Mom and Dad at my wedding in 2002. He wasn’t excactly big on pictures.

 

I’ve been wondering for weeks now if I’m supposed to acknowledge today and it’s significance or pretend it’s just a day like any other.

The first option sucks in that I’ve Really Got to Get to the Dentist to Get this Cavity Filled kind of way (immediate pain lessened by the relief of finally getting beyond the initial hump of resistance) and the second just seems wrong.

But I don’t know how to say differently what has been said before. So I’m just going to use the same words.

It might be a different day and a different year, but no matter how far forward time takes me, a piece of me is still standing in that hospital room crying because I want my dad back.

***

I make sad things funny. It’s a coping mechanism, I am sure. But it’s also an engrained part of my culture.
Sometimes, though, sad things make themselves funny. Like when my aunt told my father to look into the light.
As he lay on his death bed.
She didn’t mean it that way. But English isn’t her first language. So while my sisters and I were fighting tears and laughter for two separate reasons, my father’s sisters were rallying my him to stay with us as they rubbed his hands and patted his feet and reminded my father of all the reasons he needed to focus on living.
He was 50 and had gone into the hospital to have heart valve replacement surgery (the original surgery a result of rheumatic fever he suffered as a child). Being the cocky stereotype he was, it hadn’t really entered his mind that he might not come home. And because we all believed him to be the strongest man in the world, we had only focused on making fun of him while he recovered.
But problems arose after the surgery. And after a few close calls, the doctors finally told me and my mother to call everyone to the hospital. He wouldn’t make it more than a few hours.
There were only a few people to call. If you break your toe in my family, we are required to turn the waiting room into an ethnic stereotype. Every tia, tio, prima, and primo within driving distance is called to appear at the hospital, waiting for the afflicted to emerge, triumphant and cured. I am sure the hospital staff groans when we all arrive; a Spanglish three ring circus. Even as the doctor quietly urged us to notify friends and family, he looked around at the standing room only crowd already present.
Five daughters.
Two son-in-laws.
One Godson.
One grandfather.
Two brother-in-laws.
Three of four sisters.
One Niece.
One (or was it two?) long time friends.
One uncle who had flown in from Texas.
One aunt who had delayed her trip back to Mexico.
One wife of thirty years…who just happened to be celebrating her 49th birthday that very day on November 27, 2007.

But we made calls. My in-laws were at my house taking care of 5 month old Buttercup, but everyone else we could get a hold of did their best to arrive before my father left us. And while we waited for the inevitable, my aunts continued to rally my father.
“Rene! Rene! Stay with us! You have your daughter’s Rene. Pauline, Veronica, Sonya, Maria, Patricia!”

Stay with us, Rene! You have the grandchildren! Nicholas, Caleb, Aiden, and Buttercup!”

“Rene! Dorothy is here, Rene. It’s her birthday, Rene. She needs you to take care of her, Rene!”

 

His signs were fading.
The beeping was slowing.
The tears were flowing.
I kept my eyes closed. Easier to block the tears that way. I needed to stay focused on catching my mother before she hit the ground when the last beep would eventually fade away. And that damned light over his bed was harsh enough to sting my already tired eyes.
I stood in between Pati and Sonya, with one arm around each of their shoulders. Being six inches taller than both of them, I was able to offer them a place to rest their heads while I used them for support to keep standing.
None of us spoke. We just let my dad’s sisters cry and wail and toggle between English and Spanish while they tried to break through to his spirit. His body may have been failing, but he was strong. Maybe strong enough to make the impossible possible. If only they could reach him.
“Rene!” One of his sister’s cried out. “Rene! Look into the light, Rene! Look into the light!”

My eyes shot open as my face crumpled into a pained expression that had nothing to do with my father and everything to do with me trying to bite back a “What the HELL?” at what had just been uttered.

“Really?

Really?”

