Good New Year's Eve!
I've been thinking for months now that my blog needs to move in a new direction. The experience of death, of aging, has been a central concept for me in this blog design. I now feel the need to move it in a new direction. Not that the work of aging and dying isn't in need of its own platform, it's just that there are other topics that I would like to explore. I would like to include you, my readers, in this venture. Please feel free to post your own reflections, artwork, dreams, poetry...Argue with me. Agree with me. But by all means, please engage in dialogue with me. Feel free to present your own beliefs, similar or dissimilar to mine. This is about sharing, about thinking, about opening our minds in a new way...about ancient things. Engage.
The Holidays are difficult for many. Both of my parents died in December; it was in December of 2016 that we realized that my brother Jim was indeed on his "journey," as we euphemistically call it in Hospice work. He was engaged in the work of saying goodbye. Of dying.
Now, a year later, his family continues to process that time of unstoppable transformation. Of preparing ourselves for the loss that would come, for the new life that would arise as a result of my brother's departure. For example, even as he was passing, his son was expecting his second child. A beautiful baby girl who would be named for my father, Emerson. Her nickname is Eme.
One soul leaves this Earth, another enters. Are they related? I do not know. I do know that the cycle of life constantly revolves around death and birth, birth and death.
It is on birth that I would like to concentrate my Blog this coming year. Birth. Life. Transformation. And yes, death, too. Ultimately, it is Death that brings us back to Life.
And so, my friends, I invite you to join me on this journey in 2018. I will not judge you; I ask that you not judge me. I will share my stories, my reflections on various readings, and I invite you to do the same. Out with the old, in with the new.
Blessings,
Patricia
Christmas 2017
New Year's 2018
"Christus Natus Est" - Collage. Patricia Wheelhouse. Mixed papers and watercolor.
Sunday, December 31, 2017
Monday, November 27, 2017
Waiting for the Light
It's been over four months since I've posted in this blog. I can feel the turning of the seasons; when last I wrote, it was high Summer. Now, we're nearing the end of Autumn, beginning the descent into Winter which coincides nicely with the concept of Advent.
I've had time to begin to more fully synthesize the unknowable concept of death. I find myself leaning toward meditations on seeking light, on finding life in the stark landscape of early Winter. Advent has always been a very sacred time of year for me. This year, our priest has asked those of us in our small house congregation to consider three reflection questions for each Sunday's lectionary readings. We've done this in the past, but this year he wants us to prepare responses to the three questions, and be prepared to discuss them the next Sunday.
There is no grief for me in this process, and if there is loss, it is of the sadness and darkness that I have felt in previous years as the light wanes and the long, cold nights of December descend. I'd like to share the three questions for Advent One here, as well as my responses.
I've had time to begin to more fully synthesize the unknowable concept of death. I find myself leaning toward meditations on seeking light, on finding life in the stark landscape of early Winter. Advent has always been a very sacred time of year for me. This year, our priest has asked those of us in our small house congregation to consider three reflection questions for each Sunday's lectionary readings. We've done this in the past, but this year he wants us to prepare responses to the three questions, and be prepared to discuss them the next Sunday.
There is no grief for me in this process, and if there is loss, it is of the sadness and darkness that I have felt in previous years as the light wanes and the long, cold nights of December descend. I'd like to share the three questions for Advent One here, as well as my responses.
Advent One, 2017
1. For
what are you on the watch this Advent?
2. How
are you being enriched in every way this Advent?
3. How
might you need to be roused in order to cling more tightly to God?
Advent is perhaps
my favorite season of the church year.
So many personal events have happened during its long, dark nights and
short, cold days…My first marriage (1975), my initial move to New York (1978),
and my mother’s death (2014) all occurred on December 7th, Pearl
Harbor Day. I was born on December 22nd,
the coldest and shortest day of the year in 1955. I have
always loved being born on the Solstice.
Sharp, bright pinpoints of light in the thick December night skies are a
source of wonder and comfort for me. In
spite of the cold and the dark of Advent, I find in it a great deal of comfort,
and more than a little joy. I am a
person of the shadows, and have always been on the edge, on the outside looking
in. I can place myself in the context of
the Arab refugee family who could only find a humble stable, or cave, in which
to give birth. When pregnant with my
first child, my first husband and I lived in a modest apartment in a very poor
section of Cincinnati. To get to my
charity hospital pre-natal care appointments, I rode two city busses across
town and spent several hours sitting on a folding chair in the basement
corridor of Children’s Hospital. I was a
child myself, preparing to give birth. I
certainly can relate to Mary sitting on a donkey, riding over the harsh desert
roads and finding someplace, any place safe to have her baby. In fact, it was during Advent that I began
lighting the Advent candles in 1975, while awaiting the birth of my own child. It’s now been 42 years that the Advent
candles have been lit in my household, although the children grew up and left,
and husband number one departed, to be followed by husband number two. Both were watchmen with me, waiting for a
sign, waiting for the Word from above, guidance for the journey ahead…
I am still on the
watch for a sign from God, a word, a call…to what service? That I do not yet know. But I know that a fire burns within me to do
more, to step out in faith and offer my life up in service. Where am I going? I am watching for a sign. Perhaps I’ll be led by a star, shining in the
East…
I am being enriched
this Advent by interacting with the aging, the aged…acquaintances, friends and relatives who are struggling with some form of cognitive
impairment as their brains age and their arteries harden. This is terrifying, yet enriching as I watch
them and those who are their caregivers find new ways of relating. Time becomes more elastic for the aged, who
begin to pass more easily from past to present to future. My work with the Hospice residents is also a
very enriching experience…I always come away from a work shift feeling honored
to have had the chance to sit quietly with the dying, to listen to them, to
pray with them, to hear their stories, and to enter – however briefly – that
space of waiting – like the hushed darkness of Advent – for the next life.
In terms of being
roused in order to cling more tightly to God – well, sometimes I feel that God
uses me as a rabble-rouser, stirring up uncomfortable ideas and questions
during Mass and in conversations… like bringing up the over-abundance of our
Thanksgiving feasts juxtaposed with the huge eyes of the starving children of
Yemen, or mentioning the uncomfortable (inconvenient?) truth that our Native
American sisters and brothers have quite another context for the event that
began the first Thanksgiving. I think I
rouse myself with these queries, and I certainly need to cling more tightly to
God. It’s a big, scary world out there,
full of darkness and light, and I am but a small, aging human who cannot begin
to stand up to its challenges without the grace of God. I believe that I am being roused by the fire
burning within me that constantly prods me, saying, “You could be doing more…” And
so I look to the heavens, and listen deeply.
And begin to follow that star.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
On Hallowed Ground
This weekend, four
months after my brother’s death, I travelled to northeastern Ohio for the
interment of ashes in my mother’s grave.
My mother’s grave is in a small town cemetery in her hometown, a
beautiful piece of land in a verdant river valley. Her ancestors and relatives’ graves are all
over the cemetery…many generations of German Irish people whose stories we have
heard for years fill these grassy plots…And now my mother’s ashes are crowned
with my brother’s ashes.
Any thought that
this would be less emotionally-charged than the memorial service a few months
earlier were quickly dispelled. My
nephew read the Committal of Ashes from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer,
which I had coincidentally printed out for our use. My copies were put aside for people to take
home as my nephew, a man of the cloth and wearing all black, read the service
while our extended family stood in a circle around the new grave in the
old. Several people spoke a few
words. Quiet sobs accompanied the
memories. We prayed the Our Father, and
the service was concluded.
We took family
photos. Some of us went to other parts
of the cemetery to find other relatives’ graves, and there were many – probably
five generations worth, at least.
Ultimately we caravanned to an Amish restaurant out in the country where
we had a huge long table on which an ample country meal appeared. Then we said our goodbyes to those who lived south,
in Central Ohio. Those of us from other
states – Florida, Arizona, New York, and Pennsylvania, as well as those who
lived either in town or within driving distance – drove back to our hotels
either for rest or for further visiting.
I chose to go to
the lake outside of town where all of us cousins used to vacation together
every summer. Two cousins and I headed
out to the lake with our swimming suits, looking forward to a swim on a
beautiful summer day.
As we drove through
the lovely old town that cradled our mothers, I was aware that we were treading
on hallowed ground. Sure, there were
plenty of stories that were anything but straight-laced, but the sense that we
were driving through God’s country was undisputed. Even if we did marvel at the fact that it’s a
miracle that our older brothers are still alive after driving the Ridge Road
while under the influence at high speeds…the land is still beautiful. The valleys are still green (my mother used
to love to gaze out over valleys and murmur, “How green was my valley!”), the
farms are still operating, and very little has changed.
