Showing posts with label father. Show all posts
Showing posts with label father. Show all posts

12.02.2022

back in time

"Do you love me?" I ask from the far side of the butcher block, a question to which I know the answer, but which I ask periodically, just to be humored.

"Yes. More than anything in the world," he replies, as he looks at me with intent.

A bit incredulously, I follow with, "Even Calvin?"

"Yes," my husband answers, "but he's catching up."

The expression I give lets him know I wonder what he means.

"He's becoming more lovable," he says.

"Like when he was a baby," I add, "when he was feeling good ... he was all happy and lovable. It's the drugs that have fucked him up."

After a pause, I go on to say:

"Some doctors are assholes," thinking about the bad ones—the one who needlessly prescribed Calvin's first benzodiazepine and the ones who prescribed extremely high doses of too many drugs—sometimes several at once—that didn't work and that fucked him up, caused him to be and remain so impossibly restless.

Michael nods his head.

"I wish we could go back in time." I say, wishing I knew—and could have employed—then what I know now.

But I can only go there in my memories and dreams.

One-year-old Calvin, March, 2005

2.05.2022

longer stretches

Hours before dawn, I curled up next to my son for the second morning in a row as he shivered and shook in my arms. After the last increase in Calvin's new medication, Xcopri, he went two weeks without any seizures at all, which is a decent stretch of recent. It seems, however, that he has a pattern of going for "longish" seizure-free stretches, followed by one seizure, then going for another longish stretch, only to have a cluster of two or more seizures. In effect, he doesn't really seem to get ahead in terms of fewer overall seizures, which, of course, is the goal.

Witnessing Calvin seize is always distressing. Each grand mal—the kind he most often has—starts with a blood-curdling shriek or howl, which sounds as if he has seen something absolutely terrifying or is being murdered. I can't describe it any other way, but it's a horrifying sound to come from anyone, especially one's own child. As it happens, Michael and I jump from our bed (the seizures almost always happen in the middle of the night) unhook and unlatch Calvin's safety net and bed panel, then kneel down next to him. Michael gently holds Calvin' hands and offers him reassuring words as he convulses like, good job Calvin! in an attempt to help slow it, while I make sure Calvin doesn't break his toes kicking the wooden lip of his bed. About ninety seconds later, when it is over, we watch the color come back into his dusky fingers, toes and lips. It takes Calvin several more minutes to totally catch his breath owing to fluids and/or soft tissues that seem to periodically obstruct his airway. Then, when that trouble has passed, I syringe a milliliter of my homemade THCA cannabis oil into the pocket of his cheek in tiny bits; this seems to prevent a second seizure from occurring after he falls back to sleep.

I'm sitting here now wondering if last night's storm and low barometric pressure had anything to do with triggering his fit; it does seem like they are sometimes weather-related. In any case, he's not really well or strong enough to get into the car for a ride. He's also restless, on and off the couch, and not eating much to speak of. But, he is doing better than after yesterday morning's seizure, which is encouraging, though I wouldn't say he's out of the woods yet.

We increased Calvin's new medication again last night, but it will take a week or two until it reaches what's called a steady state, that being a higher constant level in his blood. I hope he doesn't begin to suffer badly the side effects the drug is mostly known for, which is dizziness, major fatigue and lack of appetite. It is hard enough keeping weight on this kid.

So for now, we will hunker down at home listening to music and to the snow plows and blowers outside. I'll get outside with Smellie for another walk in the woods when Michael gets home from working in his studio. I'll sit on the couch in the sun writing, and I'll dream of springtime and flowers and of longer seizure-free stretches for my kid.

In the wake of a seizure, April 2020

1.09.2022

paraphernalia

I sit motionless in a gray steel and vinyl chair before a grid of full-spectrum compact florescent lights, eyes closed, a double-sided dark cloth draped over my shoulders. For ten minutes, I hold this pose as Michael looks into the ground glass focusing the image of my face onto it, adjusting the camera’s fully extended bellows. He vanishes into his darkroom where he pours the emulsion onto the glass plate and dunks it into a silver bath before emerging and snapping it onto the back of the camera. He counts down, “four, three, two,” and on the count of one, I take a deep breath and hold it for the forty-second exposure. In my stillness, I realize how calm I feel—warm, silent—and I remark about it later, about how I rarely, if ever, relax like that and just ... do ... nothing.

My husband’s studio is packed to the brim with his photographic paraphernalia: chemicals, cameras, flasks, clamps, plastic trays, cloth and latex gloves. And then there are the photographs themselves: large black and white riverscapes; hand-tinted prints of old mill town structures; expansive cityscape triptychs, curled satiny silver-gelatin prints; an oversized cyan sky reflected in a muddled green river reminiscent of an oil painting; translucent glass-plate ambrotypes resting against a black velvet backdrop that magically reveals the rugged beauty of the images. To my delight, in nearly every section of the large space he has hung photographs of me.

Stacked on end leaning against the walls are huge framed photos wrapped in brown paper and masking tape. Some prints are pinned up, others hang framed on screws or nails. Gray file cabinets bulge with 4" x 6" glossy prints inside waxy paper sheaths. Countless boxes boasting thousands of photographs buttress towers of flimsy negative sleeves from recent and years past.

Michael is the most prolific artist I know, tirelessly laboring, inventing, creating, dreaming. His bodies of work are vast, deep and varied. His fearlessness of new territory, different methods, themes and subject matter reminds me of the innovation of Miles Davis or Beck—constantly evolving, experimenting—yet the familiar thread of genius throughout the work remains. He’ll blush at reading these words, dampen them down in his own modest way, but I know his work is gorgeous, provocative, impeccable and timeless.

