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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Parents

Another Chapter

22 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Tags

Aging, Death, Everyday Life, Friends, Hospice, Parents

Oh Daddy.  It’s been a terribly long day.

I hope you’re resting easier now.  I hope the fever is gone — that all the bedding changes, necessary but tiring, are over.  How many sponge baths did you endure today?

It’s been a day for wondering.  Biggest of all, I wondered where you are  — is this just another chapter in your ongoing struggle to stay alive?  Or have we turned the page to the final chapter and don’t yet know it?  I wish I could skip ahead, just like I do with a really good book when I’m too tired to stay up any longer to read, to see how you and this particular story are going to end.

The nursing home called Sis at 1:00 AM.  Listening to the litany of indecipherable clues, Christi finally had to ask, “Are you telling me to come?”    Surprisingly, there was no pause.  “If he were my father, I would.”   It really does help to cut through the vagueness with sharp, penetrating questions.  I need to remember to do this more often.

Christi threw on a jacket, brushed her teeth and picked up her eyeglasses and her purse before she hurried into the dark to sit by your side.  She could have woke up Jane to go with her.  But she decided to drive herself instead.

The drive was thirty minutes.  Quick.  No traffic.  She had a full tank of gas.  And by this time, Christi is a well-oiled machine.  Christi can respond to your distress calls with no need for help.  Wouldn’t you say, Daddy, that Christi has grown up a lot over the last eleven months?

Of course, just because we can doesn’t mean we should.  We aren’t made to go it alone, are we?  I know Daddy, how relieved you must have been to see Christi’s face when she walked in the door at 1:45.   Can you blame her if Christi wasn’t similarly relieved?

It didn’t take Christi but a few minutes to call me.  An hour and a half later I walked in with Jon.  It was 3:15.   Christi waited until a more decent  6:00 AM to call Jane.  And an hour later, Jane walked in with Aunt Jo.  Where else would mother’s sisters be, but by the remnants of mother’s family?

It was a long terrible day.  But Daddy, even though you were mostly oblivious to it all, there were moments of terrible beauty throughout it.

The hospice team we engaged are wonderful.  I can tell they are old pros at this business of compassionate dying.  I sense that they will steer us through whatever is to come.  The will let us know, the best that they can, where we are in your book of life.

Then there were all the kindnesses we received throughout the day.  Breakfast brought in by Jane.  Coffee and snacks made by Dottie, the manager of the nursing home kitchen.  All your nurses.  Everyone trying to make a painful process less trying.  It was only later that I thought that this is how it should always be, that we should always go out of our loving way for others.

Then there was your ever faithful sidekick Larry.  Larry didn’t at all appreciate being closed out by a wall of curtains.  I just smiled as he asked the nurse to  push back the curtains.  Larry wanted to keep his practiced eye on you.  I felt sorry for the nurse — in these days of HIPAA, what’s a compassionate nurse to do?  I offered her a helping hand — I  told her to please push back the curtains — that Larry was your family too.

What else is there to say at this point of the story?  But that I love you Daddy.  I hope you get a good night’s rest.  I hope the same for all who love you and us.  Because tomorrow promises to be another long day.  But don’t worry.  We’ll get through this.  We can hold hands through the scary parts.

Never on Sundays

28 Sunday Mar 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Tags

Aging, Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Parents

Daddy & Romeo

Use to be, folks would go calling on Sunday afternoons — long leisurely face-to-face visits rather than the at most, quick chats on the phone that suffice these days.

The visits often came by surprise.  At my grandparent’s house, the visitors were mostly family, who just dropped by to chat without making an appointment.  Invariably, the impromptu call would interrupt the standing Sunday afternoon domino or Canasta game taking place at the kitchen table.  But no one viewed this as a problem.  Those playing would put their game on ice, or put it all away for later, and they and their surprise guests would make their way to the living room to visit.

