I had planned to be there with my brothers as Bill was nearing the end. I wanted to be there. I know first hand how incredibly hard it is to care for someone during their last days. Yet, it is also incredibly awesome, in the true meaning of awe.
When my dad passed away from liver cancer in 1992, all four of us kids and my mother stood next to the hospital bed that sat in the middle of the their living room and held him as he slipped the surly bonds of this earth. It was horrible and yet, it was amazing.
I realize that this will be a hard concept for anyone who has not held the hand of a loved one while they were dying.
Is there any greater gift you can give someone than giving them comfort while they are dying? I'll admit I have been blessed with an amazing family, however that connection of providing each other comfort in the worst of times has forged a bond that will never be broken.
So, I wanted to be there. I knew that although my brothers knew what they were about to face, two people would not be enough assistance to get through the last stretch. When I had Bill sign the living will we had a very frank discussion regarding the end of his life. He worried that someone would call 911 and/or attempt to keep him alive. He also talked about getting someone to assist him in hurrying it along. I explained that if he expected one of us to assist in his suicide, that would likely be a line we could not cross. However if he was in the thralls of dying, it was different. "You forget, we've been through this before". We would let him die in peace. And in love.
So I had planned on being there.
As March was moving into its third week last year, I however was dealing with things at home. Some of you might remember that exactly on this day last year, Bob was facing a major surgery to extract a tumor on his spine. The man who never is sick or injured was dealing with spending his first days in a hospital since he was born. He was nervous. And there were people in his family making it worse by causing unnecessary drama.
And it was during that time that Bill's body was surrendering to that damned disease we call cancer.
I, like Bill's oldest brother, had important health isssues to deal with at home.
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Early morning on March 22, 2013, we arrived at the hospital to await Bob's surgery. The docs had indicated it would take 3 to 4 hours and he would be hospitized 4 to 5 days. My brother Mark had intended to come to the hospital. But he had other priorities. He had become Bill's main caregiver as Bill's final hours were coming to pass.
Both of us felt tugged in two directions. Yet we both knew where we needed to be.
Thankfully two of my nieces (my other brother's girls) stepped in. That afternoon Bill was in incredible pain and ended up doubled over laying on the floor of his bedroom. Mark and one of my nieces laid down beside him for hours. He wouldn't get in bed and he did not want to be moved. So the three of them laid in the floor.
When hospice arrived, they were able to get him back in bed and tell them the end was coming very soon.
I talked with Mark late that night as Bob was resting in his hospital bed and I was sitting up on my makeshift chairbed where we would stay for the next five days. I hated that I was unable to be there for them, but of course everyone understood I was where I needed to be and the timing was what it was.
As I cried and told my brother I loved him, I told him to call me when it was "time". My brother's youngest daughter had gone home and her older sister had taken over the watch in the house. They had arranged a schedule to switch in a few hours.
Around 1, I was awakened by my phone ringing. I scrambled out of the hospital room to not awaken Bob.
Bill had passed. His struggle was finally over. My niece had just turned over her shift to Mark.
I told Mark I would call Bill's brother. The one sleeping at home because his sweet bride was undergoing chemo battling her own cancer. Although his voice was slightly groggy, I could tell that he knew when he saw my name on the caller ID what the news would be. While I hated delivering the news, I felt it was the least I could do for my brothers since I had not been there to help.
Unfortunately, the story doesn't stop there. And now that it is now one year later makes it even harder to tell.
14 comments:
I am here reading and hurting with you. My baby brother died last September (on my birthday) while I was in Virginia. I am his administrator and have found out how incredibly loving and generous he was to people, charities and the church. He never spoke of his activities and all of his gifts were given an an anonymous nature. I have been so busy with settling his affairs that I haven't really had time to grieve. It will come, but later. Your writing has helped me, too. Thank you.
I'm so sorry to hear that Coffey. I can't imagine losing a sibling. Not something I can even let my mind dwell on.
I'm sure finding out what a wonderful caring person he was helped a little.
Keeping you and your family in my prayers.
I have found that there is no right or wrong way to grieve. Everyone does it differently and in their own time.
Take care my friend.
Wow, hard to relive that , now I have another friend dying of cancer
CnC, I'm so sorry.
Coffeypot, I'm so sorry for you..I'm the eldest of 5 and I sometimes tell Mom "I'm glad you had me first because if things go their natural way, I won't have to see a sister die."
Rita, I'm so sorry about Bill and he was sure lucky to know your family and you. You wrote this beautifully.
it's a world filled with sickness but filled with love and courage, too. Your story reminds me of that.
I'm so glad my Mr. Z didn't suffer with cancer or any tremendous pain.
My best friend died about 8 years ago...I was able to speak to her the night before she passed, her voice so feeble and tired. She was up north near San Francisco and I'm in L.A....it's an extraordinary thing to be able to tell someone how much you love her and how much she means to you and that you'll miss her...She said those things to me and reminded me "I'll see Tom before you do" (Tom being my dad!)...
I loved Nancy so much and it was such a blessing to us both to tell each other what we meant ...just before she went to God.
Can you imagine I sang "Wind beneath my wings" at her funeral a week or two later? HOW I did that, I'll never know. And why she asked for that song, I'll also never know.
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Thx Z. I understand what you mean about getting to tell someone how much they mean to you. The first time I remember hearing my dad tell me he loved me I was 32 years old. It was just a couple of weeks before he died.
