Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Take a Powder (Room)


I redid my powder room last fall. If it's possible to be in love with a bathroom, I am. Everything in itthe walls, the tile, the framed print, the mirror, the cabinet and sink/counter; even the guest towel holder and trashcan and toilet-brush-disguised-as-floor-art were carefully selected. And every time I go in there, even if it's just to put something under the counter or sweep the floor, I feel like saying "namaste." It's soothing, with a palette of beiges and a pale not-quite-seafoam blue. It makes me happy. And I'm not the only one who feels this way about my sweet little bathroom. It's a crowd-pleaser! Whoever uses it - male and female - always has something nice to say about it.

It's crazy to love this spot so much, but it's not really just a bathroom. It's my "control room." In the last 12 months, I've dealt with surgery and a difficult recovery, a nonagenarian father who is declining by the day, a stressful political environment and choppy personal and professional waters; so many things that were beyond my influence. This bathroom, this little gem, this island of calm, is a place that's always steady and pretty and quiet, even if my life isn't. It's something exceptional I made (though my contractor will likely think he deserves the credit); clear evidenceeven on days I don't feel very talentedthat I can plan and execute and create.


I feel about my bathroom the way I do when I have written something especially well: I can't make it any better. And just as I often go back to read something special that I've composed, I pop into this room whenever I get the chance. It's simply pee-utiful.

©2018 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Those Heartbreaking Brown Shoes




My father is dying. It might be next week or next month or next year, but somehow, he has made the transition since January from a relatively sturdy old man to a delicate elderly one; his once-beautiful fingers drawing up into claws, a hump forming underneath his wool vest on his bent-over back, his clothes clownishly big on him. It doesn’t help that he’s lost two teeth from his dentures recently, or that the age spots on his face and arms seem to be multiplying or expanding. My father, who used to be movie-star handsome, is disintegrating before my eyes. And I'm helpless to stop it.

Sunday morning. I picked him up at 7 a.m. to take him to Holy Cross hospital. Yesterday, when he was having trouble breathing, my older sister Susan and brother-in-law Jeff, visiting from Phoenix, took him - on his doctor’s orders - to a local imaging center to get a chest X-ray. It showed fluid around his lungs, and he was told to go immediately to the emergency room, but he refused.

After much cajoling from my sister and I, he agreed to go Sunday if I would take him early to reduce the wait. I drive up and he is waiting outside his front door with his walker, so that he doesn’t wake my sister and her husband. He’s wearing a sweater that’s not warm enough for the early chill, and his favorite cap – it’s the one with the Marine insignia. It never fails when he wears it that someone will stop by to thank him for his service. Last month when I took him for lunch at Panera's, a woman came over, took his hand and said thanks, and then asked, "When did you serve?" My father said, "In the last war." When she left, I said, "Dad! You didn’t serve in the last war!" “Well,” he said, it was the last one for me."

He looks small and vulnerable, and I help him into my front seat, lifting the left leg and then the right, wincing at the moans those little movements bring. He’s been letting me buckle him in for months now, pulling his arms over his chest and holding tight fists together as the metal clip finds its mate. He’s more and more childlike these days, and I often joke to my friends that I’m the “reverse soccer mom,” running my father to dialysis on Monday/Wednesday/Friday; going home to knock out an article or some housework; then picking him up, making a McDonald’s drive-through run (senior coffee with four creams, six Chicken McNuggets with two barbecue sauce packets, and a McDouble with cheese), and taking him home to eat at his dining room table. He’s gotten fixated on McDonald’s in recent years, though he never liked it before. I know it’s not healthy, but what the hell? He’s 92, and he wants it… and I must admit they make a good cup of coffee. 

I’m always extra cheerful when I’m with my father, maybe to balance out his sadness. This morning, I chirp “G’day, mate!” before I shut the car door, fold and install his walker in my trunk, and get in to start the car. I remember to turn the radio off because with my father’s hearing loss, it’s mostly a bunch of static to him. “You feeling okay, Dad?” I say. He doesn’t speak, just nods. I know he hates this merry-go-round of doctors and hospitals. My father was always so strong, and this life doesn’t suit him – it embarrasses him. “It’s good we’re going so early,” I say. “We’ll be taken quickly.” Another miserable nod. 

