corner, a few steps beyond the turnstile.  When I’m finally shoved through, will I then gracefully release my precious burden for its journey, and like the not-so-big girl that I am, just cry and wave my hand good-bye.  No, probably not.  I’ve never been good at saying good-bye in my life.   And the mere thought of Daddy being among the ‘dearly departed’ is not something I’m yet ready to grasp.  My flesh is weak and my spirit unwilling.   

Lake Wanderings

23 Thursday Jul 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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College Sports, Death, Everyday Life, Raising Children, Soul Care, Travel, Writing

My husband is on his way to Lake Eufala.  I wish I was heading east too.  But  someone has to stay behind to keep our canines corralled, to prevent ‘The  Wild West Show’ from galloping across Mesta Park.  And this time around, that someone is me, though Annie Oakley I am not.  

It’s never easy to say goodbye to Don.  Even for today’s overnight visit.  One might think I would be quite practiced at this art of well-wishing and putting on a brave front at the point of departure.  But maybe saying good-bye is less a fine art than it is a science, for Lord knows, I was never good at science.

The poodles could teach me a thing or two about their science of saying good-bye.  It’s the same formula every time, as Max and Maddie–letting their love hang out for all the world to see–run around in aggitated circles until they finally come to terms with the sad news of impending departure.  Then, in acceptance, they stand up on their hind legs to catch that final glimpse of their departing loved one, as the car backs  out of the driveway.   Just like children, the poodles don’t worry about keeping their true feelings on ice.  Nor do they mind making the dearly departed feel a little like a heel for leaving them behind. 

Sending Don to the lake is my gift to Don and to his Mother.  Monday she called, to say that she and Don’s step-dad were taking Micalea to the lake.   Micaela is Janice’s only great-granddaughter, and as if that isn’t enough to make her special, Micaela is the living legacy of Janice’s favorite grandson Michael.  It’s not fair to have favorites, whether it be children or grandchildren.  But favorites sometimes exist, whether or not openly acknowledged.  And, quoting all moms everywhere: “who said life was fair?”  Or death, for that matter.  Especially the kind that took Mike in a horrible car crash four years ago this December.

The news of the crash made the AP wire, as Mike and his best friend Darrell–who then played for the Oakland Raiders–had played football together at USC.  The AP reporting and all the other articles that sprang up out of the crash created a big splash at first–but as with all concentric circles created by a big splash, the outward edges have grown faint with the passage of time.  But meanwhile, at the dark hole center that swallowed Mike’s life, where those closest to Mike remain to live and love, the wounds of his too early departure are still sharply felt.  By some the wounds of loss are endured silently.  By others not so.     

Yet healing awaits for those who wander away to the lake house, for memories of happier times continue to live at that modest place that sits on a grassy hill overlooking the water.  Most of the year it stands empty, waiting to offer a bit of healing to those who come, an innocent kind of magic born from the mixture of happy children and hot summer days.  The best childhood memories were born into my children at this place.  And I imagine the same was true for Mike, as I recall his happy ten year old face as he skied across the lake twenty-three summers ago.  And while she won’t be skiing, I hope Micaela’s ten year old face is also now glowing with happiness that will one day grow into the loveliest of memories.      

As my mind wanders back in time, I realize that this is Micaela’s second visit to the lake, though her first came courtesy of her mother’s womb.  Don was at the lake that summer too, as Janice was most anxious about Mike marrying at such a young age–for knowing Mike as she did, she feared his plans for a rushed marriage might stem from a sense of duty rather than love–so Don was there to offer his rock-steadying presence.  Of course, once the family met Micaela’s mom, and saw how well she fit in and how well she loved Mike, there was a whole lot less to worry about.   

A part of Mike’s love rests in Micaela.  And eleven years later, a remnant of those who loved Mike surround his daughter, to help her create her own special brand of memories.  Somehow, I hope Micaela’s memory-making will transcend the bounds of time to reach out to wherever her father now plays in eternity.  Maybe spirits of our past selves wander across the face of the lake and maybe our current selves do too, whether they rest in the now or in the forever more.  If so, then I believe Mike and I are gathered at the lake house too, cheering Micaela on as she mixes up a little summer magic, enough that makes us thank God we’re alive in the spirit.  

Ghosts of Summers Past

06 Monday Jul 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Death, Everyday Life, Jessmore Family, New York, Oswego, Parents, Travel, Writing

Our unseasonably cool weather, in combination with other goings on in my life, has conjured up memories of  summers past, where my own childhood connected with that of my father’s, though at the time I didn’t recognize it as such.   

Traveling east on summer vacations always landed us at the home of Aunt Daisy, who was sister to my father’s mom, and for an unknown amount of time, surrogate mom for Daddy and Aunt Carol.  It was a different time really, when guests traveled to stay with family rather than at some local inn, and when hosts never made guests feel unwelcome, even when they arrived with their entire household in tow.  For my Aunt Daisy, this entailed my parents, my Greek grandfather–who by that time had taken up residence with my parents– and whatever children my parents had at the time. 

