Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
rain, laughter, the harmony in the broken
glass.
111
Fifty Years
Had I been born fifty years earlier
I would sit in a café in Paris,
Trade wit, find work writing copy
And critique, adventure in the arts
and love,
Drink dark coffee and absinthe.
I would meet people in occluded rooms,
Crowded stations, and hush
Listen carefully, I will only say this once,
Pass small slips with single names,
Hide men in my attic,
Wonder about tomorrow.
Had I been born fifty years earlier
I would say the proper
brucha
Each morning, listen to my papa,
Go to yeshiva, study Talmud,
Marry whom I was told.
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I would look toward the steppes
And one day see the horses,
My small town in smoke,
My footprints and cart tracks behind
me,
Hope for a ticket of passage,
Wonder about tomorrow.
Had I been born fifty years earlier
I would go to school
In the town with everyone else,
Shop in the markets,
Consider myself a citizen.
I would one day hear the crashing
windows,
See the walls built, the paint flow,
The armbands and the army trucks,
Wonder what we had done,
Avoid the uniforms,
Wonder about tomorrow.
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This, today, August 29th, 2010, is the
one-year anniversary of my mother’s
death.
Yahrzeit
.
I could not write this. But I could say this.
I dictated it and a friend, a good friend, for
who else would do such a thing, typed it while
I talked. He also made what edits and proofs
were needed. He did this to save me the pain
of a careful reading. Thanks, Craig.
I read it anyway.
I do not say this is what happened. What
is here is truth but may not be fact. It is what I remember from two days that are hard to
remember. I have added things as I recall
them. Still, maybe I got something wrong.
Maybe I got something backward. Maybe I
made a mistake. Maybe someone will be mad.
Maybe they’ll get over it. Maybe they won’t.
It doesn’t matter.
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•
My brother called me that Thursday and told
me my mother was in the hospital, or that
she was going into the hospital, I actually
don’t quite remember which one. I said I
would try to get down the next week or so,
and he said he thought it was important I get
down there in the next day and so. I left the
next morning.
My mother had Parkinson’s Disease, had it
for about fifteen years. For the last two years
she’d had trouble speaking, and she seemed
more and more trapped. She had brain sur-
gery, which really didn’t work for much more
than two or three weeks at a time. I think she
hadn’t walked in probably a good year.
So I called my daughter and asked Sef if I
could stay with overnight at her place. She
was living in Deerfield Beach and my mother
was in the hospital in Coral Springs, about
twenty minutes away. I also asked if she
would meet me at the hospital. And she said
of course she would. So I drive down and I
got there around 11, and Sef met me outside
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the hospital. And we walk in together. I think
we met my brother on the way up to the
room, or perhaps outside the room. Appar-
ently my mother was not able to swallow any-
more. I hadn’t seen her in, I think, about two
months. I had called from time to time, but
because she was unable to speak, she would
try to speak on the phone but end up crying,
so I alternately thought I should just call and
not have her talk, or I should not call so as to not make her cry. So I probably didn’t call her
as often as I might have. I certainly didn’t call her as often as I wanted to, because the crying was hard for both of us. She was such a
dynamic person, it was harder to hear her not
be able to speak than it was to see her not able to move.
So we went in to see her. My father had
called the night before my brother did, and
he said she had not been eating, and I forget
what else he said, but he was considering tak-
ing her to the hospital. I suggested he take her right away—from his description she needed
to be there—but he was wondering, vacillat-
ing. I believe it was my brother who finally
convinced him to get her to the hospital.
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Went in. She really looked very “shell-ish,”
nearly unable to move, unable to eat because
she couldn’t swallow. I went in, gave her a
hug, Sef gave her a hug, I did my best to not
cry and I didn’t. My father, of course, takes
me outside immediately to talk to me “in
secret”—he was always telling secrets, always
took me aside to whisper things—“Your
mother’s not doing well, you’re mother’s not
this or that,” as if my father still thought she was 40 and playing croquet, as if it were to
be a surprise to him that she’s sick. When he’d
call and say she’s not getting better, I’d say,
“What did you expect, this is what happens
with Parkinson’s.” I think he was trying to hold on to her, but I found it frustrating. He would
whisper it because he didn’t want her to hear.
So I sat with her, held her hand, Sef was on
the other side, held her hand, talked to her.
She made a few sounds here and there, she
could move her eyes a little bit. Apparently a
Swallow Test had been ordered—I’m not sure
what the logistics of a Swallow Test are, I
really don’t need to know—but they came
and got her, wheeled her down, and before
they wheeled her back up, I spoke with the
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nurse and asked what the plan was, what the
possibilities were. If the Swallow Test came
out well, she would be able to eat. If the test
did not come out well, she would be unable
to eat, and the only way she would be able to
receive nutrition would be through a tube
going through her side and into her stomach.
But the Parkinson’s medications can only be
administered orally. So it means the Parkin-
son’s would get worse and worse. So even that
was not the best option. If she didn’t get the
tube, she also wouldn’t get the medication.
So IV feeding would be useless.
