Monday, November 28, 2011

Recovering


When I was at University, living at a residential college, after every major college social event there would be a 'recovery'. Essentially it was some extension of the 'hair of the dog' scenario. It usually involved a guitarist (and songs by The Kinks, The Angels, Jimmy Barnes and the like), and beer. Lots of bleary-eyed 20 year olds with pounding heads would congregate to remind each other what they'd done the night before and compare war stories. (Note this was in the late 80s before the advent of the mobile telephone and digital camera, so nothing was documented on social media pages as it is today... when the world knows 'about last night' before the players can be reminded!)

Bizarrely I didn't drink while at college (yes, I've certainly made up for it in the ensuing 20ish years!) so I was never in need of the 'recovery' but hung out there with friends nonetheless.

Today I participated in a recovery of a different kind.... well, sort of.

My mother is currently back in Brisbane for a long weekend in honour of my niece's end-of-year ballet concert today. She's actually staying with my brother, sister-in-law and niece for a few nights - given that she recently had over a month with me here; and the fact that they jet off to the US next week and will be away for Christmas. But... I was blessed to have her company last night and some of today. Naturally I had many-an-exciting activity planned.

Umm... no, actually that isn't true. We had dinner down the road at a semi fast food place last night and today (after she attended church) we breakfasted at Cinema Cafe in Oxford Street at nearby Bulimba; which is where she and I brunched five or six weeks ago. It's strange to think it was so long ago, because it seems like yesterday. But it wasn't. Sadly.

Action photo from my plate at brunch today

At the time mum was staying with me while my father was in hospital (initially) and then palliative care, for just over a month in total. My mother spent all day by his bedside, but on weekends my brother and I forced her to take half-days off while we sat with him instead. Just over a week before dad passed away, my brother did a morning shift and my mother and I went to Bulimba for breakfast. It was delicious and it felt decadent. Neither of us had done anything remotely 'frivolous' for several weeks and taking time to dine out felt a bit strange. And also liberating.

As a coeliac I was excited by the most-delicious gluten-free bread I can remember having. (I did ask where they get it - thinking I could visit their baker - but sadly it is made for them specially!) 

And today we returned to the scene of the crime. I'm not saying it was cathartic and we are 'all better' for having done it, but we did talk and reminisce a bit about our last visit and about dad. The most important thing, mum said, was not to think about the last six weeks of his life as he faded away from us, but to think of his preceding seventy years, over forty of which we were privy to.

We'll have many 'firsts' ahead of us: first Christmas without dad; New Year; birthday(s); Father's Day; anniversary of his passing. And so forth. So, while I cannot think of him 'being gone' I will continue to try to think of him 'having been here'.

To live in hearts we leave behind Is not to die. ~Thomas Campbell, "Hallowed Ground"
 
 

Saturday, November 19, 2011

What comes next...


Is it possible, I wonder, to get increasingly sadder after someone’s passed away? Wouldn’t you expect the passing itself to be the peak, and recovery to ensue?

I'm starting to realise it doesn’t happen that way.

It’s almost exactly four weeks since my father passed away. I’m still having problems with the ‘d’ word and – in all honesty – it’s still not very real.... but it hits me when I least expect it.

I had a pretty big meltdown last Monday as I caught the train to my workplace. It came from nowhere. One minute I was sending a self-satisfied tweet about the fact I'd risen early and completed that day's blog post, and next minute I'm a sobbing mess on the train, doomed to wiping my tear-soaked and snotty face with a t-shirt I was to wear to a lunchtime gym class. Once at work I calmed down. But the melancholy stayed with me.

I’d been slowly slipping deeper into a hole since the previous morning when I went to a bootcamp at the ungodly hour of 6.30am (yes, on a Sunday!). It’s a class I go to infrequently and I hadn’t been for a couple of months. It was just after 6am that I drove through the relatively new (toll-controlled) tunnel which costs a hefty sum if used regularly, but which shortens the journey considerably. Of late I've used the tunnel but rarely, but this time last year I was a relatively regular user.

In November last year my father was diagnosed with a particularly aggressive form of cancer, Merkel Cell Carcinoma, which attacks those with compromised immune systems. My father, as a heart transplant recipient on immune-suppressant drugs had been plagued by skin cancers since his transplant, despite diligently avoiding the sun. Treatment involved 25 separate sessions of radiotherapy delivered over a five week period – which spread across November and December last year. Fortunately both my brother and I live in our State’s capital city and my parents alternated between our places; with dad’s treatments in the evenings, so we were able to drive them to each appointment.

