Aaron’s Wishes for 2015

December 18, 2014

Hello. My name is Aaron. I am six years old. I am a second grade student in Miss Vasquez’s second grade class at John F. Kennedy Elementary School. Our class has been cutting out newspaper headlines all year and last week we had to go up to the board with each headline and put it under one of the headings we had created. When we were done, we had many headings, but only a few had lots of headlines under them. The heading with the most headlines under it was Fear. Under this heading we had headlines like Ebola, the shooting in Ferguson, the chokehold death in New York City, the police protests, the midterm elections, the open carry marches in Texas and the Bundy ranch standoff.


December 29, 2014

Fear is a paralyzing emotion and emotions are amazing things, but they cannot be the sole basis upon which decisions are made. For example, my mother’s grief often manifests itself in her binge eating, and while it may feel good enough in the moment, I’m sure you will agree that a pint of Ben and Jerry’s Phish Food does not a meal make. Nor does letting a dozen casseroles spoil in the refrigerator because she’s “not hungry” qualify as taking care of herself.

My wishes for 2015 are for fear to give way to reason, for paranoia to give way to compassion and for hatred to give way to understanding. These are my wishes because I am six years old and I will always be six years old. I will always be six years old because our neighbor gave in to fear and bought a gun and accidentally shot at his daughter when she came home late last week. Thankfully, he missed her, but there is a hole in my head where my right eye used to be and tomorrow morning Mommy will bury me.

18172

Susan Sontag, in Illness as Metaphor suggests that we refrain from anthropomorphizing cancer as tuberculosis was in the 19th century. It is simply a disease, linked neither to melancholy nor passion. However, it is increasingly difficult for the patient or caregiver to remain impartial to a disease which exhibits human characteristics such as changing tactics (mutation) and exhibiting a single-minded determination (death).

As I write this, I am fifteen days out from the death of my father from lung cancer, 15 years out from the death of my father-in-law from lung cancer, locked in a pitch battle with a second primary soft tissue sarcoma in my dog and engaged daily in a barbaric fight to the death with my wife’s breast cancer. Cancer sucks.

My father was 73. My father in law was 59. I am 49. My father knew me for roughly 67% of his life, but I knew him for 100% of mine, all 18,172 days. I have been without him now for 15 days and my world has changed. The pain he endured, the pain my mother, brother, sister and I witnessed will forever reside in our brains as white hot, searing agony. Good memories will rise to replace those created in the final few months as the thoughts that race to the forefront of our minds when we think of him, but the cruel experience of watching him die can never be erased. I smile when I think of my father-in-law now, but just as quickly recall the chaos in my mind as I realized what was happening at the end (and whether I could have/should have done something different to help). Likewise, my mind wanders to dark places when I think of the future for my wife and puppy. What will it look like? Will I be better prepared? Does it matter?

I was fortunate enough to give the eulogy at my father’s funeral. It was a rambling recollection designed to please the audience and summarize a life while ignoring the injustice of the occasion or the misery he endured. I include it here:

DNA is passed down from one generation to the next. Stirred together with our experiences and memories, we become individuals. But DNA is the foundation, the framework, upon which the individual is built.

My father had an amazing memory, a trait which was not passed into my DNA. My sister got that gene. She, like he, can tell you about the time in June of 1974 when the hibachi flamed up on the patio from too much lighter fluid. They would go on, “It was a Saturday afternoon, and it was slightly overcast and humid. I remember it was humid because the hamburger buns were sticking together. Mom was wearing red slacks with a white top, and Fisk was out for the year after tearing up his knee in Cleveland the day before.”

 It always amazed me what he could remember when we talked. Especially about baseball.  Especially about when I played baseball. What I remember about my baseball career was that I stopped growing too soon and pitchers learned how to throw a curve. But Dad could pull details from specific games, including the weather, from out of nowhere. “Do you remember that day? You probably don’t. It was HOT! We were playing a double header in Warwick. You went 1-4 in the first game and we had gone through all of our pitchers to eek out a win. We had nobody left for the second game. You doubled in your fist at bat, ripped one down the right field line off of so-and-so, who went to such-and-such college later on. You don’t remember that?” What a memory.

