24 September 2017

The Canyon


There’s a canyon in my chest, and I am afraid I will fall in it if I wander too close the edge.  There are some rickety steps that descend along the wall, but no handrail.

I wonder what’s down there, though.  It feels uncomfortably hot, like a humid Thursday in early August with no breeze.  My throat closes at the thought of trying to breathe in that atmosphere – it’s so different than the normal air up here.

So I’m not venturing down there.  Screw it, I’ll just live nearby but stay away from it.

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The excavation began back on August 3rd, 2017, when I got one of those few calls that everyone gets at some point in their lives.  You know the calls I mean – where the caller hesitates for a few moments before delivering some news that they know you don’t want to hear, and they sure as hell don’t want to be the one to tell it to you.  My sister called to say that our father had a stroke and was being admitted to the same hospital where he was born and where all of our babies have been born for the last two generations.

She found him around 5 p.m., sitting where he always sits at his kitchen table, laptop open and cable news on the television.  He was barely conscious, mouth hanging slack, and no one will ever be able to tell us how long he’d been that way.  He’d spoken to his sister earlier that day to talk about plans for the day, but then he didn’t answer the phone when a friend called around 2 p.m.

So – my sister called to deliver the news and to get my agreement with the neurosurgeon’s recommendation to do an emergency embolectomy.  This is where they go into your brain and remove the offending blood clot.  Without the surgery, he would certainly die – but with it, he had a chance at some rehabilitation and recovery. 

Easy decision. 

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Between August 3rd and early September, we had our dad.  Though the doctors said he’d lost 2/3 of his brain function, he seemed to be recovering.  I visited twice during these weeks and took turns with my sisters and aunt in sitting with him, keeping him company, and encouraging him during rehab sessions. 

He rambled and talked at length, with flashes of complete lucidity followed by a conversation with his long-departed parents.  His swallowing function never came back, and he would plead with anyone who would listen to get him a Diet Coke, sometimes demanding that somebody better get him a f*#king Diet Coke or else.

His dog Pete (a mixed breed but mostly Bichon Frise) had been certified as a service animal several months prior, so Pete came up to the hospital and spent hours sleeping at the foot of Dad’s bed or sitting in his lap.

He stood up and was able to take several assisted steps in physical therapy; he learned how to shave and brush his teeth again;  he played “bat the balloon” with the occupational therapist, never once letting the balloon hit the floor.  He told funny stories to visitors, flipped birds at his sister, complained about the tiny Asian therapist who he called Tokyo Rose and accused her of tormenting him.

He held my hand while I read Psalms to him for our own little Sunday service one morning, and he closed his eyes while I quietly sang “Great Is Thy Faithfulness” to him and to Pete.  I like to think he was enjoying it, although he may well have been thinking, “dear Jesus, please make her stop”.  

But he got pneumonia.  And diverticulitis.  And he fell out of bed.  And things generally went to hell in a handbasket from there.

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I won’t belabor the grim details of his last ten days or so.  I am going to leave them down there in that boiling canyon in my chest and hopefully they will be incinerated because I don’t ever want to think about them again.

On Monday morning, September 11th, we decided to have him undergo a palliative care assessment.  This is where they weigh out the pros and cons of continuing rehabilitative and recovery efforts versus “comfort care” with lots of morphine and support for an easy departure.

It was (mostly) a straightforward decision.  I can never call it an “easy” decision, for there was nothing easy about it.  NOTHING.

The palliative care team said that it would probably be a few days before Daddy took his last breath.  So I booked a plane ticket for first thing Tuesday morning and made arrangements to stay in Tennessee for at least the next week.

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Daddy has been late for every appointment, every event, every meal, every everything for his entire life.  Years ago, we coined the phrase  “Morton Standard Time” to describe the alternative schedule by which he set his own clock (and sadly, many others of us seem to have inherited or adopted ourselves.)

But on Monday evening, September 11th at 9 p.m. eastern, he left early.  After all, he had someplace to be.

Am I mad, or hurt, or disappointed that I wasn’t there to see him off?  Maybe, selfishly, a little disappointed… holding my mother’s hand when she drew her last breath is one of the most treasured memories I will ever have.  I thought I’d have a matching version when it was his time, too.

But alas, once again God’s timing is perfect and well-ordered and completely off-script from my game plan, and Dad’s suffering ended shortly after his third palliative dose of morphine.

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And so the augur was set, chewing through my sternum and organs and leaving the hot and miserable canyon initially described herein.  The next few days were incredibly busy what with planning and well-wishers and lots of food and others in need of comfort for their grief.  There was no time to contemplate my own grief.  So I shoved it down in the hole and kept moving.