My father’s dementia meant that each trip was a first for him. So, on my weeks, each night as I drove him through the then-even-newer tunnel his comments were the same. He was surprised at its length. Then he would wonder how much it must have cost to construct. And, just before we passed through the automatic toll sensor, mum and I would prepare him for the beep of electronic tag indicating I'd been charged for the trip.

Last Sunday, as I entered the tunnel my mind immediately flashed back one year. I could hear dad's comments coming from the seat next to me. I could recite them word by word. The shock was such that I almost had to turn around and go home. I had to blink away the tears to see the road and I felt numb with sudden grief.

Later that day my mother called. We'd already had a conversation about the fact that I needed to change the contact details on my mobile phone from 'Mum & Dad', to 'Mum'. But it felt wrong. It felt too soon to be erasing him from my life like that.... the man who'd raised and loved me for over 40 years. But, as the phone rang and I looked to see who the caller was, for the first time the 'Mum & Dad' was too confronting. Although I'd initially resisted the change, I realised that it was becoming increasingly shocking each time I saw the name(s) appear.

My mother and I have talked A LOT about our grief; what we've experienced to date, what we expect to experience, as well as what others expect us to experience. When I first returned to work a week and a half after dad's passing and just a few days after the funeral, many asked me if I thought it was too early to be back there. "Was it?" I wondered. Was I not honouring his memory enough by not staying away longer? Was my devotion not sufficiently evident enough to others?

Those who know me well, know we were close; my father and I - throughout my childhood (as my mother and I clashed more then, as Freud predicted), but later my mother, my father AND I. I have to confess that when I was younger, I sometimes looked upon adults' over-closeness to their parents with some disdain or pity. "Losers!" I would think. And yet that's been me. I suspect some of my continued dependence on them (for my emotional support) comes because I don't have a partner or family of my own. No one has usurped their place in my heart, or in my world... which is what often happens once someone partners up and has their own family. With only two children and one grandchild and a lot of love to give, my parents have most certainly remained devoted to my brother, his wife, my niece and I.

But... prone to over-analysis, I have pondered on my thoughts and feelings over the last month. I know there are resources out there. I could read about the stages of grief; or how to deal with it. But - at the moment, anyway - I'd prefer to just live it. My mother has been 'keeping busy' and completed a plethora of tasks rather than wallow. I have mostly avoided thinking too much about 'the event' at all. Living three hours away from my hometown probably helps feed my denial. Sadly my mother doesn't have that luxury as she is (I suspect) both comforted and haunted by 48yrs of memories as she passes through each room of the house they shared.

A couple of weeks after dad's passing it occurred to me that I had cried a lot more for him before his passing than after. It was hard to watch as he faded away mentally and physically over the last couple of weeks of his life, but at the same time I found myself more and more compelled to be there. At the end.

I couldn't stop stroking his face as his cheekbones became more and more prominent and experienced shocked at his appearance each time I left the room and returned - as if seeing his fading body anew. In the last few days my mother, brother and I sat beside his bed listening to his breathing. There were long gaps and we would count the seconds. After reaching 20 or so, we'd catch each others' eyes in fear and uncertainty, just as he'd take another gasp. We didn't know how his story would finish. Just that it would.

In the week or two after his passing, the notion that I would never stroke his face again, something I'd probably never done before he'd lay waiting in his hospital bed, was one of those thoughts too painful to consider and needing to be pushed out of my mind as soon as it entered.

Last night I was sorting through electronic files on my computer. And there he was. Photographs from years gone by and some from just a few months ago. Again I was struck by how little I've really considered his passing. I realised I expected to see him again. Sometime soon. Suddenly the notion that I was never going to see him again hit me. Fuck! It didn't seem possible. It didn't seem right.

I try hard not to think about what dad was, or wasn't aware of in his final week or so, or of what came (comes) next. I won't say his passing was futile, because he lived a long and fulfilling life and was loved and liked by many. But it just seems wrong that he won't play any further role on this earth and it doesn't seem right that the world continues without him.

It just seems wrong that he will never again call me Snugs and ask me the same questions - again and again. It just seems wrong. For him and for those of us he left behind.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Suiting up


A couple of months ago I 'reflected' on some new TV shows about to hit our screens. At the time I was mostly excited about Dana Delany (of China Beach fame) returning to the small screen (in something OTHER than Desperate Housewives, that is) in Body of Proof.