 Ovid said, “Dripping water hollows out stone, not through force but through persistence.” Having my father as my baseball coach, especially as my skills waned, but as his intensity increased, was a recipe for conflict at home. Trust me.  Fortunately, my brother had the strong arm of a pitcher which I did not and my father had the opportunity to teach a rising star and enjoyed his career as I transitioned to college, the workforce, marriage to an amazing woman and beginning a family. But it is the mark of a good parent and softened memories that when he recalled my baseball games in later years, he only recalled (to me) the ones in which I had performed well.

Memories and DNA combine in fantastical ways. It amazes me how a family can experience something together and one or two members can have that event stick with them forever while the rest of the family has it wash over them and out of their minds forever like a wave on the beach. I remember one time we were in Oneonta, NY. I couldn’t have been more than 12 at the time. We were accompanying Dad on a recruiting trip and sitting in a little pizza shop. Jan, what was the name of it? Mama Nina’s, right. A song came on the radio, a simple tune, just piano at the beginning and my father seemed to float away. He said, “When I die, I want this played at my funeral.” It was Colour My World by Chicago. I don’t know why I remember that, or if he even remembered saying it, but I was listening to it on my iPhone when my brother called to tell me Dad was gone.

Dad was a man of contradictions.

He lived on an island but hated bridges. In fact, funny story. My brother, mother, father and I went to Cincinnati to see a Reds game in 1990. We stayed in a hotel across the Ohio River in Kentucky. The stadium was literally right across the river. You took a foot bridge across the river directly into the stadium. We walked out of the hotel, down the street and up to the bridge. Now understand, my dad was a lifelong Reds fan who had waited 50 years and travelled 827 miles to see them play, only to find himself frozen at the base of the footbridge, unable to make the final ¼ mile walk into the stadium. Slowly, we were able to talk him into making the trek and we saw the game. Of course, I can’t remember if they won or lost, but for this occasion, I like to remember that they won.

He loved living on the coast and yet I never remember him going to the beach and he never showed any interest in boats.

He hated war and the military industrial complex and yet worked at NUSC and lived in a Navy town.

He espoused peace and yet was himself quite combative.

 He loved driving but hated cars.

 He loved baseball and hated the Red Sox, although I think what he hated was the typical Red Sox fan, who knew only of the Sox and nothing about any other team; patronage without understanding, loving a local team rather than the nation’s game.

He, like my son, Cameron, loved a debate and found the lack of one far worse than solitude, for in solitude he always had a book to read. Cicero said, “If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.” I think Dad would add my mother and a dog to that phrase, but you get the point.

We debated many things, even the seemingly taboo subjects of politics and religion. Without knowing he had formulated it, I heard him, I think in a veiled attempt to convince me rather than himself, rephrase Pascal’s 1660 gambit on the existence of God, which states that as the reason to believe, “If you gain, you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing. Wager, then, without hesitation that He is.”

Of course Pascal, sounding like something my father would also say, said, “I would prefer an intelligent hell to a stupid paradise.”

He, like my daughter Samantha, loved art and found music in paintings and rainbows in music. He sought out the educated and never stopped learning, taking online courses on art and art history.

He loved words and the art of writing, finding them transcendent building blocks capable of being combined to create immense power and compelling depth. Shakespeare, in Romeo and Juliet, wrote of death:

“When he shall die, Take him and cut him out in little stars, And he will make the face of heaven so fine That all the world will be in love with night And pay no worship to the garish sun.”

Samuel Butler said, “Life is like giving a concert on the violin while learning to play the instrument.”  How often do I wish there was a manual to life and that the pitfalls of error could be written out of existence. But experiences cannot be bequeathed; we all must fail while trying in order to grow. Parents try, but children don’t tend to listen. Oscar Wilde said, “Children begin by loving their parents; as they grow older they judge them; sometimes they forgive them.” I believe we grow up when we have to, some earlier, some later; rarely does it coincide with the calendar or a birthday.

To my mother, let me say that you are stronger than you think you and far more capable. These past few months have shown me a fortitude and strength that I mistakenly thought you only exhibited in the protected shadow of Dad. Now I know that you will be alright. You have over 50 years of memories and children who love you and friends who embrace you. Remember what Langston Hughes wrote,

“To some people Love is given, To others Only Heaven.”

