February 3, 2013
The Kairos Network Blog was nearly dormant in 2012. The reason? Well, my own father?s decline and death in November. The entire year for me was one of endings and closure. As my father declined, my children approached the rim of a much more empty nest, my marriage began to permanently change, I went through some depression, menopause wrote its final chapters in my body: my hair grew more grey, my eyesight dwindled and I got the first hints of a double chin. It was nearly impossible to distinguish these events in lived experience. Our inner lives and processes get intertwined with our parent?s physical death. How do we make meaning within the totality of our still unfolding lives? To ponder this I share highlights from my journals in the next three blogs. Part 1 below. Last two to follow. Check them out too if you dare.
Part 1: Journal notes from returning home after my last visit with Dad.
Part 2: My post-death meditation encounters with my father.
Part 3: An account of dressing my father?s body at the funeral home and burial.
Dedicated to my father: Hugh Robert Denney
by Jeanne Denney
October 15
Dad is sleepy and non-communicative most of the day. In another world. Not so interested in things or news. Meanwhile I have a day of sadness and depression, weeping in trips to the bathrooms or bedroom. From here my life looks small, failed and illogical. I become aware of the difficulty of it, of how I look to them. We manage to go to Apple tasting for an hour with the wheelchair (this is an event at the family retail nursery). I breathe with effort trying not to remember.
Later I shop and cook dinner for Dad and Betty. I simply enjoy them with clear knowledge that is ending. Dad comes to the fully set dinner table to eat his soup, moving ceremonially slow in pressed jeans, with greater difficulty than my last visit. He focuses hard to get the noodles in his mouth so that he can barely listen to the talk, while Betty with round shoulders politely asks questions about my work and the children. Folded napkins, butter and salt. Everything just as it should be. The touching and implicit pride in this. It feels like drinking from tea cups made of the impossibly thin, lacy porcelain. While we eat my feelings range: I couldn?t possibly live this way and I want to live this way. I am ashamed of my crazy, chaotic life and I am proud of it. I hate New York and the East, and I can?t wait to get back to it. Two things always true. Which means, as usual, that my heart is probably open?and closed. That I am afraid to feel all that is here to be felt. How much I want them to be just as they are in this moment. Always.
October 16
Dad sleeps all morning. He asks no questions until tonight when he just asks: ?Things going ok for you?? I say ?Well enough?. Unlike any other visit of my life, that is all he asks and all I say. We collude to avoid the deeper questions. Don?t ask, don?t tell. What he doesn?t want to know and I don?t want to say: That I am suffering with depression and lost in life. My marriage is coming to some kind of an ill-defined ending and no one can see the future. That he is dying.
Dad in his chair gazes behind me at the window. What are you thinking Dad? ?Nothing?, he says like a zen sage, ?Absolutely nothing?. What a relief.
October 17, 2012
Much progress today. We work on estate stuff. I arrange for a bath aide to help with dressing and showers. Cooking, shopping, lists of things like insurance policies, the lifeline replacement. Later respite in my father?s garden after the storm and wind. Small stems broken on the large heads of dahlias full of water, sunken to the ground. The candidates debate as I make bouquets out of dahlias and roses. Then the blaring Fox news spin. Dad for the first time is disinterested. The President looks old, not like someone who is going to confidently win, someone who is just out of a foxhole. He seems like Lincoln in the middle of the civil war, heart heavy. Heartbroken. The sorrow of being human swallows me as I arrange the wet, broken flowers. I put them everywhere, on tables, counters, on either side of the TV.
Dad dozes next to me. He still gets up for the bathroom but has been having accidents on his way for several days. We aren?t sure when to challenge his independence. Later I ask him again what he is thinking as he gazes out the window again. ?Oh?.Life is good.? He says. ?Life is very good.?
October 18, 2012
On plane at the end of another hard day. Long. Today the men of businesscame, the accountant and the lawyer and we cornered him in his recliner. He is declining faster now and the checks needed to be written. The obvious and unspoken reason is that he was going to die. It is time. He was confused at times. He understood, but it took time. He knew he wanted to do this some day but kept forgetting. His hand trembled. He was so proud of his money. He struggled to keep the pen in his hand. He wrote them for the wrong amount at first. But in the end he just said graciously ?It is no problem. I don?t need it.? As he let it go he lightened. We took our checks and said thanks. It felt like an accomplishment, but somehow a weird and not so proud one.
Betty drives me to the airport for the red eye east. Dad gets up from his chair to hug me goodbye. The goodbye is poignant but not remarkable. It is just like it always is. I don?t think ?Oh this is the last goodbye.? I just think: ?This is the father who has always loved me, who has always hugged me and told me this truth?. This love, this staple of my life?I notice that I don?t think it is going anywhere.