I also, however, commented on a few other new shows about to start here in Oz. One of those was Suits. At the time I wasn't exactly sure what the show was about. The TV ads hadn't been very forthcoming in that respect. I kinda knew it featured the very-cute Gabriel Macht as lawyer and just-above-board shyster, Harvey Specter; and his protegĂ© or recruitee, Patrick J Adams as Mike Ross, a faux Harvard graduate who fakes his way into Macht's law firm.

whitecollar2I was visiting my parents for a long weekend when the show first aired so had to convince my mother that she REALLY wanted to watch the new show, taping whatever else she would usually watch. "What's it about?" she asked. "Ummmm...." I responded. Cos really, I had no friggin' idea.
What I did tell her, though, was that there was something about the 30-60 second snippets interrupting my usual television viewing, that reminded me of a show we both like, 
White Collar... and not just for the eye-candy factor. White Collar, for the uneducated, is a show about a FBI agent who recruits a convicted con artist and serving felon, to assist solve 'white collar' crimes. The show's characters are all super-intelligent and know their craft - whether it be law enforcement, or art theft and counterfeiting. The show's cute felon, Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) often goes undercover and role-plays with great gusto and expertise. Naturally despite many close scrapes he always comes out on top and generally has a few tricks up his sleeve. And, did I mention he's cute?

And... in case that didn't do the trick I told her the ads also reminded me of another show which was an old fave of ours - despite its mid afternoon timeslot, the fact that it was highly unbelievable and went a season or two longer than it perhaps should have. The Pretender ran from 1996 - 2000 and featured Jarod, played by Michael T Weiss, as a child prodigy who was taken from his family and raised by an institution. Having escaped from 'The Centre' as an adult, insanely smart Jarod had the ability to become anything and do anything... or at least anything he could turn his mind to.

Of course I was quite wrong about Suits. Our young genius doesn't go about adopting various personas or roles. Instead, he is a young man with a photographic memory, but without a law degree (who, however, makes his money by sitting exams for law students) who gets hired by one of New York City’s top 'closers' (Macht) to be an Associate at a law firm that only hires Harvard Law alumni.
Suits poster hit the interweb today...I have to say, when it premiered (and I had convinced my mother to watch the show) I was shocked at how much I (we) enjoyed it. Although it was a double episode I seriously didn't want it to finish... and I don't think that was the midweek (holiday time) red wine talking.

In fact, the first season has now just finished here in Oz and I enjoyed it all. Sure there are annoyances, and it is a tad predictable: from the get-go, you know that Mike Ross's drug-dealing childhood friend is going to somehow disclose Mike's secret... and quite frankly, Mike getting together with the friend's ex probably wasn't going to help. There's the inevitable office romance with a hard-done-by paralegal who won't get involved with a colleague (until she sees him with the aforementioned girlfriend).

But there's also a lot to like about the program: Harvey's office nemesis, the very sleazy Louis Litt (played with cringe-worthy expertise by Rick Hoffman); and the mentor /protegĂ© bromance between Harvey and Mike. Perhaps it says something about me that I continue to be surprised that Harvey is not threatened by his genius and often-butt-saving Associate. The relationship itself offers something genuine; mutual respect and admiration, but at a distance.

As it happens, the show wasn't at all what I was expecting. Even now it's hard to describe. It isn't a 'mystery' or crime-solving type show (unlike the myriad of forensic, coroner and cop shows on television at this point in time). It is probably more in the vein of the old school The Practice, LA Law or more current counterparts, The Good Wife or Drop Dead Diva... where our talented lawyers unearth the truth just before their clients are found guilty, thereby saving the day. Oh, and making shitloads of money for their firm.

Although it's departed our screens for the time being, I note that it has been renewed for a second season. Which is all kinds of good news.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Killing time

Twin Peaks
It's been a long time since Twin Peaks graced our small screens and everyone walked about wondering who killed Laura Palmer and quoting the heavily-accented 'wraaaped in plaaaastic' line from the show. I was a devotee from the start and loved its quirky, plodding but dark storylines. Well, initially at least. I could cope with the concept of 'evil' invading someone's soul and log ladies but once we got to dancing dwarfs I suspect my interest started to wane a bit. Pragmatic most of the time, I needed a tangible 'evil-doer' and - quite frankly - I think I got kinda confused by it all.

