[Nyerges is the author of
“Til Death Do Us Part?”, a series of stories describing how he and his wife
attempted to deal with death in an uplifting manner. The book is available on
Kindle, or from School of Self-reliance,
Box 41834, Eagle Rock, CA 90041 or www.ChristopherNyerges.com.]
When
my father’s 80th birthday coincided with Father’s Day some years
ago, I wrote a pictorial booklet for my father which outlined key aspects of
our life together. It was my way of thanking my father. My wife Dolores and I
went to his home after the wild cacophonous family gathering had ended. We
didn’t want an audience in an atmosphere of laugher, sarcasm, and possibly
ridicule. I only wanted to share the thank you story with my father in a
somewhat serious atmosphere.
Dolores
and I brought some special foods, put on some music, and I began my short
presentation beginning with my earliest significant memories. I shared with him
my memories of how he told me I would be an artist when I grew up. He always
told me to put my bike and toys away, so "the boogeyman" wouldn’t
steal them. As I grew older, I learned that the world was indeed full of very
real "boogeymen" and my father attempted to provide me with ways to
protect myself against these unsavory elements of life.
I
recalled to my father, while my mother and Dolores listened on, the birthday
party adventures, getting hair cuts in the garage, and how my father tolerated
my interest in mycology and wild edibles.
Everyone
found the recounting amusing, even funny, but there were also tears mixed with
the laughter. As with most memories, some things my father recalled quite
differently from me, and some he didn’t recall at all. Some things that I saw
as life-and-death serious, he saw as humorous, and vice versa.
But
above it all, I felt I’d finally "connected" with him at age 80 in a
way that I’d never managed to do before. My "fathers day card" wasn’t
pre-made by a card company, but consisted of my own private and secret memories
that I shared with him. I managed to thank him for doing all the things that I
took for granted – a roof over my head, meals, an education, a relatively
stable home.
Of
course, all our family members – "insiders" – knew that my father was
no saint. But I was at least acknowledging the good, and sincerely thanking him
for it.
My
mother died two years later, and we all knew my father would be lost without
her. They’d been married over 50 years. His health and activities declined and
he finally passed away on the Ides of March a few years later.
Though
his death did not come as a surprise – I was nevertheless left feeling his
absence. That early Saturday morning when I learned of his death, I even felt
parent-less. My view of the world changed and I was forced to acknowledge the
limits of life and the futility of pursuing solely a material existence.
After
I learned of his death via a phone call, I walked out into the morning rain, in
shock, crying, thinking, remembering. I was not feeling cold or wet, and
somehow I was protected by that unique state of mind that enshrouded me.
During
the next three days, I did as I had done with my mother when she died. I spent
the next three days reviewing my life with my father.
At
first I allowed the random memories and pain to wash over me. I talked to Frank
constantly during those three days, inviting and allowing him to be with me as
we did the life review together. I felt his pain, his frustration, his emptiness
and loneliness in his last few years of life. I did nothing to stop the pain of
this – I allowed myself to feel it all.
I
spoke to Frank as I’d speak to anyone living. I felt his presence and even his
responses. I did this for myself as much as for Frank and his on-going journey.
I
began to see him as a young man, who met, fell in love, and married my mother.
Somehow, this was a major revelation to me. I had never seen my own father in
that light before. He had simply been "my father." Suddenly, he was a
unique individual, with his own dreams, aspirations, and goals. Amazingly, I’d
never viewed him in this way during our life together.
And
then, after perhaps 12 hours of this, and miles of walking, I began a more
chronological review of my life with my father, point by point by significant
point. I saw his weaknesses and strengths, as well as my own. As I did this
review, I looked for all the things that I’d done right with my father, all the
things I’d done wrong, and all the things that I could have done better. I
wrote these down, and the "wrong" list was shockingly long. The
"right" list only contained a few items!
I
asked my father to forgive me, and I resolved to do certain things differently
in order to change and improve my character. I know I would not have imposed
such a rigor upon myself had it not been for the death of my father.
A
week later, when there was the funeral at the church, I felt that I’d come to
know my father more than I ever was able to do in life. I briefly shared to the
congregation my three days of "being with" my father, and learning
what it was like to be Frank, in his shoes, and how we forgave one another.
More
importantly, I shared to family and friends gathered that day the importance of
constantly finding the time to tell your living loved ones that you indeed love
them, not waiting until they die to say the things that you should be saying
all along.
I
remember Frank now on Father’s Day, and continue to express my heart-felt
thanks for all that he – and my mother – gave to me.
2 comments:
Wonderful, Chris. I was lucky when a whole bunch of serendipitous things collided, and made it possible for me to take care of my dad the last year of his life (2012-2013).
Really? The same happened to me, and I moved in with him for his last year! It was quite a time...
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