Sunday, December 9, 2012

The Unencumbered Cat

Julie reached out to me this morning in what I can only describe as a gentle reminder that this month might be particularly difficult for me.  Huh.  Here I was thinking that this weekend was smooth sailing, all the way!  We stopped, amidst our "tree-like-object"

decorating celebration and I reminded the family that although I seem sort of like myself these days (except the part where I live in my jammies), my parents were always really really into the whole Christmas decoration and ritual thing, so, well, I might be a total wreck come this weekend.  Peter, bless his heart, insisted that we roll the high kitsch cd's that would be our usual December soundtrack.  How awesome is this dude? Really?  He hates this music, and it's all for me.  Something about Ella's version of What are you Doing New Years Eve got to me this afternoon. Everyone had finished their share of their adorning and were out in the world. Me, left with the remaining tidying that would define my role in the family, set the lighting just right and there I go.  Sheesh! Why do I feel This Rotten?  Go figure, but here I am, and Lena Horne's recording of the song is even more haunting than that Ol' Ella cd that I've been listening to, well, forever.


"his"
But even though it was just about the greyest, darkest, non-snowiest December Day, ever, somehow we pulled it together and made it a success.  I've been jawing about a pair of killer Adrian Pearsall chairs that were on sale at the Broadway Antique Mall .  Somehow I finagled a gift out of the whole thing, and boy am I thrilled with the results! Check this out!!!

"hers"

"what's the cat gonna do to these things?"

boo-ya!


"The Unencumbered Cat"  -Peter

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Returns and Cycles...or...What did we lose along the way?

This afternoon, a rare and delightful opportunity to clean stuff (OK, papers) out of my desk-work-area. Everybody is out of the house and it's time for me to catch up on social media, I mean, nostalgia, I mean, bills and healthcare organization.  So I stumble upon a file which houses some formerly useful info regarding Mom & Dad, most of it either outdated or upgraded in the past two years.  November marked the two year anniversary of my first real immersion in trying to do what I could to help the parents. With a few days off of work, and an army of folks in OP taking care of my kids, I went to Oregon and spent some quality time with Mom and Dad, trying to convince them that maybe sometime soon some things would need to change, in order that they preserve their independence, health, quality of life, etc.. In some ways this was a delightful trip.  I, without my family in tow, was able to cook for Mom and Dad, adapt to their quirky pace of life, talk about the old times, and really enjoy their company.  I'll never forget some of the special moments of this trip.  Mom and Dad were both swimming every day, and going about their life as they had for a number of years, yet each was noticing falterings in the other.  Within a month I would get a call from Dad that Mom was in the hospital, thus sparking the first real foray into rehabilitation and care that one or the other would be involved in, for quite some time.
Jan 2011


Tonight I came across the hand-written transcript of a long talk that I had with Dad in November of 2010 in which he told of his annual trip to Southern Oregon family gravesites. We had taken this trip every Memorial Day weekend of my childhood.  It's been thirty years since I made the trip, and in recent years have tried get back out there. But when I sat with Dad, I had a feeling that this was going to be as close as I would get, at least with his company.  Today, I sit with vague messy handwriting, dictated by a faltering 86 year old, wondering, still, if I'll ever get there, or if my notes will do me any good.  The whole thing goes a bit like this:

  • "...there is only one cemetery in Rogue River, 15 miles out of Grants Pass, eight miles to town of Rogue River, turn N (left) into downtown Rogue River, Main Street is 3 blocks off bridge. off to right is bridge, turn Left off I5 approximate mile to the cemetery going south at cemetery go to the main entrance (there are at least 3) central straight down street 1 1/2 block one grave is my great grandmother, a Steward, Otis Byron Steward's mother. Incidentally, let's back up to Masonic cemetery, I always leave a boquet of flowers and clean the land Dad deeded half of that plot back to the plot...Mom can tell you who is buried there...her grandparents...TP Cramer...go into the 2nd entrance into FOE (both have archers over entrance so you an tell) so I always put flowers on the Cramer plot. And the Steward plot, 2 entrances to 2 cemeteries, one into Masonic once you're through the gates you can't tell which is which, go into masonic entrance, straight down that street two blocks...etc...."
The notes go on like this, and it's tough to imagine following this ledger and not getting completely lost.  Not to miss a great opportunity to explore some fabulously beautiful country, but heck, what do I do with this?  Well, on the hottest day of December, probably, ever, I do the unthinkable. I check the internet, of course! I get that familiar feeling of excitement tinged with the loss of hands-on discovery that we have when we realize that it's right here, at a finger stroke.  Plug into google the name: Central Point Cemetery, and I find it's most likely one of two cemeteries (aided by Dad's directions I realize it's the 100F) and within minutes I find record of the Nussbaums and the Stidhams that are buried there.   Dig a little deeper, and I'm on another site, in Glendale, Oregon. This stop was always an "extra" for Dad, only if there was enough time and the rest of us weren't too cranky.
Glendale, OR
 At Glendale was buried "Baby Stidham".  Strange, the record isn't in the online listing, until I read that whoever has recorded the markers misspelled Stidham, and wrote Baby Stedham, no known info about dates and family.  And so it goes,   For now, I'll take the knowledge that I can go on a road trip sometime in the future, aided in part by Dad's directions, but I'll most likely have smartphone and gps and web browser in hand, just in case I need another bit of help.  And so it goes.  Crank the heat up to 74F on a December day in Chicago, expecting that somehow everything is going to be alright.  Put on the back burner, again, a trip to a place that is disappearing from memory and even existence, since, of course, we can find everything we need right here, plugged in.