Dad passed away yesterday, one week after I wrote the story below.
My Dad has cancer. Our family is now part of that club that no one wants to belong to. But once you’re in it, you’re forever a member. Your mind flashes back to all of the stories of friends and family from the past and suddenly you’re hearing them again. But this time, you’re hearing them in a language you actually understand. You’ve been initiated.
No more radiation, No more chemo. Dad is dying. The man
who raised my sister and me along with Mom. The man who left the house every
morning wearing a tie, a Mad Men-worthy hat with briefcase in hand. The man who
meticulously twist-tied every single light on the Christmas tree (sometimes a
2-day process) while we waited anxiously to hang the first ornaments. The man
who believed without a doubt that road trips were to be conquered with relish. And
the only good reason for a stop was an empty tank of gas. The fact that he
traveled with three females (two of whom had infamously small bladders) must
have been a great test of his will.
Enter bone cancer. It came into our lives quickly. After metastasizing
slowly from his kidney. A diagnosis at the end of March quickly escalated to
hospice three weeks ago. A new world. A different language. The club has new
members.
His request was (and still is) simple, really. “Let me die
at home.” Mom, 84 like him, bravely led the charge. But as quickly as the
cancer grew, so did the job. When I arrived to help out a few weeks ago, Mom was
exhausted on every possible level. She was going to do it all. Because that’s what people like my parents
do. I took her to ER the next morning.
That was the moment when it was time. Time for the child to
become the parent. My sister and I have shared the blurry trek from Washington
State to remote Northern New Mexico. There, we’ve helped order hospital beds,
moved furniture and art, coaxed Dad to suffer the indignities of helplessness as
he took on a quiet newfound dignity, even handed over driver’s licenses to pick
up the controlled substances that make him forget the terrible pain that is
eating his body. We learned to navigate the volunteer system, hire experienced caregivers in a small New Mexico town (“This isn’t Albuquerque you know,”) and
convinced Mom that yes, the retired minister neighbor and his outgoing wife,
yes, the neighbor who lost her husband to ALS and yes, the man who survived
cancer really do want her to call. They’re in the club after all.
This trip, I brought my two children. To see their grandpa.
To let him see them. In his brief good moments, he shared gifts and wisdom with
them. He openly stared at them as they sat, uncomfortable but sagely
understanding under the scrutiny.
We’re heading back home now.
An early goodbye with lots of hugs and quickly-wiped tears,
an hour and change drive to the closest public airport, a hefty layover and
then the last flight. Home stretch. My 12-year-old daughter and I decided to
watch the in-flight movie: A sappy, painfully predicable love story.
And then, I lost it. Have you ever seen anyone openly
sobbing during a ridiculously cheesy movie on a plane? That was me. My daughter
looked over with concern. I wiped the tears quickly and apologized.
She looked at me, said “it’s okay,” laid her head against
mine and gently patted my arm. In that moment the child once again became the
parent.