As you know from my last post, Mom died in September of 2018. Our big black boxer Tui started having seizures two months later and died the following March from a presumptive brain tumor. (Presumptive because I said no to Dr. Crazy Canine Neurologist, who advocated spending $3,500 for an MRI to find out for sure so I could then subject him--the dog, not the neurologist--to brain surgery.)
When Dad saw that all was fine, he just stopped pushing. He felt weak on Sunday morning and died the following Saturday, in the early morning hours of my mother's birthday. He spoke his last words to me from a fog midweek. "Be sure to clear away the leaves." From where, Dad? "From the ground."
My daughter and her new family left for the funeral. She and the baby headed to Detroit. Her husband headed to Wisconsin. His grandfather, the man who helped make my son-in-law the spectacular man that he is, died one day after my dad.
In October, my stepson and his wife safely delivered a beautiful baby elfin child. She too thrives, happy and loved.
And so now I see what Dorothy Gale saw. People come....people go. Sometimes, its as fast as the Wicked Witch of the East going up in smoke or the Good Witch popping down in her bubble.
I became a Bobbe (Yiddish for Nana/Grandma/Granny/Mom Mom and all that other cockamamie stuff) and an orphan in four weeks. The family I grew up with once was four...and then there was one. My other family, the one facing forward, will have three new babies within 10 months.
Other times, it is only visible out of the rear view mirror. Now, I am the next generation in line to slip away.
Hopefully, without drama.
But it is always happening. I struggled mightily with the tornado as it whirled around me. But now I accept it. In fact, it isn't a tornado, it is the way. The Way. Perhaps my acceptance comes from a daily meditation practice that seems to have at last taken root. Perhaps it comes because once again, the passage of time remains the best cure for what ails ya. I am not going to look a gift of acceptance in the mouth, that's for sure.
Ironically, like Dorothy, Himself and Molly and I are also headed to Kansas. Next month, this beauty comes into our driveway.
Our own Airstream! When it comes, we will go. To the Black Hills of South Dakota, via the Oregon Trail and whatever else strikes our fancy. No deadlines, no reservations.
Just coming and going.
hi there! you are back here in blog-world....I did of course wonder what was going on and missed your life-stories
ReplyDeleteso sorry for your loss, and although we know this is how it goes, it doesn't make it easier to deal with or less painful; this seems to be what's happening at this stage of our lives
but boy am I delighted to see the photo's of those two new-comers, they are so, so cute, and more are due to arrive.......lucky you! there is nothing like a baby's scent and the cuddly bundle of joy to cradle in your arms to make you feel the sheer joy of being alive and there xxXxx sending you love
Glad, so glad, to be back.
Deletei've come and read a few days here. This morning though, Thursday,
ReplyDeleteI was immediately struck by the similarities in the faces of
the dad and the babies....do you see that? Maybe their Energies?
you will be Happy as Clams in this magnificant travel ship.
i'm glad you are back, Love and Love, Julie
Hmmm...there are no genetic similarities but maybe Energy of Contentment has a single face.
ReplyDeleteYes, our travel ship. Its been a long time since I was free to roam about the cabin of this country and that's what I want to exercise.
You got me thinking about that expression, since I haven't really thought about clams' state of mind. Here's what I found:
"The derivation is more likely to come from the fuller version of the phrase, now rarely heard - 'as happy as a clam at high water'. Hide tide is when clams are free from the attentions of predators; surely the happiest of times in the bivalve mollusc world. The phrase originated in the north-eastern states of the USA in the early 19th century."
More than you needed to know?