I’m back.
If you are wondering where I’ve been….
…my dad died.
He died about 3 weeks after his wife (my step-mother) died.
There’s a lot to be unpacked here, as you might expect. And I will keep some of it to myself and save some of it for future posts.
But let me tell you about something that I didn’t expect to experience.
For the last couple months of my life, I was my dad’s person. I was his caregiver. I advocated for him. I’m an only child. I had all the support a person could ask for from my people, but I was his person. I made all the decisions. He depended on me. He trusted me. Sometimes I felt like it was us against the world.
I spent about 8 weeks focused on my dad’s next step. First, he was in a nursing home. His wife was in a different nursing home about 45 minutes away. I worked to get him transferred to be with his wife. It was a win.
She died 48 hours later.
Then I worked to get him transferred to a nursing home to be closer to my husband and me. Right before this happened, he fell at the nursing home he was at and ended up in the hospital for 9 days.
While he was in the hospital, I (again) worked on getting him discharged to a place by us. Finally, he was sent 90 minutes on a non-emergency transport to a nursing home about 3/4 of a mile from our house on hospice care. He made it to the nursing home by our house. It was a win.
A week later, he passed away in the 10 minute gap between my husband leaving the nursing home and me arriving to be with him for the next shift. I texted “He’s gone,” to my husband and he was there in an instant. The cremation services came to get him within an hour. And that was that.
Then I went home and took a nap. My friend Kim had planned to bring dinner to the nursing home. Instead, we went out to eat. I had a chicken quesadilla. Then I went to my husband’s slow pitch softball game.
I saw quite a few people I knew. Many already had heard that my dad died.
But a few of them had not heard and were like, “Hey, Elaine! How are you?”
I couldn’t think of a good response. I couldn’t say I was good or fine. If I wasn’t straight up, I felt like I was lying by omission, so I would say, “My dad died.” They all responded to my awkwardness with grace and compassion. A fried on the opposing team gave me a White Claw.
I woke up the next morning feeling a bit…empty. Honestly, I had no idea what to do. My dad didn’t want any services. There was no funeral or gathering to plan. I was grateful to him because I hate planning events. My dad avoided mingling at all costs, even in death.
I laid in my bed with our pups and watched Missing: Dead or Alive on Netflix for half of the day. Our cats graced us with their presence off and on.
Then I got up and shampooed the carpet in our hallway.
Next I watched a couple episodes of My 600 Pound Life.
I had done everything I could for so long, and now there was nothing to do. Well, except shampoo the carpet in our hallway. For the first time in a long time, no one needed me. Well, except the pets and the hallway carpet.
I didn’t realize I had embraced this advocacy/caregiving role. It was stressful and exhausting. But somehow its absence left me empty. I expected to be in that role longer.
And I wanted to rewind time.
I wanted to rewind time to the times that I didn’t consider to be good times. Maybe they weren’t good times. But there were good moments within those times.
Not that I had regrets. I’m proud of how hard I worked to move my dad along on this journey. I was assertive. I did my research. I used my social skills and connected with people to get my dad what he needed. If I were to list things in my life that make me proud, this would be somewhere near the top of the list.
It’s selfish for me to say I would rewind time. He suffered. Shortness of breath. Anxiety. Terminal agitation. Fear. He didn’t deserve that. No one does.
I didn’t like that he went through that. But if he had to go through that, I wanted to be there. I was there.
I thought I had more time. I was going to walk the dogs up to the nursing home to watch Wheel of Fortune a few times a week. I planned to continue to try to convince him to watch something more politically neutral than Fox News. I thought I’d make him meatloaf. Perhaps that was a bit of a pipe dream because I hate cooking and have no idea what goes into meatloaf.
But no matter. He died.
I am a little lost. When you are someone’s person and that person isn’t around anymore, perhaps it’s normal to be lost.
Today I took a nap. I woke up in a state of anxiety. I don’t remember my dream, but I was short of breath upon waking because my dad died and I knew I had forgotten to do something. I was searching to brain to figure out what I had forgotten.
I had him cremated.
I contacted the lawyer.
I emailed the guy at the bank.
Oh, shit. Did I pick up his cremations?
Wait. Yeah, my husband brought him home.
Did I have a funeral? No–because he didn’t want one.
Did I write an obit? Yes–and it was really good (see below).
What am I missing?
My dad’s dead; what the hell am I supposed to be doing now?
I am working on letting go of the caregiver role, but I’ve got a new role: condo flipper. My dad and stepmother’s condo needs some work before it can go on the market. If I don’t know how to do something, I can just google it, right?
In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on. –Robert Frost
Roy’s obituary:
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/legacyremembers/walter-eshbaugh-obituary?id=51973551
You must be logged in to post a comment.