I like quirky. Sometimes a show takes a while to grow on you (aka Pushing Daisies) but other times you take to it straight away (Northern Exposure - which however, I believe, lost its sheen over time). Like most people, I get a bit sick of the same ol' stuff on our television screens which is why, when a show comes out of left field and is halfway decent, I get quite excited.

This past week I'd circled something in the TV guide - yes, I am THAT pathetic that I study the TV Guide each Sunday, deciding what to watch, TiVo, ignore etc (I am single and live alone after all. Although in my defence, I am cat-free!) - that I remembered to watch and found kinda seductive. (Although I did have dreams / nightmares about dead bodies all night!)

The Killing is dark and depressing; and appropriately set in wet and miserable Seattle. Like Twin Peaks it follows the investigation into the death of a local teenager (although I'd be surprised if there's a red curtain and dancing dwarf lurking about!).

The main character, Sarah Linden (Mireille Enos) is a well-respected detective who we meet on her final day before she 'retires' to follow her fiance to California; but is convinced to delay her departure and pulled into 'one more' investigation. Linden is partnered with her replacement (Joel Kinnaman as Stephen Holder) and - as is often the case - the pair couldn't be more different. I'm not sure yet if any romance ensues, but I kinda hope not... and that's not just cos he doesn't do it for me, more because I like to think it's not the sort of show that needs bells, whistles and even more tension.

Mireille Enos as Sarah Linden (Source: Washington Times)
Although I recognised a couple of faces (Billy Campbell and Brent Sexton) most of the cast is unknown to me. Enos is an interesting choice for the lead character as I don't believe she would be classified as traditionally attractive. Not that she's unattractive either. She is, perhaps, unassuming.... although there is something alluring about her and the character she plays.

I understand that the show is actually based on a Danish series (of the same name when translated), which is why it sounded familiar and why I circled it in the TV Guide in the first place (despite the absence of any description). I did, however, I read that the US version may indeed differ from the original.

We've only been privy to two hours here in Oz so far, so I may be overly-hopeful when I say that I'm looking forward to a quality crime / mystery drama. I refused to do much research (because I didn't want to inadvertently unearth upcoming story lines) but I did note that it was critically acclaimed when it first screened, but less so as the first series went on.... with some comments about the series finale being particularly confusing. It has, however, been commissioned for a second season which is always a good thing.

Notice the similarities: Laura & Rosie (Source: sharetv.org)
What I'm enjoying most about the show to date, is that the bleakness of the surrounds and pace of the plot is matched by the layers and textures of the show's characters. Before I realised that the entire season centred around this one murder, I assumed it to be a 'solve a crime each week' kinda series and I'd been baffled as to why we were learning so much about players peripheral to the dead teen.

The show and its makers seem to be giving us something a bit different to the usual 'whodunnit' fare; not patronising we viewers; or deigning to target the lowest common denominator. It is - at this point in time - one of those shows which gives me hope for the future of television.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Rizzoli & Isles: a hidden GEM


I often love non-ratings periods in television land as programs appear on our screens here in Oz which may not usually make it this far. I know, I know... we seem to have the capability to show episodes of Glee or Two and a Half Men at the same time as they are shown in the US, but many a half-decent show can take years to reach us and... quite often by the time it does it's already been axed and has been gathering dust in some TV Exec's filing cabinet with the likes of the American Kath and Kim and Baby Bob.

recently bitched about the fact that our television networks touted Law & Order LA and Criminal Minds Suspect Behaviour as the next big things, when (in fact) they'd already been axed by networks in the big 'ol US of A.

Rizzoli & Isles fan posterBut something that constantly amazes me is how shows can sneak under the radar, remain around for a few years, provide quality viewing and yet garner nary a mention from network publicity machines. Here in Oz, they'll occasionally appear on the network's lead station late at night  before disappearing onto one of its second-string digital stations at a time only known to insomniacs and faux vampires. Or shift workers, of course.

Rizzoli & Isles is one of those shows. I can't even remember now how I came across it. Perhaps Channel Nine generously featured it on that station, before it disappeared onto its digital station here, GEM, which - as it happens - is quite appropriate. Because it is ... a little hidden GEM. (Yes, I know.... cue eye-roll!)

I've been a fan of its two lead actors for some time. Angie Harmon of course graced our screens in one of the Law & Orders many moons ago, before appearing in the Women's Murder Club series - which seemed to meet its own untimely end (although the novels from James Patterson just keep on coming....). And of course I was fond of Sasha Alexander in the early series' of NCIS before she caught a bullet straight between the eyes. Add to that the fact that the telveivision series itself, Rizzoli & Isles, is based on the series of books by best-selling author Tess Gerritsen, giving it a base from which to grow, and it would seem that kismet intervened and we had a match made in heaven. Or something.

