Saturday, February 12, 2022

 Cindy and Me...



February 12, 2022

It was quite a day yesterday...

I needed to get Carol's car out of her garage because her house was in escrow and the new buyers didn't want it.  I think it's an ok car - 1999 Dodge Durango - rarely driven. But her son had used it as a trash can. It creeped me out to look through the paper trash - and other debris - looking for the title and the keys. I had texted my brother, Jim, about the car. He's a car guy, and very, Very smart. I had intended to just donate the car to the Kidney Foundation since Carol had died from renal failure, but I'd had a powerful thought to let Jim know that the car might be in good running order and might just need a battery. He agreed to take it. So, he arranged to have it towed from Cottonwood Heights, where Carol and her three adult offspring had lived, to his home fifty miles away. The tow truck had to come from fifty miles in a different direction to get to Carol's home and then take the car to Jim's house. We had some waiting to do. While we were waiting, my niece, Jessica, called. She had some difficult news that she needed to share with me...

"You know about my mom's squishy lump on her neck, right? And that it's been there a while...?" she started. I knew exactly what she meant. When I had visited my sister at her home in Yorba Linda a few months back, she showed me her squishy lump and wondered if she needed to see a doctor. "Yes! Make an appointment!" I didn't shout, but I was emphatic. Since I've been emphatic all of our lives, she took my urgency in stride. I reminded her that lumps matter. I'd just had a melanoma removed, and our brother, Jim, had a massive one removed a couple of years ago. But, we are not a doctor-going family, so I wasn't surprised when she decided to wait. I'd done the same thing and so had Jim. Until yesterday.

The night before, she found more lumps. She is a practical, intuitive woman and knew that multiple lumps needed immediate exploration, so her husband took her to the emergency room. She was examined, tested, X-rayed, poked, questioned, and kept overnight. The news was grim. Jessica's husband is a physical therapist and understood all the medical jargon. He gave us this translation:

    "Large upper lobe mass means that she as a mass in her lungs. Pulmonary nodules mean she has smaller nodules in her lungs also. Mediastinal adenopathy (chest) and auxiliary (armpit) adenopathy mean that the lymph nodes are enlarged for one reason or another. Lytic lesion of the left rib means there is possible cancerous growth in the bone. This all means possible lung, lymph node, and bone cancer."


Jim and I were stunned. How could that be possible? She is a healthy, strong person! She runs every morning! She eats VEGETABLES! Ok, she has a sweet tooth, but nothing drastic. An occasional goodie doesn't interfere with her healthy, focused nutrition. She is a calm person who takes life as it comes and is not flustered by nonsense. How. Could. This Be??? Jessica told me that her mom told her to call me, but no one else. I told Jessica that I would tell Jim and my other three brothers because we're Family. We are a strong, loving unit that has built an incredible safety net. After my husband passed away, my sibs took me into their arms and homes and sheltered me from all the pain, sorrow, and aloneness. I would absolutely include them in this news. Jessica said, "Mom told me to only call you. She didn't tell you who to call or not call. That's up to you." so, in my mind, permission granted. I texted all four brothers, even though Jim was right there next to me.

My brothers, Spence and Dave, responded immediately. I knew that Rob was at work and wouldn't see the text for a while. Dave jumped right in and called Jessica, who told him the whole story. He was shaken. This is tough. We were each responding to this new reality in our own, personal ways. I called Cindy and talked to her. She was her usual, delightful self, describing her clothing saying that she was wearing the same jeans she had put on the day before when she didn't have cancer. She talked about her friend, Shawn, who had passed from cancer. Cindy had been Shawn's right arm through that whole experience. She knew everything that Shawn had gone through. All of it. Every detail. Yet here she was, talking about what was to come in an objective, realistic way. She choked up for a minute when I asked her how she was feeling about all of this, but she came right back to herself after a moment of emotion. She was amazing. We hugged through the airwaves and agreed to talk when she was resting at home.

I started to cry and told Jim "I'm emotional and I'm starting to think irrational thoughts. I know that they're irrational, but I'm having a hard time removing them." He encouraged me to talk about my thoughts, so I continued, "There's just been so much death and illness around me. I know my thoughts aren't logical, but my reality is that my first husband committed suicide, Mom died, Dad, died, my husband, Craig died at home in my arms, and his mom died in a hospice bed in my house. I sang her into heaven. It's a lot of death and I just can't lose my sister. I don't know my life without her. We shared a bed until I was 12 and she was 11. Then we shared a room until I went to college. She came up the next year and we lived in the same town until we finished school. Then I moved to La Habra and she moved to La Habra. Then she moved to Yorba Linda, and I moved to Yorba Linda. We've lived in the same city for nearly all of our lives until I moved to Texas and then Utah while she stayed in California. I missed her terribly, but I would go to see her often and soak up her presence. I just can't lose her. I just can't..."

