Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
realizing that I was doing too much for Jeff—and not letting
him struggle through himself.” The next morning, she refused
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to brush my father’s teeth and walked away after laying out his
clothes. He brushed his teeth sulkily and, after what he told us
was “a tremendous struggle,” got himself dressed.
Over tea at the kitchen table a couple of days before my
flight left, my mother and I talked idly, as if my father weren’t
there, about what I would do if she died first. Would I move my
father to The Redwoods or try to keep him somehow in Middle-
town, perhaps with me or a hired caregiver? Worriedly he asked
us, “What are you talking about?”
I was tongue-tied in matters of the heart. I sometimes felt
like the little boy in Hans Christian Andersen’s
Snow Queen,
whose heart turned to ice after it was pierced by a shard from a
mirror that emphasized a critical and spiteful view of the world.
I liked to go at things sideways, quoting the morning paper, or
poetry, or a self-help book.
But my father could no longer understand long strings of sen-
tences.
I caught my breath. I was about to make a vow more deep
and true than the wedding vows I took in my thirties and in my
forties disavowed.
“If Val dies,” I said slowly, looking directly at him and calling
my mother by her first name, “I will take care of you.”
My mother never returned to the caregiver support group. She
couldn’t spare the time, she said. Half a century after coming to
America, she remained a stranger in a strange land. She never
understood why my two brothers and I liked baring our lives
to people to whom we’d never been introduced. I called my
brother Jonathan and vented, but I didn’t press him to go east,
at least not as hard as we both would later wish. My friends
on the West Coast made all the right noises of sympathy, but
few had ever met my parents, and none could take my father
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katy butler
to the movies and give my mother a break. I thought of going
behind her proud back and asking more of my father’s former
colleagues to take my father out to lunch regularly, but I was
afraid she would find out.
At night I worried about her agony and my father’s stasis. In
the daytime I worked the Rolodex I’d assembled in a decade
of reporting on health and human behavior, beating a trail to
a geriatric social worker in Middletown and a retired doctor
in West Hartford who consulted with families facing medical
catastrophes. I missed work deadlines and had trouble com-
ing up with bright new story ideas for magazines. My income
dropped in half.
My parents went to the social worker and didn’t think much
of him. The catastrophe doctor came to the house and suggested
my father get involved in regular water aerobics: the longer he
stayed physically independent, the doctor told my mother, the
longer she could keep my father out of a nursing home. My
mother nodded, signed the check for two hundred dollars,
closed the door, and never took my father to the pool. She was
too overwhelmed, it seemed, by the day-to-day. So I flew back to
Middletown again, and that is how I found myself sitting on my
meditation bench in the midsummer of 2002 with my parents
still stuck together with glue, my father stripped of his wallet and
watch, and my mother slapping at a fly with her flip-flop.
After breakfast, I drove my father to the Red Cross office down-
town and filled out the application form for the free paratransit
van ride service , cramming the lines with the list of his myriad
disabilities. When we got home, I asked my mother for his Wes-
leyan ID and wallet—to my quiet surprise, she handed it over
without resistance—and drove him to the Wesleyan pool, where
I helped him show his ID to the attendant. Once inside, I swam
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laps while he strenuously pumped his knees up and down in the
water at the shallow end, doing the physical therapy exercises
he’d been taught in rehabilitation.
On Monday and Tuesday, I got the Red Cross van to pick us
both up at home and take us both to the pool. On Wednesday and
Thursday, I put my father on the van by himself, drove to the pool
to meet him, swam with him, put him back on the van, and met
him back home. In his short-sleeved shirt, carrying his swimsuit
in a drawstring bag, he looked like a little boy coming home from
day camp, and I felt a wave of motherly, protective tenderness.
With the excuse that he needed to be on time for the van,
I drove him to Pelton’s Drugstore on Main Street and bought
him a waterproof Timex with a black woven plastic band, to
replace the stainless steel one my mother had taken away. The
next Monday, as I swam my laps and he did his water-walking,
he looked over the string of floats and said, in a burst of elo-
quence—he often spoke better when my mother wasn’t there—
“You know, this is something I could really come to enjoy.” He
looked at his watch. “It’s so nice having a watch.”
That moment was more important to me than most of the
articles I’d ever written, more valuable than the awards on my
bookshelf and the hunk of Lucite engraved with my name. My
self-confidence took a leap, and so did my capacity for love.
By the time I’d packed to leave one midsummer morning, my
father was taking the van to the pool three mornings a week, doing
his water aerobics on his own, and enlisting random strangers in
the locker room to help him put on his shirt. One tiny, mundane,
nontechnological intervention—water aerobics—had set a chain
of good things in motion, helping him construct a life of small
but real independent pleasures. It wasn’t a life I’d have wanted to
prolong unnaturally had it been mine, but it was his own.
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katy butler
The day my plane left, my mother’s eyes filled with tears and
she told me she didn’t want me to go—a first. After years of com-
petitive jousting, we’d finally worked together as a team. “If only
you lived closer,” she said, stroking my hand at the kitchen table.
“If only you lived an hour and a half away. If only you lived in
Boston.”
