How was your Labor Day weekend? Mine was surreal.
I drove out to Detroit and back to visit my dad in the hospital
for a couple of days. My dad didn’t resemble himself, hospitals are
strange, I think a tornado touched down in my parents’ neighborhood
(even though the weather people there kept calling it a wind shear but I
don’t think I buy that), the power was (and still is) out so we came
back every night to a dark house, dozens of hundred year old trees
upended pieces of sidewalk and smashed garages and punctured roofs
making the whole area look like a tree-seeking bomb hit it. (What a
time to forget my camera.)
So. That was a lot of stuff. And now I’m home and trying to process it all.
I started my trip in our twelve-year-old Hyundai, minus the radio
that was stolen out of it last week. (That’s the third time. People
keep asking if we lock the doors to the car, but I’d rather lose the
radio than have the window smashed and lose the radio, so no,
we don’t lock the doors. I guess with the newest one we’ll bring the
radio’s faceplate indoors each time.) I brought along an iPod and
listened to various podcasts on the insanely boring drive that is the
trip from Milwaukee to Detroit.
I stopped in Chicago on the way to say goodbye to my brother and his
girlfriend before they moved to Germany. It was too short a visit. I
don’t see them enough, and I don’t realize until I’m with them again how
much there is to say. I wish we’d had more time, but for some things
there is never enough time.
I arrived in my hometown of Pleasant Ridge, MI to find dozens of downed trees. My mom called to warn me ahead of time that there had been a severe storm and there was no power, so I came armed with my favorite flashlight
and a headlamp. It took me a while to find a path to the house. The
normal route was blocked by fallen power lines and trees, as were
several alternate routes, but eventually I found my way. I think our
specific block and a couple on either side of it got the worst of the
damage. It’s both impressive and sad. I dropped off my things and
headed to the hospital around dinnertime.
My dad was awake when I arrived, and glad to see me, but he wasn’t
awake for very long. He’s weak and thin. Swallowing anything causes
him enormous pain. He fades in and out. He winces in his sleep which
is hard to watch. He’s disoriented. He just wants to go home.
The main thing I was able to provide for my dad in the hospital was
music. It was too hard to read to him or carry on a conversation
because he was seldom conscious for more than half a minute at a time. I
put a mute on my instrument to keep the volume lower and played a lot
of Bach. My dad loves Bach. There were times I was sure he was sound
asleep and I kept playing, only to hear him say without opening his
eyes, “Very nice” when I got to the end of a piece. I don’t think there
is any applause this season that will mean as much as those quiet
words.
There are several good things about playing live music for someone in
the hospital; it blocks out all the beeping and chatter that is a
constant part of life there, you can sleep to it or actively listen and
it’s all fine, and I think it help set my dad apart as a patient.
Everyone in the oncology ward said they liked hearing the music, and I
would see people pause in the doorway as I played. (One nurse was even
proud to have figured out I was playing a viola, not a violin.) I think
anything that draws attention to the fact that my dad is loved and
adored gives him an advantage in an environment that is dehumanizing,
and now even the people who don’t deal with him directly know he’s the
man whose daughter plays music for him. He’s not just some old man
hooked up to a million tubes. He’s special. He’s my dad.
Mom and I didn’t stay until the very end of visiting hours each night
because it helped to get back to the house while there was still some
natural light. Having the power out at home was such a strange added
twist to the trip. We walked around the house in headlamps and never
got over the habit of flicking the light switches when we walked into
certain rooms. We could still use the stove top if we lit the gas
ourselves with a match, but cooking in the dark is weird. My first
night home it was warm enough we went for a long walk. (The temperature
dropped by about thirty degrees not long after I arrived and I hadn’t
packed for that. Mom gave me a jacket but for the most part I was
really cold in Michigan.)
It’s hard to describe what the storm did to my old neighborhood. No
one was hurt, and most of the houses were spared, but the few that got
whomped by trees really got whomped. Several garages were crushed, as
were a few cars. My parents’ property was spared, which is good because
I don’t know how they could handle one more thing. With luck insurance
will do what insurance is supposed to, and I’m hoping nothing too
personal was lost by any of the people who experienced damage to their
property. It’s a lot of expense and inconvenience but probably not the
end of the world for most of the neighbors. The thing that has changed
is the general look and character of the street. The trees that came
down were about a century old, most of them on personal property, not
city trees. (Although the ones by the street that came down ripped up
the sidewalks, which was something to see.) There is a lot of light
suddenly where no one is used to seeing it. Everyone’s view has
changed.
I’m glad I was able to be there with my mom at such a strange and
trying time. It felt good to make her laugh. I made her go with me
into the chapel at the hospital and I taught her how to play Heart and
Soul. The place was empty, and my mom looked alarmed when I sat down at
the piano because she thought we were being disrespectful. But to
paraphrase Kurt Vonnegut, all music is sacred. And music makes things
better so I didn’t feel for a moment we were doing anything wrong. I
bossed mom around on the keyboard until she was able to poke out enough
of a bass line to play along with, and she laughed and wiped at her
eyes. It was worth the drive to Michigan just for that.
My dad was doing well enough when I left late on Tuesday that I felt
it was okay for me to go home. The medication that sent him to the ICU
(Xeloda) had horrible effects on his body and he nearly died, but the
ever encouraging and kind Dr. Pearlman said we’re past the hump and dad
was improving. I trust him. All the nurses were excellent, and I am
forever impressed at how caring yet firm the physical therapy people
are.
On the downside, some people in hospitals need to remember that
discussions about life and death are not casual events for many of us.
One well-meaning young doctor rattled my mother badly in the hall when
she stopped us on the way to lunch to ask if we had orders in place
about whether or not to revive my dad if he got suddenly worse. She saw
a frail man with stage four cancer and was calling things as she saw
them based on her everyday experiences, but she doesn’t know how hard my
dad wants to fight. She just kept saying, “Because he’s really very
sick, and if you’re not here we need to know whether you want us to let
him go if his heart stops.” My mom was flustered as she explained that
at this point in time we’re quite sure my dad would want to be revived
if possible and of course she’d signed papers to that effect.
It was
not appropriate to approach us in that way. We had been feeling okay on
our way to lunch, and that doctor destroyed our equanimity for the
day. There was also a palliative specialist who talked to my mom only
in terms of dad never leaving the hospital and how to go about pulling
the plug. I hope we never see either of those doctors again. I know
there is a time and a place for those important discussions, but they
shouldn’t have been sprung on us when what we needed was reassurance.
On the drive back to Milwaukee I thought about the trees of my
childhood. When I was little, Pleasant Ridge was filled with huge,
majestic elms with limbs that spread out like fountains shading all the
streets. When I was nine, our neighborhood, like much of the nation,
was struck by Dutch elm disease. We lost all of those trees. The
neighborhood seemed unbearably bright for a long time. But the truth is
that there were many smaller trees in the neighborhood that could
suddenly reach for the light. I looked around my old street before I
left, past the endless rows of tree removal trucks and wood chippers,
the debris in the streets, and damaged maples with what was left of
their splintery limbs poking at the sky while awaiting chainsaws and
cranes coming to take them down. I saw the new generation of smaller
trees, some of which had grown up leaning odd directions just to find
some sun. The neighborhood will be different, and for a while it will
be unbearably bright. But now the new trees have a chance to grow into
new roles.
It won’t be the same, this new view, but for some it will be
the view they grow up with. The new view will become home.
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