Today is the anniversary of my father's death. In his memory, I am reposting a piece I wrote last year on this date.
My father died 20 years ago today.
I still miss him.
Colon cancer killed him at 58. When they first found the tumor in his colon, he had surgery to remove it. During the operation I sat in the waiting room at New Rochelle Hospital with my mother. All I remember is that the surgeon came out when he was finished, and said: "It was very big. The size of a grapefruit. But I think I got it all."
The tumor had grown so large because my father didn't get himself checked for years. He had misdiagnosed the pain in his back. I remember him always having back problems. When I was 13 he was in traction, and to pass the time, he hand-hooked rugs. I still have a lovely floral rug that he made for me in my guest room. Sometimes he said his back problem was caused by an injury he got playing Gaelic football; other times, as I recall, it seemed to be related to a fall from a telephone pole. My father used to repair telephone wires for a living.
Finally they found the source of this particular pain, and so he had the surgery, and chemo, which seemed to cure him for a while, until it didn't.
He died right after Father's Day. I don't know why, but I bought him a large mahogany wall clock that year. He was so frail, and when he opened it, he sobbed a heart breaking sob. Why had I bought him such a gift?
Very near the end, he was thin as a rail, and he wanted a cigarette. My brother Robert could not deny him. I watched him smoking it, and he seemed a corpse already, but I knew that Robert had done the right thing.
I spent the night before he died at my parents' house, and I was able to tell him that I loved him, and he heard me. My family of origin is not big on "I Love You." It is so rarely spoken amongst us that I can barely choke it out, and if I do say it, it seems like some sort of breach of etiquette. People avert their eyes, then make jokes. We don't say it, but we know it.
The afternoon of June 23, 1990, it was sunny and beautiful, and my brother took a few of us, me and some cousins, out in the little motor boat that my father had recently insisted on buying for him. (For me, he had thoughtfully purchased an air conditioner for my stifling New York apartment.) The sun glittered on the water. We were quietly waiting.
When we returned a few hours later, my mother and my parents' closest friends sat around the dining room table. I glanced their way as I went directly to my father's bedside.
"Chris..." It was Mr. Maye, my father's lifelong best friend. He didn't need to say anything else.
My father's hands were folded on his chest.
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Thank-you for sharing such a poignant moment with us.
ReplyDeleteThis is so powerful, Christina.
ReplyDeleteGosh, this is so familiar to me, the bad back and traction, eventually finding a very large tumor, the cigarette. The story of my Dad's death from colon cancer at 54 over 20 years ago. Thank you. I miss my Dad every day and wish her were here to know my kids and guide me in life.
ReplyDeleteMy dad died last year from lung cancer. His lower back always hurt, turned out there was a tumor on it. He was 53. It's comforting to know that there are others out there grieving as well.
ReplyDeletexoxoxo
ReplyDeleteMoving and beautiful.
ReplyDeleteMy dad died 14 years ago of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. I miss him every single day.
ReplyDelete