Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Year's End II

Mom called Saturday morning, the day after the school was out. She asked me if I had finished my finals and that Grandma left at 11:15 local time. “Don’t worry,” she added, “we are going to bring the ash back, and put it right next to Grandpa’s.” 

“Ok, Mom.” I hung up the phone and crawled back to bed. We shut off the phone and lit a candle. 

I never thought that I wouldn’t be around when it happens. 

We shut out the world to mourn. Then we realized, it’d be Grandma’s wish that we go out and live. It has always been. 

Monday, I followed the routine and showed up in this office. “The doctor will see you now.”

The secretary led me into the office, where a picture of human anatomy hangs on the wall.

“Come in. How are we doing today? Oh have you read this?” he handed me an article in the newspaper, stating that medical doctors are part of the richest professions in this country. “Can you believe it? And me? I am also a doctor. But I am not making as much as they do! I am barely making half of what they make! (We are talking about 8000 euros a month! So around 4000 euros a month is not enough for you?!) The system is not fair towards psychologists I am telling you… anyway… how are we doing today?”

“Grandma left last Saturday.”

“Oh…” 

Let me guess, you didn’t say anything contained the word “condolence” because patients are supposed to be only subjects for you? Is that how you define “professional”? Did I hear you correctly, your reaction upon my news, had been, solely, “OH”?!

“You know I am glad that you signed up for that class I suggested.”

“I didn’t sign up.” (Do you ever look at your own notes or listen to your patients?)

“Oh. Eh… why?”

“Like I said last week, the schedule for the coming semester is not online yet, and I need to see when I have time outside of school, for other things.”

He stood up from the desk, and I said to myself: “if you are going to show me your fucking certificate again, for the 100th time, I am going to take that piece of paper and slap it you across your face with it.”

“See? Here is my certificate,” I wondered if he was suffering from Alzheimer. “I did a course and it cost me more than 300 euros!”

I am not a violent person, but I really wanted to slap him with it. I am bringing you around 90 euros an hour, and you are pushing it for twice a week. I am not doing it, because I have a life, and more than ever, I need to go out and live, not sitting here and counting your useless certificates and listening to you bitch about how much money you would like to make! Let me out! Let me out!

“We did some great exercises during the seminar, in order to obtain the certificate. For example, we spent 15 minutes with a grape. First of all, you don’t touch it, just look at it; then you touch it a bit, with one finger, afterwards with two, or three; before you put it between your teeth…”

My mind went blank after 30 seconds, while he went on and on and on about this fucking great grape that he had been in love with. 

“So, how does it improve my life?” I asked, noticing that he has stopped talking.

“It made everything slower. For example, when you cook, don’t talk to anyone, but concentrate on the things in your hand…”

“Listen, I do not cook; secondly, when WE cook together, we talk to each other, because that’s what people do when they are in a loving and satisfying relationship. People TALK to each other! Even when he is cooking for me, I am in the kitchen too, talking to him… because we are happy together!”

“It always surprises me that you have a functional relationship. But yeah, take that 6-week class I suggested. If this class were not good, that Institute wouldn’t have offered it.” The Doc. uttered.

Well, it always surprises me that you are working here, or the fact that being employed anywhere at all. 

“I just lost the most important woman in my life, facing financial and career crises, and all you can offer is a 6-week class from a new age-y institute with the argument that BECAUSE the course is from that institute, it can’t be wrong. Do I look stupid to you? Do you think I am 5 years old? You might as well tell me something is true because it says so in the Bible! I am gonna need a better argument than that!” 

Pause. Probably more uncomfortable for him than for me. 

“So, when can you come twice a week?”

“I don’t know.” I don’t even know if I want to be here at all, “I am waiting for the semester schedule to be put online. I will let you know though. I don’t have the luxury to make everything slower or to spend half an hour staring at two grapes every day. It takes me 3 hours every time I come here, and 6 hours a week isn’t anything I can afford in the near future.”

“But write to the institute and ask about that class!”

Has this become a religion for you? Do you have doubts in your own belief? If not, why would you try so desperately hard to convince others? If others said yes, it’d confirm your conviction isn’t it? You are not at peace either with yourself, so stop showing me your 300-euro certificate every time I come. 

