Monday, August 8, 2011

SWEET OLD GIRL


A very sweet old lady I knew died last Saturday.

The date was pre-arranged.  She had her family around her and she was happy (if a little bit tired) after a spectacular sunny day spent with her favorite people in her favorite place.  The place they would sprinkle her ashes when she was gone.

She had many of the ailments associated with her age group: Cataracts, hearing loss, arthritis, lowered stamina. Their normalcy did not lessen their difficulty or her suffering.  It was fairly certain that she had cancer although it was never officially diagnosed because, at her age, chemo and radiation were out of the question.  Really – why go through that at 84?  That would only add to her suffering. She needed help getting around and incontinence was beginning to rear its ugly head.  The only thing ahead of her – and it was probably looming close – was more pain and emergency intervention. 

And so, on Friday night, her family threw her a going away party.  30 people attended throughout the course of the night and many more sent regrets and condolences and love.  There was food and drink and laughter and tears and hugging and philosophical talk of death and passing and life.  The guest of honor basked in the limelight and visibly perked up from all the attention. 

The next day was spent sitting on the beach, smelling the salty sweet air and water.  Her family spared no kisses, no hugs, no tears.  The sunshine was clouded only by the knowledge that time was running out, by their resignation to the dreaded moment when the medication would be administered that would cause her heart to stop and end her life on this earth.  Knowing that this was the last time they would be together in this way made everything sharper, clearer, brighter.  And so, so bittersweet. 

Confessions of a Nerd


The picnic was in full swing.  A fifth grade graduation celebration where the guests of honor were not little kids any more, but not quite teenagers either.  They were learning, though, by practicing, playing at being older.  Girls were admiring each other’s jewelry, cooing over the latest clothing fads and the aps on their smart phones -- tools of the pre-teen trade. Mid-conversation with a group of parents, one mother realized that she hadn’t seen her daughter for a while. She did a quick scan of the party. Where was she?  Not with the girls huddled together whispering. Not with the group around the food table.  Not with the flirty girls being chased by the boys.  And then – ah -- there she was. Sitting at a distant picnic table, facing away from the crowd, legs stretched out, ankles crossed, gazing down as she ate her hot dog.   Her heart seized at the sight of her daughter, alone, ignored, unnoticed.

My heart went out to this woman, a work mate, because I have been through similar times with my daughters.  And I have personal experience to draw from.  Flashbacks to the times when I felt like a no-count nobody because I was excluded from social events or teased and publicly humiliated. I still get mad – 40 years later -- just thinking about it.  

SUPERHERO IN THE HOUSE


Superman fights Lex Luther.  Batman fights Joker.  Spiderman fights the Green Goblin.  Superheroes are in constant battle with their enemies who, while they never triumph, never completely disappear either. Well, move over, boys, because there’s a new super hero in town.  Meet Clean Irene, or as she is known to her family, OCD Woman.

Like my male counterparts, I have been fighting a monster who has tried for years to invade and overtake my home; banging on the doors, climbing through the windows, creeping in the cracks.  Ever on guard, I fend it off; beat it back -- sometimes with weapons and sometimes with pure, determined, brute strength.  This monster, this thing that threatens my sanity, my peace, is a shape–shifter.  One day it is a sink full of dirty dishes, another it is dust, and another it is a trail of socks and cast off shoes.  In other words, it is the detritus of the people with whom I live. People who, although endearing and skilled in many areas, have not mastered my sense of organization or the skills for keeping that order…  in order.  Were it not for my vigilance, this monster might just huff and puff and blow the house down, forcing my three little pigs to go wee wee wee all the way to oblivion.

Love on Four Legs


How do you know when it’s time to put your dog down?  When she’s had enough? Dog owners walk a fine line between reason and compassion.  The suffering and diminished quality of an old dog’s life is one thing. But rational thinking can be clouded by sweet memories and the moments when our dogs seemed to transcend their animal nature, responding uncannily to our needs, our thoughts, our human-ness.

Our dog, Lovey, has astonished us with her pure, spot-on responses to certain situations.  Call me crazy.  I don’t care.  Lovey and I know the truth.

One night, sick in bed, unable to get warm, I thought how nice it would be to have Lovey up on the bed – normally forbidden territory.  The thought of her warm, soft body close to mine circled around my feverish brain for a while when I heard her thumping up the stairs.  With a determined leap she was on the bed and curled up, her back pressed against me.  Her warmth seeped into my bones and I finally slept. Coincidence?

SOMETHING FOR NOTHING


With any luck, by the time you are reading this, we will have had a glorious weekend of warm sunshine, long walks, bike rides, kayak paddles, barbeques and all the things people do when the sun comes out in Seattle. 

What did you do last weekend? Did you clean your house?  Pay bills?  Do yard work?  Accomplish something so you didn’t feel like you wasted the weekend away?  Or did you enjoy the onset (finally) of summer, by leaving all that behind to play?

Here’s the thing. We are conditioned that we must always be achieving, working towards a goal.  Planning, scheduling, keeping busy.  Filling that calendar with more and more. No blank pages!  No wasted time!