I’d wanted to hear her speak like this—the softness, the
need, the appreciation—for much of my life. For a moment I
wished I could stay.
For fifty years I’d watched her take on tasks that over-
whelmed me. Nothing had stopped her—not leaving everyone
she’d known and loved in South Africa, in a doomed society
where African servants brought tea trays to the bedroom door
each morning; not raising three children in postwar Britain with
a one-armed husband who couldn’t change a diaper; not arriv-
ing almost friendless on the docks of New York in 1957 with a
couple of trunks and one good blue wool Jaeger suit.
In the first mid-century modern house she and my father
built overlooking a lake in the suburbs of Boston, she’d painted
the front door turquoise and in the long window beside it hung
strings of orange-juice-can lids strung from nylon fishing lines.
The disks caught the light like glittering golden scales: a work of
art, ingenious, and practically free. She stepped back for a look,
arms akimbo, with a paint smudge on one cheek and a blonde
tendril falling from her French twist, and sang her favorite line
from
Annie Get Your Gun
: “Anything you can do, I can do bet-
ter! I can do anything better than you!”
Decades later, I still felt like a clumsy teenager in her presence.
And now that teenager was supposed to become her parents’ par-
ent. I stroked my mother’s hand, told her that families were never
meant to live this far apart, and went upstairs to get my bag.
*
*
*
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In California a few weeks later, I got a letter of thanks from a
man who, much to my surprise, could think, read, and write
even though he could barely speak.
“Not only did you do what you said you were going to do,
but you did it with great panache, which the French claim they
have lots of,” said my father , in a letter he’d probably labored
over for hours on his computer, his written eloquence utterly and
amazingly at odds with the smiling, inarticulate man I’d kissed
good-bye at the airport near Hartford. Although the stroke had
blasted his capacity for understanding and articulating spoken
language, it had apparently spared places in his brain, highly
developed thanks to decades of academic work, where neurons
process visual data and are at least partly responsible for the abil-
ity to read and write.
“One of those ways was your ingenious devices for achieving
things like the organizing of the swimming,” his letter went on.
“The drivers were touched by your familiarity. You were never at
a loss for a plan when something went wrong. There was a sad-
ness in your leaving which could not be avoided. You made your
Mother and me very sad, but also very proud. We left the airport
in a strange but wonderful mood. So you did what you had to do
without causing any fuss. So my darling, that is what I want to
say. All my love to you. If I have been guilty in the past of being
ungrateful, then I must try to make it good.”
Below the printed text, in a tangle of spidery lines, barely
decipherable, my father had written his first name.
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In the fall of 2002, my father quietly turned eighty with no
particular celebration beyond a handwritten note from my
mother and a letter from me. With the doggedness that is part
of his legacy to me, he’d settled for little victories and accepted
losses. In the year since the stroke, he’d learned again how to
fasten his belt and to comb his own hair, despite his now-limited
reach, with a special long-handled comb I’d ordered from a dis-
ability catalog—against my mother’s wishes: she hated the way
it screamed “handicap.” Three times a week he walked to the
pool to do his water exercises, slightly dragging one foot—my
mother had canceled the Red Cross van because it sometimes
brought him home late after leaving off other passengers in a
neighboring town. Twice a month, his former colleague Richard
Adelstein took him to lunch, doing most of the talking while
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my father did most of the listening. With encouragement from
Angela, his speech therapist, he set to work on an autobiogra-
phy. But the gains were slowing, as the rehabilitation center
brochure had said they would. He was settling in at a new base-
line—with the memories, mind, and reading comprehension of
a highly educated eighty-year-old; the spoken speech of a four-
or five-year-old; and the physical dependence of a boy of six.
I spent Thanksgiving of 2002 in western Massachusetts with
Brian, his sister Ann and her family, and Brian’s eighty-seven-
year-old father John. John had advanced arthritis and had suf-
fered a minor stroke; because he needed a walker to get around
the house and a stair glide to go up stairs, he’d vacated his
house in Queens and moved in with his daughter’s family. (Four
months later we would fly east for his funeral.) After spending a
week caring for him while Ann and her husband took a vacation,
Brian and I drove to Middletown, where I introduced him to my
parents for the first time.
I was afraid they’d think he wasn’t good enough for me, and
to tell the truth, I had my doubts. He wore 49ers sweatshirts
and baseball caps, made his living as a medical salesman, and
sometimes said things like “it’s raining cats and buckets” or “the
candidate didn’t pass the mustard.” His first forays into connect-
ing with my parents hadn’t gone well. When he told my mother
over the phone how wonderful her daughter was, she’d said,
“Well, she’s a handful.” When, at a family lunch in a restaurant,
he’d asked my father for permission to marry me, my father had
grinned, shaken his head, and said—and I will never know to
the end of my days whether he was toying with Brian or saying
an uncomfortable, stroke-freed truth—“You’re just not suitable!”
I needn’t have worried. My father took Brian on a tour of the
Wesleyan campus, just the two of them, and in the end neither
he nor my mother could resist Brian’s persistent goodwill. Only
after their deaths would I learn, from reading the enthusiastic
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