A few nights after modeling, I return to his studio to see the day’s work. Scattered across the tabletop are countless orange bottles with childproof caps and printed white labels with Calvin’s name. In large bold letters, one reads MAY CAUSE DIZZINESS. Many are empty. Others still contain the sinister little capsules stamped in a tiny font: ZONEGRAN. We’ve saved most of the empty or discontinued drug canisters and their contents over the years for Michael to photograph. Along with the amber bottles are translucent ruby vessels with traces of syrupy liquid beading their insides, paper-backed foil blister packs—the kind that are oh-so satisfying to pop—bundles of striped urine test strips, and multiple dozens of crinkled and stained handwritten medication logs with rows of penned in Xs and administration times.

“Makes me sick to look at them,” I say to Michael, regarding the piles and piles of foil and plastic casings strewn on surfaces or spilling like guts from every possible nook and cranny in the large cluttered space. I imagine Calvin’s little body, his smooth belly and flawless skin, and think of all the wicked chemicals we’ve spooned into him over so many years. Frigging seizures, I think to myself. Effing drugs. And yet this paraphernalia proves so ironically beautiful to behold, like precious metal, little gems or handfuls of pearls. At the same time they remind me of the acrid metal of war, of steely prison bars, padded white cells, of the numb brain and bleak future of my precious, innocent little boy who, every morning and night, we woefully coax to open his mouth and choke down this string of endless, chalky, bitter pills.

originally published in 2012.

2.07.2019

birthday blues

Fifteen years ago today, as I laid on a stainless steel operating table being prepped for my emergency C-section, the busy doctor and nurses patted my legs and feet as they walked past. Their gestures, meant to calm and reassure me, worked. Then, within minutes, I fell under the spell of general anesthesia. Sometime later in a different room, I awoke in a haze, Michael beside me holding my hand. I felt a dull throb in my lower back and the ache of fresh incisions and sutures in my belly. As I looked around at the blurry world, my newborn was nowhere to be seen. Slurring my words, I alerted Michael of my pain. Instinctively, he launched into our hypnobirthing script, which worked to dull the pain and lulled me back to sleep again.

Later the next morning, I emerged from a morphine fog, eager to meet our son. Gradually, I sat up, careful not to pop the staples and stitches in my gut. I placed my feet on the waxed linoleum floor and gingerly lowered myself into the wheelchair Michael had fetched. He wheeled me down wide corridors and into an elevator which took us downstairs to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Somewhere in the florescent-lit room, Calvin was sleeping in a clear plastic box called an isolette, the intubation apparatus that had assisted his frail lungs having recently been removed. We scrubbed our hands and forearms with soap and warm water, then donned paper masks before entering the room.

As we neared our son's station—unsettling bells and alarms ringing and buzzing periodically—we passed by several other isolettes, each housing its own tiny baby, some no bigger than my hand and weighing little more than a pound or two. All of the preemies wore adhesive leads to monitor their heartbeat, respiration and oxygen saturation, and most were hooked up with cumbersome breathing tubes. When we reached Calvin's isolette, I recognized him instantly. His moon-shaped face had red marks where tubes had been taped, and a tiny little furrowed brow told me he'd been stressed. His right hand and wrist were taped with a splint meant to keep his IV in place. I scooted up as close to his box as I could and peered in, marveling at my beautiful boy whose nose I thought looked familiar.

"Hi Calvin," I said softly, and my baby boy opened his eyes for the first time; he was twenty-one hours old.

This morning at four-thirty, on his fifteenth birthday, Calvin awoke to a grand mal seizure. He convulsed for over a minute. He bit his cheek and it bled. His breathing was labored and strident. Afterward, I crawled into his bed. There, I cupped his shoulder with one palm and laid the other on his hip; he rested one hand over my eyes and put his other around my neck. He slept.

While walking Nellie a few hours later, a friend drove past then pulled up curbside. She got out and we strolled a bit. We exchanged stories of life's struggles and of raising pubescent kids. As we embraced, I thought of Mary Oliver's gorgeous poem, Wild Geese. In it she says:

Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. Meanwhile the world goes on.

After we parted, she called to me before driving away:

"Happy Birthing Day, Super Mama!"

With a smile on my face and cleated rubber boots on my feet, I trudged home in the slush and sleet left from a mini ice storm that rolled through last evening. It reminded me of the morning Calvin was brought into world.

In honor of Calvin's milestone, please consider a contribution to CURE epilepsy by clicking here.

12.25.2018

nostalgic christmas

Alone in the house with Calvin and Nellie while Michael spends a couple of hours at the studio. Silent Night is playing on the radio. For the first time in years I feel an emptiness, its source the absence of my mom and dad. I long ago lost my religion, but I sometimes still enjoy a few holiday traditions I did with them as a kid.

While feeding Calvin grapes I remember Christmases of my childhood, recall Dad goofing off in his new orange track suit, and making funny faces while carving the bird. Even the feeling of disappointment when certain gifts given to me weren't exactly how or what I'd hoped feels nostalgic. I wish Mom and Dad were still around. Wish they'd had a chance to know Calvin. Perhaps Dad would bounce him on his knees until he giggled uncontrollably. Maybe Mom would trap Calvin in her larger-than-life hugs, a flour-dusted apron tied around her ample waist. We'd sit around the table making jokes, passing dinner rolls and gravy. I've little doubt that Dad and Michael would've been famous friends, working in the kitchen, cleaning up the mess together. Michael's family eggnog would have been a big hit with Mom and Dad, though especially Dad who had a wicked love of sweets.

But they're both gone, Dad for some twenty-two years and Mom for a handful. Instead, I've got memories of them seared into my head—the smell of hot apple cider and of breakfast sausages and French toast wafting through the old brick ranch house. Holiday music coming from the radio atop the fridge. The huge tree all lit up and tinseled. The warmth of Mom's smile and embrace. The relentless razzing Dad gave each of us. How nice to see him when he wasn't working, though Mom, who was a homemaker for eight, never really seemed to quit.