What would happen if you decided to spend an entire weekend doing nothing? Actually scheduled it as your weekend plan.  Wrote it on the calendar? 
Saturday:  Nothing. 
Sunday:    Nothing. 
Of course, you’d have to prepare food and clean up and walk the dog and take the garbage out.  But what if you let all but the essential chores go? 

UNDER THE VEIL


Close your eyes and picture this:  Woman in Burka. 

What do you see?  Dark, flowing fabric?  Face visible?  Just eyes?   Is she walking through a barren, dusty, rock-strewn landscape? Or seated in her home, comfortable but isolated, saved only for her husband’s eyes. 

Or… is she walking down the halls of a hospital in Seattle, a refugee seeking medical care, cut off not only from her own people but also the people amongst whom she now lives.

I work at UW Medical Center, a hospital that serves a virtual United Nations of patients. Dealing with people from all over the world in life and death situations allows me to regularly encounter the heart of our shared humanity.  Perceived differences between people can come crashing down in one familiar, empathetic moment of connection.  In this hospital setting, I am constantly reminded of how alike we are despite language, tradition, culture and the garments with which we choose to cover our bodies.

Last week, heading to the espresso bar for my morning coffee, a man looking lost met my eyes and asked, “Do you work here?”  I postponed my coffee run to help him.  Navigating our way through the maze of hallways, I learned that he was Ethiopian and needed medical documents for immigration.  In my mind I switched places with him, trying to accomplish a similar task in Ethiopia.  I couldn’t wrap my brain around it, but it made me glad to be helping him.  We parted with a smile and a handshake.

Back at the espresso bar, two women I see every day greeted me.  Members of our housekeeping staff, also Ethiopians, they are constant presences to those of us who work in my area.  We chat about our lives and our families while waiting for our coffee.  One of them mentioned that it was her birthday and we ended up in a triple grande hug.  

Finally, latte in hand, I headed down the hall to my office.  A pedestrian traffic jam in the main hallway caused me to walk next to a burka-clad woman, our shoulders practically touching. I ignored my usual impulse to just walk by,  (a response to the burka’s apparent  message to keep distance between us?), and asked, “How are you today?” She looked surprised and responded, “Fine thank you, how are you?” in perfect English.  After learning that I was an employee, she said that she thought this was the best hospital in the world.

“I was near death,” she explained.  “I was in this hospital for a long time and they saved my life and showed me that life was worth living.”  I asked what unit she had been on.  The answer surprised me.  It was the in-patient psychiatric unit.  Then I learned where she is from.

She is Somalian. 

I was struck as I thought about it afterwards at how little I know, really, about Somalia. I know the basics.  I know it’s bad over there. But I have not taken it to the next level. I felt embarrassed when I admitted to myself that I didn’t even know where Somalia is in Africa. Or Ethiopia, the country of work-mates and where my daughter’s best friend is in the Peace Corps. 

I began obsessively studying a map of Africa; learning the geographical relationships between countries and places on this vast continent.  I felt ashamed at my ignorance but grateful for this encounter that propelled me on a mission to step outside my little world.

I googled madly.  “Somali Women;” “Somali Women’s Plight;” “Somali Civil War.” This is a glimpse of what I learned.

Somali women in refugee camps (for two decades now) have fled their homes and their lives, grieve dead husbands and children and parents and siblings, are starving, forced to endure poor hygiene and sanitation, subjected to sexual violence including being raped and sexually mutilated in front of their children (their attackers given absolute impunity as the powers that be consider rape a weapon of war).  They suffer trauma beyond our comprehension.  Grief and resignation is what one reporter described as the permanent look on the faces of these women. 

What had this woman standing next to me in the hall been through?  What had landed her in the hospital after finally escaping this horror, with no desire to continue living?

Under that burka was a woman who had likely loved, borne children, enjoyed the warm sun and the flowers and the sweet smells of salt air and spring.  A woman who, in another time and place, might have been a friend or a sister.

But that’s just it.  She IS a sister. And a daughter.  And a mother.   The sooner we start looking at our world, at each other, that way, the better we all will be. We are so much stronger when we work together and try to understand each other than we are when we fight or try to build ourselves up by putting each other down.  

A friend of mine emailed recently recommending a documentary called, I Am.  “The film’s message is that the human race is meant to be cooperative, not competitive, and if we don’t start working together – helping each other – no matter race, creed, country – we will go extinct.”

When we focus on our differences we become participants in the funneling of hatred and fear and blame towards people, symbols and places. We become pawns in a larger, very dangerous game.  Fuel for the fire.  Instead, we have to turn our thinking around from an “us and them” mentality.  A “we win – you lose” philosophy. 

Naïve?  Maybe.  An original thought?  No.   A little “kumbaya?” Perhaps. 
But that doesn’t mean it’s wrong.

We are all going to win. 
Or we are all going to lose.

It’s pretty much that simple.  And, unfortunately, that complex.