She, of course, meant the light over his bed. The one harnessing the power of the sun. The one we would have joked was bright enough to wake the dead had my father not been dying.
But a chuckle, which came out as a muffled sob, escaped one of my sisters. Sonya and Pati, tears streaming down their cheeks, both looked up at me. They wanted to laugh. My father would have laughed. He would have laughed his ass off.  But it wasn’t the right time. Later. We could laugh after we got home. After we had signed off on the autopsy. After we got my mother into bed. While  we sat huddled together waiting to leave for the funeral home. After we got home from the service. We could, and would laugh about it often. All it took was one of us to dramatically call out, “Look into the light!”


But not now. Not yet.

I pursed my lips and silently shook my head slowly. It was as much an admonition for them as it was a reminder to me not to lose it. Because good fucking God, I needed to laugh.

“Rene! Look into the light!” She cried out, as the beeping slowed even more. “Look into light!”


My father had never listened to his sisters. He never listened to anyone. But as the beep, beep, beep finally drew itself out into a heart-wrenching “beeeeeeeeeeep” until one of the nurses (thankfully) turned off the machines, as I let go of my sisters to catch my mother before she fell to the floor…I had one thought.

“Damn it, Dad! Fifty years! And you listen to them now?”

 

This is the second to last picture of my daughter with her grandfather.

 

It’s the day before my father will die. He’s in a hospital bed in the intensive care unit, hooked up to machines monitoring his vitals, with a light so bright hanging directly over him that I must force myself to think of things other than tunnels and what lies at the end of them.

My mother-in-law is sitting behind me on the bed. She watches with me as my father blinks, opens his eyes, and focuses them above us both. His eyes meet mine and he opens his mouth to speak a single word. But his mouth is dry and he cannot vocalize, leaving me to guess what he is trying to tell me. I offer him water, ask him if he’s cold, are the lights too bright? He closes his eyes in frustration and weakly shakes his head no. Then he raises his right arm as high as he can and points to the light above the very bed we will all stand around as a family tomorrow night when he leaves us much sooner than any of us had ever anticipated.

“So the light is too bright, isn’t it?” I ask again. He shakes his head no and points again, silently speaking the same word over and over, his mouth forming around the tubes going down his throat. My mother-in-law suggests I ask the night nurse for a pen and a notebook, so I leave and return, pen and paper in hand, only to discover he is too weak to write.

“We should go,” says my mother-in-law.

I kiss him. I tell him I love him. I tell him that I will see him tomorrow. I don’t realize that he won’t know we are there beside him. I don’t know that my father is pointing to the spirit of my grandmother floating above him. I don’t understand that he is trying to tell me she is waiting for him; that it’s time. And I should. He’s the only one who believed me when I told him she smiled at me when I kissed her cold cheek that day I thought she was sleeping when I was only six. She watches over us both, he has told me more than once. Her only son and her first grandchild. So many late night conversations about the spirit that bound us together, always grateful that he believed me when I told him she smiled at me that day. And yet, I leave, unaware that I should have stayed with him.

I don’t know that my mother-in-law suspected what he was trying to say. Or  that she sent me out of the room on purpose. And I don’t know that he nodded his head that yes, someone we couldn’t see was waiting for him or that this good-bye will be the last.

So we leave. I climb into bed with my six-month-old daughter and my husband. And I sleep a dreamless sleep.

This post was written in response to a writing prompt on Write On Edge. This week, writers were asked to write about their worst memory. Mine is not knowing what tomorrow would bring.

 

 

I’m trying to figure out what I would have gotten you for your birthday today. Always so hard to shop for. I’m betting Buttercup would have picked out something pink and then had the good grace to feign surprise when you gifted it back to her.

Maybe a new barbeque grill. I’m betting you’d still be using the same one you had four years ago and a new one, just like the one I bought The Husband for his birthday next week, would have guaranteed a happily matched pissing contest between the two of you. You had the same watch. Most of the same tools. A matching grill and I’d have been a hero in the eyes of my husband and in yours, too.

I still have your number saved in my phone. The jewelry mom gave me gets taken out every now and then when I’m feeling wistful.

