Poppa made it to 90. For weeks leading up to his birthday, he often seemed anxious about the date and when I asked him why, he replied that he didn't want to miss his birthday! My sister, Kacy, flew in late Thursday night and surprised him by waking him up the next morning. He was a little confused but when she told him she had come to celebrate his birthday with him, he was pleased. Poppa seemed to feel well and was mentally in the moment most of the time, slipping into fuzziness now and then, as was his custom.
Because Kacy had to leave on his actual birthday, Sunday, August 5, we planned his party for Saturday. Not wanting to buy gifts for the man who had at least one of everything, we bought a half-dozen silly musical cards, streamers, balloons, confetti, party beads and a helium fish balloon as well as party plates and napkins. We comisioned two dozen gourmet cupcakes from a friend and Tim cooked Pop's favorite dinner of corned beef and cabbage.
The meal was festive and Poppa ate a lot of everything. Afterwards, we gave him the cards to open. He couldn't actually hear the silly songs in the cards so he missed the humor but he smiled graciously. Everyone was later shooed into the living room while we tidied up and got the cupcakes ready by placing a couple dozen skinny party candles in them and setting them ablaze. Poppa's face was alight with joy as well as from the candle glow. It was a precious time. I think we watched a movie but Pop tired early and went to bed.
The next day, Sunday, he slept all morning, as he had been doing more and more often. When I told him that Kacy was going to be leaving soon he finally got up and sat in his chair. Kacy hugged him and cried, Pop telling her how much it meant that she had come for his special day. We drove her to the airport and sent her on her way, knowing that she would most likely never see Pop again.
Poppa fell back to sleep in his chair. It was later in the day when he finally woke up enough to receive his birthday phone calls. I overheard him saying something to my brother, Bud, like, "Oh, I guess I'm 91. I don't know where the time has gone...." I think he was confused that Bud was wishing him a happy birthday again, and he figured a year must have slipped by somehow.
The week following his birthday Poppa passed in and out of dementia. One day he would sleep, the next he would seem fine. His pain didn't seem to be unmanageable. He would be better by bedtime and would invariable ask me what adventures lay before us the next day. After Friday, though, he never really came back into the present. He became increasingly confused. Even though he still knew us, he couldn't reconcile that he was in his own home. His thought we were in a hotel and it concerned him that all of the "people out there" needed looking after and he couldn't decide what needed to be done about it.
His last week was not an easy one. He lost contact with reality and became fretful. Finally he deteriorated to the point where he was upset and angry that someone had placed all of his things "here." But he was adamant that it was not his home and that made him very unhappy. By the following Thursday he was slipping into total dementia and needed round the clock care. Thinking that this was the way things were going to be for some time to come, we hired Angels on Duty to fill in the hours between 11 PM and 7 AM and also on Saturday to help with bathing and his personal needs. The hospital bed was installed on Friday. About the only thing that would wake him was the urge to go to the toilet but by Saturday he was too weak, even with assistance, to make it into the bathroom. The visiting nurse and I cleaned and changed Pop around 11:30 PM and I left her with instructions to call me if there were any changes, no matter what the time.
Sunday morning I tossed and turned from two o'clock onward. I finally woke up enough around six to realize that I needed to get up and check on Dad. When I got in the room his breath had deteriorated into a rattle and I was so shocked that the "nurse" hadn't realized that it was a sign of impending death. I woke Tim and Ben immediately and called hospice. The on-call nurse came until our nurse, Anita, arrived. I called Cara in Springfield and she drove down as quickly as possible.
I spent most of the day on vigil by the bedside, holding Poppa's hand and cooing to him, telling him it was okay to leave us, that we would be fine. People passed mugs of steaming coffee to me and hugged my shoulders but, except for a few moments, I don't think I left the room. Poppa passed away early in the afternoon. I cried, selfishly in my grief, "what will I do with myself now?" because caring for my father had become my full-time employment, my sole focus in life.
He was so much more ill than we had known. The cancer had gone crazy in his body and done terrible damage in just a very short time. Had he known or was it God's mercy that he had increasing dementia so that he wouldn't understand? We will never know. The end came so amazingly quickly. Just when I was feeling like this part of my life was interminable, he was gone. And right up until almost the very end he was still wanting to go out for some adventures, he and I, shopping, going to lunch, messing around.
Thank you, God, for the opportunity to serve my dad. Thanks for the time to get to know him in this special way, to love on him and spoil him. And I am grateful for every day that I had to call upon Your strength to get through it because it has made me stronger. Nothing else would have stretched me to such a degree that I, coming to the end of myself ten times an hour, would gasp and grasp the hand that sustained me. So that when all was said and done, I'd know that it was He in me and not myself that gets the glory. But Poppa made it to 90.