I was around for four such trips, though I’ve no memories of the first which took place the summer following my birth.  But by the time I teetered on the age of kindergarten, and we had ventured back for our second serving of a cool summer in upstate New York, I was able to latch onto a couple of memories for posterity, and though neither is remarkable, they are precious all the same, in the way that every day is a brand spanking new adventure in the life of a child. 

The spankings from my brand new adventures always came from Mom rather than Dad, though I heard my Aunt Daisy tell a story more than once — the kind that grows to the stuff of legend through the sheer number of tellings–of Daddy once bringing himself to slap my hand, accompanied with a quiet wavery voice saying  “NO, NO”.   I could tell that my Aunt Daisy relished the story’s telling — of  ‘Jackie’s’ feeble attempt at parental discipline–for it was always accompanied by such riotous laughter.    So it was probably Mom rather than Dad who helped make the memories of a bedeviled goat and a forbidden staircase–both childish lures to my own fascination–stick to my memory, compliments of her hand on my small childish behind.    

By our third visit to Oswego, I had come into my own way of storing memories, without further guidance of Mother’s hand.  I was ten the summer we descended onto the doorstep of Daisy’s new home, which in a former life, served as the old country school house.  The summer days were ripe for picking and preserving memories, as even today, I can rummage through the cellar where I’ve stored my oldest and best memories to recall a moving picture of my young and vital father throwing smooth stones, as big as my adult hand, into Lake Ontario, after our family had consumed a simple supper of fried fish sandwiches at a local fish stand, prepared by my daddy’s very own Aunt Gib; I can see our young family taking a small road trip to enjoy another part of the lake with a picnic lunch and a swim with Gib and Daisy and some young cousin my age (was his name Kip?) the very day Gib introduced us to the taste of Mountain Dew soda pop; and then there’s the big reunion picnic my Aunt Daisy hosted in honor of Daddy’s homecoming, which was held in Aunt Daisy’s backyard, with food and people galore spread all over her picnic tables beneath her cool and inviting grape arbor.  The memory of Daisy’s grape arbor inspired me to have one built for Mom and Dad, that still stands today near the foundation of my maternal grandmother’s home, just steps from Daddy’s house.   

But the loveliest everyday memories were made on Aunt Daisy’s enclosed back porch, where she and my parents and an assortment of drop-in guests would while away the afternoon while sharing snippets of stories about their shared past.  While the adults were talking, we kids would entertain ourselves with a huge chalkboard parked on the porch.  Several of the aunts and uncles took notice of the quality of my drawings, but by the time we had returned for our fourth and final visit, Aunt Daisy thought I had lost some of my talent.  Knowing what I now know, the loss of any artistic ability was minor compared to the losses suffered to my true and original self.    

I remember shaking off Aunt Daisy’s comment like a dog with a pesky flea, just as I had learned to shake off other hurtful comments from the intervening years, that had taught me the need to become a person that the world might like better, than that naive girl who had once enjoyed receiving adult accliam for some blackboard pictures.  And raging teenage hormones and cosmetics were helping me in my transformation, as these days I much preferred to draw on my new face. 

The night of our fourth arrival,  Aunt Daisy showed us to our rooms amidst whispers that her husband had just been diagnosed with cancer a few weeks before.  So the visit of 1969 was more somber in spirit — no parties, no reunions, though everyday life on Daisy’s back porch went on.  A few days into our visit, Aunt Daisy– thinking she was doing me a favor– advised me to relax rather than to bother with cosmetics, as there would be no guests around, onlya bit of  family now and then.   But finding her suggestion silly, I chose to hide behind my face paint;  and she, sitting on the other side of the porch, probably found me silly for going to so much trouble for no good reason.     

Forty years later I sit here and smile, with a clean face and still no ability to draw–except for whatever gift I possess in painting images with words– and still full of memories of those ghosts of summers past.  Perhaps these ghostly memories haunt me for a reason, as I am left to wonder why Daddy refuses to talk about them.  And it is Daddy’s very silence that has spurred me to take matters into my own hands– accepting help from friends and lucking onto a fruitful website that holds pieces of Daddy’s puzzling life– that I now hold copies of old census records from the 1920s and 1930s and some old newspaper stories of Daddy’s family, including a sizable article reporting his mother’s fatal car crash and a few obituaries scattered across the decades of Dad’s aunts and uncles, who are now truly ghosts of summer’s past.

It is difficult to reconcile Dad’s desire to pay visits to his mother’s family against the painful memories that Daddy’s childhood holds.   Maybe the visits were a way of Daddy reconciling his past with his new life and wife, a way of  showing his mother’s family that a good future can come from a sorry past, and that forty years later, I now see teaches me the same lesson.  Perhaps we trekked back east so Daddy could share bits and pieces of his childhood story in the way that he could.  Not with words, but with the important faces of his life.

However the visits came to be, I am thankful for the memories and even the bit of light they still shed onto Daddy’s shadowed history.  And  I hope that these visits somehow helped my father lay some of his own childhood ghosts to rest.

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