Yes, these carols so familiar spark in me a visceral poignancy, and I'm overcome with a loneliness I know isn't uncommon during the holidays. But Michael will soon be home. Then friends will be arriving after sundown. Eggnog with bourbon and rum will be drunk. Savory meats will be carved and eaten. Wine will flow. Cake will be served with ice cream. Mom and Dad won't be at the table, but my own family will be, and the house will be full of love and laughter. And Calvin, whose days are virtual carbon copies of each other, won't know he's missing anything.

Mom and Dad, Harriette and Don

2.07.2018

fourteen

As far as I know there are no photographs of me holding Calvin the day he was born, a Saturday. Having arrived six weeks early and missing much of the white matter in his brain, he spent his first week in the neonatal intensive care unit where I held him infrequently, if memory serves. He was so fragile and "floppy," suffered from tachycardia and needed help breathing. I feared I would break or smother him. Michael did not take parental leave (I can't recall if it was available to fathers then) so he returned to work the following Monday to teach his college students the art of photography. Around the same time, I was released from the hospital to continue recovering from an emergency C-section. While Calvin remained in the hospital, Michael and I spent nights at the Ronald McDonald House three blocks away, and passed most of our waking hours tending to Calvin in the hospital nursery. The photo below was taken when Calvin was two or three weeks old. He was not stabile enough to bring home until seven weeks after he was born.

Today, on Calvin's fourteenth birthday, he suffered a grand mal seizure at three a.m., just a few days since his last one. I had begun writing this post yesterday, saying that I had a good feeling about February, in part because Calvin had not had any partial complex seizures since I'd dropped his Keppra dose back down a couple of weeks ago. This morning, however, in the wake of the grand mal he had a partial complex seizure in Michael's arms, one long enough for his lips to turn ever-so-slightly blue.

Unlike most parents who seem astonished at how quickly their children grow up, it's not hard for us to believe that Calvin is fourteen. Every year has been an arduous struggle, every milestone no matter how small has been years in the making, his development nearly plateaued. Every second expands into a sea of monotony. What is amazing to me is that Calvin survived his birth and has made it this far.

Fourteen is somehow special and simultaneously frightening to me. I know several parents whose children with epilepsy have died around this age. One drown during a seizure. Two died from pneumonia. A forth died from Sudden Unexplained Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP). A fifth succumbed to other complications from epilepsy. I am sure there are others who will come to mind later.

I'll be keeping our boy home from school again today. Michael just left to go pick up Calvin's birthday cake—carrot with cream cheese frosting—from a special bakery in town. Calvin will love the taste but will have no clue that it is his birthday. In two-and-a-half weeks he will take his last dose of Onfi, the benzodiazepine he needed to help get him off of the first benzo, Klonopin, that he was regrettably and unnecessarily put on when he was three. I'll keep looking for new remedies and hoping he'll make it to fifteen, which will no doubt prove to be light years away.

Epilepsy is a dreadful, heartbreaking, life-wasting disease. If you can manage it, please consider donating to CURE epilepsy in honor of Calvin's birthday by clicking here.

Photo by Michael Kolster

9.11.2017

faith of my father

Originally published in The Sun magazine, August 2014
Barbecues with friends are supposed to be fun. Kids are meant to be running around barefoot, playing tag or whacking croquet balls across freshly cut lawns while the adults lounge on the deck with sweaty drinks and salty chips. Everyone is relaxed, enjoying the opiate of burning coals and the serenity of cumulous clouds drifting by.
But not this one. The gin and tonic my friend Kellie had given me as I’d reclined in a bay window did little now to ease my worry over my listless two-year-old boy. Calvin slouched limply in my arms in the late-afternoon heat, the cicadas’ buzz splitting the muggy air. Suddenly the color drained from his face, and his mouth twisted into a grimace, as if he’d eaten something rotten. As the seizure took hold of his brain, his body stiffened into a plank, and his glassy blue eyes rolled back into his head.
“Here it comes!” I called, and Kellie and my husband, Michael, came running.
Guests who were inside quickly ushered their kids out. “Daddy, what’s the matter?” I heard one child ask from the other side of the screen door. I have no idea what the father told his child or if he even knew what was happening.
“Call 911!” I said. Calvin began convulsing, his eyes fluttering, his lips smacking with each new spasm. We turned him on his side and pulled down his diaper. I grabbed the vial of rectal Valium from the pouch in his stroller, cracked off the cap, and carefully inserted the tip into my child’s rectum. Onetwothree, I silently counted as I depressed the syringe, injecting enough benzodiazepine to knock a full-grown man out cold.
By the time the ambulance arrived, Calvin had started to come out of it. The medics surrounded us, shielding us from the view of the concerned party guests. I recognized one of the EMTs from a previous 911 call, but I didn’t acknowledge him. I was fixated on my boy’s catatonic gaze. After looking Calvin over, the larger of the two men gathered him up and carried him to the ambulance. I climbed into the back and reclined on the gurney. The medic placed Calvin in my lap, loosely buckled a seat belt across my legs, and fit an oxygen mask over my son’s mouth and nose. Michael followed in our car.
As the driver pulled away, I watched the barbecue party disappear around the bend in the rutted gravel lane, the parents and kids standing in the yard, a mother resting her hands on her child’s shoulders.

When Calvin had been diagnosed with epilepsy three months earlier, I’d simply added it to the long list of neurological conditions he’d had since birth: ventriculomegaly, ocular and cerebral visual impairments, hypothyroidism, global hypotonia, global developmental delay. (So much for “As long as he has ten fingers and ten toes . . .”) I’d always figured epilepsy was a relatively benign condition. What could be harder, I thought, than getting down on your hands and knees for hours each day, teaching your infant to crawl by supporting his trunk and moving his limbs one by one? What could be harder than enduring two years of colic: seeing your child writhe in pain and hearing him scream for much of the day without being able to soothe him? What could be harder than knowing your child might never walk or talk or read or write or live life independently? At that time I had no idea the answer to those questions was “Epilepsy.”