But I’m starting to forget a little. If mom hadn’t sent me a text message this morning telling me what day it was, I’d have woken up tomorrow still holding on to that nagging feeling that I forgot to acknowledge something important. That means Guelo’s birthday is in three days. The Husband’s three days after that.

I miss the shared birthday cake with the names of all my men written atop it in sugary gel. And your voice. Because that’s starting to fade from my memory, too.

You would have been 54 today, Dad. I miss you. Hope you’re having a hell of a celebration up there in the clouds.

 

It’s July 24.

It’s a big date for me.

For one, it’s the official start and end date of my year’s Baby F(Ph)at journey. I gave myself a year to lose 40 pounds and while I didn’t make that goal, I made huge strides in changing my outlook, my eating habits, and my understanding of the importance of never putting myself last on my to-do list again. My daughter, my husband, and the responsibilities I have to my family have and always will come first. Screw the bra-burning party. It’s just the way I’m wired. But I’m happy with second place.

I’d call that a success, which is also a big mental step for me. That alone shows me that I have realized my journey doesn’t stop when I type The End on the book.

There’s another reason that July 24 is important to me. My father would have turned 53 today. His number’s still in my cell phone. I used to call it, before my sister inherited his cell, just to hear his voice. But it’s been three years since he died unexpectedly. And I think it’s taken me this long to let go. There isn’t any more lingering guilt when I feel happiness or take a hard-earned moment’s peace to just be. I didn’t realize it until a few days ago, but this entire year has been more of a growing experience than I had ever planned for it to be. I settled into a new house thousands of miles away from my family and friends and brought my mother and one of my sisters with us. Made repeated trips back to the east coast for legal matters surrounding my father’s death, which led to a legal fight with certain (former) family members because my father had died without a will. And while I was gluing my heart back together, life kept moving forward. My dog died.  More pages were written. More steps taken to a happier and healthier me. My grandfather died. Buttercup turned three. And life kept moving on. More pages were written. And more steps taken to a happier and healthier me and in spite of the PCOS, the Insulin Resistance, the hypothyroid, I lost 16 pounds as of my last count. *throws confetti*

It’s been a hell of a year. But I survived. And I’m a better person for it, I think.

Did I realize the importance of this date when I decided to start writing chapter one 365 days ago? Yes and no. Of course I realized it was his birthday, but I didn’t start my book on July 24 intentionally. It just happened. And as the year progressed, I forgot about it…until I looked at the calendar again and realized what day my year’s journey would officially end.

I wrote a book for your birthday, Dad. How’s that for a new beginning?

 

My mother gave me the ring back after he died. It’s only fitting, she said. He would want my husband to have it, she said.

I honestly don’t remember if I waited for a special holiday or if I just presented The Husband with the DAD ring—in its original box because my father saved everything—but I remember a lot of other things.

Like seeing the ring in the Sunday ads and saving my Friday and Saturday night tips from my job as a busser for a month. And grabbing my bike and riding across town to buy it myself because Mom didn’t have a driver’s license and I didn’t want to give the surprise away by asking Dad for a ride.

I was 13 when I gave him that ring.

I was 31 when I got it back.

In between the then and now, I exchanged secret, barely-there smiles with my dad every time he wore it. Working in a factory meant jewelry was reserved for special occasions. And the little girl in me always felt a surge of pride when I’d see the sun reflect its warmth off of the third finger on his right hand.

He remembered, I’d think. He wore it because he knew I’d be looking.

My father was a man of few words. His actions did his speaking for him. He married my mother right out of high school because I was on the way, dropped out of college and worked two jobs to move our growing family into a safer neighborhood. His absence during my childhood was never seen as negative. Instead, it was a silent testimony to his loyalty and love.

My mother knew how important that ring was to me. That’s why she placed it in my hands when she was finally able to go through his belongings.

The Husband won’t be wearing the ring tomorrow. He’s working and doesn’t wear jewelry on the job.  He might not even wear it on his day off, instead saving it for the next special occasion. And when he does put it on, I know he’ll wait for the warmth of the sun to reflect off the third finger of his right hand for me see all the memories contained within.

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