That last week of his life, he finally let all of his guard down and he told us all how much he had loved us. He kept repeating it. And said, "always will. Always will." Sometimes he would drift off saying "always will".
We had those two words engraved on the back of his headstone inside of a heart.
Having those last days with him were priceless. And the bonding in our family, each of us taking our turns at being strong or being weak while others took over was a gift really. Sadly so many families waste that precious time opening up old wounds instead of healing them. And they tear themselves apart.
The suffering and the pain of watching someone you love go through it is truly horrible. But it can, and should also be when you put things into perspective.
I would imagine your voice was truly beautiful at your friend's funeral. It's amazing the strength you can find for such an occasion.
CnC/Mark delivered the eulogy at our dad's. I didn't even know that he was going to do that until just a few minutes before. My sister had written the words. The message was live each day as if it's your last. And tell those you love how much they mean to you now. Some never get the chance to do so.
My very beloved sister is dying. We found this out within three days of moving away. I went home in September to make sure she knew how much I love her. She knows.
If we hadn't moved, I'd be with her daily, and by her side when her time comes.
But something occurred to me one night when I was thinkin of MY death.
I realized that being surrounded by loved ones is more for their benefit. When I die, the only person I will want at my side will be Joe.
So I keep reminding myself of that when my conscience tries to kill me for not being with Bev during the final moments.
Littlelottajoy@gmail.com
My wife's niece cared for my MIL in her last months as she battled the cancer that wracked her body. I am forever indebted to the niece for the truly heroic actions of her, her husband and children.
My wife and her sisters were able to be there at the end. Unfortunately, in the final hours my MIL seemed to get a bit better and regained consciousness. My wife's brother left to get everyone breakfast and at that time my MIL passed away. He was devastated.
LJ. Your sister knows you love her and from what I've read, you've left nothing unsaid. I think that's the hardest part for some people.
We have always been close with my cousins in this particular family even though we would go years without seeing them at times. Since we had such a long break with Bill, all of got to know him so much better those months he lived with my brothers. All the good and the bad.
His sense of humor was ridiculously wicked. One evening he was talking about how people looked at him because he was so incredibly emaciated. He looked like a walking skeleton and he said he should go into one of the drug stores and take a bunch of Slim Fast and diet aids up to the checkout counter just to see the reaction. That would have been priceless.
You are right of course. The end times is more about the people who are left behind. I would imagine there is some guilt for the one dying, thinking about the burden you are placing on the ones left.
Joe: I feel for your brother-in-law. I know I would have been upset too, and all the reasoning in the world can't "fix" that for him. I'm sure everyone has tried to convince him it didn't matter, but that regret would be hard to shake off.
I so desperately want to say something profound or moving or encouraging...but don't know what to say. My husband and I stayed at his mother's side as she died...after we chased off all the parasites that were there for THEIR sake, their guilt...(all the while asking if they could have this or that out of the house). It was incredibly agonizing and yet calming to witness the end of earthly life.
Hopefully that is what most people walk away with Mrs. W. The calming I mean, not the leeches.
Sadly too many situations become another instance of drama.
I think I'll rewrite my living will and say that anyone causing drama will be shot on sight.
I wanted to wait til everyone was gone.
I was privileged to see you handle this via fb.
I think I told you and others about my dad passing.
W
My brothers and I held him as he passed peacefully.
I cant find where I ever posted about it, though.
Thank you so much Ed. These cousins were very very special to our family. You know how some people can be out of your daily lives for months, yet when you are reunited, it's as if not one hour has passed? That's what these guys were. In the last 20 years, the oldest one was especially close. As was his bride.
And as you know from fb, the story doesn't stop here.
Today was the oldest one's 61st birthday. My heart just aches for him.
If only they lived closer.
It's been a very hard year. Especially for Mark as he lost two close childhood friends within the last few months also.
It is very hard for people to understand the amazing moments you have with someone as they are dying.
The morning my mother died, I'd worked the night before, which was a culmination of the weird day, then night, then day aspect of patching the highway.
I wanted to catch a few hours sleep, set my alarm for 11:00 am and felt a little guilty, because I didn't go see my mother first.
I received a call around 10:00 am. The nurse told me she had checked on my mother about thirty minutes before, had a feeling and went back to check again. She was gone.
I'd spent a lot of time with my mother. Her hip surgery was successful, but the anesthesia accelerated her dementia. She couldn't understand the therapy; she didn't even remember she fell and broke her hip.
I knew her time was short. She refused to eat, wouldn't open her eyes and it was a task to get her to sip some Ensure.
Still, I just knew I could be there when she passed; maybe to hold her hand, or offer words of comfort, if she was frightened.
So, I understand what you experienced. I think it's not so much as being there at the end, but being there every chance you can. Life goes on for those left behind and the passing of loved one is only a short pause. All your efforts to be there may be futile, but that's as much as part of life as anything else.
Maybe when you get to be our age, life and earth take on a whole different meaning. I wish I could tell myself from moment to moment, or day to day, even week to week to remember how precious life is.
I read today that some Newsbuster contributor passed away from cancer. He was diagnosed in January and wrote a post about it. He was in his early 50's, healthy, active.
I know death is not fair. But yet we spend our whole lives wanting it to be.
I just hope that this next life will give us the answer to that dilemma.
Sorry about your mom Jess. I remember your post about her.
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