The summer before we were married, Michael and I vacationed in Brazil. We traveled north along the coast to Salvador de Bahia, where we visited the Church of Nosso Senhor do Bonfim. We had already started trying to conceive a child. It was hot as we climbed the stairs to the stucco church. In a back room plastic limb —hollow arms, legs, and heads—were suspended from the ceiling. Some had been tagged with ribbons; others had stickers bearing the names of the ill, the wounded, the dying. The talismans had been hung by loved ones hoping for a miracle. Pocket-sized photographs of the suffering people were tacked to the walls, a sea of snapshots, their edges curling in the moist heat. I looked up, eyeing the bottoms of feet, the tips of fingers, the plastic heads, and I pondered the faith these supplicants had in a God who seemed to answer some prayers but not others.
Later we sat on the steps of the church under the Brazilian sun, and Michael tied a sky-blue ribbon—a Fita do Bonfim—around my wrist and knotted it three times. As he tied each knot, he told me to make a wish, as was the custom. We’d heard that the ribbons had been blessed by parish priests, and though we had both long since abandoned religion, we liked the symbolism: a wish knotted tightly, so that when the bracelet finally frayed and came off, the wish would come true. With the first knot I wished for a happy marriage. With the second I wished to become pregnant. And, as Michael tied the last knot, I closed my eyes and wished for my child to be healthy.

Calvin had a second seizure in the ambulance. Once we arrived at the hospital, they wheeled us into the brightly lit emergency department, with its shiny lino­leum floors and khaki curtains hanging from tracks in the ceiling. Nurses transferred Calvin to the hospital bed, laid him on his side, and draped a blanket over his body. I told them that Calvin’s behavior seemed odd; that usually, after the administration of Valium, he’d fall asleep, but this time his eyes remained open and fixed, with none of their familiar jerking and roving. His countenance worried me. Though he wasn’t convulsing, I feared that he was seizing again, silently. The doctors and nurses encouraged me not to fret. Michael sat next to Calvin’s bed and held his hand while I called my brother and cried into the phone, licking salty tears from the corners of my mouth. My brother’s voice trembled at the news, and I knew he was crying, too.

Until the death of my father in my thirties, I’d skated around the edges of other people’s tragedies: a high-school friend whose own father had died in a car accident; another whose sister had succumbed to leukemia; a childhood teammate who was killed in a plane crash, along with his father, the day before his twenty-third birthday; my best friend from middle school, who, as a young woman, had a stillborn daughter. Other friends and acquaintances had endured the drawn-out illnesses and loss of parents, siblings, children. None of the survivors spoke to me of how they coped with their grief, nor did I ask.
When I was fourteen, my friend’s two-year-old sister nearly drowned in the family’s backyard swimming pool. Her mother fished her out and resuscitated her before the medics arrived. No one knew how long the child had been facedown in the water. My family lived just two houses away, and I was about to mow the lawn when the mother’s eerie howling echoed into my backyard. A little while later my father came outside to tell me of the accident, and we stood there, shocked, his hand on my shoulder.
The toddler remained in a coma for nearly a week. My friend told me that her mother had prayed to God to save her daughter, offering to give up cigarettes in exchange for a miracle. Though I understood the mother’s desperation as much as any teenager could, and though I’d been raised Catholic, I couldn’t understand a God who would allow this to happen. It just didn’t make sense to me that this child, this mother, this family should suffer so.
The girl survived, but she sustained brain damage. After that incident any faith I might’ve had in the God of Scripture began falling away like dead leaves from a tree.

The attending emergency-room physician arrived, and I listed Calvin’s various diagnoses and suggested that it might be wise to give him an IV, in case he lacked fluids or in the event that he might suffer another seizure and need more medication. I asked for their most skilled IV technician, explaining that Calvin’s veins were particularly difficult to find because of his low muscle tone and layers of baby fat. He had a history of being stuck with needles scores of times in his arms, wrists, and ankles without any luck. The doctor insisted that the nurse assigned to Calvin just happened to be their best, but when she wouldn’t meet my gaze, I knew she wasn’t. And although she tried valiantly, she failed. Then Calvin slipped into another seizure, beginning with the faintest twitching, imperceptible to the others, who continued to doubt my observations. Minutes later another, more skilled, IVtechnician arrived and confidently took over. She tried for ten minutes, sleeves pushed up past her elbows, while Calvin’s convulsions intensified until they racked his body. But she, too, couldn’t hit a vein. Michael and I could do nothing but stand by helplessly with our hands on our boy.

As a child I attended Catholic parochial school and went to Mass most Sundays. I’d sit in the pew among my five older siblings, gazing into dusty rays of sunlight or through the stained-glass windows to the trees and the sky beyond. The silence between recitations from the altar was punctuated by hollow coughs, babies’ cries, and the creak of the wooden kneelers. I tried in vain not to laugh when my siblings whispered jokes in my ear. During hymns our giggles were drowned out by the monotonous drone from the mouths of well-dressed couples seated beside obedient teens, fidgeting toddlers, and infants in frills and bonnets.
I was curious to know what went through the minds of these sober parishioners who sat picking at the lint on their trousers or smoothing an errant crease. Were they thinking about lunch or dreaming of the sweetheart they’d once kissed in the woods behind the school? Maybe some of them were silently annoyed by the tie they had to wear or the itch that begged to be scratched beneath their pleated skirt. Or perhaps they were lamenting the sins they’d committed and would have to confess inside a dark closet to avoid eternity in hell. I’d done so myself, reluctantly admitting to an unfamiliar priest behind a lattice that I’d mistreated a friend or cursed at my mother—though I hadn’t divulged what I’d done between my legs that had felt so good, so right.
During the homily I never felt anything but the hard slab of wood on which I sat, the tile floor beneath my feet, and the desire to be released. I’d think about everything else I could be doing on a Sunday morning, like sleeping in, reading the comics, or climbing trees. I’d look up at my dad, sitting motionless with his austere expression, and try to guess what he might be thinking about. His mind didn’t seem to be on the liturgy. Sometimes his gaze, like mine, would wander to the sky and the trees outside the window.