I don’t promise he’ll be going home today, because I’m pretty sure they’ll keep him. We ride the 15 minutes to the hospital in silence, and I swing into the lane for the emergency room, grateful there are only two cars in the small parking lot, hoping it means he can get in quickly. Sure enough, as we enter I can see only one other person waiting. In seconds, we are called by a petite Indian nurse with “Gathika” on her name tag, who checks him in and takes my father’s blood pressure, then tells us to walk through the automatic doors to the senior section of Emergency, where he is assigned the first room. My father seems to be the only patient. One of the nurses, a brisk young blonde girl in pink scrubs, hands me a gown, says “I’m Stephany, he can leave his pants and shoes on,” and starts taking my father’s vitals. When she steps out, I help my father take off his undershirt and shirt, thankful they are both clean. I notice the shirt is frayed near the top button and make a mental note to rotate it out of his wardrobe. He is tired from rising so early and keeps yawning. After Stephany comes in a few more times to insert a port and hook him up to a monitor, and a doctor stops by to tell us Dad is going to be admitted in a few hours, he falls asleep, his mouth open enough for me to see the two missing teeth, his gown falling from one bony shoulder, his scratched brown shoes sticking up from under his blanket. 

I went through a similar health scenario with my mother nine years ago – increasing visits to doctors and hospitals, and then the decline, and then she died. Only my father was younger and stronger then, and bore a lot of the driving and the worry. I had one of my best moments with my mother as she lay on a gurney in a hospital hallway. She was already losing her mental edge, and I asked her, “What have you liked best about your life, Mom?” and she smiled like an angel, her tiny face framed in a fringe of black and grey hair, her eyes squinched up the way I loved, and said, “Oh, it was always you kids.” 

My father is stirring, scratching at his wrist where Stephany has added a pink “LIMB ALERT” and a red “ALLERGY” bracelet to his admittance wristlet. My father has had two knee replacements and one revision, is allergic to latex, had his bladder removed after fighting cancer 20 years ago, requiring his use of an ostomy bag, and has been on dialysis for 10 years after his kidneys failed. I know the four medications he takes, and the dosage, and I can reel this information off as if it’s mine. He is a warrior, and I have watched him take each hit on his health with stoicism, except the day he found out, after making it through cancer, that his kidneys weren’t functioning. “Why did I have to get two things?” he asked me, despondently, and I can’t remember if he voiced his perceived wrong any further, but that’s how it sounded, and in my head I said it: “I know, Dad - it’s not fair.” 

It’s already 10:30, and soon my sister Susan will be here to relieve me. She’s an attorney who practices in the health field, and often asks pointed questions of doctors that start with, “I’m not a doctor, but” and include information she has read or heard about. I love when this happens, and I hope when she comes the doctor returns then, too, so I can sympathy-smile at him while she's talking, because I already know I'm not a doctor. I don't even need to say it. 

I go down the hall to use the bathroom, noticing that since we arrived there are six more patients, one a woman in the space right next to the bathroom, and I can hear her whimpering through the walls. It’s all such a cry for help, and I feel for her, too, my compassion boundless in a place like this, where you would not come if all was well. I know my father will be mad when he wakes up - that he can’t go home, that he will have to sleep in a strange bed and will worry about his ostomy bag being handled by other people. He will want his navy-blue leather chair in front of his TV and his orderly kitchen and his black plaid flannel pajama pants. He will want to be the master of his domain, instead of a patient at the mercy of unpredictable visits by nurses to check his temperature or invade his privacy.  I leave the bathroom and wonder, as I have many times before, if this is the last trip to the hospital; if I will have to bring those beat-up brown shoes he won’t part with home in a plastic bag, crying as it lays on the seat next to me.

I know that one day will be the last day, and tears rim my eyes at the thought; then one spills over and rolls down my right cheek. I brush it away, and as I reach to pull back the curtain to my father’s room, I hear a woman saying, “I’m not a doctor, but…” 

©2018 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Church Lady



My sister R. texted me the night before Easter that she was going to church the next day. I asked if she wanted company, even though I couldn’t remember the last time I went to church. (We recovering Catholics must be careful about exposure to that gateway drug, lest we backslide and get religious again.I even offered to drive, and said I’d pick her up at 9:15 for the 10:00, knowing full well I would be sitting outside her house in my car the next morning, watching the minutes tick by as I waited for her to finish dressing and hustle out to the car, carrying her jacket and earrings to put on as we drove, certain that when we got to St. Joseph’s we’d have to park at the far end of the lot and scurry up to church, late, always late. I am the only early one in my family, and it’s always been a source of embarrassment to me, this inability to plan well enough so that we didn’t call attention to ourselves. We are the ones who would fumble over other people in a theater to get to our places right before a play started, across a sea of irritated, grim-faced seat-people twisting their legs to the side to give us room to squeeze by, all that unsavory stranger-knee-touching marring their perfect night out.

