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My grandmother, age 19, 1932 |
My happy ending is not going to be what I thought it would be.
I still don't know what's in store for us: what portion, if any, of our parenthood journey remains to be travelled. Perhaps a baby from Jody's body will be in our arms one day. Perhaps a toddler will run through our house after exiting the foster system. Or, maybe the only little feet padding on our floors will be of the four-legged variety. I don't know. Maybe my happy ending is simply what I've already got; it's just not what I've been imagining for the last 42 years.
I have been so focused on the goal of pregnancy for more than two years now that I haven't truly tried to imagine my life without children. It would have been counter-productive. So here I am, closing the door on what I'd said would be my last attempt at a pregnancy, and trying to "go there" in my head.
Subconsciously, over the years, I have socked away experiences and lessons learned, parenting moves I disagreed with, childhood memories I wanted to recreate (involving the purchase of several seasons of The Carol Burnett Show, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and M*A*S*H)...all with the expectation that one day I would use this information as I raised my own kid(s). What do I do with it all if there are no kids?
My wandering thoughts return to the spring of 2007, as my Nan lay dying at her nursing home in Markham. It was my first experience of being with someone throughout the process of dying, and I still feel it deeply.
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Holding my grandmother's hand in the nursing home ©Shutterbug |
My grandmother suffered from dementia, and had in many respects left us long ago. What remained was the love, and I will never forget coming to this realization. She existed in the same state for several years, our visits consisting of gentle hugs with her frail body (which still brought such warmth to my heart), repetitive discussion of the weather, or the day's meals, and mindless television programs (often golf, a game she'd enjoyed playing for most of her life). And then, one day, she simply stopped eating. There was no rhyme or reason, we think she just decided she'd had enough - and who could blame her? This is the woman who, widowed unexpectedly at age 58, proceeded to travel with friends and take up new hobbies with abandon. This is the woman who, at age 68, accompanied us on a family trip to Disneyland, and gamely rode every rollercoaster with me. And this is the woman who, at age 69, decided to remarry and move across the country to begin a new life in Victoria, BC. Eighteen years of travel and adventures later, she found herself widowed a second time, and it soon became clear she was no longer able to live in the retirement community that had been their home. She was unable to find her way to the bathroom in homes she'd been in a hundred times before, and once in the bathroom, often didn't know what to do. She didn't want to be here anymore, and we would have to let her go.
My Nan sang her way out of this world. Music always played an enormously important role in our family, from my great-grandmother providing the piano soundtrack in silent movie houses, to my grandmother and her sister singing on the radio, to the whole family doing dishes in the kitchen and everyone singing their own part in perfect harmony. Nan's arthritic hands could still bang out a mean tune on the piano in her 60s, which spurred my interest in lessons as a child. At holiday gatherings, any member of the family could burst into spontaneous song in the middle of a conversation, if a word sparked a musical association. It was not only tolerated, it was encouraged.
As she lost her command of language, my grandmother began to sing her side of every conversation. Eventually this dwindled to her belting out just a few specific songs that had lodged in her foggy memory, one of which, for some inexplicable reason, was "God Bless America". You'd ask her a question, she'd smile, and answer in full-throated ninety-three-year-old song "GOD BLESS AMERICA, MY HOME, SWEET, HOME" in perfect pitch.
She began to disappear, to shrink from her already-frail state to someone I barely recognized. Her teeth began to fall out, which she handed to us with a confused and slightly irritated expression on her face. She began to sleep more, and exist in an in-between state, muttering things that made sense only to her, then pleading with us to "please let me go". My aunt flew in from Seattle to join my mother and uncle at their mother's bedside. We each took turns sitting with her, talking, reminiscing, and, of course, singing. I stroked her hair, and rubbed her feet, and told her that I loved her, feeling as though life absolutely comes full circle. Living with her until the age of 7 as I did, I could only imagine the number of times she did all of those things for me.
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My grandmother holding me, summer 1971 |
I went to work sporadically, none of us sure when her laboured breathing was a sign, and when it wasn't, and spent a lot of time just sitting with her and thinking. And watching. Watching her three grown children, two of them now also seniors themselves, care for her so lovingly and do whatever they could to ensure she was comfortable. I remember thinking to myself that she had raised three (and a half) pretty wonderful people, and you could feel the love in the room. Nothing else mattered, and it felt like I was finally grasping something. Whatever money and possessions she'd had, wherever she'd gone, whatever she'd done...all that mattered in her last days was who was with her, sending her on her next journey with love. I felt the need to build my own family more keenly than ever.
She died on my 37th birthday. I woke in the early hours of the morning with a start, and an overwhelming desire to drive to Markham to be with her. When I left her side the night before, I kissed her head and thanked her for everything she'd done for me, and there was nothing left unsaid. Now I fought the urge to get dressed, drive to the nursing home, and lie in bed beside her, telling her it would all be okay. I talked myself out of it, worrying that it wasn't my place, that the practicalities of getting in there were too much, that I was being dramatic. At 6:00 a.m. the shrill sound of my phone woke me, and my mom choked out the words, "She's gone." I raced to the nursing home and waited in the parking lot for everyone to arrive. We sat with her for hours, holding her hands and feeling the warmth eventually leave her body. I watched as people finally wheeled her tiny shell away, the smallest bump I could imagine under the sheet.
What scares me is envisioning those scenes for myself one day, but alone. What if I outlive my spouse, and we have no children? What will bring me comfort in my last days, months, or years, by myself? What is the point of all the things I've worked towards, and all the dreams we had for our lives, if there is no one to share them with? Or what if Jody is the one to outlive me, and my beautiful, gregarious, wife is sitting alone in a home one day?
I am a photographer who has been cataloguing her life for years. I began a project to amalgamate all the beautiful historical photos I inherited upon my grandmother's death, and create a lasting record for all the members of our family. Suddenly all of this became so much less appealing at the thought that it's only for my own benefit, with no one to pass it on to. All my things, all my memories, will one day end up in a dumpster or some curio shop, like the many sad, dust-covered belongings I've poked through in similar shops over the years.
If family is everything, what does it mean when you cannot have one, through no fault or choice of your own?
And there is that. This is not my fault, and yet I feel as though I have failed. I have lost two more little lives that had actually begun, and taken root in my heart. I couldn't keep them here, and everything we've been through has been for nothing. All the needles, all the tests, all the pain, all the stress, the heartache, the money...has all been for nothing.
I don't know where we go from here.
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