Saturday, June 25, 2011

But He's Not There

The week just ended has been one for the ages. We'll start late in the evening on last Friday, the 17th. Around 10 PM I learned that a friend died very unexpectedly. He was a month shy of 40. His children are 1, 5, and 8 years old. You want to talk living dadlessly? These children, now facing their entire lives without their very loving and attentive father, are all I can think about. His wife is also my friend, and the fact that she is suddenly a widow so young defies all understanding. I've got much more to say about this very good man and his devastated family, but let's take a full accounting of the week.

Last Sunday was my first Fathers Day without my dad, and my wife and kids made it a nice day... until the mid afternoon, when wife and I cleaned up and dressed up and headed to an orthodox Jewish wedding. I mean really observant. Men and women were separated for the entire affair. It was fun, different, and another event that makes this week a stand-out.

Monday was my oldest child's last day of first grade. How on earth did any of us get this old? Oh yes, and I spent that day in and out of press events at the headquarters of the United Nations. Not the kind of thing one does every day.

Tuesday was the funeral for the friend who died. I sincerely hope that my family and our tight-knit community can live up to our promises to help this family move into a future that must seem impossibly frightening right now.

Thursday I flew to my home town with only my one-year-old daughter in tow. She is a delight. That same day I stood at my father's grave 363 days after he left us. I wanted it to feel a certain way. I wanted to feel close to him. I felt not much at all. It wasn't because I don't love my dad or miss him. But nothing about that site connects me to him. I don't believe the deceased hang around near their graves just to hear what their bereaved relatives might say. In fact, I don't believe the deceased are anywhere at all.

Once or twice over this past year I have imagined my father's presence, but I have always very acutely felt the sting of his absence. I felt his absence when I stood in his workshop and wondered what was the last project he was working on, and whether he realized the last time he was in that room that it would be the last time. I felt it on Thanksgiving. I felt it on the April morning when his house was alive with activity as we all got dressed for his unveiling. I feel the sting when I visit with my grandmother. I feel it when my mom tells me how much she misses him. And I feel it every time any of my children hits a milestone or just does something cute - these are daily occurrences. I'm torn between being sad for him that he is missing out on all the fun, and being sad for us because we don't have him to share in our lives anymore.

When I feel that sting of his absence, of being cut off from him, the feeling has nowhere to go. The words I want to say would do just as much good if I spoke them to our gold fish. I can look up to the sky and speak, but he's not there. I can just say out loud what I hope he'll hear, but wherever I am, he's not there. I tried talking to him in his workshop, but with all his unfinished work laying around, I really hope he's not there.

Now we've reached the end of one hell of a strange and emotionally challenging week, and I am marking one year since a nurse named Iffy called me not a half hour after I said goodbye to my dad for what I knew would be the last time, and said to me, "I've got some bad news..." One year since I had to tell my mom that my dad had died. As many families with young kids do, we've crammed a lot of memories into the year that's passed. I want more than anything to have my dad back so he can assume his rightful place in some of those memories and so I can share other ones with him, but I am kind of getting used to the hole. He is simply, finally, irretrievably, not there.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Every Day is Kids' Day

It would be too easy to get sentimental on my first Father's Day without my dad. I'd rather share a memory of my dad in his prime. This story has a little of everything: my dad as the skilled and fearless craftsman, who makes a snap decision that saves the day. And the whole reason the day needed saving was that he was trying to make me happy.

When I wanted to play drums as a kid, my father took me seriously. After much searching, my dad bought me a very old jazz drum kit from a very old jazz drummer. Together we learned all about tuning the drums, taking care of the hardware, what to do when it turns out you've bought drums in metric sizes that won't use standard size drum heads, etc.

Since it was a used kit I had to deal with the fact that the drums bore a garish glittery green finish. This was the mid-80s and I was 11. The idea that something could be so dorky as to become ironically cool didn't exist for me yet. In the 80s I'm not certain that concept existed for anyone. But green they were, and there was no getting around it. It was still pretty great to have any drums at all.

After about three years during which I became an adept drummer, I could take the green no longer. I'm sure my dad felt he could no longer deal with my whining about it. He could stand being in our modest-sized house while I pounded away on the drums for hours without a break, but my complaining about the green drums finally drove him to seek out a solution. He was very handy anyway, and was never afraid of a project. Over the years I'd stood by while he splayed the guts of TV sets and other appliances out over his professional-class work bench. I'd seen him replace a power window mechanism in a car door, and install a tile floor in a large room. Turning my ugly green drums into something better suited to my private sessions re-imagining the drum parts on "Appetite for Destruction" surely was within my dad's reach.