Helen Keller wrote, “Death is no more than passing from one room into another. But there’s a difference for me, you know. Because in that other room I shall be able to see.”  Dad is no longer in pain and only time, like Ovid’s dripping water, will soften the sharp painful edges, the memories we share of his final months. Eventually, the good times will replace the bad in our dreams and these memories will fuse with our shared DNA and we will remember that we are his and he lives on in us.

 At the cemetery chapel, a good friend read a poem my father had written in 1986 to my mother. In it, in a quite linear manner, he describes their life together. Nowhere in those verses is there a reference to pain or cancer. Life’s narrative does not include the intrusion of a malevolent entity determined to rob us of the future for which we have done everything we can to prepare. Everything we can do, but blind to the suicidal mutation bent on our destruction.

Here is his poem:

My Choice

I’m not good at tennis, but I think the game’s swell

It’s when I first met her, I remember it well

A distance away, a casual glance

My head met my toes, my heart did a dance.

 

My casual glance turned into a stare

She knew I was looking but just didn’t care

When finally we met, I looked at her eyes

Seeing rivers and oceans, and bluebirds and skies.

 

Even bluer than sky on a bright sun kissed day

No clouds cross her path, blue eyes turn them away

Only earthly tears of joy should flow from those eyes

If I’m her life partner, I’ll tell her no lies.

 

As I got to know her, I applauded my choice

As she spoke in whispers, I adored her soft voice

Her hair was quite long, with curls at the end

Please don’t break my heart, I fear it won’t mend.

We went many places, we did many things

Time spent together was time sprouting wings

I envisioned forever, and tomorrow today

Instead she just dropped me, I can’t have my way.

 

We went out with others but it wasn’t the same

Was it a test, or some sort of a game

When I see her with others, do I speak, do I care

Please give me a nod, just a sign you still care

 

Maybe fate or just luck, or whatever it’s been

We got back together, hold my breath, count to ten

Circle the calendar, a date not to forget

We’ll live life together, we’ll share what we get

 

The years started passing, to college to nursing

Precious moments together, just sweet talk, no cursing

We tied the old knot in our junior year

All brand new to us, you’ll love it, my dear

 

A child or two, maybe three with some luck

A house and a car, and some baseballs to duck

Life’s experiences we’ll share, gardens together we’ll tend

I’ll tuck in the doggie with her dearest friend

 

But most of all for this selfish old me

Her companionship, warmth, and of course, a hot tea.

She bore three children, mostly gentle like her

She much prefers them to diamonds and fur.

 

She nursed and bathed them, showed comfort and passion

All treated the same, her love she won’t ration

With mental alertness, fine health they enjoyed

Their values time honored, with no moral void

 

Years slipped away, they end with a song

Children still with us, but won’t be for long

Adults they’ve become, to us they’re the best

They’ll find their own forest to build their own nest.

 

Alone we will be, but two as in one

Let’s visit the children and watch their kids run

Would we do it again, in a minute, no warning

Let’s repeat it again, let’s start in the morning.

 

Dare I guess at our future, can you put time on fade

Will we grow old together, is it too soon too late

Are hours elapsing, do minutes have minds

Can we set back the sunsets, must they always unwind

 

Philosophers ask where does time really go

Not sure of the answer, I don’t really know

If the answer’s discovered, please allot me some more

To spend more of it with the girl I adore

 

The end may come sooner than you or I know

It’s not fair I’ll answer, my joy turns to woe

But how few you have known been as lucky as us

To have been at the station, have caught the right bus

 

Eternity closer, I’ll meet her there too

I’ll bypass the clouds, I’ll follow the blue

We’ll thank the dear Lord for our beautiful marriage

And roll through the Gates in Heaven’s best carriage

 

Thanks for making us mates in our earthly endeavors

We juggled the balls, we pulled all life’s levers

The poem is ended, I’ll feed you no malarkey

Thanks for the short time with Ellen Frances Sharkey

 – March 13, 1986

Forgive me this downbeat missive. We will rally again, circle the wagons, do what we have to do, but time is finite and pain seemingly eternal.