Jim quietly and calmly talked me though my fear of being a "death person" and helped me see why I was thinking that. The irrationality left me and I regained my practical, realistic perspective. The tow truck came and focused on the task at hand. The car had no key, and the transmission was in Park, so the driver hooked up a cable and dragged the car down the steep driveway to his waiting flatbed. I didn't know you could drag a car while the transmission was in Park. I left Jim and hurried of the the next important task of my day... to make future funeral arrangements for my former Sister-in-Law and her brother.

They are both still alive, living at a care facility. My former SIL, Donna, is mentally and physically disabled, while her brother is physically disabled. Since Medicaid pays their bills, they cannot receive any proceeds from the sale of their mother's home. But, I can pre-pay their funeral expenses from those proceeds, so that's my plan. I had an appointment at the mortuary to make those arrangements, which I did. I'm not sentimental about these folks, so the conversation was very objective and practical. I needed to get a few more bits of information that were at my house, so we agreed to meet back in a couple of hours which would give me time to go to the care facility to wish my former SIL a happy birthday, because, of course, along with everything else, it was her birthday.

Before I headed back to my valley, I stopped and bought Donna a Minky blanket that had brightly colored flowers all over it. Minky Couture is known for its ultra-soft, cushy blankets and I knew that Donna would love the texture as well as the colors. The clerk put it in a beautiful gift bag that Donna could easily unwrap and I was pleased to have a momentary distraction, Things got even better when I went to Cravings/Alisha's Cupcakes and saw the incredible display. These folks had been on the Food Network show Cupcake Wars and won - for all the delicious reasons. I chose six drool-worthy works of culinary art and fully expected to eat at least one on my way to see Donna but I didn't eat it; I just thought about it. A Lot. 

Donna was in the craft room when I got to Cascades at Orchard Park. I had put the delicacies and gift in her room and then went to find her. As I wheeled her back to get the goodies, she reminded me that it was her birthday... several times... and I kissed her head. "Well, if it's your birthday its a good thing i brought you a present!" She was delighted. That all-encompassing smile enveloped her face as she began tearing the tissue out of the gift bag. "Oh! It's a Bwanket!" Her child-like excitement belied her 64 years, "It's Bwoodiful! Look Low-ie! I got a Bwanket!!"

When I presented her with the box of amazing cupcakes, her first thought was to share them. We took one to her brother who lives down the hall, she gave one to his roommate, one to the nurse on the way back to the craft room, and the rest she shared with the other crafters. She didn't have a bite of even just one. All the joy came in the sharing. I always learn a lot from Donna.

I had gotten the information I needed and was heading back to the mortuary to finalize the plans when I got a call from my realtor. Carol's house had fallen out of escrow. The potential buyers had finally realized that As Is meant As Is. No, I would not be paying them $96,000 to fix the house. So, on to the next potential buyer. But for the time being I couldn't pay for the future funeral expenses. I went to the appointment anyway. Maybe we could make plans now and pay later...?

As I was on my way, my daughter, Betsy, called. She had a processor come to her door to serve her with papers. "For What?!!" Betsy is an amazing woman. She does not do wrong things. No one could have any reason to serve her. She was in turmoil as we texted. The processor agreed to wait until Bets was off work to serve the papers. In the meantime, I had some sleuthing to do. I talked to Jim and told him of the situation.

I had a ticket to see a concert that night at the Abravanel Music Hall in Salt Lake City. The concert was called, "Bravo Broadway, " and would feature all of my favorite musicals. I had just enough time to stop at Floor and Decor and get the materials for the backsplash that would be installed once the new cabinets and countertops were in my kitchen. I started reeling with overwhelm at all the things. Then Jim called. "Sis, I know you have a lot on your mind. Tell Betsy that there are at least two possible scenarios here..." and he described two possible plans of action, one of them being that the whole thing could be a scam and how to handle that. "I also know that Cindy probably won't tell you to come to California to be with her, even though that's what she wants and it's what you want. I can take over your kitchen project if that will free you up to go. Just tell me who to talk to and what you want me to say and do. You can go as soon as you want." He freed me. He freed me to follow my heart instead of my responsibilities. More tears, but this time of relief. "Thank you, Brother. As always, I'm deeply grateful for all you do for me." I texted Betsy, emailed the cabinet and countertop people, gave them Jim's contact info, bought the grout, caulk, and schulter jolly edging and thought about going to the concert. I. Was. Exhausted. I wondered if the concert would be a fun pick-me-up that would help me feel better, or if it would just be draining and I'd be driving home late and spent. I opted for home and drove south instead of north.

