Death, Be Not Stupid

by John Shore on January 25, 2011 in Personal · 46 comments

You know how you have those moments when all of a sudden you see your whole life?

I had one humongous such moment when I was eleven. I was in my bedroom, standing before my dresser. With my left hand I had just placed atop the dresser an object I can’t now recall. To my right, along the same wall as the dresser, was my bedroom door, which was slightly ajar.

Between dropping off whatever it was on the top of my desk and moving to the next thing I was going to do, it hit. In mid-movement, I froze. I didn’t stop much when I was a kid. For this, though, I sure did. It was like having an entire weather front move right through me.

The challenge of your life is going to be getting over your father. That’s the Big Truth I suddenly found myself processing.

As raw information goes, this wasn’t exactly a news flash. My dad, I’m afraid, was a dick. He was just mean, and always furiously angry. You never knew a guy so angry. My dad had two emotions: so pissed off he could barely see, and asleep. He even slept angry; he had a snore like a jet engine into which someone had tossed a blender.

It’s scary, living in a house with a guy like that. He was six-four, and built. I always thought he was about to kill me—or punch out a wall, or … eat the chimney, or something. I was always sort of waiting for the other (size-12, in his case) shoe to drop.

Anyway, as a dad he was pretty much of a disaster. He’d definitely already failed as a husband; he and my mom had divorced some three years earlier, and he had moved out. But my mom was 100%, full-on crazy—and not in a fun way. So it didn’t seem to me that it was particularly my dad’s fault that they’d divorced.

Really, I had zero idea why those two did anything they did. They both seemed nuts to me. All adults seem nuts when you’re a kid. Adults still seem nuts to me. But … whole other post.

I’ve written about this before (in My Runaway Mom), but one day, two years after my dad left, my mom literally disappeared. She said she was going to the store for some bread and milk, got in her car, drove away, and didn’t come back—for two years. She just completely disappeared. Two years; no phone call; no note; nothing. Gone. Vaporized. Where my mom had been was now just space.

The morning that came after the full night of my mom’s Surprise Exit, my dad returned to our house. He just … walked in the front door. He was home!

And he had a woman with him! That he wanted us to start calling “mom”!

He was married! He had a wife—who, as it turned out, made my original mom seem like June Cleaver. Yowzerfuckinbowzer, man. Talk about your evil step-mother. (Poor woman. She tried. I guess. I dunno. She freakin’ failed, I know that. But it’s not her fault that I happen to be fodder in that failure. As she was fond of saying, she never wanted children. Again: not a news flash.)

Anyway, I’m eleven, hanging out in my room, trying, as ever, to have a life of some sort. I put something on my dresser, and whoomp! there it is:

Your life’s challenge is getting over your father. If you don’t untie that knot, it will choke everything else out of you. You’ve got a giant hole in your boat, and your dad put it there. And he’s not going to help you patch it. You know that. You know that when it comes to your dad, you couldn’t be more alone. Fix that hole within yourself, or go down. That’s your life. We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming.

So. There it was.

And sure enough: all my life I’ve been singularly concerned with coming to psychological and spiritual terms with the awful fact of my awful parents. If you start your life with parents who weren’t fit to properly tend houseplants, let alone children, you have no other business in life but getting over that fact—since, if you don’t, your life will surely be spent spinning in the vortex they placed you in. So that’s what I concentrated on: coming to terms with Mom and Dad.

One of the things that has meant is always trying my best to make sure that I would be okay if my father, right then, actually died from, say, yet another of his heart attacks.

If at any given moment I’m not ready for my father to pass away, then I know I’ve got some work to do. Because that, I’ve always known, is what I must be okay with. So throughout my life I’ve tracked myself relative to that dynamic. I’ve always asked myself if I’ve said everything to my father that I need to. If I have any avenues of Dad Trip I still haven’t been down. If any new such pockets have opened up, and now need exploring. If there are any issues at all, relative to my dad, about which I feel unresolved. And if there are, I resolve them.

