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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Writing

A Yankee Transplant

06 Saturday Jun 2009

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

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Aging, Death, Everyday Life, Mesta Park, Oklahoma Gardening, Parents, Writing

The old stressed Magnolia outside my window is blooming profusely this summer, which is not a good sign.  Sensing its days are numbered, the Magnolia is reproducing many seeds, in hope that some will land on fertile ground.  I often wonder how old the Magnolia is.  Was it planted back in 1928, when the home’s first owners moved into what is now Mesta Park?  If so, my tree would be close to Daddy’s age. 

I’ve an interest in knowing more about Daddy’s early days as well.  But he has no interest in me knowing.  This Saturday and last, I invited Dad to confirm bits and pieces of his childhood told to me by his sister, my Aunt Carol.  He ignores me.  But later, when I wonder aloud a simple question about the actors on an old Andy Griffith show we are watching together, he has no trouble getting his point across.   Only the trivial is worthy of a response.  

So Daddy’s past appears irrevocably closed.  I will not attempt to cross back to the land of his childhood again.  But today, I learned that even our shared past is full of unknowns, because my point of view is different than Daddy’s.  This lesson was brought home by thumbing through a travel journal I made Daddy seven years ago, on the occasion of his seventy-second birthday. 

The journal records memories of a vacation we took eleven years ago — Daddy, Christi, Don and I– when we stayed seven days in Ireland and three days each in London and Paris.   I kept a contemporaeous journal of our travels and I think it was Christi who put the bug in my ear that Daddy might enjoy a copy of my memories for himself.  So it was Daddy’s copy of the travel journal I picked up this afternoon, in an effort to share memories with Daddy, even while Daddy was off on his own travels in the land of  nod.  

At the end of my words on Paris, I was surprised to run across an entry in Daddy’s own handwriting, that seven years ago, was still strong and legible, rather the faint hieroglyphics it has become today.  Daddy’s memories of Paris were different than mine, he wrote, probably because he was older than me.  For one, Daddy loved seeing the bird’s eye view of Notre Dame and the Eiffel Tower, as we circled the city in the air on our arrival into Paris.  And he also expressed thanks that Don was willing to climb 160 feet of stairs to the top of the Arc de Triumph, for he didn’t think he would ever forget seeing eleven roads converge into one.   Simple things became unforgettable for Daddy. 

And though not simple himself, Daddy too will be unforgettable.  Though the rich and lovely memories that I share with Daddy alone… as well as the dark secrets of the past that remain unknown by any save Daddy… will all die with Daddy’s death.   When that happens, a small part of me will die too, because Daddy’s life and mine are intertwined, and his passing will leave me with unfillable void.  

No so with the old Magnolia outside my window.  And while I mean no disrespect, when this old girl dies, I’ll just plant another tree.   And it will not be another Magnolia or any other southern tree.  Rather, if such a thing exists, perhaps a nice Yankee tree, in memory of Daddy, that like Daddy himself, will prove a strong transplant for Oklahoma.  

Settling In?

04 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Aging, Death, Everyday Life, OKC Dining Out, Parents, Pixar movie 'UP", Robert Browning, Soul Care, Writing

Life is settling into a new everyday normal.  Don has been home from Beijing a week now, so life is good on the home-front. Meanwhile, when I saw Dad on Tuesday at his new home away from home — a rehab center in Seminole — he seemed to be settling a little more into his old self, in spirit if not in body. 

I know from experience that Dad’s condition is a day-by-day thing.  One day he seems to be on the rebound.  Two days later he’s in the ER, surrounded by his daughters and a sister-in-law.  Daddy’s condition teaches me that a good Tuesday is not a sign of a good Thursday or even a string of good days, but only ‘what is’ — that he is having a good day on Tuesday.

Even now, my Father teaches me.  And I am thankful for ‘what is’, rather than thankful for what I hope will be–a string of better days ahead for Daddy.   Being anchored in the present with a grateful heart keeps me from fearing what I cannot control, what one day will be, what one day will come unexpectedly too soon, which keeps at bay the worry and fear of what may be hiding around the next corner — or Thursday.

Today is Thursday.  And the last four Thursdays in Daddy’s life have been anything but settling.  Two ER visits, one almost ER visit that lessened into an unscheduled Friday doctor’s appointment and then, last week, making arrangements for Daddy’s rehab stay.   By any rights, I should fear seeing the face of  another Thursday, as they’ve brought nothing but bad news of late.  But instead, I choose hope rather than fear.  And instead of anxiety, it is peace that settles in all around me, like some warm soft blanket, fresh from the dryer on a cool Thursday night in June.

Living in the present moment creates an open spirit, a heightened awareness to see and receive unexpected gifts that would be easy to miss were I preoccupied with worry.  Last Sunday for instance, my family gathered in Norman for May’s movable feast, for some of Kyle’s favorite fast-food chicken, which is served up by Raising Cain’s.    The strength of numbers from the after-church crowd caused us not to settle into our choice large table for too long, but rather than adjourning to go our separate ways, we vacated to spend time in a nearby park and then decided to go see the new Pixar movie “UP”.  

I knew nothing about the movie when I signed ‘up’ to go.  And as I settled into my chair and into the latest installment of Disney — that offers something to children of all ages — I saw that the hero of the film looked a little like my Daddy: A lonely widower, who was something of a dreamy introvert, who was misunderstood and under-appreciated by the world, who was being forced, against his will, to give up his treasured home for a new life in a nursing home.   To see how all these elements that sound so down can become the source of moving ‘Up’ is better seen than explained.  And it is worth seeing.  I left the movie feeling up.   And with the feeling that it’s best not to become too settled, but to be open to whichever way the wind blows us.  And to hold everything and everyone in this world lightly, whether a treasured house packed full of memories or a treasured best-in-the-world Daddy.  Because, as Robert Browning wrote, all those years ago, the best is yet to be.

“Grow old along with me!
The best is yet to be,
The last of life, for which the first was made:
Our times are in His hand
Who saith “A whole I planned,
Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be afraid!”
Robert Browing, from Rabbi Ben Ezra 

 

Home Sweet Home

30 Saturday May 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Life at Home

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Tags

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.

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