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Pastimes : ISOMAN AND HIS CAVE OF SOLITUDE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ISOMAN who wrote (84)12/15/1998 9:53:00 AM
From: ISOMAN  Respond to of 539
 
Beautiful, She Said

I never thought that I understood her. She always seemed so
far away from me. I loved her, of course. We shared mutual love
from the day I was born. I came into this world with a bashed
head and deformed features because of the hard labor my mother
had gone through. Family members and friends wrinkled their
noses at the disfigured baby I was. They all commented on how
much I looked like a beat-up football player. But no, not her.
Nana thought I was beautiful. Her eyes twinkled with splendor
and happiness at the ugly baby in her arms. Her first
granddaughter. Beautiful, she said.
Before final exams in my junior year of high school, she
died. Seven years ago, her doctors diagnosed Nana with
Alzheimer's disease. Seven years ago, our family became experts
on this disease as, slowly, we lost her.
She always spoke in fragmented sentences. As the years
passed, the words she spoke became fewer and fewer, until finally
she said nothing at all. We were lucky to get one occasional
word out of her. It was then our family knew she was near the
end.
About a week or so before she died, she lost the abilities
for her body to function at all, and the doctors decided to move
her to a hospice. A hospice. Where those who entered would
never come out.
I told my parents I wanted to see her. I had to see her.
My uncontrollable curiosity had taken a step above my gut-
wrenching fear.
My mother brought me to the hospice two days after my
request. My grandfather and two of my aunts were there as well,
but all hung back in the hallway as I entered Nana1s room. She
was sitting in a big, fluffy chair next to her bed, slouched
over, eyes shut, mouth numbly hanging open. The morphine was
keeping her asleep. My eyes darted around the room at the
windows, the flowers, and the way Nana looked. I was struggling
very hard to take it all in, knowing that this would be the last
time I ever saw her alive.
I slowly sat down across from her. I took her left hand and
held it in mine, brushing a stray lock of golden hair away from
her face. I just sat and stared, motionless, in front of her,
unable to feel anything. I opened my mouth to speak but nothing
came out. I could not get over how awful she looked sitting
there, helpless.
Then it happened. Her little hand wrapped around mine
tighter and tighter. Her voice began what sounded like a soft
howl. She seemed to be crying in pain. And then, she spoke.
"Jessica," Plain as day. My name. Mine. Out of 4
children, 2 son-in-laws, 1 daughter-in-law, and 6 grandchildren,
she knew it was me.
At that moment, it was like someone was showing a family
filmstrip in my head. I saw Nana at my baptizing. I saw her at
my fourteen dance recitals. I saw her bringing me roses and
beaming with pride. I saw her tap dancing on our kitchen floor.
I saw her pointing at her own wrinkled cheeks and telling me that
it was from her that I inherited my big dimples. I saw her
playing games with us grandkids while the other adults ate
Thanksgiving dinner. I saw her sitting with me in my living room
at Christmas time admiring our brightly decorated tree.
I then looked at her as she was...and I cried.
I knew she would never see my final senior dance recital. I
knew she would never see me cheer for another football game. I
knew she would never sit with me and admire our Christmas tree
again. I knew she would never see me go off to my senior prom.
I knew she would never see me graduate high school or college or
see me get married. And I knew she would never be there the day
my first child was born. This made tear after tear roll down my
face.
But above all, I cried because I finally knew how she had
felt the day I had been born. She had looked through what she
saw on the outside and looked to the inside and saw ... a life.
I slowly released her hand from mine and brushed away the
tears staining her cheeks, and mine. I stood, leaned over, and
kissed her.
"You look beautiful."
And with one long last look, I turned and left the hospice.