Thursday, November 7, 2013

How has it been 10 years?


On a day like this 10 years ago you could easily find me holed up in my bedroom at my grandmother’s house staring out the window at the swing in the backyard. I could stare at that swing forever. To an outsider it wasn’t anything spectacular – in fact it was just two heavy duty chains attached by eye hooks to a couple two by fours that had been nailed or glued or screwed together  and spray painted John Deere green (his favorite color after gold). But to us that swing was everything. It was anchored between two huge pine trees smack in the middle of the yard. You could swing as high and as fast as you wanted on that swing, and that’s just what we did. That swing represented every weekend of our childhoods, pumping and pushing each other higher and higher as he stood there laughing and watching. There was a patch of dirt beneath that swing that developed a divot that just got deeper and deeper with each passing  year. My sisters and I would sit on that swing and spin in circles until the chains were as tight as they could go, then we’d pick up our feet and squeal as the chains unfurled.
But on that day as I stared out the window I knew the magic of that swing was gone. He had taken it with him and we’d never be able to find it again. He had been our hero, our friend, one of the greatest men I’ve ever known … he was our Buppa. And he was just gone. How were we supposed to wake up in that house every morning without seeing his face or hearing him shuffle through the kitchen on his way to the microwave? How could we be expected to play in the basement knowing he wasn’t in his office or his workshop puttering away? How would we ever be able to use that swing again without missing him? The answers were years in the making – even now five years after my grandmother has sold that house I find myself wishing for those weekends back, if only just to hear his voice one more time.
When Buppa was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease I had only heard of it in passing. At the time I didn’t understand exactly what was going to happen to him and to us. My parents explained that Bup would slowly lose his memory and eventually we would lose him. Back then they called it the five year disease – but our Buppa lived another 10! He was always stubborn that way. Tell him he couldn’t do something and he’d prove you wrong. After he’d been diagnosed our family continued to live our lives the way we always had, we went skiing and golfing and spent summers in New Hampshire. We celebrated birthdays and holidays and traveled as a family. Buppa knew what was happening to him, he began to leave himself notes around the house reminding him to take his glasses and wallet when he left and he drew himself a map for the steering wheel of his car so he knew how to get to the corner store and back. It wasn’t until the weekend that he got lost that we realized things were a lot further along than we’d thought. He had gone to the store to pick up some milk and when he didn’t return my mother began to panic. My father went out to drive the neighborhood to see if he could find Buppa but when that turned up nothing we called the police. Eventually Buppa found his way home to us, but it was then that we knew his days of driving – and ultimately independence were over. And for him, being the man he was, this might as well have been a death sentence.
Slowly but surely over the next few years we watched as the man we once knew disappeared from us in every way imaginable. He could no longer ski or build intricate projects in his workshop. His golf game suffered and his hands began to shake. He was easily frustrated and often angry when he couldn’t remember the littlest detail. But despite it all he loved us and we him. He was truly a man that could never be replaced.
So when the call came in late October of 2003 that “he didn’t have much longer” I dropped everything to be there. I was living in Vermont at the time attending UVM and was in the midst of mid-terms. I jumped in my car and drove straight through – breaking speed limits as I drove down 89 through Vermont onto 95 in Massachusetts and then 84 into Connecticut – over 6 hours without stopping just to be by his side.
When I arrived, my entire family had descended on my grandmother’s home. Buppa was in a hospital bed in the sunroom surrounded by his five children. My mother and her two brothers were, in reality, his step-children, but to him there was no distinction – they were his in every sense of the word. They held hands and cried, told stories of his life and when he would open those deep, knowing eyes they’d smile and he’d smile right back. There were so many of us there, I can’t even remember how many – we took turns sitting by his bedside, remembering the man he was to us. We each had our private moments with him to tell him how much we loved him and be able to say goodbye.
I remember when it was my turn, I sat staring at the face of a man who God had put into our lives as our cornerstone. He was in essence our anchor – keeping our crazy blended family together. I wondered what life was going to be like once he was gone, I thought about the fact that he’d never see me graduate from college, get married or start my own family. I reached out and took his wrinkled hand in mine and when I did he opened his eyes. As tears streamed down my face I told him I loved him. He looked back at me, smiled and said “I love you too”… those words had never meant so much.
Just a few hours later we all gathered around his bed and held hands one last time. My uncle said a prayer for Buppa and for us. And as we stood there together God called him home. He took one final breath and he left us. In that moment we knew we would never be the same.
 
Now, ten years later as we celebrate his life I realize that statement is more true than I could ever have imagined. In the years since his death our blended family has gone our separate ways. We no longer see my mother’s step-brothers, and while we stay in contact with their children our holidays are no longer spent together and those ski trips and summers in New Hampshire have long since ceased. I have graduated from college, married an amazing man and just gave birth to my first child. All the things I knew he would miss. In my heart I know he’d be proud of my degree, he’d love my husband and Lucas would be the light of his life. But despite knowing these things, there isn’t a day that goes by that I wouldn’t give anything to have him here for just one more minute. I want him to SEE the woman I’ve become and I want to hear his voice just once say he’s proud of me. I think for the rest of my life I’ll miss him. Whether it’s  the sound of his feet shuffling down the hall, the way he taught me how to ski “correctly”, or the way he’d dance the Charleston… my life wouldn’t be what it is had he never been a part of it so for that I’m grateful.
I’ll see him again someday; that I know but until then … Rest Easy Bup! We love you more than you’ll ever know!
 
July 7, 1917 - November 1, 2003

 

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