Mass was just starting, the first hymn in process, and the priest and altar boys were standing at attention in the back before their big entrance. We held back, shades of our tardiness for weddings, waiting for the bride to make her way down the aisle before sliding into a pew – only this time the bride was an 80-year-old cleric in a white tunic with a gold embroidered cross overlay, broken red veins latticed across his pale face, and bright-white hair loosely covering his shiny pate. He and his grade-school sidekicks finally started their slow promenade to the altar, and my sister and I followed the prompts of an usher smitten by his own importance, crooking his fingers and jerking his head left to motion us to a couple of seats. As I have in the past, I think about how the parish got screwed by whoever designed this church. The pews stick out about three feet farther than the space where you can get to the kneelers and the wooden pockets that hold the service missals and the songbooks, and of course that’s where we were seated, so we were left without the standard options necessary to behave as the rest of the natives – kneel, stand, sit, sing; rinse and repeat.  

Eventually we were passed a songbook, so we kept that between us, R. holding it with her right hand, me with my left. Since I wasn’t in this for soul-saving or holy favors, and it was Easter, after all, I spent most of my time people-watching, loving the petite red-headed girl in the yellow polka-dot dress, matching hair ribbon, white tights and beige patent-leather shoes, and the little twin boys with coffee-bean eyes and fluffy, static baby-bird black hair; vests and bow-ties over the tiny little long-sleeved shirts that were tucked into elastic-waist pants.  In front of us was a woman, platinum blond mane with dusky roots in in dry clumps. She was dressed all in black, and some of those hairs were like prisoners escaping, traveling down her back separate but aligned, as if they were going to meet up later at a predetermined location. When she got up, her skirt hugged her bottom in an unfortunate sideways grin, and I was reminded of the joke my Irish friend Kevin used to tell, complete with a lovely accent, about Seamus asking Paddy how he got his black eye. 

"You'd never believe it," said Paddy, "but I got it in church." He’d been sitting behind a fat lady when they stood for a hymn, and he noticed her dress was creased into her behind. "All I did was lean forward to pull it out and she hit me,” said Paddy. A week later Seamus sees Paddy again, and he’s got another black eye. He said he found himself behind the same woman, and when they stood for a hymn, her dress was again tucked into her hind parts. “Then,” Paddy said, “My little nephew reached forward and pulled it out. But I knew she didn't like that, so I leaned over and tucked it back in."  When Kevin told that joke, he made a soft karate chop with his hand on the “tucked” part, and I found my hand mimicking that action now as I thought of him.  

Ah. The sermon. Only about 20 minutes more to go. The elderly priest is talking about Googling something last night for his talk today; a term I didn’t expect to hear from the pulpit or from an octogenarian priest. But perhaps I’ve just been gone too long.  I zone out again, playing the game I’ve played in church since I was twelve and just showing signs of the extra weight that would plague me all my life. I scan the congregation and look for skinny people. That guy over there, with the scrawny neck and delicate wrists, gets five pounds. Those teenage girls with the tight dresses that my father would have hit the roof over if me and my sisters ever wore them at all, much less to church, get two each. That mom in the yoga pants looks like she can stand a few – she gets three, and her four kids get one each: that’s sixteen total. I put five each on the altar boys – they aren’t thin, but they’re at that chubby stage, so I don’t feel bad – and I just have to unload four more – ha! They go to the young couple sneaking out during communion. 

Minutes left to the end of the service, and I sing loudly on the only words I know to the processional hymn, loving my sister and ready to suggest we go to Starbucks and have a chat before I take her home. We walk at a zombie pace behind our fellow saintly colleagues leaving the church, but nothing bothers me anymore – not the lateness or the poor seating or the tediousness of this service. I’m feeling so light; so very light – after all, I just unloaded 30 pounds – and I scoot in front of a family, push the lever on the door and walk out, blinking, into the sunshine. 

 © 2018 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie


Wednesday, January 31, 2018

In Praise of Measuring Twice and Cutting Once

When I transitioned from college to a career, I was fortunate to land in the company of people who cared about honest reporting of facts, statistics, financials, actions, and intent.

As a young, promising but inexperienced business writer with a newly-minted English degree, it made a big impression on me when my then-boss picked up on a generalization I made without fact-checking, and introduced me to the phrase "measure twice and cut once." His point: we check, and double-check, and make sure that anything we say or publish is as accurate as possible. I've loved working in that environment all my life. I respect the fact that my colleagues share my commitment to dig down and look at all angles of an issue to make sure we are painting a legitimate picture of what we are communicating; that we are meticulous with details; that we are not misrepresenting information or situations.

I don't know what to make of the current climate. The game seems to have changed, so that persuasion by any means is applied to get to a "win." (Quotation marks intentional.) But I'm old-school on this one, and if you are, too, you're someone I want to know. After all, a house built on faulty angles cannot stand. That's why we measure, and measure again.

© 2018 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie