Thursday, December 10, 2009

WINTER



It’s the first “real” one in 25 years. We drove down the mountain last Saturday in a fine snow and headed out to Gettysburg for our anniversary weekend. The snow flew horizontally against the windshield and though it wasn’t yet sticking to the road, the pines began to take on a light coat. No deer around that day. We wondered where they huddled.

The first four months of our new adventure have been rich and comforting. All the rolling farmland in nearby Virginia and Maryland changes its appearance daily as the slanting of the light moves toward the solstice. Rain, too, has been frequent but even rain looks different through the late autumn colors in our wooded yard. Our big kitchen is the heart of our new home and I find myself cooking old recipes from cards that have stains going back to the Warwick days!

Both of the girls were with us Halloween weekend and Liza has been out a few times since. She catches the late Friday train with me and we shop together on Saturday or get our hair done. Diana will be back for Christmas and Neil will join her. Jon will be back soon from a brief assignment in the Philippines. We bought a ping pong table and set up a movie room in the basement for those nights between Christmas and New Years when they’ll all be home.

It’s only now that we can reflect on the move, after the craziness of the furniture delivery and the huge adjustment to the long commute. It does feel normal now and the house feels like ours.

Paul’s Civil War passion is constantly fed by this environment. Lately it’s been focused even more on Lincoln, and his early Christmas present is a life mask of Lincoln that was cast from the famous Volk piece. He reads book after book about the 1860’s and I’m finishing Ted Kennedy’s beautiful memoir and then will start David Plouffe’s book about the Obama campaign. Little more than 100 years separates our interests!

All of this year, I’ve been terribly aware of getting older – both the sadness and beauty of feeling one’s own mortality. Here near the woods and the two rivers and the naive deer – many of whom don’t survive their first encounter with our machines – one can’t ignore the passing of seasons. But for millennia, humans have tried to fill their dark December nights with as much light as they could create … both with their fire and their stories. So tonight we will build the fire, put candles in the windows and make that marvelous lentil soup from Sunset magazine. We’re ready for your visit!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

THE TRAIN, THE BUILDING & THE JOB




These are pictures of the MARC train and the Park Lawn building. But let me connect them to my day.

I get up now at 5:00 AM and there’s no leeway, no snooze alarm, no lying to myself about ten more minutes…I have to get up because if not, I’ll be crazy and/or miss the train. Paul gets up with me because he’s a real doll!

I make the coffee and breakfast for the two of us, turn on the news (It’s even too early for MSNBC’s “Way Too Early”) and focus on focusing. Since we found and unpacked the calendar, it feels much better because I can actually see what day it is and calculate its relationship to the weekend. At 6:10, I get in the shower and at 6:40 we leave and do the drive down the mountain and across the Potomac to Brunswick MD where I catch the 7:07. I stop to get the Post out of the machine. (I subscribed to the Post and then found out there is only delivery on Sunday up on “Walton’s Mountain” so I’m stuck with newsstand prices). The train is generally on time and I join the throng of commuters and board at one of three points. I like the designated quiet car but have come to realize it doesn’t matter much in the AM because everyone’s quiet. (It matters a lot on the way home when many people have some kind of trainborne happy hour and do a lot of serious carrying on.)

The ride in uneventful until we come to Gaithersburg, MD and lots of people get on and look for seats and everyone who has an open seat next to them pretends they are sleeping or deaf and blind and people have to actually ASK if they can sit down even though this happens at EXACTLY THE SAME TIME every day with the SAME PEOPLE. I am amazed. I get off at Rockville, the next stop.

From there, I go down the stairs and into the Metro then up the escalator to the platform and onto the Red Line. This takes me just one stop to Twinbrook and I get off, go down the stairs, out the gate and walk the .8 mile to my building.

The Park Lawn building has 18 floors. I am on the 18th. When I enter my building, I go through security, just like the airport (only they don’t make me throw away my water bottle). I ride upstairs and enter the “headhouse” hallway where I walk by the office of the US Surgeon General. Just after the women’s room is the first door to my suite. I am one of about 40 new staff who are working on grants to health centers supported by the president’s stimulus package or ARRA, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. I am not doing the most exciting job of my career, but I know I am helping get dollars out to an excellent health care system for the underserved and in my heart I feel like I’m helping Barack Obama.

Some of the best features of this job include:
1. Awesome coworkers
2. Great cafeteria food. Yes. It’s true. Choices range from stuffed grape leaves to turkey dinner w/ trimmings to Greek wraps, spinach lasagna…all for about $5/day
3. The building has a dry cleaners and they do alterations (like hemming newly bought pants that are now always 4-6 inches too long. What’s up with that? I’m tall.)
4. The credit union is in the building and there are not one but two free ATMs
5. There is a little shuttle bus you can take to and from the Metro when it rains
6. Inside the building, there is also a convenience store that sells Tylenol and birthday cards and has warm freshly baked cookies every day at 2:30

There is nothing about my life that is the same as before, way back in June. I work till 4:45, do the reverse commute back to Brunswick where Paul and Daisy pick me up and we drive home. Driving to work in Tucson took 5 minutes and I could often complete my work at home… entering hospice data on my little laptop. This is a daunting commute but I am rejuvenated and hopeful and grateful for it all. Every day.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

The Russians


They were the movers. We waited for two weeks from the time we requested our stuff be delivered to WV and finally we received a call from 1st Choice Moving (make that Last Choice) that they would be here between Wednesday and Friday. Having dealt with so many business spokespersons since the moving began, we knew not to trust this, and we were right. The driver called us on Friday night to say they would arrive early Sat AM. About 9 AM I called him to ask for a time and he said about 4 hours which would mean 1:00 PM in most universes. Having heard nothing by 2:00 PM I called again and no one answered. This did not give me a confident feeling and then I rationalized it that he was happily delivering furniture to someone in the next town. At 2:45 PM I received a call from a total stranger who asked if I was expecting a moving company and that they were at his house and totally lost, about 25 miles to our west. We talked it through and arranged for me to meet them at the nearby Walmart in 45 minutes and they would follow me to our house.

I drove to Walmart and waited. After a while an 18 wheeler with UNITED VAN LINES on the side pulled in and it was them – Yuri and Richard. I never knew why it said United and not First Choice but no matter, every company in the US is now one company anyway.

Yuri was from Russia and Richard from Latvia, both were speaking in Russian at a very fast clip and their English was iffy. We chatted for a bit and I tried to determine why there were only two guys when it took five to load the truck in Tucson over a 4-hour period. This was like the math word problems in grammar school where you figured out how many it would take … and I knew we were in trouble. Richard said he was going to look for a “Mexican” in the Walmart parking lot. He said he did this all the time and he would offer $10./hour for a helper. This was Saturday and we were moving quickly toward happy hour but I went along. I even helped and checked the laundramat and dollar store for anyone who looked like they could move furniture and needed a quick buck. Nothing… Yuri, meanwhile, was expressing skepticism about being able to get up our hill once he realized we lived on Walton’s Mountain and as the clock ticked, the whole thing was starting to make me nauseous. Long story short, The Russians went to Home Depot looking for a Mexican and had no luck there either, so they followed me home and made a heroic attempt to pull into our driveway, but then one of the wheels was stuck in a large hole for about 15 minutes before this was accomplished. (Those of you who have known us for a long time will see this as an homage to our trip through Tyler Texas in 1987).

Eventually, the tractor trailer made it up the driveway. It was after 5:00. The sun was slowly making its descent in the western sky and only two guys were present to haul ass and get this stuff in the house. Just then, Paul came out to meet the Russians and, not surprisingly, agreed to help. Seven hours later, everything was inside. The guys came in to shower and then slept in their truck in the driveway till they could see to back out early this morning. They were nice guys and we got to know them. Richard has a baby girl in NYC and they were off to do a small delivery there and have some time to visit with the child.

Just before they left, we discovered that the piano was damaged eight ways to Sunday, an antique Shaker rocker was missing and Paul’s “gorilla” ladder was not with the boxes. It’s OK. It will all work out cuz we not only have insurance but close friends and families who are lawyers.

We ate dinner tonight at our own kitchen table. The only thing that would have made it better was if you had been there.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Give Me The Beat



The aging angular face of Marlin, the guitarist/singer was spotlit in red. The drummer, who was skinny as a rail, had signs of a mild stroke or Bell’s palsy. He threw himself into his six piece set of Pearl drums with a rapt look that lasted the night. Off to the side, a guy on keyboard kept melody in a supportive, even way. Though the volume was way too loud, some extraordinary music was happening in this Quality Inn lounge in Harpers Ferry and we couldn’t resist staying and dancing, stretching out a couple of Blue Moons and a basket of homemade chips. Marlin’s vocals lured us to the dance floor with Mustang Sally, Drift Away and a very lyrical Always on My Mind. The band looked like they were on Medicare and, as heavy smokers all, are probably using their benefits. But their music was very fine and it was a great way to start our new life in West Va. Jo-Anne and her kids had come in earlier in the day and she and Paul did a few turns on the floor with the same grace that they brought to the Buttonwoods dance hall in the summers of the late 50’s and early 60’s.

We have already been reveling in the closeness of family again with our stay at the "compound" in Great Falls, VA with sisters Patricia and Doreen and Pat's husband Lloyd. We parked ourselves there for days enjoying the space and the generosity of “kinfolk”. Liza came to visit there as her summer job ended and she began a short vacation before starting back to grad school. We went shopping, had pedicures and played Hi-Lo Jack like old times. Everything is feeling right. Tuesday night we will get the keys to our new home and then we move in and wait for our furniture. (The moving company can’t “promise” when it will arrive but say they will let us know “soon”).

Meanwhile, yesterday morning Paul and I did a “test drive” to Rockville to the federal building where I will work. It was fine until we exited the interstate and attempted the convoluted route to the Twinbrook Parkway and I freaked as unexpected left exits and narrowing lanes threw me in the wrong direction, encouraging lots of horns behind me and a few explicit gestures. When we finally spotted the 1.4 million square foot building where I will bring my little briefcase, I vowed to only use the train to get there! Beginning tomorrow…Monday AM… I will leave the house (or Quality Inn for now) at 5:15 to catch the MARC line. I don’t know what to wear or bring for lunch. I am already feeling a lot like Diana in her little plaid dress, about to cross the street for the first time.

Wish me luck.


Wednesday, August 5, 2009

THE WATER IS WIDE



As we wait for the job to start, the new house to close and the furniture to come, there’s not a whole lot to do. Some days I fret and Paul calms me down and says that it’s all working out fine and everything will get done. So it seemed like the best thing to do was start regarding this time as a prolonged and unexpected vacation. At the end of last week we set off for the beach.

First we had to drive to Manassas to get our car which had finally arrived at the last possible moment of our contract with Autolog. We searched for the wrecker service where they said we would find the car … not exactly reassuring. It was thankfully in one piece and we drove to a motel to spend the night and wait until dawn on Saturday for our journey east across the Chesapeake and eventually to the Delaware coast. Eventually. We had no preparation for this traffic. We’ve seen Cape Cod and LA and nothing compares with the traffic across the Bay Bridge at Annapolis on the first Saturday of August, and then the bumper to bumper crawl through MD to DE and over to Rehoboth Beach. It took us 5 ½ hours. Meanwhile, about an hour into this trek, we both have to find a bathroom. Nothing tells you that you’re 62 like the sudden, desperate urge to pee that seems to come out of nowhere with a relentlessness you never experienced in your youth. Think of all the nights at Newport clubs when you could stand in line after a few beers and chat while everyone took their turn. Not any more. We finally pulled off the road at a big gas station/convenience store and joyfully burst through the door only to find a line of about fifteen travelers waiting for the one unisex toilet. There was nothing to do but head for the small cluster of trees at the back of the parking lot. Paul got there first and disappeared. Needing more cover, I headed behind an abandoned 18-wheeler but could see nearby traffic too clearly. I finally found relief as I tucked into a large shrub near the rear of the building and crouched into position. I could see a family of five get our of their SUV and look in my direction and I didn’t care. Something about being a nurse… I’ve seen it all, now you can too if you care to! Relief! We headed back to the car from our separate undisclosed locations and joined Daisy who was sitting up in the drivers seat and wondered what the big deal was with peeing outside.

After 2 ½ more hours in heinous traffic, we got to our little inn at the beach and began to truly relax. Mid-afternoon, we headed down with Daisy only to find a “no dogs allowed on the beach” sign. We knew taking turns wouldn’t be a lot of fun and then remembered her airplane carrier. Paul packed her in, threw a shirt over the carrier and we were good to go. For the next three days, we visited the beach with our small “package”. On the last afternoon, I saw a lifeguard looking curiously in Paul’s direction as he continuously talked and offered treats to the package, patting it and checking its little zippers. Nevertheless, it all worked. We even had a chance to go in the water together, jumping with the waves and laughing as we had in those Buttonwoods summers so many years ago.

Today we are heading back to my sister Pat’s. Papers are coming from Tucson, homeowners insurance is being arranged in West Virginia. We are refreshed and ready for the next big thing.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Rush to Judgment

In the small country town we are staying in as we wait for news of both homes closing … the one we are selling in Tucson (closing date approx 8/7), and the Harpers Ferry home (closing date approx 8/18), we wait and discover the unfamiliar relaxation that comes at the end of all this geographic change. There’s nothing to do. The frantic calls to realtors and lenders at both ends have leveled off. And then today, there was one more little trickle of activity.

Our Tucson realtor Patti called about a perfunctory appraisal form that had to be FAXed back to the lender. She needed a FAX number to send it to in WV and to have me send it back. Paul and I were in the center of town walking Daisy when Patti’s call came. I thought about the library but had already had a run-in with the librarian there when I had popped my head in to ask if vacationers could borrow DVDs and was told “No” with a tone that made me feel both annoyed and stupid for even entertaining such a thought. Even though as a former librarian, I know how much abuse of the word “borrow” goes on, I thought she was a bitch and told Paul how unpleasant she was.

You can imagine how reluctant I was to return and inquire about sending FAXs, but when I had asked another retailer where to send a FAX, the library was it.

I went in and told her my need and she gave me the rate for a max of 10 pages plus any long distance charges. I called my realtor to ask her a few questions and then the librarian literally threw me out for using a cell phone in her (empty) library. I was miffed and told Paul that this woman was impossible and if I had to deal with her ever again, he needed to go in my place and turn on the French charm.

Patti had said she would mail the form but as it happened she called me back and said no, she had to FAX it. The last thing I wanted to do was return to the library and incur the wrath of this woman, but I did.

I went back. I asked the librarian if she would please send my FAX and she said she would and I stood there in neutral annoyance until she asked me to sit down and I pulled a chair up to a desk in the aisle and waited. A patron came in and asked the librarian, whose name was Carolyn, how her summer was going. “Not good”, she said, and I was quietly gloating thinking “Right. What a bitch. She can’t even enjoy this gorgeous town in the ripeness of a late July day when everything about being alive is so exaggerated and wonderful”.

The return FAX came in and I had to sign it and have Paul sign it too except that he had taken Daisy back to the rental and I was signing for him which if you were a small town librarian might be considered a crime and I did it fast and gave it to her and she sent it and didn’t look…as far as I could see.

Then I gave her four dollars. There was an awkward pause and I had noticed early on that her arm was wrapped in an ace bandage so I asked, “Did you fracture your arm?”. She answered, “No. It’s lymphedema.”

Now a light goes on and everything starts to reprogram so quickly and with such discomfort that I feel the process of my brain making its corrections.

“You’ve had surgery?”, I asked, knowing full well that she had had breast cancer and that the removal of lymph nodes was causing her present distress.

“Yes”, she said and recounted the chapter and verse of her cancer nightmare ending with the discovery yesterday that she has metastasis to her bones. “It’s the 'inverse T’, she said, “spine and pelvis both”. She went on to tell me about the pain and how her MD has told her it’s just a side effect of the chemo but she knows it’s the bone mets. I believe she is right. I told her what I knew about managing the pain from bone cancer, the need to add steroids, the long-acting and breakthrough meds. I did not use the “H” word and neither did she, but when she talked about having only Medicare and no money, I wanted to tell her about the Medicare Hospice benefit that is there for her when the time comes.

I will communicate with her again before I leave this idyllic town. I am thinking about how to do that. Meanwhile, I have learned a profound lesson about being small and judgmental that I am more than happy to share while it is still fresh.

A long time ago, when the girls were hurt, a friend of mine named Father Ed Abbott told me that “Sometimes we find God and sometimes He finds us”. Today he found me.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Moving


The day arrived much too soon and there they were, four movers at the front door. The chief mover was a strong, compact Israeli who walked back and forth in front of all the boxes shaking his head. I approached him to ask about the piano and whether it would be placed on the truck before everything else. “We’re not talking about the piano, Lady”, he said. “You got too many boxes”. Paul had packed a bazillion boxes six months earlier. I had no idea what was in them and have just recently learned that a significant percentage contained stuff the girls had saved since kindergarten (Liza saved things from even earlier… I think she snuck souvenirs out of the maternity hospital). One box contained cactus clippings. Several had remnants of old frames and chairs. I had estimated 60 boxes and there were over 100 in the garage alone.

“That’s fine,” I told the man. “We’ll pay the difference”. But he was not content with that. “Your estimate is based on 60 boxes. You got too many.” We went back and forth for a while on this and it became quite heated until he understood that his company was released from the “binding” quote. The process moved forward.

Four hours later, the movers were almost done and the men from 1-800-GOTJUNK? showed up and started carrying out stuff to the left … loads of cardboard, broken plastic and old blinds, while the movers continued loading the rest of our precious belongings from the right. Neil and Paul were still wrapping mirrors and paintings at the end and somehow it all got done with the JUNK people sweeping the garage clean as they departed.

It was very quiet in the house. We said goodbye to it as we have five homes before and went to Diana and Neil’s for the night. They took us to a restaurant where Paul nearly dropped his head onto his plate of ribs, he was so tired.

The next day, refreshed and excited, we rode with Neil to Phoenix where we had the pleasant surprise of an upgrade to 1st class for our trip to BWI. This was Daisy’s first airplane ride. She was in a little carrier and had been sedated about halfway to Phoenix, per the vet’s recommendation. Once on board, she was placed under the seat and she started growling through her medicated state and scratching incessantly at her carrier to get out. Some of the passengers who had actually paid for 1st began looking around for the source of the noise. Paul was asleep already and Diana and I started whispering and signing so the dog would settle down which she eventually did.

Late that night we arrived in Baltimore and began a mini-vacation with Diana, driving down to the Chesapeake to a VRBO rental that turned out to be very peaceful and relaxing. It was over those next few days that we settled back into the rhythm of the East and the pattern of summer days we had almost forgotten. We rose very early and sat out on the porch where the music of birds was like a reception party given by old and dear friends. Daisy was enthralled. She stood on her hind legs at one point and followed a bumblebee across the yard; all she knew in Tucson were geckos and an occasional tortoise. She also learned how to pee on the grass and followed the scents of other dogs who had visited before her.

On Thursday we drove to my sister Patricia’s in northern VA and prepared to say goodbye to Diana the following day. The evening was filled with laughter as Pat and Paul, the two crazy Geminis, bounced off each other’s humor and we enjoyed Lloyd’s fabulous cooking. My sister Doreen helped to make us feel at home and we stayed up lots later than we did in Tucson days.

On Friday we brought Diana to Dulles and bid her adieu for a while. I am plotting to get her out again within a few months and hopefully for good when she finishes her latest degree at the end of 2010.

Since she left, we have had all our energies focused on our home-to-be in Harpers Ferry. Here is what it looks like.

Later…




Sunday, July 5, 2009

THE LAST DEATH


Friday marked the end of my hospice career. At 1:00 PM, I was sent to evaluate a 92 year old woman in a nursing home. It was one of the least pleasant nursing homes in town and I always take one last sweet breath of fresh air as I open the front door. I did so on Friday and made my way through the long halls to find the patient in 46C. As I passed the med nurse in the hallway I told her who I was and she said, “I think Mrs. N. is close”. Now we in hospice say “active”, not close, meaning actively dying. I always find this an interesting word in that most of us think of death as a process of letting go and not as “work”. The reality is that it often appears to be work, to be a job to leave this world. When I walked into room 46 I saw Mrs N. in the corner and her breathing was very labored. I called her name and she didn’t respond. As I waited by her bed she opened her eyes and fixed them on the space near the window. She cried out softly and closed her eyes again. She was not aware of me.


I knew that if we admitted her to hospice, she would have one of our nurses come out, get meds that would make her more comfortable and provide great support for her family. I got to work. I called her daughter who lived out of town and explained what was happening. The daughter said she doubted that her mother was really dying because “she looked fine on Sunday when I was up there”. She agreed, though, to sign faxed consents so I started preparing five forms for her signature. When they were ready I inquired about the location of the fax machine. A very large nurse with keys opened the med closet, showed me the fax machine and began to leave. I asked a few questions about dialing 9 or 1 etc. and she answered me abruptly and left. I then started faxing and broke the machine. It wasn’t exactly broken but the little square screen had the message “open cover” and when I did, I found nothing wrong. I closed it but the message persisted. This went on for several minutes. All I could think of was that this lady was going to die before she could be officially on hospice. There was something wrong with that. It was almost as if the fax machine would be responsible for her death. No, worse, it was as if I WOULD BE RESPONSIBLE because I was too incompetent to operate this little machine. At that moment, the large nurse with the keys returned to the closet, asked how I was doing and then said VERY smugly, “We never have a problem with the fax.” In a few minutes the consents were faxed, signed and returned and I was able to admit Mrs. N. and then left to do my charting.


I won’t ever know if she died that hour or that day because I turned in my computer and my pager and left my job at 4:00 PM. I thought my last day was kind of absurd and then thought about death itself being pretty absurd. You spend a lifetime growing, learning, trying and failing and then trying and getting it right. You develop wisdom and appreciation for simple things like birds and the feel of a cool breeze on your cheek. You refine your love for everyone in your life and start loving them just as much if not more for their quirks and bad habits as for all their so-called virtues. You learn to laugh at all of it. And then it’s time to go. And sometimes it’s your fate to die alone in 46C with a little light sheet over you and somebody down the hall trying to send a fax to your family to buy you a little more comfort. God bless you, Mrs. N. God bless us all.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Almost Heaven

Liza and I drove to Harper’s Ferry from her DC apartment on Sunday – up Connecticut Ave, through Chevy Chase, jumping on the interstate to Frederick, MD and then hanging a left on 340 for the last 28 miles. We crossed the Potomac River into Virginia, met Dorothy our realtor and set off to discover this little corner of history and extraordinary beauty. Harper’s Ferry dates from 1799 and is at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers. It is the site of John Brown’s raid in 1859 that served as the prelude to the Civil War. (Ironically, on our home tour we saw some confederate flags and one large one had a wolf’s head at its center. Fortunately it’s a wolf that goes hungry in our time).


We rode up the mountain side seeing all kinds of lovely homes with 2-3 acres of land and yards that backed into the Appalachian forest. What’s not to like? It’s a quick ride down the mountain and across the street to the train station with both the MARC and Amtrak running on cue. Two homes were really appealing and are priced a lot lower than MD or VA, with lower taxes as well. Downside? I will no longer stop at Safeway or Trader Joe’s on a daily basis. Nobody can “drop in” for less than a weekend. Work will be an hour away by train. The positives: great living and breathing space; proximity to DC when we feel like it; lots of flowers and wildlife; and QUIET.


On July 10, we will head out and make our way to that little niche on two mighty rivers. Let’s see what happens next…

Thursday, June 25, 2009

SEE-SAW

June 22 – Realtor Patti calls to say that 83 year old lady is “walking” away from deal. Patti will find out if young couple is still interested.

June 23 – Longest day of year. Notice has been given at work. Movers set up. Diana has arranged her schedule to help us drive across the country. We wait.

June 24 – Bride and groom-to-be will buy. Contract signed. Everyone (including Daisy) exhales.

Our new possible location is Harper’s Ferry W. Va. It’s a one-hour train ride to Rockville (federal building) and is a gorgeous historic town overlooking the convergence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers. Sunday I will visit with Eliza and look at some homes. The house prices and taxes are AMAZINGLY low. I’m picturing long walks, canoe rides on the river, quaint shops and no Starbucks (sigh).

So many months have passed since we imagined ourselves back east, and now it’s beginning to be real.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

FATHERS DAY


My memory of him has really faded like an old photo. In fact the pictures I still have are little snaps from the 50’s and 60’s that are candid and off center, frayed at the margins. It’s been over four decades now that he’s been gone.

When I think of him in those years, I remember his calming effect. In a childhood that was not idyllic, where I struggled to connect with my peers and be whatever “normal” was, he always reassured me that “everything will be alright”. I took walks with him -nowhere special, down to Pinault’s drugstore or the A & P. He walked rather slowly because of his bad heart. My mother used to say he had taken the stairs “three at a time” when he was a young man, and I found it incredible. He was in his late 50’s when I was 9 and 10 and we walked and talked, having our uninterrupted time. I remember his large hands and the feel of my right hand in his left and the sense of its protection.

The clearest picture is the one on the piano where he’s in New York and it’s the 1920’s. He wears an overcoat and a serious face – a young Irish immigrant embarking on his big adventure. He stayed in the US, married my mother, and returned to Ireland where we were all born. It was the second emigration in 1953 that broke his heart. His business in Ireland failed and the decision to return to America was the only practical option so that our family of six could start again in my mother’s country.

It was only when I went home to Ireland several years ago that I understood the sadness of his later life and the sacrifice of leaving that beautiful land forever. He was not given to complaint or regret, always looking after our needs and making the effort to pass on the best things that he knew – the history, the ethics, bits of Shakespeare and the poetry of Yeats.

He is with me still and very much present in my sisters and my daughters – some would say in my husband as well and I believe it’s true. He is with me when I’m quiet and when I’m passionate about doing the right thing. He made me feel that everything would be alright and, in fact, everything is.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Paul and Geri's Excellent Adventure

It feels like we have been waiting most of our adult lives for our house to sell. Now it's actually happening. Two different parties put in bids yesterday. One is an elderly woman who looked at it four months ago and was too worried about the economy to act. She is 83 and undaunted by the multiple staircases. The second is a lovely young bride-to-be and her fiancé who LOVE the house and are getting "wonderful, peaceful vibes" when they walk through our rooms. Theirs was the second call and the bride-to-be is crying at the prospect of losing the bid. By the end of today, the realtor will have sorted this out and we will have a contract.

Then what??? Where do we tell the movers to go with our stuff? Which job will open up? How do we cross the country with a poodle? What about driving 2300 miles with bad backs? What will our new home be like? What do we do when it rains???

Tell us our fortune as you imagine it and share your vision ….

Sunday, June 14, 2009

SABBATH

This is a day of rest and is actually more restful this week, preceded by having Saturday off. Every other week I work on Saturday and so Sunday is the ONLY day I have to rest. That often makes me panicky because I feel the pressure of having to rest and worrying that if I’m not resting and have to start work again on Monday I am sure to fall apart by Wednesday. Of course it’s hard to rest when your house is for sale and you can’t lounge around in your PJ’s till 3:00 PM . At any moment a realtor could call and say she and her client will be over in ten minutes. It takes a good hour to make the bed, shower, pick up towels and underwear, get the dishes going and examine the carpet for the little bits of leaves and stones brought in on our sneakers. For now, what constitutes Sunday rest is about two hours with an extra coffee, the scrawny Tucson Sunday paper debulked from its ads, and a few interview shows.

When I was growing up, the Sabbath was an entirely different proposition. We couldn’t lounge around in the morning because we had to go to Mass and the rule was: if you don’t go to Mass, you don’t anywhere that day. We usually went at 11:00 because with six of us and one bathroom, it took forever for us all to get ready. You couldn’t just throw anything on either. You had to have a dress or skirt and blouse…and a hat…and white gloves. It was always possible to locate one glove but never two. Someone was always yelling at someone else, accusing them of having moved something that could not now be located. And that was the way we went out the door every Sunday, clothes barely buttoned and zipped, totally stressed out, off to pay homage to the Prince of Peace.



Mass was usually followed by a large breakfast and a prolonged family discussion about the sermon, the dreadful soprano or something in the morning news. I guess that was restful in its own way. We always laughed a lot and lost track of time with no expectation for how the rest of the day would go. My parents would often nap in the afternoon , my older sisters would take off with friends and I would go across the street to play Monopoly or Star Reporter with the neighborhood kids. Sometimes I’d curl up with a book. The day had a special feel to it. Nobody worked. The stores were all closed. It was the 1950’s and the world felt safe (if you didn’t let yourself dwell on the Russians).

It would be nice to have a day when everything stopped. As I get older I find myself wistful about the simplicity of an earlier time that was lighter on the soul. Then I realize I can choose to close the doors and shut out the noise any time I want. Maybe that can happen ... after this transition is over and the Sunday realtors are gone from our life.

Friday, June 12, 2009

THURSDAY


I never knew I was a “sympathy crier” until yesterday when my patient’s wife suggested that. She explained that she was one herself. When she told me about her husband she started sobbing and I sobbed with her. I tried to joke a little and told her my employers say it’s OK if I cry, as long as I don’t cry more than my patient and their family. We sat holding hands in the darkened room where her husband was lying, unresponsive. She told me he had been in perfect health until this year. He did not smoke or drink, ate right, exercised, laughed a lot. In early March he found out he had a deadly, aggressive form of lung cancer and it had migrated into his ribs causing intractable pain. Nothing would relieve the pain and now the doctors were recommending “comfort care”.