Some twenty years later I still don't really know what his plan was, or how he managed to pull it off, but I can say that a blow-torch was prominently involved in the early steps. The first drum he started with was the floor tom. This is the deep-pitched drum that is roughly the size and shape of a small keg of beer.

Here is where this tale of fatherly devotion turns to one of fatherly calm in the face of serious danger. That glittery green material on the drums turned out to be highly flammable. In the room where he kept a large and valuable record collection, my dad had the drum on its side on a parquet floor when the whole thing went up in flames. He started to roll it on the floor hoping to snuff out the fire. No luck. The smoke alarm started going off and my mom called from across the house to ask what was the matter. My dad had to decide how to get her to help without freaking her out - and he had to do it while holding a burning wooden shell with a blow torch and all his records nearby - not to mention his own body.

He made a split-second decision that made all the difference. He didn't shout, "FIRE!" Smart man that my father was, he shouted, "WATER!" And that is what my mom brought into the room quickly. And that is how he got the fire out and everything calmed down within a few minutes.

He finished the drum job without using the blow-torch, and I played my shiny, black, good-as-new, drums for years after that.

If you are a dad, or if you will be with your dad, I hope you have a terrific Father's Day.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Alice's Bucket List

Yesterday I discovered Alice's Bucket List, the new blog by a 15-year-old girl in the UK who knows she is going to die very young from a cancer she's been fighting since she was 11. She's got two posts so far, and one of them is her bucket list. Imagine being that young and knowing it was time to think about what experiences you want to cram in before you get very very ill and die. Imagine being the parent of a kid in this situation. It's too much to even try to process.

I have said before that while losing my dad has been awful, I don't regard it as a tragedy. The story of Alice is a tragedy of the highest order.

Her list is sweet and simple, and much of it seems within her grasp. Most heart-breaking are the few items she acknowledges it's already too late for her to ever have or do. My first thought on reading the list - and yours will be, too - was to think about whether I could have anything to do with helping Alice get anything on the list. It's not likely, because she lives in the UK, and it really isn't that kind of list. But one thing she is asking is that everyone sign up to become a bone marrow donor.

I'll be honest, I'm not sure I have the nerve. But part of that is because there is so much blather out there about the process of donating bone marrow. So I've decided that if nothing else, I will learn as much as I can about it, and I hope you will, too. It may not be for me, it may not be for you, but we owe it to Alice to at least find out for sure. Here are FAQs about the whole process from the National Marrow Donor Program.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Here We Go 'Round Again

We have these close friends who make a calendar every year with candid pictures of all our kids. When our two families first became friends we each had a lone baby boy. Now there are five children between us. I love the friends and I love receiving that calendar every year. Hanging beside our pantry, it's a daily reminder of the great times we have along the way.

But this morning as my seven-year-old was flipping ahead to preview the pictures coming in the next few months, I momentarily went numb. "Dad, remember when we took this picture? It was last Memorial Day weekend, the day after Roy Halladay threw his perfect game. We went out for ice cream with the L- and the C- families that day. Remember?" The sweet boy has no idea just how much I remember.

I remember that I dropped my wife and kids off at the ice cream place, and as I was looking for a parking space along the cramped and narrow streets of our shore town, my phone rang. Mom was frantic because Dad, who'd already been told to consider hospice, but who until that point had not seemed like he had only four mostly miserable weeks to live, had started slurring his words out of nowhere. It had never happened before. She called an ambulance. That night, the day after Roy Halladay threw his perfect game, the day we went out for ice cream with the L- and C- families, almost fifty-one months after his initial diagnosis, my dad was admitted for the first overnight hospital stay of his cancer experience. A pretty damn good streak was over.

I've said before that before parenthood I had a great memory for dates: birthdays and anniversaries were a snap, and I could remember dates and details about even unremarkable events without trying very hard. Now that I've got some traumatic memories in the mix, I try not to dwell on dates, and I try not to mope just because of a number on a calendar. However, as we're now into June, getting close to the date on which my dad died last year, some date-jogged memories are unavoidable. Here I am doing a lot of the same things I was doing at this time last year, but with my dad simply, irreversibly, missing from the picture. And it was this season, this month, that weekend, when the abstract idea that I would eventually lose my dad became no longer a far off abstraction, but a clear, definite, inevitability.

Any brain can hold only so much info, and it does me no good to devote free disk space to bad memories. When I think about my dad, I'd much prefer to focus on his life than on his death. It's a shame we can't un-remember things.