Michael and I leaned over our seizing boy and offered soothing words of encouragement: “Come on, Calvin. You can do it. Everything’s going to be OK.” But after twenty-five minutes all I could think was that brain damage had likely begun to occur and that my only child’s vital organs might soon begin to shut down.
At that point a pediatrician entered. I gave her a quick summary, and she sat down to try to thread the butterfly needle into my son’s tiny vein while he spasmed. She had as much trouble as the nurses. Finally her needle punctured a vessel, and a bolus of the anticonvulsant Fosphenytoin leaked into Calvin’s bloodstream. I wondered if it burned, if Calvin’s seizing brain had some awareness of the foreign liquor commingling with his blood. I put my hand to his forehead, which felt clammy, and I waited for something to change.

I never once heard my dad utter a word about God save during the grace he recited by rote each night before dinner. The way the words tumbled from his mouth in a garbled strand of syllables made me think he was as skeptical as I was that some deity was calling the shots from on high. Nothing he ever said or did indicated any piousness. If anything, Dad’s faith seemed rooted in the splendor and majesty of nature: the trees, the rocks, the animals, the stars, us. I saw it in his love of gardening, his passion for being out in the sun, his way with animals, how he held my hand and taught me to make a blade of grass sing between my thumbs. I’d watch him sometimes as he regarded a body of water, or mused on passing clouds while lying next to me on a blanket, or searched the night sky for falling stars. I learned from him the sacredness of the natural world. I appreciated its balance, its plain and honest beauty, even its unpredictability, which at least expressed no judgment or dogma.

The seizure raged for another twenty minutes. As I leaned on the edge of the hospital bed next to Calvin, I wished I could feel his pain for him. The emergency medications appeared to have failed my boy. His fingers, toes, and lips were the color of plums, his oxygen-deprived skin ashen. His body still spasmed in rhythmic bursts. In my research on epilepsy I had read that the longer a seizure lasts, the harder it is to stop, like a runaway train speeding downhill. It seemed we had no choice but to watch our boy crash right before our eyes. The only solace was in hoping he was unaware of what was happening to him. He’s going to die now, I thought, and I felt sure my husband was thinking the same. Trying to blot out the presence of the medical professionals, who by now had stopped trying to save Calvin, we wrapped our arms around him and told him we loved him and that he was going to be OK. We stroked his arms and legs, brushed his wispy blond locks from his face. When I kissed his neck, I realized it might be the last time I’d press my lips against his warm flesh.

When he was sixty-five, my father had a bone-marrow sample extracted from his hip and biopsied. My mother told me that he’d had no anesthesia before the doctor had bored a hole into his pelvis, and that my father had come out of the room with a sickly pallor, drenched in sweat. For years they treated the cancer they found with regular bouts of chemotherapy, which sapped his vigor and stifled his appetite until he was a six-foot-four rack of bones. I watched this father of mine—this fine athlete, this track-and-field champion—wither and tremble. When I held his hand in the weeks before his death, it felt as thin-skinned as his ninety-five-year-old mother’s. He and I didn’t talk about the cancer, or death, or what he believed might happen after he died. It seemed of little consequence during the moments we shared. We just sat in relative silence, and I rubbed his back, and he held my hand.
After he died, my mother gave me a jar of his ashes. I rolled the glass around in my hand, held it up to my ear and shook its contents: tiny pieces of bone and grit. I unscrewed the cap and sprinkled some ashes into the palm of my hand, pushed them around with my finger as if writing in sand. Then I touched the center of the pile with my tongue. It tasted like chalk. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, I thought, and I smiled at the irony: the one piece of Scripture I could finally embrace.
Months later I scattered some of those ashes in a wooded glen on the side of a mountain, and the rest I tossed into the wind beside the sea. It made perfect sense for my father to become part of the universe in this way.

Had I not been in a state of shock, convinced that my only child was dying—my beloved boy who had never been without pain of some sort, who had never developed the words to tell us how much he was hurting—I might have thought unkindly about some of the things people had said to me over the years. I might have recalled the times that family, friends, and even complete strangers, upon hearing about Calvin’s terrible deficits, had said, “There’s a reason for every­thing,” or, “The Lord works in mysterious ways,” or, “God doesn’t give you anything you can’t handle.” And then I might have thought about what I had wanted to say to them: “What reason could there be for a terrified two-year-old boy to have a too-big tube shoved down his trachea without anesthesia, withdrawn bloodied, then reinserted, all while he screams in pain?” Or “If God doesn’t give us anything we can’t handle, then why do some people kill themselves?” And then I’d imagine the plethora of other ignorant platitudes that float inside people’s heads about kids like Calvin and parents like Michael and me. Or perhaps I’d have thought of the comment that my best friend’s Catholic aunt had made to her when her daughter was stillborn: “The saddest part is that she’ll go to hell, since she wasn’t baptized.”
But I didn’t think about those things. I also didn’t think about my Fita do Bonfim bracelet, which years earlier had worn thin and broken, along with the promise of a healthy child. I didn’t think about the plastic limbs adorned with people’s written pleas to God to save their legs, their lungs, their hearts, their brains. No doubt some of the portraits neatly tacked to the walls of that Brazilian church belonged to people with epilepsy.
No, all I thought about was my Calvin and his little birdlike chest, his silky skin, his slender fingers. I meditated on the smell of his hair, the sensation of my lips on his neck, where I might have felt a faint pulse, though I couldn’t be sure. I just thought about kissing my boy, perhaps kissing him goodbye.
And then, after having burned for at least forty-five minutes, the seizure stopped.
By that time a pediatric intensive-care team had arrived to transfer Calvin to the Maine Medical Center, where difficult cases like his were handled. So we were loaded into the ambulance as twilight deepened. The barbecued meats and vegetables that our party hosts had brought to the emergency room, complete with cutlery and cloth napkins, had become shriveled and cold. In the dim ambulance we began making the thirty-five-mile drive. I lay with my son in my lap again, the needle in his wrist bandaged in place, a tube down his throat, a glowing red oxygen-saturation monitor stuck on his toe, and I wondered if he’d ever wake up, if I’d ever again see him smile and feel his soft hands on my face.