Showing posts with label reminiscence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reminiscence. Show all posts
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Poppa at 90
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Friday, November 5, 2010
November Rose
The trees have turned very little. The red maple in our front yard is the exception. It has been changing colors slowly over the last few weeks, hanging on tenaciously despite windy fronts and wide swings in temperatures. Today it is melting into deepest ruby red, preparing to finally deliver it's bounty of leaves to the waiting ivy below. Look out over this part of Missouri from any high vantage point you will see greens and grey and browns and even some bare branches.
Some people say it's because of the dry autumn. Lord knows we have had a terribly dry October, but the rest of the summer had plenty of rain. My frustration is this: every year in New England they have marvelous displays of color. Do you mean to tell me that they never have dry years? Years dry enough to cause eighty percent of the foliage to NOT change colors? I don't think so.
Every year it's something. Last year it was too warm. This year it is too dry. I am not going to begin to understand this and folks who know me know that I drive myself to distraction "trying to figure things out."
I planted a flower garden early last summer just below the windows of my parents' apartment. I planted impatiens and roses and zinnias and blue ageratum, hoping my parents would come sit on the little patio and enjoy the flowers of a mild summer evening. To my knowledge, they've never visited the little flower garden, but they do look down upon it and approve. I have regularly brought in cut flowers for Momma to enjoy and this week I brought her the last two roses of the year. The weather man predicts the temperature to plummet into the lower twenties tonight. That will end the flowers and the russet leaves and the persistently green ones as well.
Tomorrow it will look like winter. And it will be winter soon enough. Short gray days with gray skies and gray tree trunks and gray grass. Windows shuttered tightly against the gray winds. I begin to think of snowflakes instead of roses. Winter. A quieter time, smaller, more confining. Layers of clothing, walls and windows. Enclosed. Close. One petal falls from the November rose, landing in a beam of weak wintery sunlight slanting on the breakfast table.
Some people say it's because of the dry autumn. Lord knows we have had a terribly dry October, but the rest of the summer had plenty of rain. My frustration is this: every year in New England they have marvelous displays of color. Do you mean to tell me that they never have dry years? Years dry enough to cause eighty percent of the foliage to NOT change colors? I don't think so.
Every year it's something. Last year it was too warm. This year it is too dry. I am not going to begin to understand this and folks who know me know that I drive myself to distraction "trying to figure things out."
I planted a flower garden early last summer just below the windows of my parents' apartment. I planted impatiens and roses and zinnias and blue ageratum, hoping my parents would come sit on the little patio and enjoy the flowers of a mild summer evening. To my knowledge, they've never visited the little flower garden, but they do look down upon it and approve. I have regularly brought in cut flowers for Momma to enjoy and this week I brought her the last two roses of the year. The weather man predicts the temperature to plummet into the lower twenties tonight. That will end the flowers and the russet leaves and the persistently green ones as well.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Tree House

It looked very different when we moved in. Six little arborvitaes had been planted near the foundation, dwarfed by the jutting bulkhead of our facade. We had a century maple, ailing, on the north side of the house and a couple of old maples in the back. In the bigger one we tied ropes to the lateral branches to make swings for the grandsons who used them for years. I loved to come home from work and swing with my head thrown back like a little child, gazing up at the winter evening stars. Even then, the maples were so diseased and hollow that the tree trimmer said he would never climb them again.
So we planted cotton wood, weeping willow, pin oak, redbud, and I don't know what else. We just stuck things in the ground and hoped some would survive. All of them have.
In the front we planted clump birches, pin oaks, a Bradford pear, red maple, ash and redbud. Any of these trees would have been big enough to fill the yard but instead they have all grown and filled in. I've tried to "layer" them, limbing up so that there are mid and upper story branches.
It looks like an animal sanctuary or the beginning of the movie "Shrek": birds and rabbits and squirrels "tweet, tweet, twittering" around the yard. The tips of the branches overlap, forming roadways for the squirrels to run from tree to tree. It's lush and leafy, almost too green. But I like living in my tree house, shaded from the blazing afternoon sun and shielded from passers by.
Years ago my mother-in-law, Emy, and I would sit outside in the late afternoons. From our perspective on the porch, we would place bets when the red maple would reach or exceed the apex of our neighbors' roof across the street. She'd laugh at the ash because it didn't look like a tree at all, more like a stalk of celery. I insisted that it would assume the appearance of a tree eventually.
These days, as I look up through the mature canopy, I think about which branches need to be removed because they're brushing up against the house or cutting out too much sunlight for even the shade loving plants in the under story. The big old maple out back is gone and I miss the boys swinging on it. I wish Emy were here to see how the ash has grown into a real tree and not just an odd celery-top looking thing and that the red maple is now as tall as the house.
What will the next owners think when they move in? I wonder if they'll think we were crazy to plant all of these trees and have them all taken down. They might not like living in a tree house, after all.
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