In the show Harmon plays a frank-talking no-frills Boston Homicide Detective, and Alexander a well-educated, socially-inept and somewhat-anal Chief Medical Examiner. The pair are best friends and despite their differences, THAT is what makes the show work. I'm not sure whether it's the writing or the believability of the characters and their fondness for, and frustration with, each other. But whatever it is, it does. Work that is.
Rizzoli & Isles.Both women have that X-Factor I've written about before. Their banter and on-screen relationship is exceedingly believable and I wonder if they are friends in real life. I 'follow' Harmon on Twitter and she certain seems as down-to-earth as her namesake Rizzoli.

The two leads are supported by a great cast, including Lorraine Bracco as Rizzoli's somewhat annoying (though well-meaning) mother and both characters have their fair share of personal issues to ensure we have a textured backstory and sufficient subtle insight into them and their relationships.

I'd read some of Gerritsen's books before watching the series and have gone back since to read some more. But - and I probably shouldn't say this - though she is a talented writer (and has a great blog!!!) I'm not as sold on the characters in the novels as I am on the small screen; something that I suspect has more to do with the talent and charisma of Harmon and Alexander than Gerritsen's words.

The show has disappeared from our screens here over the past two weeks but while undertaking my vast research (Google and Wikipedia) I noted that the show has been renewed for a third season, which made me very happy indeed.
 

Barry Cook (1939 - 2011)


This is the only writing I've done in the past week... a eulogy honouring my father, crafted with my brother which he delivered yesterday.
My father, Barry Donald Cook, was born in Maryborough on 4th April 1939, the second of three children to Dulcie Jean Boldery and Arnold Archibald Cook.

Older brother Adrian was born 3 years before Barry, and sister Sharon eight years later. From all accounts Barry was a typical older brother, slightly jealous of his younger sister and quite skilled in taunting her until she retaliated…. ensuring that it was she who usually copped the wrath of their mother, Dulcie.

By his own admission dad was a bit of a scallywag growing up.  Those that knew him later could only imagine the sort of boy he was, but it's fair to say he wasn’t an overly dedicated student during his years at the Central Infants School, Primary School and Maryborough Boys High School.  When dad regaled us with tales of his childhood, most related to the games he played with his school and neighbourhood mates and involved shooting at “things” with bows and arrows and slingshots.

He was, however, a natural and talented athlete and participated in cricket and athletics at school, annually awarded Age Champion and representing Maryborough, before eventually focusing on what was to become his great passion - Rugby League. 

Finishing school as soon as it was feasible, Dad’s first job was as a messenger boy for Hecker’s Car Dealership, before later commencing work with the Railway.

It was around this time, in the late 1950s, that dad was approached to further his football career by moving to play in Toowoomba – then a Rugby League stronghold. After considering all the offers received he decided to play for Souths Rugby League Football Club, which he later captained to a premiership. His free board and 10 quid a game hardly compares to professional footballers’ salaries nowadays, but back then it was more than generous.
Anyone who has ever spoken at length to dad would know that these were his glory days.  Playing for Toowoomba and Queensland in the early 60’s, under the legendary Duncan Thompson alongside some international reps, including his mate Elton Rassmussen; it was one of the most rewarding and fulfilling times of dad’s life.

In 1963 dad took a captain/coach job in Quilpie in the far west of the State.  It was there he met local belle, Margaret Hennessy.  Mum never exactly remembers when or how they first met (which – quite frankly – spoils a good story), but recalls that her father was impressed by dad’s prowess on the tennis court and said that ‘If the new coach can play football as well as he plays tennis, we will win the Wallal Cup.’  Well he could, but history reports they didn’t. 

So at the end of that (otherwise unsuccessful) season dad left Quilpie, but not before marrying the woman who was to be his wife for the next 48 years.  They settled back in his hometown, Maryborough, where they’ve remained ever since. 

Once back in Maryborough Barry continued his love affair with Rugby League restarting his contribution to League in this city.  In 1964 he coached ALL local teams over alternate weeks as well as representative teams. Despite playing his early years with local club Roos, much of his later involvement was with Rovers.

Though he loved football and coaching, he loved his family more and when we were young dad quit coaching to avoid being away from his family on weekends.

I was born during their first year back in Maryborough, and three years after that, my sister Deborah came along.  On return to Maryborough dad found work at the Maryborough City Council – ostensibly as a soil tester.  I recall, even when I was young, never exactly knowing what his job entailed, though I knew people believed him to be a person with integrity and a strong moral compass.  He was given jobs like delivering the pays (in the days that the currency was cash).  He often served as a conduit between the ‘outside’ and ‘inside’ workers at Council and appeared to get along with everyone.

Barry spent the next 33 years with the Council, where he worked with many people he liked and respected.
Our childhood was mostly idyllic with both mum and dad working hard to give us everything we wanted or needed.
   
But Dad also suffered his share of tragedies.  He was very devoted to his mother and she to him. Both athletes, my aunt talks about their special relationship. In fact, on occasions Nana reportedly taxied from Maryborough to Toowoomba to watch dad play in representative matches.  I can only imagine his devastation when Nana died (aged only 52) in 1966. His father, our own Poppie, found happiness with Gwyn and her family a few years later. Dad’s older brother Adrian died tragically in 1973 and of course Gwyn and Poppie have passed away since as well.

And dad had his health issues in particular, his heart problems which were first diagnosed in the early 1970s. I suspect his patient files at The Prince Charles Hospital in Brisbane would probably weigh more and be taller than me by now.

By the late nineties, the doctors had determined that it was worse than they thought - as the wall of the pumping chamber was damaged by rheumatic fever he suffered as a child. Thankfully he was otherwise healthy and he was able to continue his normal active life still playing tennis regularly.

Finally in 2000 we first received the news… that the only real option available to dad was a heart transplant. By December 2000, dad’s health deteriorated and he underwent a barrage of tests. There was little else the doctors could do to improve his condition and he was officially added to the organ donor list.

Then on 11 December 2000 a donor heart was found and dad underwent a heart transplant. Miraculously his health improved and dad continued to do all of the right things and was even able to recommence his regular tennis games for a few years.

Those who knew and loved him would not understate the generosity of the organ donor and their family who allowed my father almost 11 more years with us. And I am personally grateful that he got to see my own daughter grow from a cute 4 year old to a beautiful and intelligent 15 year old.

Of course there are always trade-offs and dad suffered vascular dementia as a result of his illness and operations; along with recurring skin cancers, exacerbated by the medication he took daily to suppress his immune system.
The last few years have been difficult ones for mum and dad at times. Mum has remained devoted and – I can only imagine – her patience tested as dad asked the same questions or made the same comments again and again. And again.

His lack of short term memory must have been particularly difficult for him, as he prided himself on his recall ability in his younger years. He had an amazing knack for remembering number plates and telephone numbers. In fact, we continued to roll our eyes in recent years and months as he proudly rattled off our phone numbers – many of which had long-since lapsed or changed. And… he also regaled friends and family again and again with the names of railways stations he obviously learned when working in the railway as a youngster. Names and places unforgotten over four decades when he was unable to remember a conversation from one minute earlier.

Late last year dad was diagnosed with a particularly aggressive type of cancer and, although he underwent radiotherapy, it appears it returned and weakened his body over recent months. After a couple of weeks at St Stephen’s Hospital under the care of his devoted doctor, Dr Carole Rayner, he was transferred to The Prince Charles Hospital for further tests. On discovering the spreading cancer dad spent his last fortnight there in palliative care with mum by his side.

Many (so many) well-wishers have been in contact over the past few weeks and days. It’s humbling and heartening to hear the same comments coming from so many of them. “He was SO polite and respectful,” people have said. And he was. He was unfailingly deferential to those he thought his superiors and continued to refer to his bosses (or others) as ‘Mr’ or ‘Mrs’. My sister still tells of her frustration when she was young because when they were walking dad constantly maneuvered her to one side. It wasn’t until many years later that he explained that he did it in case a car veered off the road. So it would strike him first.

Dad could be tremendous fun – and my cousins probably still have nightmares as a result of his torment of them when they were young.  He delighted in terrifying them and teasing them mercilessly. He gave us all nicknames: Craig was Crag, Fraser Florrie, Deborah was Snugs and I was Fat-tummy. So he was a big kidder, a sign that he really was a big kid.  He loved children and always had a way of connecting with them.  I saw it with my own daughter (Emily, known to him as Tinkerbell or Tinkers) to whom he was deeply devoted.

He was passionate about so many things, including his family and his friends. For most of his life he was a people person, known for his sense of humour, his integrity and generosity of spirit.

He was a devoted family man and committed friend. He leaves behind many who loved and liked him, many of whom are here today, including:
  • those who remember him from his football days
  • old colleagues from Council
  • my and Deborah’s childhood friends
  • my mother’s extended family
  • dad’s step family
  • his and mum’s many, many friends – some of whom have been around for most of our life, and others, such as those from the church breakfasts, more recently
  • his devoted sister Sharon and her husband David, more like a brother than a brother-in-law as well as their family and Adrian’s family.
Finally, he leaves behind two children, a grandchild and a wife who he cherished and who – despite any faults or frustrations – continued to love him dearly.

On behalf of my mother and sister, my wife and my daughter, I’d like to thank you all for the kindness and care you have shown my father over recent weeks, months, years and (in some cases) decades. And I know many of you will continue to be a proverbial tower of strength to my mother in coming months and years and I thank you for that as well.

The world outside


As a connoisseur of fine television (as well as some particularly spectacular trash) one of my favourite TV shows is Buffy the Vampire SlayerAnd (as I've said before) I believe that its creator Joss Whedon is freakishly talented and an eccentric risk-taker of epic proportions.

I'm not sure I have favourite episodes of the show, rather I have favourite moments - because there are so many throughout its eight seasons. But a memorable episode for me was The Body, in which Buffy, our superhero who saves many a damsel, dude and demon in distress, arrives home to find her mother Joyce dead of natural causes.
Whedon shot the entire episode without any background music or a soundtrack of any kind. I read in an interview that his intention was to not offer audiences any of the usual 'comforts'.

Although it is the later scene involving former-demon Anya's blunt but innocent  confusion over death and its wastefulness* that always had me in hysterics-of-the-bad kind; the part that always hit home was one of the earlier scenes. After Buffy has found her mother and called paramedics, she opens the back door of her house. The sounds coming from neighbouring houses, including children playing, is in stark contrast to the shocked silence of her own house.

pink umbrellasWhen I first saw it I was reminded of my grandmother's death. I recall accompanying my mother to the funeral director's office to make the decisions-you-don't-want-to-make when it struck me: the world around us was still turning. People were going about their everyday business - laughing, talking, bitching and so forth, while my own family suffered in silence.

When I later saw the Buffy episode, I was immediately reminded of the isolation and aloneness that comes with death and devastation. Although it impacts directly and even indirectly on a whole range of people, many MANY others continue to live and breathe in ignorance, without a care in the world. As they must.

My own father died last night. Peacefully. Thank god. It had been close for a few days. On Sunday he started gasping for breath and my mother, my brother and I searched each other's eyes for comfort as my father struggled. At the time we were sitting in dad's palliative care room with the door open to allow some fresh air to sneak into the stuffy room.The place was full of visitors. At that very moment families were crowded around outside tables in the courtyard. As we sat clasping my father's hands in an attempt to eradicate his pain and comfort him into whatever came next a little girl's voice drifted in from outside.

She was a cutie. I'd seen her in the corridors earlier. Clad in bright pink, her long dark curly hair bounced about as she frolicked. In the courtyard she'd found a small fern tree which housed her height perfectly. "Look at me and my umbrella," she shouted repeatedly to gain the attention of neighbouring adults. Despite my father's fading presence on the bed in front of me in the silent room, I was drawn to the life outside. And I was hopeful and sad at the same time.

*From Buffy's Anya:
But I don't understand! I don't understand how this all happens. How we go through this. I mean, I knew her, and then she's, there's just a body, and I don't understand why she just can't get back in it and not be dead anymore! It's stupid! It's mortal and stupid! And, and Xander's crying and not talking, and, and I was having fruit punch, and I thought, well Joyce will never have any more fruit punch, ever, and she'll never have eggs, or yawn or brush her hair, not ever, and no one will explain to me why.
More on my dad: his dementia and his borrowed heart.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Oops

I do realize that two weekdays have passed since I last posted in my dieting blog. A rarity for me since I committed to post there 5-6 times a week!


But stuff's happening, and not all good.


It's currently almost 2.30am here in Oz and I'm sitting beside my father's palliative care bed, while my mother is napping on the (I suspect) somewhat uncomfortable sofa bed in the corner of the room.


We were called here at 10pm last evening, but we've been thinking it has been coming for days.


It's not gonna be good and it will end the tumultuous journey my family's been on over the last few weeks.