“I am taking a break from all this next week. So we will see each other in 2 weeks. OK?” I stood up, as the session came to an end. 

It hasn’t stopped snowing for almost a week now. Grandma would have loved the snow. She told me that I had been born in the coldest winter of the century. It was the first time she had to go downstairs, filled buckets with snow, than melted it near fire to get water, for the pipes were completely frozen. She said that children survived the hardest winter were to be the strong ones; she said that she was never afraid of winter because she always knew where her heart would be.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Year's End




We hadn't that many snowy days in early Spring for years. Maybe the Spring didn't want to come. Tomorrow is the last day for the year of Dragon. We welcomed the youngest member in the family, but we didn't know, this might be last year for the oldest member of the family. This, is the first time, Grandma isn't sitting on the table with the rest of them, at New Year's Eve, arguing about how much salt and pepper should go into the filling, or laughing her head off about the clumsiness of Mom, or the fact that they should call me ...

            Mom wrote this morning, and asked me not to call. Grandma hasn't been conscious for a week now, the doctors said that they had done all they could. Mom said, that we should prepare for the worst; but the thing is, there is nothing to be done, all the perfect preparation in the world wouldn't change the course of the development, or our heartbreak. This is not how I want to it end!! Not at all!!

            I told them that I've gotten this rotten feeling in my stomach; I told them that Grandma should absolutely come with Mom last November; we told them that we would even apply for an official accompany from the embassy if Grandma feared long distance flight; we told them that SHE HAD TO COME THIS TIME! But no, Mom came alone, brought handmade presents from Grandma; and Grandma was brought to the hospital the day before Mom headed home, hasn't left the hospital since... We don't know if she ever will.

           I told them that if neither of these so called good sons would take the time to accompany her (and Mom); if anything happened before Grandma saw our life in our house with her own eyes, I would never forgive them. SO BE IT! I won't call them today, any of them, for the only one I want to talk to is still lying in the intensive care, and unconscious.

            "You both don't need to come," Mom said on the phone, "Grandma wouldn’t know if you were here, and we are afraid of phone calls. That terrible phone call from the hospital could hit any moment..."

            Don't worry, we are not going ... we can’t: I am in the middle of final exams (and flunked math already); we have to restart our careers again; there is still rent to be paid and checks to be sent...

            Huge heavy snow flakes are falling silently outside the window, but this is not how I want to it end!! Not at all!!

            I told Grandma that I would get her out; I told her that once my little chaotic life gains a bit stability, I would get her here; I told her that nothing in this world would ever ever stop me from spending more time with her during her senior years; I told her that I could provide things that all the money in the world can't buy, I told her that I would make her happy, WE would make her happy....

            The last time I talked to her was two days before her operation; and this is not how I want to it end!! Not at all!!

            "She IS happy, and content, for all the things you have done for her; she said that she was content all along, for you often called and talked to her; she said that you are her favorite child, and it was all worth it all the love she gave you. You ARE her favorite and she wants you to know it...." Mom told us.

            And yet, this is not good enough for ME. Grandma only saw me and my husband ONCE in the past 12 years. This shouldn't be the end, it can't be, because it doesn't make sense to me, because I left so that I can one day provide her a better place to live; because I am lighting up a candle for her every day, and I would light up a thousand candles for her if it helps, ten thousand?  What should I do? Just tell me what to do and I will do it.

            Mom brought two sweaters and two huge scarves a couple of months ago, handmade from Grandma, personally tailored for us. I would have preferred her personal presence, we all have. I am in panic every time the cell phone rings, ... all these "should"s and "could"s and "would have"s..., the tearful eyes that last time I saw her in the airport, before our home flight to Europe, and I promised: this wouldn't the last time, and I believed, that wouldn't be the last time: I still have so many things to tell you, and you said that you have so much to tell me too! What happens to these untold stories now? I could print out my words and post them on the streets, but I want YOU to hear them, directly from ME! I want to hold your hands when I tell them; I want to bring you tea and massage your back; I want to introduce my world to you, just you used to do for me 30 years ago; I have my own loving family now and I want you to see it, feel it and live with us…

            The last time I saw you, you showed me the prepaid shelf in the temple, right next to Grandpa’s ash. And you said calmly: “This is where I will be.”