Dozens of hospital stays later, Calvin is ten years old—bigger, yet still so much like a baby. He remains in diapers. He can’t read a book, can’t speak a word or walk all by himself. He can’t believe or disbelieve in God. He still has seizures, despite taking huge amounts of medications to thwart them. But he’s here now, and, as my father and I used to do, Calvin and I live in the present moment, breathing the fragrant air, feeling the sun warm our backs, touching the trees and grass, and smelling the lilacs and peonies. We hold hands, embrace, rub each other’s heads, listen to the birds and the wind in the trees. Together, we exist.
When I was about Calvin’s age, my father used to come to my bedroom to say good night. I would complain about aches in my legs. “Those are growing pains,” he’d explain. Then he’d take one shin at a time in his large, strong hands, and he’d firmly press and massage the muscles like a trainer. Afterward he’d scoop me up like a bundle of kindling, slide me under the covers, kiss me good night, and say, “You know I love you, don’tcha, kid?” As he left, he’d pull the door shut behind him until only a thin slice of light shone through the crack. There were no bedtime prayers, no blessings, no mention of angels in heaven—it was just my dad and I and the clouds drifting across the moon and stars outside my bedroom window.

Me and my Dad, 1965

3.31.2016

wine and rhododendrons

Wine, rhododendrons and the promise of spring bring an end to winter doldrums. Finally, I can kneel and work my angst into thawed earth dark as coffee grounds, dirtying my fingers and knees until the muscles of my arms and thighs burn luxuriously. I feel alive.

The sun is riding high and buds are plumping amid warmer winds. Birds coax us to head outside where we watch the grass green up right under our feet. Dad comes to mind as I prune and preen hardened twigs from shrubs and trees; there are so many lovely rhodies for me to tend just like when I was his little kid.

Calvin cannot learn to water or prune or feed, but when I hold his hand as we stroll through the garden between verdant mounds of plum and green, he reaches out to touch their leaves, a splendid testament to how much he's like my Dad and me.

Photo by Michael Kolster

3.07.2016

patch of light

A miserable wind ekes its way through cracks in window frames and under doors. It was meant to be “warm” today, but at thirty-six degrees it has begun to snow. Most of what had dropped this season had already melted revealing dead grass, crumpled brown leaves and sidewalks strewn with sand and salt. Last week, purple crocus spears pushed their way through thawing mulch, the only color in a barren March world.

I sit at my desk on this gloomy day wondering what to write, and as I do my eyes wander to a photo that Michael gave me years ago, which sits in a corner window sill. In it, he and I relax in the sun near a favorite place called The Lookout, his head in my lap, our dog Jack at my side. Pregnant, I was in the initial weeks of my first trimester, and Michael fashioned a photogram of a single white dot symbolizing our unborn child, then set it adjacent to the shot of us three and encased it in a raw wooden frame.

The image of that single dot, that patch of light, had held so much hope, so much promise, and I’d ask myself: Will it be a boy or a girl? Will she be blond or he brunette? Next summer, will we be basking at the beach, our child playing with yellow buckets and plastic spades? What might his first word be?

Alas, life offers no guarantees. Our boy came six weeks early missing part of his brain and barely able to breathe, as if the reams of troubling medical reports, test results, endless worry and dread were pressing on his birdlike chest.

It was a day like today, twelve years ago, a month after Calvin's birth, that I was propped in the hospital bed holding him, gazing out a window into a forest veiled in snow, trying in vain, or so I thought, to get my son to nurse so we could finally take him home. He was so wee and frail. Michael held vigil while our dog Jack laid on his bed in the corner of our labor and delivery ward room. Outside, leaden skies leeched all color from the scene. Trees were black. Snow was white. Stones were ashen grey. My heart sunk wondering if we'd ever get to take Calvin away.

The days were long and lonely, the three of us being cut off from friends and family and home, living in an antiseptic room with a helpless child and no way of knowing the hardship that was in store. Winter seemed never-ending and I rarely left my boy's side except to venture out into its cold for a spell just to breathe and feel alive.

But as I look at this photo twelve years later, and think of my son who has come so far—walking and, though not talking, signing a few words, and able to recognize and love his parents and his home—I see the patch of light and in the glass a reflection of the outside world, and it makes me wonder again what promises it might hold.

1.16.2016

dad

Twenty years ago today my father died from complications of multiple myeloma, cancer of the bone marrow. He battled and suffered the disease and its treatments for nearly five years, if memory serves. When he died he was only seventy years old; he'd have turned ninety-one this year had he survived.

I think of my father often, perhaps daily. I'm reminded of him by Calvin's blue eyes and long, skinny legs.