I’ve been on that stuff like a dog with a bone, all my life.

And it worked! I don’t know how to say this without sounding insane, but outside of my wife I think I’m the most psychologically fit person I’ve ever met. I’m good with that shit. I did it. It took me about forty years to nail it, but I did. I know who I am in relationship to my parents.

And good thing I do, too. Because now my dad, by all accounts, is dying.

And he wants to see me.

I’m barely going. But, you know: honor thy dinker dad, and all that.

So in very short order my wife Catherine and I will fly to North Carolina, to be with my dad in the home he shared for some twenty years with his second wife, who this month three years ago died of cancer.

He needs to move into an assisted care facility. Now. He’s in terrible shape.

He doesn’t want to. He’s afraid to live alone anymore—but he won’t move into a home, or let anyone take care of him in his.

And though he asked me, a year ago, to arrange for him to come live near Catherine and me in San Diego, at the last moment of that Big Move, he backed out. As I’d known all along he would.

Poor guy. He’s just so … deeply, deeply tweaked.

Anyway, now Cat and I are doing this thing, that middle-aged people do, with the parents. (And with, in my case, the sibling. Who lives in Hawaii. Whom I’ve seen once in, like, thirty years. Man. Some family.)

I’ve arranged for Internet service to begin at my dad’s house the day we arrive. While I’m there, I’m pretty sure that being there is what I’ll be blogging about. I can’t imagine I’ll be thinking about a whole lot else.

You guys rock. Thanks for reading me.

******

Related posts: I Just Found Out My Mother Died–Five Years Ago; My Stepmother Passed Away; Unhappy? Reject Your Loser Parents.

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{ 46 comments… read them below or add one }

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Jill June 27, 2012 at 3:04 pm

Mr. Shore, I knew there was some Big Universe reasons why I recently found you + your lovely self. I’m only at the iceberg tip of getting to know what’s going on in your powerful mind, but I’m thoroughly enjoying the ride. (sorry for the mixed metaphor–typing too fast.)

Anyway your dad was my mom, and your mom was my dad. Ironic how ironic life gets. Just as Amazing how we find the faith needed to sustain us through the 7th ring of crazy to get to… not as crazy as before. Which I call progress.

Looking forward to reading more adventures… thanks for you being you.

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Diana Horel August 10, 2011 at 6:38 pm

Wow, this is me.

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Amy Sasso July 16, 2011 at 1:17 am

I’m only 27. That’s what I keep telling myself. I’m practically a child. No one expects me to be able to forgive my family yet for the horrible scars that are their legacy. (Metaphoric scars; I was never hospitalized or needed to be due to physical abuse.) And yet I keep trying to forgive them, if only to get that hate out of my heart. They don’t care what they did to me. It doesn’t hurt them. It hurts me. I know that, and I simply can not do it.

There is a church very near my house. I have started to pray again and I think perhaps going there on Sunday may be good for me. It is the only church in my town that is open and accepting of gays so I think I might fit in there. The fact that this church is the one that is half a block from my house seems like some kind of sign.

Hmm, do Christians believe in signs and superstitions? I haven’t been one in so long, I’ve forgotten.

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Barbara June 26, 2011 at 9:55 am

John, thanks for this post and the others, which I’m wading through. My dying mother was moved by hospice into my house two days ago, very suddenly, and we had to put her in the living room. She’s not happy, we’re not happy, but we’re all trying to cope. Mom has always been paranoid but it’s now very, um, colorful. Your “15 ways to cope” is going to become my commandments, and I will read them every day.

My father was a bastard like yours, and when he died 13 years ago Mom started living her life and making friends for the first time. COPD and an inoperable aneurysm took away a lot of her independence and she’s been bitter about never having a chance to live as she liked. Last week we thought she wouldn’t live through the night and today, I’m half-convinced she will outlive me. I might not take that much.

