Forgotten But Not Gone

My Dad doesn’t really know who I am any more. I think he’s aware that he’s got a daughter out in the world, and that her name is my name, and she has certain qualities that I have, but he doesn’t associate those things with my physical self. Dad, who was a mathematician and a V1 kind of guy and a white collar criminal, Dad, he of the punny and absurd wit, is losing his mind.

Not in the “What, are you out of your mind?” kind of way, but in a much more difficult way. His brain isn’t working like it’s supposed to. His past is becoming increasingly colorful, with trips to China and stage door adventures at the Metropolitan Opera and collaborations with Albert Einstein. He is rewriting his history, that time in prison was time in school instead, that time in Korea in the military somehow included border runs to China. A wine rack shaped like a cello needs tuning, a fallen leaf in a stream is a fish, Dad your room is that way, no, the other way.

Since he can’t remember how he got to the kitchen, I suppose it’s not so surprising he can’t remember who I am. It’s been three years since he’s seen me last and only five minutes since he found his way to the kitchen. I am familiar and friendly to him, but none of the usual questions are there – how is your work, your travels, your husband? I’ve been bar-coded as a generic family/household member. Qualities? Helpful, will fetch coffee and make toast, can be trusted to assist with shoes and seatbelts. But in front of him, I’m not the me I was when we talked last, about three months before this visit. That me is in his voice mail, in a series of unreturned calls.

I have not spent much time with my Dad over the past 15 years, maybe longer. This is largely intentional. When I was a teenager, my parents divorced and a few years later my father remarried to a woman who I have never been able to get along with. My father and his wife were – are — fairly inseparable. They were business partners, too, and she did time of a different variety for the same white collar crimes that made my Dad what he used to call “a guest of the US Government.”  Those were his gap years, his career break, a minimum security facility in Boron, California, with a short relocation to a “real” prison in LA for some medical treatment. Dad came out thinner, with stories and an ability to read gang signs and, oddly, a membership in Toastmasters.

I lived with my Dad and my stepmother for a brief stint during my last years of high school and again upon return from my first long trip abroad, before the prison years. They lived in the Orange County suburbs after I returned from India. I was 23 and living in a terra cotta and tan subdivision that was serviceable only by car. I rode my bicycle for miles and miles and miles through suburban neighborhoods to attend the community college during the day, I waited tables at a pizza place, I babysat my little half-brother from time to time – I adored him, still do – and I recovered, slowly, from a bad bout of giardia and salmonella and travel in India.

I was also crippled with culture shock, absolutely crippled, and probably having had enough of however this was manifesting itself, my stepmom sent me to therapy. One evening, I overheard her telling my father that I had been diagnosed as suicidal and could not be left alone. This made me extremely angry. I was choking in their status driven, increasingly chaotic household, but I never wished for death, only for elsewhere.  I didn’t know at the time that they were careening towards another bankruptcy, and ultimately prison time, only that I wanted desperately to not be there.

One day I snapped into focus, packed my limited things, and moved into a house in the Santa Ana barrio with a totally hot Chilean guy and a brilliant German inventor. My mood improved tremendously, and a few months later, I got the hell out of Southern California. I fled for the San Francisco Bay Area, leaving the Santa Ana winds and the traffic and the continual oppressive striving for more that seemed to define Dad’s existence with my stepmom.

I can’t have been easy to get along with. No doubt I’d been spouting zealot’s rhetoric about European public transit and third world disparities and neo-socialism. My time away had also broadened the divide between me and my stepmom. I was relieved to be away from her, from Dad’s occasional outbursts caused, I know now, by his increasing financial distress and impending prosecution. I do believe that they both wanted the best for me, but I suspect what my stepmom wanted was for me to be properly dressed in designer labels, to have societal approval, to have better hair, whereas my father simply wanted his kids — and his wife — to be happy.

If you imagine that thing where the pages fly off the calendar, you can see Dad and my stepmom moving to Tucson, Arizona, to join my half-brother where he’d been living with his grandmother while his parents were doing time. You can see me flying all over the planet, and divorcing my first husband and falling in love again in Australia. You can see Dad making a speech at my half-brother’s wedding about how happy he is to see his family grow. You can see that last time I visited Dad solo, when we went to the Laundromat and played pinball while the sheets dried and where I worried, worried, worried, crushed into a corner of the house where I’d been confined by my stepmom’s hoarding. A few years later, when I visit with my brother and we share a rented vacation property because staying in Dad’s house is impossible, you can see Dad folding into himself a little, and his words gradually disappearing.

Now he is smaller – he was a 6’2” swimmer in college, and I am not exaggerating when I say that pictures of him from this time make him look like a young Richard Gere. Now his eyes are cloudy and his shoulders slope forward and he shuffles, picking out his steps with a cane. He taught math – it frustrated him tremendously that I had no gift with numbers, and later, he was a salesman, your classic salesman in pinstripes and oxfords, a big man with forceful rhetoric. Now, he wanders through dusty shelves of what were once giant volumes of vocabulary and wit just to answer a simple question.