It was a different time then.  Certainly, the pace was slower.  But it was more a difference in attitude in that folks didn’t regard Sunday as just another day of the week.   For sure, you’d never have caught my Granny doing her shopping at Safeway on Sunday’s.  No, Ma’am.  Sundays were special.  Sundays were reserved for morning church and big lunches and gathering family and playing games.  And if some of the family that dropped in were unexpected, well, so much the better.

As my brother and I were making our way down to call on Daddy today, I was thinking about my grandparent’s unexpected Sunday visitors all those years ago — and how now,  every guest Daddy receives is an unexpected visitor.   Like a child, Dad has lost his ‘poker face’ skills, for Dad always wears that slightly befuddled look when he first sees us — rather than pretending to know who we are.

But today, Dad was actually at home.  And not just physically. Daddy pointed his finger at objects, his way of giving us his commands — like when he wanted to go to the bathroom, or be put into his recliner.  Daddy flipped through the newspaper I brought — and he really read a article on the sports page.  And as my brother and I were having  a conversation about our favorite Frank Sinatra tunes, Daddy followed our conversation, shaking his head in memory of songs he liked too.

I also told Daddy that his granddaughter Abigail turned sixteen today;  “Daddy, can you believe today is Abigail’s sixteenth birthday?”  And just like it was nothing special, Daddy shook his head ‘no’, in the wonder of it all.  And, of course, it was so incredibly special that Daddy shook his head at all, because in his shaking, Daddy connected with me in a moment of wonder that was, in and of itself, as wonderful as what we both wondered at together.

Our visit was exactly what a surprise Sunday visit should be:  The host received the treat of surprised guests and we, his guests, found our host home.  And like two little pigs who’d gone to market, my brother and I celebrated our good fortune all the way back home.

And then, because we all have to come back to earth and reality sooner or later, my brother asked me to take him to the market  so he could buy a  few groceries.  And though I could have picked up a few groceries myself, I decided to sit this one.

After all, why ruin a perfectly good Sunday with grocery shopping?

Spring at Heart

19 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Aging, Death, Everyday Life, Parents

The weatherman’s winter snow warning nipped tomorrow’s plan in their daffodil buds.

Instead of Jon and I going to see Dad tomorrow, it was my husband and I this afternoon, a spur of the moment decision to quickly go and get back, to get back before the big bad winter wolf showed up blowing at our door, threatening to huff and puff, and kill all my lovely spring green and flowers.  Will my daffodils freeze tomorrow?

It was a lovely day.  Today, not tomorrow, by all rites, should have been our first day of spring.  We floated on the air on my husband’s new wheels, with blue skies and warm balmy temperatures surrounding us.  I wish I had been able to carry a hint of spring into Daddy’s dark nursing home bedroom.  But this is real life I’m living —  not no Hollywood script.

We found Daddy hibernating, curled up in his recliner sound asleep, with an oxygen tube up his nose.  I looked at him sleeping so soundly — like all parents do when finding their young child asleep.  Then I leaned down to wake him — “Hey Daddy, I’m here.”   Three more gentle nudges finally caused Dad’s eyes to open slowly.  Dad looked slightly startled at first, as he greeted me with that frozen blank stare I’ve come to expect.

I think Dad finally placed me — but Dad never recognized my husband.  It’s been August since my husband has accompanied me — time enough for Daddy to forget I have a husband.  How long will Daddy know me, I wonder.  What if he really didn’t know me today — what if Dad didn’t know that he was my father and that I was his first-born daughter — what if he didn’t recall the life we once shared before he wore Depends that are not dependable, before he wound up in a nursing home, a dire prediction of my mother’s that he once laughed at?

Winter will not loosen its grip on life in this world.  The resurrection of spring that awaits most of us will meet Dad in another space beyond time.  Spring forward, fall back, who cares?  None of that funny timekeeping business bothers Daddy.

It’s winter from here on out.  It’s winter until it’s not.  It’s winter until eternal spring arrives to claim my Daddy’s heart.

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