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laurie January 30, 2011 at 2:13 pm

john shore. you came out of this forgiving.can’t say i woulda..you are a much much bigger, more loviing person then I. To think, our sermon was about forgivness just today..and i am having some inner tantrums about it..I really have a new appreciation for you..and newfound respect.

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Cheryl Hannah January 25, 2011 at 6:01 pm

Dear John,

I don’t know if this will help you put things into perspective, but it was a tactic that I used when still married to my abusive ex. Unless your father repents and puts his faith in the grace of God through Jesus Christ, this life is the closest thing to Heaven he will experience. For me, that marriage was the closest thing to Hell that I will ever experience thanks to the same grace.

Plant seeds, water them, and perhaps God will grant a last minute harvest like he did with the thief on the cross. You won’t regret it no matter what.

And btw, I am not recommending “niceianity” that is boundaryless as opposed to following Christ in showing mercy.

Prayers for you in a difficult task,
Cheryl H

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Lina January 25, 2011 at 8:15 pm

I have to disagree with this suggestion. Death bed proselytizing is extremely disrespectful. If John’s father shows any desire to have this conversation, then by all means, they should have it. Otherwise, it’s just adding tension and division into an already tense time.

John, you have my best wishes. Death is always difficult, no matter what the circumstances.

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Cheryl Hannah January 30, 2011 at 7:31 pm

There is more than one way to plant a seed and water it. One way is through acts of kindness, especially when they are undeserved. It’s God’s kindness that brings us to repentance, and humans are usually the agents of that kindness.

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Don Rappe January 25, 2011 at 5:11 pm

I remember when my Dad died 47 years ago. I was 27 and studying math at Cal Berkeley. He had been feeble minded for 5 years and lived with my Mom in Chicago. It seemed to make a great tear (rip) in the world as I understood it. There was an emptiness I found hard to believe. How could the world still exist with him not in it? It made it difficult for me to live in my atheistic world. Although I could not believe in the existence of God, I came to believe that God loved my father. I was fortunate to meet a Lutheran chaplain at Cal who was also a Nietzsche scholar. When my mind began to crumble back towards the absolutism I had been taught in our 3 room parochial school, he asked me: “Don, you’re not becoming superstitious are you?” It was a turning point in my spiritual journey. Now, I welcome you to the world of those of us who no longer have physical parents. For many of us it’s a big thing. I’m sure it depends on our ages as well. May God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, bless you and your Dad and all your family.

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Brighid Rose January 25, 2011 at 4:32 pm

I do have to say you are very lucky to have figured that out at such a young age, but then it doesn’t sound like they left you a lot of choice either. It took me until about 36 to even quit trying anymore because none of my efforts matter. I give you so much credit for still being there for your dad at this stage of the game. I don’t even talk to my family anymore out of self-preservation. You are way ahead of me. All credit to you!!

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Jeannie January 25, 2011 at 4:30 pm

Sorry to hear this John. I think our relationships with our parents at the end of their lives can still be very emotional and difficult – even if we haven’t had much to do with them over the years. I hope this time with your dad is better than you think it may be. I wish you, Catherine and your father, peace.

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Suz January 25, 2011 at 4:18 pm

You figured that out when you were 11???? In addition to everything else ( humor, depth, compassion yadda yadda yadda…) :) you have an amazing mind! Thank you for sharing it with us. Your clarity is almost scary.

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Erika January 25, 2011 at 3:27 pm

Hi John,
Compared to you & so many (most?) others, I basically grew up in a Norman Rockwell painting…and I still have both my (really good) parents. So I won’t claim to have *any* idea how you’re feeling and what you’re going through, but I thank you for sharing – you’ve really helped me to understand a lot about people, and to be even more thankful for how blessed I’ve been. I’m a very quiet, never-comment type person but I just wanted to tell you I’m praying for you and your family, for strength and that amazing peace only God can give.

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