I said goodbye to Dad, leaving him sitting on the couch in my half-brother’s house in Houston, Texas. Before I started the rental car, I sat in the driveway trying to decide if I felt guilty about not having spent more time with him over the past decade, more. It would be easy to paint the situation as your classic Freudian mess, me outraged over my stepmom replacing me in my Dad’s affections, but I’m not – have never been – some kind of “Daddy’s girl.” And it would be tempting to veer into a screed against my stepmom’s slights against me as I have perceived them throughout the years, but that would offer no benefit or satisfaction. At the most basic level, we never reached détente and I never, as an adult, felt comfortable in her company. And in recent years, visiting had become a physical impossibility; there was literally nowhere to sit down in their home.

Not for anything would  Dad have told me to visit him instead of going to Antarctica or Zanzibar, he would not have asked me to make that choice, he would not have wanted me to. I know this all the way through to my bones. Before Dad arrived at whatever plateau he’s on today, he would call me and burst with excitement when I told him about what I’d been up to. He was positively giddy over my visit to Antarctica to see penguins; he was the same way when I told him about my safari adventures. Of course, of course, he would have liked to see me more often, but he never said a word that made me think he felt I’d flown the wrong way when I boarded an airplane.

“It sounds like you’ve been having a great time!” he’d enthuse. “Oh, Dad, it’s been AMAZING,” I’d respond. He sounded happy for me. During this recent visit, he did not ask me once where I’d been, what I’d been doing. At the end of our last visit, Dad hugged me and then waved as we drove away, this time, he did not look up. “Oh, okay, see you later,” he said.

My Dad knew me once. Just before I turned 30, I called him to tell him I was getting divorced. “Dad, he wants us to settle down and have kids,” I said. “That’s nice,” my Dad said, “but who is he planning on doing that WITH?” I laughed out loud, I still laugh out loud when I think of my Dad saying this to me. I was heartbroken about this breakup, I loved my husband of the time, but he did not know me. Dad’s wit, his quick humor, black and sharp, but still exactly the thing, made me feel so much better. Though it’s possible to argue that it’s simply a byproduct of being Jewish, I like to think that this sense of humor in the face of sadness or difficulty is something I got from him.

Dad’s sense of humor is still intact, though his jokes make no sense. He was content to tag along on our outings and he seemed to enjoy sitting at the table with us, observing the conversation. He needs a great deal of help, his arthritic old bones make it hard for him to get dressed, his hands are a little shaky making small tasks a challenge. It requires a lot of patience just to get him to the car or to the breakfast table. His physical decline is difficult to see, but the loss of his mental acuity is what is the most heartbreaking.

While my life gets bigger and bigger, as I loop increasingly large circles around the globe, Dad’s collapses in on itself. He was in Hong Kong and Manhattan and a bunch of other places on the globe, and he wanted that for me, too. I could feel guilty, perhaps I do feel guilty, about not being bigger and setting aside the complicated yet ultimately petty things I feel about my stepmom in order to spend more time with Dad.  It is, in a maddening cliche, too late for that. I’m stalled in the driveway in yet another generic sedan, sad and angry and confused and frustrated.

In a few days, I will board another airplane. I won’t visit my Dad, yet again. If my Dad knew who I was, he would say, “Oh! San Francisco!” and he might sing a bit. “I left my heart…” before making some kind of joke. “Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair. Have a great time!”  I think he would want me to go, but now, I can’t be sure.

§

My dad died on December 29, 2012, shortly before his 75th birthday.

31 thoughts on “Forgotten But Not Gone”

  1. My dad became a different person towards the end, suffering with cancer and a blood infection that eventually ushered him out of this world. It was scary and disconcerting to see him…diminished. Great writing. So…poignant.

    Reply
  2. It is hard, especially when there’s baggage, to watch a parent decline into dementia. My mother, with whom I’ve had a difficult relationship all my adult life, has Alzheimer’s, and I find that balance of “I should visit” versus “it’s so difficult” to be painful.

    Reply
  3. Pam, thank you for sharing this very personal and touching story. Your father sounds as if he travelled a journey with many turns in his life. Children can not be expected to follow, can they? Even though I believe that family relationships are meaningful, they do not always follow reason and I admire you for trying to find both.

    Reply
  4. Pam, I definitely feel your pain. And I am blown away by your honesty. People tell me all the time that I am so brave to “Put it all out there”on my blog” but I certainly haven’t tackled the issue of my family. Suffice it to say that, unlike your father, mine insists I am wasting my life as a travel writer. How I wish he could share in my excitement like you father used to. At least you can hold onto that; you father was happy that you were doing what you loved. And maybe for that reason you can let go of a little bit of the guilt I hear in your article. We all do the best we can, but we have to do what’s best for us, rather than doing what others expect of us. I admire what you’ve done, and if your father could tell you, he’d no doubt say the same thing. Sending you a big hug. Hang in there.