The freeway was crowded and I was glad to get a call from my son, Donnie. He'd had a great day and was happy to share the exciting details with me. I was grateful for the diversion. I recounted some of my day and we commiserated about Cindy's condition. I told him I had decided not to go to the concert and would probably opt for a not-Noom-approved dinner.  He gave me a verbal "hall-pass" to do that and I giggled. It felt good. I got into the incredibly long line at the Purple Turtle drive-thru to get a burger and a root beer freeze, and decided to talk to my brother, Dave. He had talked to Cindy and was clearly distraught. When he answered my call, I could hear the despair in his voice even though he insisted that he was fine. He invited me to stay with him when I go to California, and I love to be with him and Paula in his home. I'll probably stay with Cindy, though. She invited me and I want to be with her. Dave and I chatted until it was my turn to order. It felt good to talk with my brother. I am so blessed to have such good men in my life.

I took my bag of high fat, high cholesterol, booty-building yummies home and watched the Americans win the Team Snow Boarding Cross. Gold medals. Years of work. I was so happy for them. I thought about the winning and losing in life. How days go on even when it doesn't seem like they can or will. I was grateful that I wasn't at the concert. I was grateful that I was in my pretty little house, cozied up on the couch, safe and warm. Waiting. Waiting for whatever. Waiting for whatever comes next. Tomorrow I'll go and I will be part of Cindy's battalion - literally hundreds of people who love her and are on her team. She will fight this tooth and nail. She will pull out all the stops and we will all be there buoying her up and carrying her onward. We will go on every day, no matter what. We will do all the good things and all the hard things and all the every day things. We will weep and we will cheer and I will love her fiercely forever. And Ever.








Sunday, May 6, 2018

Good Brothers






I have been richly blessed with really good brothers.  You can look at the previous posts if you want to know more about them, but trust me they are really, Really good people.  I’ve also raised good brothers.  My sons are kind to each other and to their sister – genuinely supportive and fond of each other.  That is so satisfying to me because they are each and all so very, very different.  They are loosely aligned on politics, not aligned on religion, very aligned on education but in vastly different fields, and most importantly, they do truly love each other.  That is pure joy for a mom.

Husband is a good brother – the best if you listen to his mom.  He is the “star” child.  Does everything right, including the fact that he calls her every.  single. day.  If there’s a squabble among his adult siblings, he is the voice of reason.  If his mentally disabled sister needs someone to laugh at her jokes, he’s the guy.  He doesn’t usually agree with his sibs, but he refuses to fight with them.  Life – and love – is just too important for that crap.  He doesn’t go along with all their stuff.  He just loves them in spite of it.  Sometimes that requires forgiveness in copious amounts.  He’s very good at forgiveness.  It’s one of the things that makes him a good brother (and a good spouse).

Perhaps I’ve been spoiled by growing up with such great brothers – they were definitely the role models for raising my sons.  Husband didn’t have any uncles as role models.  Both of his parents were an “only” child.  They had multi-generational family reunions every time his grandparents came to dinner.  A multi-family generational family reunion in my family requires a city park and assigned- color T-shirts.  Our kids have 25 first-cousins.  There were a whole lot of “brothers” in their lives. (Sisters too, but that’s another post). My brothers love my kids as if they were theirs.  They play with them.  Teach them.  Eat with them.  And they listen to them – genuinely listen.  They are fountains of advice – if asked.  And mind their own business if they’re not asked.  My brothers and I don’t see eye to eye on everything either – but we absolutely love each other.  We would go to the mat for each other. And, of course, with each other because we are Italian and Scots-Irish so we fight.  All our lives.  We’re kind of over that now, but we’re still competitive.  And it’s just all so super fun!  Love is definitely an action word with my family – and “the boys” provide a lot of the action.

What would the world be like if everyone had really good brothers.  Or uncles.  Or dads.  Or cousins.  How amazing would it be for everyone to be loved and valued and stretched and forgiven?  The value of a really good brother is probably underrated.  I’m voting for a Brother’s Day.  Not just their individual birthdays, but a whole celebration for these guys.  It would probably involve grills and gentle noogies.  I’ll bring the cookies.