Then, the
lake. So blue, so calm, so inviting…we
drove into the leafy green paradise that sheltered our aunts, uncles,
grandparents, and now some of our children and their children…small cottages
and some larger homes are nestled in the forested hillside that leads down to
the lake where boat slips and a small private beach beckon. The memories that this residential woodland
holds for us are endless. We walked
these roads when we were toddlers, with our parents and their parents. Now we’re the grandparents, and the little
ones at the beach are my second cousins.
We stepped into the
cool, sweet waters of the lake, and sank into the silky softness that has its
own distinctive perfume. Again, the
hilarity of the past shenanigans of our siblings – the hiding of beer under the
dock, the times we rocked the raft so hard it flipped over – the many family
reunions – echoed in our ears and hearts like the soundtrack to a very old
film. We’ve lost two cousins, all of the
aunts and uncles, and certainly our grandparents. But we’re still here – for now.
Then, a member of
the next generation offered us a ride on the family boat. Oh, yes – this would complete my total joy at
being here again. We threw some clothes
over our wet swimsuits, and climbed aboard the pontoon boat. Off onto the larger lake we went – past
forests, houses, cottages, docks, and eventually the more remote valley and
beach where we rented cottages fifty or sixty years ago. We pulled into the cove where my father kept
our little wooden rowboat, where we all fished, where my older cousins swam,
and yes, where they stashed their beer for late-night rendezvous. As we pulled out onto the larger lake once more to head back toward the glens from which we had come, I received a text that yet another relative - my husband's aunt, the last of his mother's generation, had just died up in Canada. Another soul had launched from Earth to Heaven, and coincidentally, she had been a sailor. Perhaps it was the day, or the way the wind blew, or the incredible shade of blue of both water and sky...All of the memories
coalesced into that boat ride on that gloriously beautiful summer
afternoon. My brother had been laid to
rest, it is true, but now he is part of the great heavenly host of relatives
whom I imagine are still out there enjoying the lake, the cottages, the
children, the memories. This is hallowed
ground, and holy water.
From dust we come,
and to dust we shall return. It is
true. And perhaps our tears become the
raindrops that fill the lake, and our laughter becomes the wind rustling in the
trees along those beautiful wooded lanes.
There is loss in
death, without question. But as we grow older, and as more of us pass on to the
next world, the boundaries begin to waver and fade, and our beloved family
homeland becomes a thin place, as the Irish say. A place where one can walk between worlds.
Friday, July 7, 2017
The Long, Long Journey
This is perhaps the most difficult blog post I will have written to date. During the last eight years, my daughter Jessica and her husband Bryce have tried every possible method to have a child. They suffered through every combination of IVF, even trying donor eggs and donor sperm. Nothing worked. There were a few hopeful moments, but they always ended in tragedy. There were painful injections, painful procedures, a miscarriage...Jess was finally actually pregnant, but it ended in an ectopic pregnancy.
As the years ticked by, their hopes and dreams seemed dimmer and dimmer. I wept with them, sent flowers, prayed, and did everything in my power to make the universe welcoming for that infant grand baby that just never came. Finally, two years ago, Jess and Bryce decided to adopt. This was great news! She had a shower at school (she's a teacher.) She had a family -and -friends shower. The happy couple outfitted a nursery fit for a prince or a princess, with every doodad and invention that had ever been created to welcome a newborn into the family. And then they waited. And they waited. And they waited. They made a book about themselves as required by the adoption agency that was so well done. Jessica is a writer, and her well-honed skills came to her aid. But still they waited. And they waited some more.
Every now and then we would get an update that there was almost a match…They had 6 opportunities. Once, they were actually chosen, but the expectant mother ultimately chose to parent. The waiting couple weren’t getting any younger, and expectant moms seemed to want to choose couples who already have another child. My daughter and son-in-law continued to hope…again, they waited. And waited. Finally, the constant state of readiness and disappointment came to a head. There was too much physical and emotional stress involved in the constant waiting. They decided to stop the adoption search.