    Reply
  5. Beautifully written and heartbreaking, Pam. Reminds me how much I miss my dad. I lost him when I was 27, and while he knew who I was then, I think he’d be happy with who I am now as well.

    Reply
  6. Oh, Pam. 🙁

    Unfortunately for me this all happened overnight for my dad 5 years ago thanks to a massive stroke. The stories he told of wild adventures and impossible cartoon reflexes has turned into me not visiting him in 3 years now. He remembers me as I was at 17 permanently since everything after my mom leaving was washed away in the flood. I was an impossible angry child. It’s too overwhelming for me to think of explaining that I’m 27 and married to a man just like him again and again. I wouldn’t wish this loss of memory and personality on anyone. I’m truly sad it’s affecting your family.

    Reply
  7. I read the first paragraph. Had to leave. Wash some dishes. Drink some coffee. Didn’t work. I wept from the beginning to the end.
    My Mom looked at me over dinner that last Christmas, and said “This would be so perfect if Sharon were here.” Rationally I knew that I had lost my Mom long before that off hand remark, but…but…later she found me weeping and wrapped her arms around me, and whispered, “I know you–I know my baby”…but…but
    We are all still children, no matter what age we are until our parents die. You see, we can always go home, be the kid, if they are still “there”. With Alzheimer’s, the death is painfully protracted and infinitely cruel beyond measure, no matter what our relationship with that parent. Because it steals the “being” there can be no resolution for the thought unspoken, or the kiss not given. And we cannot be the kid anymore.
    You did the right thing by going, and whatever decision you make in the future about seeing him again or not, will not diminish the obvious love you have for him.

    Reply
  8. Pam — This is beautifully written, honest, and sad. I can only imagine this sense of being torn. All I can say is that we all must keep moving on, and that you can’t carry it all with you.

    Reply
  9. So lovely (is your writing). I have no other words, but I can feel your heartbreak. I know from my grandmother’s Alzheimer’s (see Sharon’s comment) how painful this process can be.
    Whatever you choose to do now, it sounds like your dad would be supportive.
    I send you a big virtual (((hug))).

    Reply
  10. Beautifully said, Pam. And I SO get this: “I suspect what my stepmom wanted was for me to be properly dressed in designer labels, to have societal approval, to have better hair…”

    Reply
  11. Very touching Pam. I lost my mother to Alzheimers too. It was very painful to feel her slip away from us as she changed into a person we no longer knew. She passed away a few months ago, and I still haven’t been able to write about it. Not sure I ever will be. But you did. And my thoughts are with you.

    Reply
    • OK, revision to my previous comment. Pam, your post kept rolling round and round in my head all night, and this morning, my own post forced its way onto my home page. Thanks for the nudge. See? What you do affects others in ways you might never imagine!

      Reply
  12. Thank you for sharing. It’s a lovely piece and very moving.The progression of Alzheimers is just so heartbreaking to watch. It doesn’t necessarily make it easier when the relationship is complicated, does it?

    How is your brother holding up? If he is your stepbrother, then I guess he has another dad but if he grew up with your dad as his stepdad then it might be difficult for him anyway. Or is he actually your half-brother (ie you share a dad) rather than your stepbrother? I am not trying to be pedantic here, just trying to figure out if it’s his dad too. I hope you can be there for each other since he’s a person you care about.

    Reply
  13. I usually just read your blog with admiration and without comment, but this story was completely captivating. I’d love to read a book written by you. I found myself reading this story hoping it wouldn’t end.

    I’m so sorry for your losses, those that have occurred and are occurring.

    Reply
  14. This is really beautifully written. My great grandfather had Alzheimers when I was too young to really understand what that meant or how painful it could be, and it breaks my heart to think about it now. I’m very sorry for your losses; I hope the fates will give it a rest on your end.

    Reply
  15. Responding to this post in any way sounds hollow. I feel for you, for things once had and have no longer, for the trials of the past and for unavoidable and undesired change. And I hope I would have the wisdom to listen to you without interrupting if you were here.

    Reply
  16. Why can’t lovely parents just stick around forever?
    I don’t know what’s harder to deal with — my fit, healthy, vibrant, noisy Dad just dropping dead two months before his 65th birthday, or this horrible, torturous fade-out by a Dad. It’s so hard, either way.
    Hang in there, Pam.

    Reply
  17. Thanks foe sharing, Pam. I spent the last three years of my grandparent’s lives taking care of them as they drifted further and further away because of dementia. It was such a blessing to have the time with them, but with the harsh daily reality that they weren’t coming back.

    Reply
  18. Beautiful writing and reflection, Pam. I’m sorry that you’re struggling with this and my thoughts are with you.

    And I’m so, so sorry to hear about your uncle. Cancer steals away too many wonderful people before their time.

    Reply
  19. Found your site randomly. Took a look around. Tried to learn something about your blog. And than… found this post.
    My Dad has ALS. Loosing him to this damn disease without any chance to help him…

    Realy good post.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.