My brother’s wife, Amy, worked at the hos-
pital as a pharmacist, so anything needing
clarification were made clear, She explained
that the Swallow Test indicated she couldn’t
swallow. That even ice chips would very eas-
ily be aspirated. She was wheeled back into
the room, put back in the bed, and my father
pulls the nurse outside and around the cor-
ner—and by then a friend arrived, this guy I
didn’t know—and my father asks the nurse
the results of her test.
“Why don’t you ask in front of mommy?”
I say.
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The nurse cuts him off and says, “She has a
right to know, and I will not discuss this with
you unless she’s present.”
I thanked her, and we walked back into the
room. The nurse addressed my mother
directly. She told her that the Swallow Test
indicated she was unable to swallow, would
aspirate anything she tried to eat, was at risk
for choking, that the Parkinson’s meds can
only be given orally, had to be digested, so the only possibility was a PEG tube. And that was
the only option.
So she asked, “Do you have a Living Will?”
And my father says, “No.” At that point my
father and my brother get into an argument
about why there is no Living Will. I don’t
remember if it was me or my brother who
asked him, “Did it never occur to you that
this day would ever come?” My father was
crying. Denial. This was no time to have an
argument about why; the fact remained that
they never discussed what she had wanted.
A long time ago, before she got sick—twenty
years ago—my mother told me that if she
ever got like my grandmother, unable to take
care of herself, she “wanted to be shot.” I had
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to repeat this to the nurse, saying we had dis-
cussed this in the past, and she looks at my
mother and says, “Is that true?”
And it’s the last whole word I can remem-
ber my mother saying: “Yes.”
And the nurse looked at me, and said,
“That’s very clear.” And so she continued to
ask her a few questions: “So that means you
do not want a PEG tube?”
And again: “Yes.”
“You understand that means no nutrition,
no food?”
“Yes.”
So I was standing behind the nurse at that
point, so she could talk as close to my mother
as possible, and my father asked what that
means, and she said, “It means your wife does
not want to be fed, and wants to allow this to
take its natural course.”
And I’m watching my mother, and I think
it was at that point that she realized she was
going to die, that all the days she had left could now be counted on the fingers of one hand,
and that was it. I saw her realization that she
was about to die. And she just started to cry.
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And she just cried for quite a while. And peo-
ple held her hand, and hugged her.
My brother kept saying to her, “It’s going
to be all right, it’s going to be all right.”
My father kept saying, “Don’t worry, Sheil,
don’t worry Sheil.”
I, on the other hand, went up to her, and
said, “I don’t know why they’re telling you
everything’s going to be all right. You know
and I know what the truth is. You’ll be fine,
but you won’t be here. Everybody loves you.
You did good. Rest.” And I kissed her on the
forehead. She stopped crying, and a few min-
utes later she closed her eyes and fell asleep.
My father had brought in a CD player, and
he was playing Johnny Cash, Nat King Cole,
John Denver. I think her hearing was perfect.
No TV, just music the entire time. The nurse
had left at some point to go get the social
worker to have her come up and talk about
her options. It was a small room. I guess there
were four of us in the room, Amy would pop
up from time to time, so five. And directly
above her, not four feet above her head, a
bank of fluorescent lights on the wall, and
fluorescent lights on the ceiling above, and
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bells were dinging and people calling on the
loudspeaker. It was not at all a restful room.
So the social worker comes up and we go
down the hall to talk—my mother was still
sleeping and we needed out of the room for
a while. I had Sef come with us because I actu-
ally depend on her sometimes to have a clear
head when I don’t. The social worker wants
to talk to us about hospice, which I think is a
great idea, and the sooner the better. She
couldn’t stay at the hospice in the hospital,
because you can only stay there for three days,
and starving to death can take up to two
weeks. My father keeps saying he can’t afford
hospice. The social workers keeps saying
Medicare would take care of it. “My insur-
ance won’t take care of it.” “Medicare will take care of it completely,” back and forth.
She told him of Hospice by the Sea, which
I have heard over and over is the best care
anyone could ever want. He wants to see it
first. He think it’s going to be dingy, old.
“Is it going to be worse than the room she’s
in now, with the fluorescent lights and the
loudspeaker?” I ask.
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“I don’t know,” he says. “Why don’t we go
see it tomorrow morning?” he asks.
And my daughter asks him, “Why don’t you
go see it
now
?”
“Well, everyone’s tired, maybe we should
rest, see it tomorrow morning.”
My daughter insisted: “Why don’t you
think of her? Get her out of that room, get
her somewhere comfortable?”
I ask the social worker: “Can we do it
tonight?”
“Yes.”
Father didn’t know if he’d like it, didn’t
know if he could afford it. Don’t remember
my brother saying much, but he probably did.
I asked my father, “What are your choices?
Look at your choices. She can’t stay here more
than three days. You cannot bring her home.
This is her only choice. If you like it when you see it, if you don’t like it when you see it, if it’s a palace or a dungeon, this is your only choice.
Why are you putting it off?”
I looked at the social worker and she said,
“He’s right, this is all you can do.”
And so arrangements were made to bring
her to Hospice by the Sea that evening. It was
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a Friday evening. So he wants to go there first