That's all for now as I'm on duty and need to stop typing on my iPhone and hold my father's hand in mine....


Back soon.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

10 good things - to stop me strugglin'


There's a song that's been out for a while now that featured in one of my gym classes a few weeks ago called Party Rock Anthem, by LMFAO, which includes the lyrics, "Everyday I'm shuffling". For those who don't know it, it's one of those bloody songs that gets stuck in your head and, for me, the "Everyday I'm shuffling" line has latched onto some creepy part of my brain* so I'm constantly hearing "Everyday I'm struggling". Which I am. Struggling, that is. Not shuffling. Although if I attempted to run right now I may well do that. Shuffle, that is.

Douglass_1024x768eBut... back to the struggle. Which I am SO over. In my diet blog I've written endlessly about my currently lack of motivation, which I possibly do in the hope that I will be sufficiently guilt-ridden to overcome. But alas, it hasn't worked as yet and my tales of woe must be boring those readers to tears. So today I'm STRUGGLING (there's that word again) to find something 'un-maudlin' to blog about. 

I've had some suggestions (and endless encouragement) from my Twitter friends and I thank them (you) all for that. One suggestion was to force myself into being a bit more positive. Peppiness is bloody hard for me (grumpy old woman I sometimes am) but it's something I've tried before and so I'm going to try again.  So... I will endeavour for the rest of this post to use only positives as I come up with ten good things about me and my life. (Deep breath!)


1. Despite my recent behaviour I am still 20+kg less than I was on 21 May 2011 when I commenced the first round of my weight loss program. So... yay!

3. I'm able to do some gym classes I enjoy, like Zumba and a Body Jam / Hip Hop type class, which I wouldn't have tried before.
4. I followed through on my intent to put my place on the market. Sure, it hasn't sold (yet) but I actually did something I said I would and learned a lot from the experience.
5. I'm really enjoying my current job. I haven't been able to say that for a long time. I love the place and the people, who I find to be energetic and passionate. Many people there don't realise it but the place feels young and vibrant and full of potential to me!
6. I'm blessed by many old (and close) friendships. I'm still in touch with a group of girls I went through school with and - though we (and our lives) are quite different - when we catch up it's always comfortable and easy. I also have close friends from my University days and working life since then. My closest friends now have been in my world for over 20 years of my adult life, and know me well (and like me despite that!!!)
7.  I'm even more blessed to have devoted parents. I wouldn't say my brother and I were 'spoilt' growing up, but we were loved and there was NOTHING our parents would not do for us. We didn't get the latest games and expensive clothing (no iPods and Wiis in those days), but they sacrificed a lot for us and ALWAYS put us first. I do not doubt my parents' devotion to our family. Even now.
8. That my father has had over 10 years with us that he may not have had if he had not received a donor heart in December 2000. 
9. The rest of my family: my brother, sister-in-law and niece. Emily is a beautiful and intelligent young woman now. I had the opportunity to almost live with them for six months after she was born (between stints overseas) and she felt almost like my own. We're still in each others' lives fifteen years later and hope we continue to be. (And - frankly - as I won't have children of my own, it may well be Emily visiting me in the aged-care facility and wiping the drool from my chin... Thank god she doesn't read this!) 
10. As I sit here deciding what random factoid to include next I look about me. OMFG! I am VERY lucky. Despite its un-sold-ed-ness (new word I've invented: will advise Websters - the dictionary people, not the biscuit company - obviously!) I have a BEAUTIFUL three bedroom, three level apartment in a fantastic position. I am surrounded by stuff I wanted and I bought (cos I could), like my iMac, my TiVo, hundreds (and hundreds) of books, clothes, housey crap. And so forth. And my walls are adorned with memories thanks to fabulous wall hangings and baskets and thingys I bought while living overseas.  

2.  My exercise has increased a million-fold (I'm sure that IS a tangible number!) since that same time.
So... there you have it. I must confess it was WAY easier to come up with the 10 things than I imagined and I could have kept going - but didn't want to bore you anymore than I was (possibly) already doing. Perhaps I will continue making my list, so when I next think 'poor me' I can slap myself around the head a bit (again!) and wake the fuck up to myself (again!). I sense a theme here....
*Note that I'm not disrespecting myself by calling my brain creepy. My aversion to the brain (and its aesthetics) isn't limited to my own. There's just something creepy (insert shudder here) about it. Perhaps I have some phobia: I can't eat cauliflower or broccoli because they remind me of parts of the brain. (Another shudder!)