The masses of rhododendrons I've planted in my garden are there because of my father's love of the shrubs, banks of which flanked my childhood home and which Dad and I used to prune and dead-head together.

I think of Dad whenever friends bring me homemade applesauce—one of Dad's specialties that filled the house with the sweet aroma of cinnamon and that he liked to serve warm over vanilla ice cream. I, like he, have a fondness for sun on my shoulders, for gardening, eating dessert, camping, walking on the beach, and making wisecracks at every opportunity.

Dad seemed drawn to those unlike him; he had friends of all ages, races and religions. I take after him in that regard, too. And though raising six kids was stressful considering his modest income, Dad seemed to like kids and enjoyed coaching for many years. He was very affectionate with me. No doubt Dad would've loved cuddling with his grandson, Calvin.

I miss you, Dad. You were one of the good ones. It's really too bad you had to leave us so soon.

Me and my dad, circa 1965

2.20.2015

dad up ahead

If Dad were alive he’d be turning 90 today, but we lost him to bone marrow cancer when he was just seventy and I was thirty-two. I often wonder what he’d think of me now and what he’d make of Calvin. I have no doubt that he and Michael would hit it off and that he'd be a good grandfather to Calvin, loving him for who he is and wanting nothing more than to tickle him and simply be with him. I think he’d be proud of what I’d accomplished so far in life: that I’d realized my childhood dream of being a clothing designer; that I’d become financially independent before getting married; that I’d married a good guy, a solid guy, a smart guy, an honest guy, a responsible guy, a good citizen and one who loves me (all in one guy, mind you); that I'm using my mind in a creative and worthy endeavor such as writing.

In honor of my dad who was a Naval Academy graduate, a hero who saved lives in a terrible airfield accident, a track and field star (he ran hurdles, threw the javelin for the Navy and, in 1948, ran a mile in 4:28) an engineer, a coach, a father, a friend, a husband, a prankster, a swim meet official, a mechanic, a sunbather, an avid gardener, a canner and a clammer, here is a remembrance which is part of my memoir-in-work:

I trudge up onto a grey morning beach, wind plaiting my hair, damp sneakers chafing my ankles and Dad up ahead leading the way across the sandbar. He carries a shovel in one hand and a swinging white bucket in the other. Hip waders the color of clay hang from suspenders off of his broad shoulders, a gossamer white t-shirt clinging to his chest trembles in the wind. He is Neptune and I am his little green urchin. As we pound our feet on the wet sand, water spurts from tiny holes. Dad kneels down and works hard and fast digging scores of pits and forming small, sloppy mounds of sand to their sides. At each site, he reaches elbow-deep into the hollows as waves wash over the bar dissolving the mounds and dumping sand into the space around his arm and into my sneakers. “Got it,” he says with a grunt, then works his muscles against the sand vacuum slowly tugging the clam to the surface. It’s long and thin, shiny and green-gold, the color of seaweed, its edge as sharp as the razor for which it is named. This time he hands the clam over to me for inspection and suddenly, with a phony growl, he squeezes it so that it spits at me and I flinch. We both laugh then he gestures and says, “Climb up, Shorty.” My ankles are sore and raw, my feet numb and wet and I’m shivering so much my teeth are chattering. With one arm under my leg, the other carrying the shovel and a bucket half full of clams, he carries me up the beach through tall grasses over ivory dunes, my hands clasped loosely around his neck riding his back like a monkey on a stallion. Through my rolled-up Levi’s and nubby sweater I feel the damp warmth radiate off of his back into my birdlike chest and I think to myself, I have the best dad in the world.

Donald Murray Shake, February 20, 1925 - January 16, 1996

6.30.2014

faith of my father

The gin and tonic my friend Kellie had given me as I reclined in a bay window did little to ease my worry over my listless two-year-old boy. Calvin slouched limply in my arms in the late-afternoon heat, the cicadas’ buzz splitting the muggy air. Suddenly, the color drained from his face, and his mouth twisted into a grimace, as if he’d eaten something rotten. As the seizure took hold of his brain, his body stiffened into a plank, and his glassy blue eyes rolled back into his head.
 

“Here it comes!” I called, and Kellie and my husband, Michael, came running.
 

Guests who had come inside quickly ushered their kids back out. “Daddy, what’s the matter?” I heard one of them ask from the other side of the screen door. I have no idea what the father told his child or if he even knew what was happening.
 

“Call 911!” I said. Calvin began convulsing, his eyes fluttering, his lips smacking with each new spasm. We turned him on his side and pulled down his diaper. I grabbed the vial of rectal Valium from the pouch in his stroller, cracked off the cap, and carefully inserted its tip into my child’s anus. One, two, three, I silently counted, as I depressed the syringe, injecting enough benzodiazepine to knock a full-grown man out cold ...

—Excerpt from Faith of My Father, which will appear in the August issue of The Sun magazine. To read the entire piece when it comes out, you can subscribe here.

photo by Michael Kolster

6.20.2014

things that make me breathe easier

husband. fresh air and wind. peonies. cannabis for my sick kid. not having to split tiny, unsplittable pills. barbara. sitting alone in the eveningstar theater with a bag of popcorn. gardening. long views. bourbon on the rocks. sunlight and golden fields. seventeen seizure-free days. date night. drinks with the gals on a warm afternoon in the shade of a balcony built over the river. smutty humor. laughter. green. wes anderson films. azaleas. calm boy. smiling boy. toddies on the porch with woody. dancing by myself to a live blues trio in a narrow space amongst a happy crowd in a dark tavern where no one else is dancing, where the bartenders are funny and michael is within arm's reach watching me with a smile on his face. sleep, if i could get some. friends and neighbors. summer.