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Whack



 May 5, 2018

Today, I’m laughing.  Laughing because it’s all so crazy.  Cinco de Mayo is not a Mexican holiday.  It’s an American holiday.  Because people need to drink cerveza.  Especially here in Texas.  Which is a little ridiculous because lots of these people drink beer 24-7.  But today, they have a holiday they can claim in order to up the consumption.  But that’s not why I’m laughing.

I’m laughing because my life is seriously so whack.  Like, I mean it’s actually Out of Whack.  Whatever Whack is.  I don’t even know anymore because I don’t know what’s typical or normal or average or regular… I just know that all of those words are not, in any way, representative of my life.

Yesterday my husband was “forced” to join the NRA.  My Husband, the Pacifist, is a card-carrying member of the National Rifle Association.  Long, complicated, messy, family story, but he has never wanted to be a member of that organization.  And today, he is.  I don’t know whether I’m appalled, surprised, bewildered, or just okay.  Husband has never carried a gun in his whole life.  He is totally anti-gun.  Well, not anti-Second Amendment, but anti-war and anti-killing anything kind of guns.  He doesn’t like hunting, even though he’s never been hunting.  He’s a software engineer.  Not an outdoor guy.  His idea of outside time is a baseball game watching the Dodgers at home.  Or any (all) of his kids’ soccer/baseball/football practices.  He doesn’t like to fish, camp, hike or even ski.  He’s a suburban screen guy.  But not movies.  Episodic television.  The older the better.  He has recorded Series 1 Episode 1 of Gilligan’s Island, Green Acres, Star Trek and a host of others.  No guns.  Tasers, yes, but no guns.  And yet… the NRA counts him as theirs.

This is in direct opposition to our last-born child (the one he produced and didn’t adopt because I had the other three when he asked me to marry him.  Really.). Our son and his wife are feminists – far more left than the bra-burning generation of the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment for the not-so-old).  I was that girl.  Equality for Women!  But I still had to make dinner and check on the homework and get the kids’ teeth brushed and make sure they prayed and get the them to bed and do the dishes…. My feminist son and DIL are card-carrying members of the ACLU.  The American Civil Liberties Union.  That rages against the NRA and vice versa.  And here am I, a voter not affiliated with any party because I think they’re all corrupt, but not on the conspiracy space craft either.  I believe the earth is round, even though I’ve never been in outer space.  I have enough to think about right here on this round-ish earth.  And, the more I think, the more I just… laugh.

I guess it’s really not so much laughing as it is accepting the fact that life is so vastly different than I ever thought it would be.  It seems so out of control.  Like control is the very last part; the smallest aspect of my life.  It seems like there isn’t any.  At least not the kind of control that I had as a mom of little kids.  Not that I’ve given up being a mom – because even though I’m 65 those 30-40 yos are still my kids.  I don’t feed them anymore, unless we’re going to a restaurant that they can’t afford.  And I don’t do their homework with them anymore, unless they’re trying to figure out if they’re in the right career, or if they’re house is in the right location or if their budget is in disarray…. Speaking of budgetary considerations: It’s crazy to me that our ACLU kids ask their NRA dad to pay for their iPhones.  And he does.  HE DOES!!!  See – we’re definitely not typical.

I’m not really sure what “typical” looks like in families.  Husband and I have been married for 31 years this month. (Remember I had those other three kids when I married him.  Divorce can honestly be a blessing sometimes).  In all of that time, we’ve owned our home in the suburbs, been employed, driven cars that ran well, sent the kids to good public schools, had regular dental check-ups, fixed any and all broken limbs, attended graduations, went to church, served in the community, paid for college – all of the things that it seems that “typical” American families do.  Our kids were team members of athletic programs, were above-average students, had friends, went to school dances, and sometimes even ate dinner at the dinner table.  And yet, we are now all So Different.

All those Sundays in church?  One of my children is as devout as I am.  Another attends with his wife and kids and is involved and faithful.  Another is an atheist.  Another is… maybe… agnostic?  Not sure.  He’s uncomfortable discussing this with me because he doesn’t want to “hurt” me.  Like spirituality is a weapon or something.  So, sometimes I shake my head and sometimes I laugh and sometimes I pray and sometimes we talk a little bit and sometimes I just choose to think of something else.  Because I’ve lived long enough to know that many philosophies and attitudes and circumstances are temporary.  Some things are binding, but many times we just flow.  It might be friends, or location or professors or timing that create the flow that we choose to go with, and we might stay with the flow for a while… but inevitably something comes up and we divert to a little different direction and that takes us someplace we just never thought we’d go.  That’s where I am now.  So, I just have to laugh.