khamsin: (david byrne)
My grandpa passed away tonight. He was 91.

Baby Jenn


This is how I'll always remember him: comfortable in his chair, whether it was with a book and a grandchild (that's my sister in the photo) or falling asleep watching The Frugal Gourmet while home for lunch. That chair is the hottest commodity in their house, followed closely by his chair at the kitchen table.

Fesenmeyers

At some point he stopped being the one behind the camera at all the family occasions. At some point he stopped driving - they stopped driving. They didn't come to Jenn's wedding, or to my second. Travel was too difficult. I can't imagine the feeling of losing yourself by inches over a tremendous amount of time. Hands no longer steady enough for surgery or woodwork. Retirement, finally, at 79. Walking with a cane. No longer having a garden. Pride compromised by infirmity.

Gram and Gramp

My grandparents had more than a lifetime together. If we're lucky, most of us get 75-80 years on this planet. My grandparents were married close to 70. Seventy years with another person. Can you even imagine? The home nurse is staying with Grandma tonight, and Tom will be there soon, if he's not there already.

With Grandpa!

Mom called while we were bowling, then texted me to ask me to call. I tried to go outside, then stopped in the foyer in my rented shoes. It was like a physical blow, then a literal lump in my throat, then kicking off the bowling shoes and standing outside, doubled over, sobbing. I had just been talking with my friend about plans for the weekend - whether I should go to Vegas for a friend's wedding, whether I should cancel my plans just in case - so they knew what had happened and surrounded me with hugs. We came home and sat on the step and smoked pink and blue cigarettes and I drank a bourbon and told stories.

The time that Grandpa tried to convince me to eat disgusting cabbage rolls by making them talk to me in funny voices.

His old man pajamas, bow ties, and slippers.

His poached eggs and tea in the morning. How many eggs must Grandma have made for him in a lifetime? 10,000? More?

His shampoo - Herbal Essence something in a green bottle - which I would always use when I visited.

That photo of him on his pony.

The way he would always make sure that we had money and gas before we hit the road.

His wood shop in the basement.

His "office girls" that would still take him to lunch more than a decade after retirement.

The y-shaped scar from his heart surgery in 1999.

And, in my drawer, a delicate bracelet brought home from the Philippines, where he was stationed as an Army (?) doctor during World War II.

IMG_6926

I love you, Grandpa. I hope that wherever you are tonight, you're at peace.
khamsin: (david byrne)
Grandma finally decided it was time to call for home health assistance for Grandpa.  Mom said they've been asking her to do this for years, but this time she finally heard.

Mom spent the day there yesterday taking care of Grandpa, helping him to the bathroom, cutting his nails, giving him a bath.  He asked if she would come back in July and August so that he could have baths then too.  Mom said of course, but that he should probably think about having baths more often than once a month.  Grandma can't possibly manage to get him in and out of the tub without further assistance.  She is 93.

Yesterday Grandpa recognized and knew Mom, but talked about needing to go to the hospital and to see patients.  He retired in 1999 at the age of 79 after a lifetime of medical practice: a surgeon in the Philippines in WWII and then for years back home, then practicing occupational medicine when his hands got too shaky.

When I was 8, my new ear piercing closed up from an infection, and Grandpa repierced it for me with surgical wire, just as he'd done Mom's ears.  To this day I have one hole in the front of my earlobe, but two channels through the lobe to the hole in the back.

Mom said that for the first time since her dear friend died in September, she's been able to cry.  She said she's been praying for years that she will be prepared to let him go, that she will be able to bear it.  She knows she'll be able to do those things, but she also can't imagine not hearing his voice again.  She's saved messages on the answering machine.  "Hello Kathy, this is your father calling from Davenport"

Tonight I need to sit down and write him a letter.  It's too hard to talk on the phone - his hearing is worse than his memory at this point, and I wouldn't be able to get out the things I want to say.  A letter you can hold in your hands.  A letter you can read slowly.  There is grace in a letter.

I love my grandpa so much.  I'm 31 and don't think I fully understood the depth and ferocity of this love for family until recently.
On Saturday, my friend Tina and I will be running in the Susan G. Komen Global Race for the Cure. The fundraising for this race supports breast cancer research and women's health advocacy around the world. If you know me well at all, you know that both of these things matter a great deal to me - which is why I'm asking for your support in my fundraising efforts.

When I was 17 and a senior in high school, my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer at age 44. My brother, then barely a year old, refused to nurse from one of her breasts, so she had my dad, an oncologist, check it out. He found a lump, and a biopsy found that it was cancer. I remember coming home between school and rehearsal and getting the news from my dad, then going back to school and being wrapped up in the arms of two family friends - one of whom had been my dad's patient when she had Hodgkin's lymphoma - as the three of us cried. My senior year of high school was overshadowed by the fear and uncertainty that goes along with chemotherapy, with watching your mom's hair fall out, with helping to care for your baby brother because your mom is sick from a treatment.


Me and Mom at Iowa v Illinois, fall 2006


Jen and Grandma


Jenn and Grandma, Thanksgiving 2006



We are very lucky and thankful that Mom has been cancer-free for a number of years, as has my grandma, who was diagnosed in her 60s and is still healthy at 91. With two close family members diagnosed and treated, though, my sister and I are considered to have an elevated risk. It's fair to say that my interest in supporting breast cancer research is a selfish one - I want there to be money for research so that if/when my sister and I are diagnosed, there will be a better understanding of the disease, leading to better treatment for patients and better education for their loved ones.

In addition to these personal reasons, I also believe strongly in helping women become advocates for their health. Several of the Komen programs emphasize education and strengthening doctor-patient communication - both things that we worked on when I was a gyne instructor at UIUC. I grew up in a medical household - my father's an oncologist, and my mother's father was first a surgeon, then practiced occupational medicine until he retired at age 79 - so medical care is something I've taken for granted all my life. Despite this, it wasn't until I worked as a gyne instructor that I felt any sense of ownership of my own healthcare. Going to the doctor was something that I did because it's what you're supposed to do - not because I wanted to make sure I was getting what my body needed. Gyne instruction changed this, and I now feel responsibility to help empower my loved ones to ask questions and get the care they need.

If these things are important to you and you can spare the money, please consider donating on my behalf - or to our team, Team Helpful Paws. If you're in the DC area and feel like running on Saturday, consider joining our team! For personal, selfish, and altrustic reasons, I greatly appreciate your support.

September 2021

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