6.15.2014

dear old dad

Dear old Dad,

You left this earth far too early, far too young. I hope your pride in me exceeded your disappointment. I think of you every day when I tend to my rhododendrons, when I eat my oatmeal and sometimes when I drink my coffee. I say the same things to Calvin that you said to me, like, "You know I love you, dontcha kid?" and "How many times do I have to tell you?!"

I love you and miss you and I know that your ashes, which I scattered on the side of a mountain in a glen of forget-me-nots and in the wind at the water's edge, are still reflecting the sun's light and warmth.

Christy

5.26.2014

vigil strange I kept on the field one night

Vigil strange I kept on the field one night;
When you my son and my comrade dropt at my side that day,
One look I but gave which your dear eyes return'd with a look I shall never forget,
One touch of your hand to mine O boy, reach'd up as you lay on the ground,
Then onward I sped in the battle, the even-contested battle,
Till late in the night reliev'd to the place at last again I made my way,
Found you in death so cold dear comrade, found your body son of responding kisses,
(never again on earth responding,)
Bared your face in the starlight, curious the scene, cool blew the moderate night-wind,
Long there and then in vigil I stood, dimly around me the battle-field spreading,
Vigil wondrous and vigil sweet there in the fragrant silent night,
But not a tear fell, not even a long-drawn sigh, long, long I gazed,
Then on the earth partially reclining sat by your side leaning my chin in my hands,
Passing sweet hours, immortal and mystic hours with you dearest comrade—not a tear,
not a word,
Vigil of silence, love and death, vigil for you my son and my soldier,
As onward silently stars aloft, eastward new ones upward stole,
Vigil final for you brave boy, (I could not save you, swift was your death,
I faithfully loved you and cared for you living, I think we shall surely meet again,)
Till at latest lingering of the night, indeed just as the dawn appear'd,
My comrade I wrapt in his blanket, envelop'd well his form,
Folded the blanket well, tucking it carefully over head and carefully under feet,
And there and then and bathed by the rising sun, my son in his grave, in his rude-dug
grave I deposited,
Ending my vigil strange with that, vigil of night and battle-field dim,
Vigil for boy of responding kisses, (never again on earth responding,)
Vigil for comrade swiftly slain, vigil I never forget, how as day brighten'd,
I rose from the chill ground and folded my soldier well in his blanket,
And buried him where he fell. 

—Walt Whitman

Confederate dead, Chancellorsville

5.12.2014

mother's day blues

Like any other, the day started painfully early, but the weather, grey though sixty, offered me a little hope. After breakfast, the three of us took a drive out to the beach. It had been months since we'd been there as a couple, who knows how long since we'd brought Calvin along. Waves lapped the sloping narrow beach, and as we walked hand in hand with Calvin under an emerging sun he stared at the burning orb, twisted and whined, cackled and dropped to his knees simply refusing to walk.

A few yards down shore we stopped to rest on a sun-blanched driftwood trunk. Michael took our impossible kid into his lap while I sat on the far end weeping tears of despair and frustration. We didn’t linger, and on our way back to the car Calvin kept up his maddening antics until Michael picked him up. I watched them pass a mother carrying her infant in the exact way Michael carried Calvin, who appeared as a giant compared with the tiny baby. With furrowed brow, I spit obscenities at my kid. I cursed the world and its ruinous start to Mother's day.

Back at home we tried taking naps, but just as I was drifting off I heard Calvin begin to whine then cry. I dragged my weary body into his room only to find him strangled in the netted canopy of his bed. He’d poked his head through a small gap at the end, its cords wrapped around his gills like a fish. Tears streamed from his eyes and, untethering him, I noticed ropey, red welts at the back of his neck. I held him close and wept again.

Finally Calvin napped, as did I. The much-needed sleep brought its healing properties to my psyche, enough so to put Calvin in the stroller in search of sweets at the little red ice cream shack across campus. Once there, a ridiculously long line of students convinced us to abandon our quest, so we made our way back home, coaxing Calvin to walk on his own. Just as he had at the beach, though, he balked, contorted and fussed. At the edge of the campus quad I took Calvin from Michael, encouraging him every few steps. Once we arrived at the dorms, which Calvin seemed to recognize, he was much more compliant, so I praised him for his efforts and told him we were almost home. In the end he made it a great distance, perhaps as far as ever, albeit stubborn and pigeon-toed most of the way.

Shortly after our return, thirsty in the late afternoon heat, we broke into the absurdly large bottle of Maker's Mark that Michael had given me. The Hallmark holiday was beginning to look up. I spoke with my mother-in-law on the phone, who at times lovingly calls me Sweet Pea. My sister called and I talked with her and my mom a bit, and though it’s getting harder and harder to have a conversation with Mom, I was still glad to hear her voice and to wish her a happy Mother's Day.

Michael and I ended the day toasting twenty-four days since Calvin’s last evening seizure, more convinced now that the THCa cannabis oil might be helping, though suspicious that it is driving his seizures into the morning hours; we gave Calvin a few extra drops before his bedtime.

Having been the first warm evening of the spring—one without bugs—we pulled the coffee table outside to eat Michael's herb-encrusted barbecued rack of lamb with wild rice and salad. As dusk settled in, we reclined in cedar chairs sipping red wine and watching a few bats silently circle above our heads, an indigo sky their backdrop. At times I thought I'd caught the scent of the white magnolia blooming in the garden.

Before bed, I checked my email and found a Mother's Day message from my friend Jessica:

There are so many different versions of having a mother and being a mother. On this day of thinking about such things I am thinking for the moment of you and of how your version is really something quite special. Thanks for posting those beautiful photos from the Special Olympics—love those smiles. I'm quite sure if there were a Mom Olympics you would be gathering all sorts of gold.

The day that had started out so poorly had made a 180 degree turn. With a little nap, the help of Michael, of family and of friends, and with the unconditional love of a goofy little kid, I went to bed happy and more certain than usual that anything might be possible.