We give comfort in what we do, both the medicines and the human comfort. In the hospital there’s plenty of medicine but not much time to be with patients, let alone hold hands and let people cry. In our hospice there is time and lots of space to sit and meditate or sit with a cup of coffee and a social worker or chaplain.

Some days in this work are easy to put aside at 5:00. The last two days there were three families facing end of life and each experience stayed with me. Tom was the old man on Wednesday who had a great attitude despite his lungs filling with blood and the constant suction that bought him a only few breaths at a time. He told me ,matter of factly, that he was waiting to see his great-granddaughter for the first time at the end of the day – she was coming in from the airport. “After I see her, I’m all done.” he said and he smiled. Yesterday I saw him and he had entered that space we call “actively dying”. He will have crossed over by this morning.

The third patient, Frank, had “multi-system failure”, a cascade of internal events that trigger one organ after another to fail, tipping like dominoes. Lungs, kidneys, liver, heart. His wife cried in yet another small room where we filled out papers. There was nothing to be said except, “We will take good care of him…and you.” She was grateful.

At the end of days like these, I don’t listen to Chris Matthews or (God forbid) Keith Olbermann and hear the latest political tiffs and sideshows. No, I look for a Fred Astaire movie on TCM and if that’s not available, one of those arcane history shows that Paul can always find will do just as well as I drift off, hoping to dream of an empty beach somewhere. If I’m lucky, the next few days at work I will be sent to visit only octogenarians with Alzheimer’s , full lives behind them, ready to cross the water.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

LA PALOMA


Yesterday I ran over a bird… a dove, I think. It was sitting in the road with its back to me as my car approached. I half noticed it but expected it to fly away in time, but it didn’t. It must have been preoccupied. I felt the slight bump under my wheel and then saw feathers fly up, cartoon-like, in the rear view mirror. I felt bad. It triggered the memory of the time I ran over a rabbit a few years ago and how awful that felt. I made a mental note to tell Paul about it when I got home, but then I forgot to.

Last night I was awake for a while and thought about the bird again and about killing things with your car. I almost hit a large dog once in Glendale – close call – and was shaken for days. What does size and species have to do with our remorse when we kill something? Are the animals that could be someone’s pets in closer relationship to us and of more value? Is it aesthetics? Is a “beautiful” animal more valuable? Here in Tucson we have javelina and they are butt-ugly. I imagine if I hit one of those I would feel bad but not nearly as bad as if I hit a beautiful small wildcat on a foraging trip down from the mountain. And how is size a factor? It’s easy to kill a roach or housefly and actually enjoy a sense of accomplishment. Insects in our living space almost seem meant to die. They’re dirty and gross. Paul has seen packrats in the garage and they are really cute so even though they have destroyed artwork, broken into bags of dog food and hidden things in their secret spaces, killing them is unthinkable.

It’s all very subjective – what , in our largesse, we allow to live, what gets whacked and how we feel about it. I wonder if the dove is missed today by its friends and family or if they even took notice of its passing.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Monday, Monday

Today seemed like a good day to start a blog. Nobody knows it's here so I don't have to worry about an onslaught of responses. I am -we are - moving East and don't know when or where exactly. Today I was invited to apply for a job (in Fredericksburg VA) as a bereavement counseling supervisor. I had never considered doing a job like that but in some way feel prepared. I understand loss... I am a counselor by training.. I have also supervised small numbers of people at a time. I could do this job. I don't know if I would enjoy it but one never knows about new jobs. It only takes one fellow Aquarian or a beautiful drive to work on a country road or an opportunity to innovate and it's all good.

Today I also started physical therapy and found out something I have known for many, many years: my hamstrings are way too tight. I also found out that to loosen them I have to do a funny exercise with a ball between my knees ( the therapist's ball had Spiderman on it) and breathe deeply several times while squeezing muscles various ways.


The last thing that happened today (so far) was an application I submitted to yet another job at a hospital in Rockville, MD. This was a job that I made up a long time ago and, waddyaknow, it actually exists. It is a patient representative (RN) who explains everything to the patient and family that's been thrown at them by the docs and other hospital staff, and gives them a fighting chance to figure out what to do when they go home... what their meds are for, how to stay well, avoid coming back to the hospital, eat right, etc. The hospital is run by the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Their members are extremely healthy as they wait for the second coming.

Diana tells me not to get too far ahead of myself and she's right. That's enough for today.