October 19
It was wonderful to be met by Nick at the airport. He parked the car and met me coming out of security. Startled to see him standing in a suit at 6 a.m. We tear seeing each other like long separated siblings or neighbors after a tornado, the eruption of gratitude can?t be explained. What do I do with this old and real love? Yet it has to change, is changing. He blames himself as if the workaholism that has plagued our union could have been different. Still, we talk and joke all the way to his office, sharing war stories before he disappears into the revolving doors of his office building.
October 20
Back from Portland I find myself at home in a garden so unlike my father?s. Mine in midlife an essay on failures, his garden at 91 a burgeoning collection of abundance, color and grace. Largeness and bounty. Roses still overwhelm his front walks reaching up to the eaves of the house to bloom their last. Large tea roses mainly in pinks, oranges, whites and yellows. It reminds me of my mother?s house after she died which had so much residual order that it stayed in place for years after. My father?s gardens astound me with his love and perfection, administered through high quality soil, chemicals and the old horticulturist?s expertise with roots honed over 80 years of gardening. Wherever he lived there were gardens, his places of prayer and respite. Him coming in from the garden whistling or singing with armloads of broccoli, kohlrabi or flowers saying ?Look Mother, here. For you.? She greeted them with delight or dismay. Late in life more dismay, more mess in her perfect house. She would have to can, freeze, arrange or clean up after them. He didn?t stop.
This season Dad directed the gardener from his command post at the recliner, pointing with his cane and shouting bad Spanish. In the front of his house in October were still rows of peppers, red and green. Huge red and orange begonias burgeoning out of their planter boxes. The things he throws in the compost as dead would look good in my yard. Things unwatered and unfertilized, hanging by a thread.
Writing this evokes deep sorrow. My failures as a caregiver swarm like a pestilence of flies. What was not received in the family: that is where I staked my flag. I therefore suffered. And suffer we have this summer and fall. The marriage cannot go forward, it can?t seem to end and it cannot return. We are crawling to the finish line of parenting bloodied and raw as war buddies. You will not be reminded of my parent?s well tended house and gardens here.
We on the other hand are in pestilence and drought of spirit. The deer this year ate every flower that bloomed. Black mildews and white mildews erupted variously. There are gangly arms of petunia without flowers and overgrown butterfly bushes, a garden full of weeds, beds full of weeds, a long row of hostas mowed to nubs by deer, dry vertical stalks everywhere, signs of our undoing. I read them all as signposts of the failure to thrive. When I returned home from my last trip to Portland there was an invasion of every kind of fruit flies, black flies, all circling themselves the kitchen. Garbage overflowing. Cats fighting, stressed and peeing everywhere including the bathtubs sensing clarity lost. Paradise lost. This cacophony sent an alarm of anxiety through my system that is still muffled, rhythmically moaning as if under a pile of laundry waiting to be discovered. It says ?Things are not well?.
Where did this embarrassing disarray or my parent?s intense order come from? Theirs wasn?t healthy, but it was something. My life isn?t healthy either, just maybe closer to some weird truth. Still, who wants to live here? My marriage is failing, or?maybe it isn?t. Maybe it is just blossoming into its own beautiful death and that death is a process full of embarrassment and riches.
Dad has numerous accidents in the bathroom a day now and forgets what everything you just told him five times. Still, he looks more peaceful than he ever has. He is no longer cursing Obama or interested in the election. He is not attached to his money or the judgments of people he had all his life. He is blithe and grateful. He takes in the sun saying ?It is so nice to have you here.? He reaches for my hand. Lovely. How the mess and the release from all that we don?t need any more go together. Uncoupling things is a wild metamorphosis bringing you to the root of being, the place of pens and hives and bees. The place of honey and ink.
Dear father fading. You have taken your turn into the land of the white birds, your turn toward Canaan. He is in a boat now heading to sea relatively happy. If he is sad, he is not expressing it. Who would have thought this liberation, coming as it does with its dropped spoons and soiled clothes and drool, would be so complete? Yesterday he was reading the grocery store fliers. Too proud to read grocery store fliers a months ago, now he isn?t. Which opens the door to me owning my gardens, overgrown, gangly, dry, weedstricken, and poor. Poor gardens still hold something dying but real. Something waking. Something bringing its essence forward to fail in exuberance but to succeed in heart, in humble trying.
Here in this sunlight of failure I put my flag, hoping one day for tall, tall roses and the delights of wealth and the deeper order that falls from the skies and rises from the earth naturally.
Jeanne Denney is a therapist, hospice worker and death educator in the Greater New York area. Her website is http://www.rocklandmindbody.com and email is jeannedenney@gmail.com.
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