I wake with it in the morning as I
swallow fish oil pills. I meet it while filling out financial aid forms for my
college-aged son. It follows me driving to the post office to mail the electric
bill or waiting in line to buy Greek yogurt at Whole Foods. It is there in the
rear view mirror of my heart, as I rise at three in the morning, padding to the
bathroom to down a fistful of homeopathic sleeping pills, as I pull the covers
over my head, hoping they will rock me to sleep. I imagine placing it under the
bed, letting it remain with the box of old yearbooks and yellowing
obituaries.
But the mind refuses to be cajoled.
The image will not let me go. It starts gently, with nearly inaudible softness,
like the opening bars of Fur Elise. It moves outward toward a nearly still body
of water, a lake named Onota. It pools wider to include a moment in time, four
o’clock on an early June afternoon when the din from the motor boats and jet
skis has died down, when the sun is lower above the trees on the far shore, but
there is still plenty of warmth and daylight. This is the hour when he
might have hauled out the scull to row it to Appletree Point or settled in
one of the paint-chipped Adirondack chairs, bare feet resting against pine
needles, and finished the Times’ crossword puzzle, nursing a cup of black
coffee and waiting until five when he might replace it with a glass of Chardonnay.
But the mind is nothing but a master
of legerdemain because these images are buried deep in the past like arrowheads,
and on this late afternoon in June in two thousand and fourteen, he is no
longer anything resembling the man in the photographs on the memorial table
beneath the white tent, he is a collection of bone and ash, and I am not his twice-married
sixty-year-old daughter, to whom he once said kind or cruel things, I am a solitary
figure among others, sister, brother, nephews, grandchildren, each of us taking
a handful of ashes and walking silently to the water’s edge and flinging it
among the muddy leaves and mating dragonflies…
My hands are dusty, clay-y with him
as I rub them together, brush them off while walking back up the steep, root-thick
path to the cabin and parking lot. I have let him go, consigned him to the
waters of Onota Lake, where he will travel southeastward to mingle with the
Housatonic River and southward again 149 miles to Long Island Sound and the Atlantic
Ocean.
I have let him go. I do not want to
let him go.
Weeks later, I learn that Onota is a
Mohican word that means deep blue.
It is a small thing, a clue in one of
his crossword puzzles, but for now it is enough.
Berkshire Natural Resources Council Pittsfield, Massachusetts June 7, 2014
My father, who turned 90 recently at his assisted living
facility in Maine, would just as soon have let the day go by without blowing
out one birthday candle, but we three children, who are getting on in years
ourselves, needed some fanfare.
After much e-mailing, Dad and Janet, his companion of many
decades, agreed to attend a dinner party at my sister's in New Hampshire. There
were 16, including in-laws, grandchildren and various significant others. A
Civil War-era cannon was fired; meat was roasted on a grill; tributes were read.
This is my tribute - I am his younger daughter from his second marriage - which
I wrote as a half-mocking, half-serious self-help treatise about how to become
a nonagenarian based on what I learned from him.
Run. Get up every morning and run two miles before breakfast,
when others in the household are still sleeping; run in the dark, in the rain,
in the snow, in summer heat that ripples the blacktop, run so hard so that your
face drips with sweat, soaks your faded tee-shirt, darkens your gray athletic
socks, makes your daughters hold their noses and cry "Pee-you" when
they hug you. Run every day for 30 years, Sundays and holidays, on business
trips and vacations, until your hips will no longer carry you, and then walk.
Read. The New York Times, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.
The Savage God. The Lives of a Cell. A Brief History of Time. Read everywhere
-riding the chairlift at Bousquet's with The Brothers Karamozov in your parka
pocket; it's only a 10 minute ride, but after you've pulled down the safety
bar, settled your skis on the painted rung, slipped your poles along your
wrist, you can telemark into another world larger than all the blue hills of
the Berkshires, the world of the Grand Inquisitor that poses the only questions
worth asking: Is there a God? And why does He permit some to be happy and
others to suffer?
Play. Play the piano because you always wanted to and were never
allowed to as a child because your parents said it was for sissies, for girls.
Play Chopin the Prelude in C, the Nocturne in E Flat Major --late at night when
everyone else has gone to bed. Play even though it's hard to stretch your
arthritic fingers across those octaves, hard to capture all the subtle
crescendos and diminuendos, play even though you ll never sound like your concert-pianist
teacher with her nimble, fairy fingers, play because it moves you, because it
holds you in the moment, because it makes you forget about everything you have
lost.
Laugh. Don t take anything, especially yourself, too seriously,
because it's all passing, the tragic and the comic, and nothing endures, even
the wittiest remarks, the family dinner years ago when you said to your
38-year-old younger daughter, when she couldn t seem to settle on an occupation
or a boyfriend, much less a husband, "You know, Becky, life isn't for
everyone." You laughed. She laughed, even though the joke was on her. The
fool, you often pointed out, is the wisest man in Shakespeare, and he who
laughs lasts, as your favorite bumper sticker says.
Eat. Fill your plate. Take seconds. Take thirds. Steak,
scalloped potatoes, Cole slaw, Stickie buns, anything chocolate brownies,
chocolate ice cream, chocolate turtles nestled in gold paper and tucked in gold
boxes from the candy store that the smiling salesperson saves just for you,
that you squirrel away in the top right hand drawer of your desk and munch on
to sweeten all those nasty chores like staying up late to finish your taxes.
Drink. Raise your glass. Make a toast. Chardonnay. Sauvignon
Blanc. Pinot Grigio. You're no oenophile, you don t really get terms like nose
and palette. You'd be just as happy with a $10 bottle of Fat Bastard Chardonnay
as with a $200 dollar bottle of Chateau Margeaux. But you drink because you
love the taste of the sweet-sharp, oak-like bouquet swilling down your throat,
love the altered state that makes death and taxes fly away, the buzz that fills
the world with oxytocin, makes everything worthy of your attention.
Change. Stop drinking. Eat less. Travel to the North Pole. Take
a dip in the frigid, 40-degree waters. Leave the western Massachusetts city you
were born and raised in, the county where you have lived nearly all your 85
years and move to an assisted living facility, Piper Shores, on the coast of
Maine. Join a weekly men's doubles group, even though you hate doubles. Walk
four miles a day. Walk the flat hard sand of Higgins beach at low tide, in
summer and in winter, in rain and in snow.
Break your hip a week before Christmas, recover in Holbrook, the
acute care wing which you wouldn't enter when first touring Piper Shores. Stay
there for three weeks, even though the food is terrible and the demented old
folks give you the willies. Learn to use a walker, learn to get around with a
cane. Return to your condo. Take up all the scatter rugs so you don t break the
other hip. Walk the paved lanes near Higgins Beach, enjoy the spectacle of dogs
off their leashes chasing seagulls, even though you ve always hated dogs. Vote
for Barack Obama, even though you ve voted the Republican ticket for most of your
life.
End every telephone conversation with your partner, your
children and grandchildren with the words, I love you, even though you come
from a generation that isn t comfortable expressing sentiment. Hug your friends
and family at the beginning and end of every visit. Say, Thank you for coming,
say I love you, say I love you.
Copyright 2009, Daily Hampshire Gazette, All Rights Reserved.
I am the author of A Time to Mourn: One Woman's Journey through Widowhood, referenced in several studies on memoir and grieving. I have published essays in The New York Times, Redbook, Cosmopolitan, and Women's Adventure Magazine. I am a member of Authors Guild and the American Society for Journalists and Authors. I am an Adjunct Professor of Writing and Literature at Springfield Technical Community College.