He was dying. I knew he was dying. His doctor, when I was finally able to corner him to ask for answers he made it clear that 1. my dad didn't deserve a liver transplant because he was an alcoholic, 2. that dad's organs were in the process of dying as a result of the cirrhosis, and 3. that he was not going to use any "heroic" measures when my dad's organs failed.
For a few weeks my dad's cognitive function had been declining. He would wander the halls at the hospital, so the nurses would lock him in what amounted to an adult high chair, and asked me to be there whenever I wasn't in class to baby sit him because they were busy. An acquaintance once mentioned the cute little old man who sat in the high chair in the hallway on the floor where her mom was recovering from surgery, "yeah, that's my dad."
For weeks he hadn't been coherent. He was either unconscious, or he was conscious but essentially unaware of who he was or where he was. My last coherent conversation with him before his brain became so pickled by ammonia he had said the heart breaking words, "If I could have one wish...(in the long pause I filled in the sentence 'I'd get the ranch back', 'I'd spend more time with you', 'I never would have drank'...)...it would be that I could drink the way I used to." Grace-2025 understands the power of addiction, but writing those words still rips a little hole in my heart.
But those weren't the very last words, and of course I didn't know his last words would be his last words. I went to visit him before my evening class. It was the first time he'd been "awake" in several days. He whimpered about needing to pee so I helped him with his urinal, then he was thirsty and I helped him drink a can of juice. "I'm scared. I don't want to die," he told me. "It's ok dad, you're not going to die." I didn't know what else to say. I was a 20 year old, emotional mess, who'd been taking care of their dad for the last year alone. I didn't have the emotional fortitude for anything else, so even though I had some time to spare, I slipped out of the room with my last words to him, "I'll be back after class."
I really didn't think he would die that night, not after having woken up, spoken, and drank something. But half way through my class the campus security came to find me to tell me that the hospital was trying to reach me. I drove straight over to the hospital and ran up to his room to find it empty. I knew but didn't want to believe he was dead. I paced the hallway looking for someone to confirm. A few moments later a chaplain that I'd only met in passing apologized for not being in the room when I'd gotten there, and confirmed that my dad had died earlier that evening. She asked if I wanted to see him, but I wasn't ready to see his dead body, and I wasn't ready to cry in front of this stranger. After my sharp "no" to her question, she asked if I'd not been close to my father. "What a stupid fucking thing to ask" I thought to myself, "just because I'm not blubbering like a fool." I would not let myself cry. I hadn't planned on letting myself cry until the funeral, but I couldn't hold it in when I went to the viewing. And I thought that after the funeral my grieving would be over. One big cry and done- that's how cowboys did it, right? But no, here I am 35 years later and I'm still grieving.
Grieving the loss of the dad that he was, grieving the loss of the dad that could have been, grieving for the milestones and achievements he never go to be there for, grieving for not having the right words, grieving for not just being able to say "I love you" because we both had to be 'tough cowboys.'
Our relationship was complicated, but I know my dad loved me and was proud of me- I didn't always realize that latter part, but I can look at my memories now and see in the ways he showed up that he was proud of me. I hope he knew that in spite of my irritable nature, I too loved him very much.
Before he went in to the hospital the last time we went to look at mules because he'd always dreamed of looking for the Dutchman's Gold. I still dream of doing the same just to honor him, although I'd be content just have the "mools".
Sometimes I forget that my personality, and who I am as a person isn't just the sum of reactions to trauma, that I was also shaped by love, not just of my beloved grandmother, but also the love my father showed me those last few years I lived with him, even if we were never able to say the words.
I love you dad. I wish you could have been here to see the person I became. And I wish we would have had the chance to take those pack mules on that epic adventure together.
1 comment:
ππππ
Post a Comment