Dad wanted to be cremated, but the funeral home allowed me a private visit with his body for a couple of hours on Wednesday afternoon. 

When they opened the door to the room where he lay in a plain casket, I gasped and literally took a step backwards.  There was that beak, sticking up from a pillow inside of a box.  Those big dopey Dumbo ears that he could wiggle on command (and I can, too!)  Longish gray and brown curls – we’d never managed to get his barber to visit him in the hospital.  Dismissing any thoughts of decorum, I put my head on his big barrel chest and sobbed on him and at him.

But the chest was silent, hard, cold – empty.  And I knew he wasn’t in there anyway.  This was just the package that the soul of my father occupied for 76 years.  Seventy-six years of good, full living with plenty of chaos and drama and love and heartbreak and fun.  Lots of fun.   Boxes can only take so much fun before they wear out.

My grief poured out all over that old box before they took it for cremation later that afternoon.  But grief doesn’t incinerate.

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I have done my share of crying in the 8 days since then.  I arrived at 9:59 before his 10 a.m. graveside service (Morton Standard Time, and it wasn’t on purpose), and I sat with my despair and my sisters and brothers on the front row of folding chairs in front of a small black box.  And I wept.  And wept, and wept and wept.  Then I wept some more.  Then it was time to go. I put a little Diet Coke next to the little black box and we all got up and left.

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I’d written his obituary earlier that week, and I’d decided that I’d like to say a few words at his memorial service.  I wrote out my thoughts in a couple of draft versions … but I didn’t finalize them until the last 15 minutes before the memorial service began.  After my earlier disintegrations, folks including myself were nervous that I wouldn’t be able to deliver a coherent message.

As many folks later said, that was the best funeral they’d ever attended.  Not so much because of what I said, but because there was so much love and joy filling the room.  If you were among the lucky friends and family who were there last Friday afternoon, then you’ll know what I mean.  God was present, offering comfort and peace… and when it was time for me to talk, I felt Daddy there, supporting me and cheering me on and saying, “you’ve got this, Baby Girl.”

And so for the last time on this side of heaven, I think I made my Dad proud.  Here is what I said:

How are you today?
I’m just fine, thanks for asking. 
How about you?  You fine?
Well, it certainly is a fine day to honor a fine man.

That’s what folks have always said to me about Dad… that he is a fine man. Not the “he’s so fine” sense (well maybe some of y’all did, but he’s my dad.  Don’t be gross.)    But more along the lines of a “fine, upstanding citizen”. 

These are not words that my father would use to describe himself.  Dad considered himself a rascal, a scalawag, a scoundrel.  And he thought that being a “fine upstanding citizen” was something that would always be just a little bit beyond his reach.

Now why is that?  After all, he’s from one of Knoxville’s finest families, and he grew up in this fine neighborhood, in this fine church.  He taught me to ride a bike in the parking lot of Reed’s Fine Foods right across the street.  He had many of the “finer things” growing up that others didn’t have, and his parents were truly fine, upstanding citizens themselves. 

But he made mistakes along the way – some little bitty ones, and some doozies.  Somehow he’d gotten the idea that fine people are perfect.  Fine people don’t have guilt, fine people don’t cuss or drink J&B or eat too much red meat.

I think Dad chased the notion of becoming a fine man his whole life – and I think most of us would agree that he got there a long time ago.  You see, my dad is absolutely with his Savior Jesus Christ right now.  I am not crying for poor old pitiful me anymore (you shoulda seen me this morning though).  I am celebrating that our Jan is hanging out with Buddy and P-tee and Normie and Fred and his mom and dad – and his sweet sweet Ruthie.  He’s probably even passed a kind word with Linda and Mildred.

If you ever went anywhere with Jan, you knew it was going to be a while before you got back.  He had to stop and talk to EVERYBODY.  It drove me crazy when I was little – what on earth did he have to talk about, and for heaven’s sake, why did it take so long?  As I got older, mid-teens maybe, I noticed that it really didn’t matter who he was talking to – it was going to take however long it was going to take, and it didn’t matter if he was talking to a Fortune 500 CEO or the kid bagging his groceries.  He was going to visit a minute, and maybe ask about their mom, and then he’d be ready to go on.

You see, our dad loved everyone for who they are, not what they have or do.  He just loved PEOPLE.  He loved all y’all. He loved us – he loves us still.

And that old rascal who thought he was always going to be a black sheep -  he has been white as snow for a long long time.  Rest high on that mountain, Dad.  There will never be one finer.

The canyon is still there, and I’m still afraid of looking too close and or falling in.
 
But it doesn’t look quite as deep as I thought it was yesterday.