Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Rambling when I should be sleeping

My older brother and I went to buy him a suit today. Frank, who has some variant of autism, is nearly 50. He focuses on European progressive rock, Beatles music, and old episodes of Twilight Zone, Emergency, and Gilligans Island. But in the last months of mom's life, he'd kept his earphones off and his TV at low volume. Since her death, he's been playing only tastefully subdued Beatles music, no prog rock. Frank doesn't have much of a sense of style. The last time he wore anything resembling a suit was at my dad's funeral seven years ago. When he pulled that old cashmere jacket out of his packed and dusty closet and held it up in the light, it looked like roadkill hanging from a fence. I told him we'd be going downtown, and he grimaced but was game.

At Men's Wearhouse, Frank looked over the suit jackets and whistled even at the sale price tags. "164 DOLLARS?!" he said in a loud whisper. "I'M NOT MADE OF MONEY!" "It's OK, Frank," I said. "These are really great-quality suits. We'll find out something cool." He had on his best Led Zeppelin T-shirt, some stained navy chinos and black sketchers. A salesperson bustled up, tape measure over his shoulder, and whisked Frank into a dark gray pinstripe that looked fantastic on him. Frank turned toward the mirror, leaned in and glowered, and practiced his best James Cagney. "You'll never get me, see?" When he tried on the pants, they bagged under his prodigious belly. But the salesman hiked them up to where they were supposed to fit, declared them to be proper except for the need for cuffs and suspenders, and proceeded to lay out shirts and ties for us to choose from. While Frank was making his selection, the salesman picked out some great shoes that fit Frank perfectly. I hate to flack, but I love that store. Then with Frank in front of a mirror, the salesman got out his ruler and chalk, marked up the jacket and slacks, picked out some suspenders, and away we went to the cash register. We'll pick up the altered garments on Friday.

Frank proudly paid for the jacket and slacks, declaring "I'm NOT keeping THIS suit in my CLOSET. I'm going to keep it in a much nicer place." As I paid for the shoes, shirt, tie, suspenders and alterations (it turned out to be an even split), Frank asked the salesman if he could wash his new duds in the washing machine. The salesman patiently explained the rules of suit cleaning, handed Frank the handle bag, and away we went. He treated me to lunch to mark the occasion.
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My family's friends have been lifelines these last several days. They bring by food now and again, or invite me over, offer to come help clean the house. Quiet lines of support, thrown accurately into the waves. It's different from when my dad died suddenly. Then, almost instantly, there was a neverending stream of flowers, cards, casseroles for his widow. But now there is no widow, only exhausted children, and friends who know that when the phone goes unanswered here, sometimes it's not because nobody's home, but because we just can't bear to pick it up. So they patiently try again, or they just come over with their broad shoulders and their kind eyes and they pick our spirits up and set us aright.
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I've wondered time and again why my mother had to die the way she did, why she wasn't granted a healthy life and a swift and painless demise. I think about my father's death--the night of Feb. 9, 2000, when the phone rang and the horrific news from the other end felled my life--and I compare it with the five-month onslaught my mother's dying was. I got used to her dying in increments, as she got used to incremental upticks in her morphine doses. At the end, she could tolerate a dose of morphine that might have killed her had she taken it six months before. And at the end, her death brought us relief rather than shock--relief that she was no longer suffering, and relief that we could get a night's sleep at last. I don't believe this was a gift; what arrogance that would be. I can't believe it was just a matter fate; how then could I have faith? My task, it appears, is to simply accept and to stop seeking a reason for the way things happened. But at night, when I'm trying to get to sleep, the question keeps recurring: Why? How did she deserve this? What god would allow this? All gods, it seems, as countless good people from all walks and all faiths die in misery each moment of every day, each time I breathe in, and every time you exhale.

1 comment:

Jeani said...

You have a few heavy days to go. I have read that there is nothing as exhausting as watching someone you love die. I agree 100%. Be gentle with yourself.