Now, they are beginning to heal. Now, they are celebrating who they are, not who they wanted to be. They have emptied the beautifully-appointed nursery, and donated all of their equipment, clothing, and furniture to a shelter for young mothers in crisis. Jess has carefully re-created the little empty nursery into a beautiful writer's nook, a lovely office that is calm and welcoming. There may never have been a baby in that room, but I know for sure that many great ideas, stories, and poems will be born in that space. I am so in awe of Jess and Bryce. They have had such strength throughout their eight years of waiting...Jess's mother-in-law and I have ridden that roller coaster with them for all these years, eagerly awaiting that miraculous moment when our first grand baby would come into our children's lives. Now we can all move on. We can celebrate the children that we have, the adults they have become, and the tremendous talents and abilities they bring to the world, just the two of them. May we all have the grace to accept what we cannot change as well as these two amazing people.
I have struggled to accept this loss the same year that I lost my brother, and even my cat - all within a few months. I'm 61 now, hardly a spring chicken. I, too, must focus on what I have - who I have - and not dwell on the infant grandchild who never arrived, the brother I lost too soon to cancer, and even the beloved feline companion who left us so abruptly. I am a person of faith. I don't have answers as to why all of this loss happened, but I do know that it is all part of life. In previous generations, when tragedy struck, people didn't ask "why" as we do today. More often, they asked "how." How do we carry on? How do we pick up and move forward in spite of our sorrow? That is the question. It is my belief that we do not walk this long, long journey alone. The Almighty sits with us in the silence, in the sorrow, in the slow realization that life will not happen as we assumed it would. God is not Santa Claus, filling our stockings with all of our desired gifts. However, prayer can help us focus...on strength, on compassion, on wisdom, and on finding contentment with who we are, who we love, and the life we've been privileged to live. I must dry my tears and move forward, celebrating the family that I do have - a terrific husband, two wonderful step-grandsons, two fabulous daughters, and the two sons-in-law who are so very perfect for my girls. I can and will continue this journey, with all of its highs and lows - grateful for what - and who - I have.
To visit Jessica's blog, My Path to Mommyhood, click on this link:
My Path to Mommyhood
As the years ticked by, their hopes and dreams seemed dimmer and dimmer. I wept with them, sent flowers, prayed, and did everything in my power to make the universe welcoming for that infant grand baby that just never came. Finally, two years ago, Jess and Bryce decided to adopt. This was great news! She had a shower at school (she's a teacher.) She had a family -and -friends shower. The happy couple outfitted a nursery fit for a prince or a princess, with every doodad and invention that had ever been created to welcome a newborn into the family. And then they waited. And they waited. And they waited. They made a book about themselves as required by the adoption agency that was so well done. Jessica is a writer, and her well-honed skills came to her aid. But still they waited. And they waited some more.
Every now and then we would get an update that there was almost a match…They had 6 opportunities. Once, they were actually chosen, but the expectant mother ultimately chose to parent. The waiting couple weren’t getting any younger, and expectant moms seemed to want to choose couples who already have another child. My daughter and son-in-law continued to hope…again, they waited. And waited. Finally, the constant state of readiness and disappointment came to a head. There was too much physical and emotional stress involved in the constant waiting. They decided to stop the adoption search.
Now, they are beginning to heal. Now, they are celebrating who they are, not who they wanted to be. They have emptied the beautifully-appointed nursery, and donated all of their equipment, clothing, and furniture to a shelter for young mothers in crisis. Jess has carefully re-created the little empty nursery into a beautiful writer's nook, a lovely office that is calm and welcoming. There may never have been a baby in that room, but I know for sure that many great ideas, stories, and poems will be born in that space. I am so in awe of Jess and Bryce. They have had such strength throughout their eight years of waiting...Jess's mother-in-law and I have ridden that roller coaster with them for all these years, eagerly awaiting that miraculous moment when our first grand baby would come into our children's lives. Now we can all move on. We can celebrate the children that we have, the adults they have become, and the tremendous talents and abilities they bring to the world, just the two of them. May we all have the grace to accept what we cannot change as well as these two amazing people.
I have struggled to accept this loss the same year that I lost my brother, and even my cat - all within a few months. I'm 61 now, hardly a spring chicken. I, too, must focus on what I have - who I have - and not dwell on the infant grandchild who never arrived, the brother I lost too soon to cancer, and even the beloved feline companion who left us so abruptly. I am a person of faith. I don't have answers as to why all of this loss happened, but I do know that it is all part of life. In previous generations, when tragedy struck, people didn't ask "why" as we do today. More often, they asked "how." How do we carry on? How do we pick up and move forward in spite of our sorrow? That is the question. It is my belief that we do not walk this long, long journey alone. The Almighty sits with us in the silence, in the sorrow, in the slow realization that life will not happen as we assumed it would. God is not Santa Claus, filling our stockings with all of our desired gifts. However, prayer can help us focus...on strength, on compassion, on wisdom, and on finding contentment with who we are, who we love, and the life we've been privileged to live. I must dry my tears and move forward, celebrating the family that I do have - a terrific husband, two wonderful step-grandsons, two fabulous daughters, and the two sons-in-law who are so very perfect for my girls. I can and will continue this journey, with all of its highs and lows - grateful for what - and who - I have.
To visit Jessica's blog, My Path to Mommyhood, click on this link:
My Path to Mommyhood
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
The Rainbow Bridge
This weekend I said goodbye to my beloved companion, Tobey.
Tobey was my cat.
Not just any cat, but The One True Cat.
Like all of our pets, Tobey was a rescue animal. My eldest daughter Jessica fostered him as a kitten, then adopted him as he grew. When she met the man she would marry, Tobey wreaked havoc on their household for three days before they made the decision that he wasn't going to blend into the family in a good way. Tobey then went to live with my younger daughter, Amanda. She loved him, he loved her, and all was rosy until she ended up in the emergency room with a super-bad asthma attack. She was allergic to Tobey.
Tobey came to live with us. It was love at first sight. Aside from the fact that he couldn't tolerate any other animals in the house, it was a perfect match. Tobey behaved much more like a dog than a cat, at times...he played fetch, was very social, and was quite possibly the most affectionate animal I have ever known. He continued playing whole-heartedly well into his senior years. We estimated that he was about fifteen years old this year.
Because we are avid travelers, we had several friends and neighbors who took turns taking care of him while we were away. Tobey educated each and every one of them in the ways he liked to play. One of our neighbors, a retired social worker and the neighborhood Cat Lady, began creating intelligence tests that masqueraded as games. He would eagerly rise to each challenge she presented to him, often causing a lot of hilarity when we came home. Once when I arrived home from a trip, Tobey joined me in the bathroom, hopped in the tub, and looked at me expectantly. Then he blinked, looked at me with complete disgust, as if to say, "Get with the program! Don't you know what we're supposed to be playing now?" I'd call Joan, and ask her what exactly I was supposed to do with a cat in a bathtub. And she would tell me...
Tobey had an amazing ability to look deep into our eyes and communicate...well, I'm not sure what, but it was incredibly deep.
What he didn't communicate was that he was in pain. Mortal pain.
Last week, he began throwing up. We were annoyed. Then he stopped eating. I took him to the vet. She drew blood, but his lab reports came back negative for diabetes, kidney disease, and hypothyroidism. She suggested a scan of his abdomen.
Meanwhile, Tobey became very weak. The day of his scan, he wouldn't come out from under the love seat in the sun room, his favorite room. I crawled as far under as I could, stroked his head, and he meowed the weakest, most tired meow I've ever heard. I knew his time had come. Weeping, I asked my husband to take him to the vet clinic early...
Tobey never came home. His scan showed a belly filled with cancer. The best thing for him was to end his life. My husband brought him home in a tiny kitty casket, wrapped in a blue blanket.
He looked like he was sleeping, his body curled in a little ball, his paws crossed over his nose. A pose I have seen so many times.
Joan came over to say goodbye. We sat with his little casket between us, stroking his soft, soft fur.
My husband and I packed up our weekend bags and took Tobey with us to his final resting place, the Memorial Garden at our little camp in the Catskills. We drove three hours to get there. I sat in the passenger seat with the little coffin on my lap.
Once we arrived, my husband dug a grave in the soft earth of the garden. We said a little prayer, placed the box in the ground, and covered him over in the earth. I put one of his favorite toys in his box, and put more toys and his brush (he loved to be brushed) on the rocks of his cairn. Then I put a candle my daughter had given me on the stone. It had been raining as we arrived, and the rain continued for three more days. That candle didn't go out for 52 hours. It burned night and day, clearly visible from the road when we took our walks in the rain, and didn't go out until the morning of our fourth day there. When it did finally sputter out, I took it as a sign that it was time to let Tobey go. Several friends wrote to me that Tobey had "crossed the rainbow bridge," a concept I had never heard. I asked Rob what it meant. His response: "Maybe he went to Canada?" (There is a Rainbow Bridge in Buffalo...) And so Tobey lies at rest in the garden that I have filled over the years with little wooden plaques bearing the names of family members who have passed. I filled the garden with impatiens, geraniums, begonias, iris, bleeding heart, star flower, and peonies. It already had the Harry Lauder Walking Stick Tree my in-laws had planted in memory of my father, and the climbing white rose bush that friends of the family bought to memorialize my mother-in-law. I added a wind chime that hangs in the ornamental cherry tree over Tobey's grave, a small cherub holding a bird in her hands next to the bird bath, and finally, a black steel bench that my husband assembled for folks to sit by the beautiful garden and meditate. Tobey is the only pet of many buried there that has his own wooden plaque. Tobey was a member of our family, a friend, a mentor, and a cat who thought he was a dog. As for that Rainbow Bridge, I finally know what it means. A number of dear friends and family members informed me that when our beloved animal companions leave us, they go to a place just this side of Heaven. There is sunshine, no pain, lots of food, toys galore, and no illness or death. There, they wait for their human companions to join them. Then, together, they cross the Rainbow Bridge, and enter into eternal life. Some of us have several pets waiting there for us. I hope Tobey is enjoying the view...
Monday, May 1, 2017
Walking for Hope
Every year my daughter takes part in a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, the Relay for Life. This year she invited me to participate in it with her. I had no idea of what to expect - I knew it had to do with walking, and with getting pledges for the amount of time walked. She put together a team for her Lions Club, and sent me an invitation to join the team. "Why not?" I thought. "How difficult can this be?" It turned out that taking part in that adventure was a very healing experience for me.
I made the four-hour drive to Potsdam, NY where the event was to be held. There were many teams, mostly of college students, lined up to register for the event in the field house of the large, state university athletic facility. Each team was given a specific piece of the indoor track infield in which to set up a "base camp." Teams would walk from 8:00 p.m. Friday night until 6:00 a.m. Saturday morning, nonstop - hence the concept of a "relay." My daughter and I took two camp chairs, a small table, and the cardboard diorama my daughter made to go along with the Dr. Seuss theme of this year's event. Our little "encampment" was entirely surrounded by the members of several sororities and fraternities, who claimed their spaces with canopy tents, sleeping bags, pillows, stuffed animals, and all manner of interesting slumber-party type items. Other groups included athletic teams, an entire conglomeration of North Country firefighters of all ages, several service clubs, and various other committees, individuals, and alumni. It was colorful, to say the least!
After opening ceremonies, we bought and decorated luminarias, paper bags that would hold tea light candles (battery operated) for the 10:00 p.m. ceremony honoring loved ones who had died of cancer. My daughter and I each made one in honor of my father (leukemia in '93) and my brother (lung cancer in '17). These were put aside while our teams began walking. First there was the Survivors' Lap, in which purple-shirted survivors took a lap with a special banner while relay members cheered from the sidelines. Then there was a Caregivers' Lap. My daughter urged me to take part in this - as a Hospice volunteer, I have helped care not only for my brother, but for five other cancer patients since beginning this work in September. I began the lap with a large group of others. When we rounded a corner, all of the firefighters were standing at attention, saluting us as we walked by. That was a hard moment not to cry. The firefighters have put their own lives on the line time and time again, ready at a moment's notice to help save lives. To have their respect was a humbling moment. After those two laps, all the teams began their relays. As people became tired, one or two members would go sit out a lap or two at their "base camps" while others took their places in the walk. There were special fundraising events throughout the evening: People could sign up to hula-hoop, and the firefighters held a very popular fundraiser involving donating money to walk a mile in their gear. Other groups sold wrist bands, hats, and other artifacts to add to the money raised for cancer research. There were musical groups performing, a DJ, and tons of free food - nachos, popcorn, cotton candy, veggie platters with humus...something for everyone. And lots and lots of coffee. At 10:00 we stopped walking for the remembrance ceremony. All of the luminarias were placed around the inside of the track. Lights were put out, and candles were not yet turned on while various survivors told their stories. Then, a silent lap was taken in the total darkness. Slowly, as each person was moved, the luminaries memorializing loved ones were lighted, until the entire track was lit by candlelight while music played. It was profoundly moving. There were tears, hugs, and an overall sense of camaraderie among everyone there. The firefighters put their helmets next to the luminarias memorializing their lost members. Eventually the lights came back on, the upbeat music returned, people donned their costumes and Seuss hats, and the party went on. My daughter and I left around 11:00, leaving the relay to the students on our team (we're too old for all-nighters any more.) The Lions Club earned a special award that night for fundraising. In all, the state university raised over $42,000 for cancer research. It was a challenge, both physically and emotionally, to take part in this large-group extravaganza. But it was totally worth it. The overriding message was, You are not alone. If you or a loved one are living with cancer, or have lost family and friends to cancer, you are not alone. These relays take place all over the country. Our loved ones live through our memories, and in our willingness to step out on behalf of those who do the research and caregiving to beat this disease. It is a walk for hope.
Friday, April 14, 2017
Day is Done
Wednesday, April 5, 2017
The Lone Silver Wolf
Tomorrow I am leaving for Ohio again, this time for the last time of this six-month journey of saying good-bye to my brother. Yesterday I was filled with grief. Nothing would make me feel better, until I spent several hours in my little home studio and made a few small paintings. One of them, "Ghost Pack," was a bit unusual in terms of symbolism. Maybe I didn't know I was processing my grief. After all, what does the image of a wolf have to do with losing a brother?
Today the meaning came to me. I remembered a story about Barrington Bunny from a book called "The Way of the Wolf," by Martin Bell, that came out in the 70s. Today I looked it up, and there it was...the lone, silver wolf, by the forest's edge, looking out for the little guy. Looking out for someone he loved. The lone silver wolf would not leave a friend alone in the snow... The story of Barrington Bunny may be found here: http://www.angelfire.com/music/lefantome/bunny.html.
Today the meaning came to me. I remembered a story about Barrington Bunny from a book called "The Way of the Wolf," by Martin Bell, that came out in the 70s. Today I looked it up, and there it was...the lone, silver wolf, by the forest's edge, looking out for the little guy. Looking out for someone he loved. The lone silver wolf would not leave a friend alone in the snow... The story of Barrington Bunny may be found here: http://www.angelfire.com/music/lefantome/bunny.html.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
It's been a long couple of months. While I was writing my earlier blog posts, my brother Jim was struggling with lung cancer. He was diagnosed about a year ago, but after radiation therapy, they thought they got it all. Think again. In late September, Jim found out he had Stage IV lung cancer. Terminal. My husband and I were able to make it out to Ohio to visit him and his family four times between September and his death a few days ago. Those visits were so very important to us. Each visit found Jim just a little bit weaker, although his spirits remained high. Each visit left me wondering if it would be our last. We went out in October, and Jim was still getting out to enjoy eating out and other trips. We went back in December. He was on heavy pain meds then, and slept a lot. We did have a few good hours with him, exchanging Christmas gifts and sitting around the kitchen talking and laughing. I had made a fleece blanket for him, green with white deer (bucks, of course. With antlers.) We drove back out in February, just after he spent a week in the hospital. He went home to Hospice care. That weekend, we arrived on a Friday. It was a shock to see him in his hospital bed in his living room, a darkened room curtained off from the rest of the house. The green and white buck fleece I had made him for Christmas was on his bed. I spent a lot of time sitting by his bedside, praying. Slowly over the course of the weekend, he began to get up a little, and by the end of the weekend, he was using his walker to get around the house a little bit, even venturing into the kitchen. After we departed, his wife Kim told us he had made it out to a casino! That just seemed miraculous. Then the call came a few days ago. Jim was failing. Did we want to come out? Of course we did. We made the drive, even though a wind storm had left our home in Rochester, NY without power. We found my brother sitting in his elevator-chair, the one that was bought during our last visit. However, this time I don't think my brother recognized me. At all. My husband and his sons helped put him back in his bed, as his legs would no longer bear his weight. Once again, the green buck fleece blanket was his cover. He was heavily medicated. Although his eyes opened, and he even recognized his wife, sons, and the wife of his best friend, he was clearly on his journey. The family sat vigil around the clock, and we spent many hours with them. Twice I was sure his time had come, but he rallied both times. He had the unexpected energy burst that sometimes happens with one who is ready to leave this world. Then he crashed. My husband and I had to leave on Sunday afternoon, which was very difficult for me. The family had "cocooned" so deeply that I felt cold and alone when I left the house. Of course, Jim's family continued the vigil...until I received the call about 24 hours later that my brother had passed away. I cried. I sobbed. I howled into my own fleece blanket. My brother! My brother! Where are you now, my brother? My daughter gave me a beautiful flower arrangement which I placed on the cover of my grand piano, along with candles and a photo of Jim, laughing and smiling for the camera. My brother is at rest now, at peace. My brother is no longer suffering. We believe that he is with God. We were blessed to have him on this earth for 69 years, but now my brother has gone home. Sleep well, dear Jim. We will see you in the Great Bye and Bye.




Thursday, January 12, 2017
Silent Night, Holy Night
And so the holidays came and went. My husband and I spent time with our daughters and their families, and travelled down to NYC and up to Orillia, Ontario to visit family and friends. As always, the ghosts of the past floated through...family and friends who had passed away, some during the holidays.
Some of our friends passed away last year during this month, January. In fact, last year I lost four friends in one week, two on the same day. None of them knew each other. It was one of the most devastating weeks of my life. My husband and I were on vacation in Florida, enjoying the relative warmth and sunshine with family and friends who had made their move South years ago. Upon our return, I attended four funerals, stunned and numbed by the unexpectedness, the suddenness of their departure. Yesterday all of this came flooding back, as I began planning and packing for another upcoming trip south. Yesterday was also darkened by a loss of another kind, sustained by family members. I was struck by the unfairness of life. Yesterday, it just seemed as if all the wrong people were rewarded and all the right people were punished. Of course, I know that in reality, bad things happen to good people all the time, for no apparent reason. However, that does not dim the loss. As I dragged through the day, feeling the heavy weight of baggage both old and new, I felt like I was 100 years old. Where is the justice in all of this? I am a person of faith, and yet my prayers had not been answered. Of course, I know that God is not Santa Claus. He doesn't check his list for who's been naughty or nice. I've played by the rules. My family and friends have played by the rules. We've been good. Why was life turning out this way? Then, last night my husband and I did our first shift at the Hospice house since November. (The house was closed when we were supposed to work in December; the two then-current residents had died.) A friend asked if I was really up for working there last night, given my dark mood. Yes, I said, I need to go. When I'm down for the count, I know the value of serving. Of giving. Of leaving my personal pity party and sitting by the bedside of a dying woman, whose daughter is keeping vigil. And so we went. The evening went quickly, as instead of a quiet time spent while the resident slept, I was called upon to do quite a lot of patient care. Thank God the nurse on call came in, because I had forgotten how to do the most basic things. She patiently guided and watched me as I repositioned the resident, gave her the pre-measured medications, offered her sips of water, comforted her daughter, and sat by her bed keeping vigil after her family went home for the night. There's something about being present with a person on her final journey that erases all of the sadness, sorrow, and exhaustion of my own problems. Life looks pretty good when you're sitting with the dying. In an interesting twist, this lovely 90-year-young woman had the same name I have. I felt like Ebenezer Scrooge looking at his own gravestone shortly before he had his epiphany and became a better person. Epiphany...according to the online British Dictionary, the secular definition is "A moment when you suddenly feel that you understand, or suddenly become conscious of, something that is very important to you." Its religious meaning is the recognition by the wise men that the baby Jesus was indeed the savior that had been foretold in the Old Testament scriptures. Here I was, not in a manger, or even an inn, but in the room of a dying woman, and I found peace with God. My epiphany. When our shift ended very late that night, I left a calmer, more centered person. As the night aide came on duty, I had laid hands on the resident, silently calling upon her spiritual Guide to bring her stillness and peace as she entered what might be her last night's sleep. My hope for all of you, my readers, is that you might also find your Guide, and that you might also be able to live with the injustices of life. We all hope for the best for our families and friends, but that doesn't always happen. But we can find the strength and the courage to be the best partners we can as they make their life journey. Happy New Year to all. May you find strength and peace in 2017.
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