(My family when we were young)
I've been blogging about child loss. This week's focus will be on a different kind of loss. A few years ago, my vibrant, hard-working father started to fade. The doctor diagnosed him with senility. He could no longer work as he had. He couldn't drive as he always had. He couldn't learn or remember. As he walked away from his last job and mourned the loss of his license, he still tried to function and did a pretty good job. But as the years passed, he became less and less eager to get out and about. He'd go to movies then return to his bed, his TV, and his beloved little Pom-poo (Pomeranian poodle) we brought him and that he loved with all of his heart.
(At the Bear Lake Beach, camping with Mom, Dad, our Pomeranian, and Dad's dog.)
(Flying away for vacation)
All of his life, he longed to see Disneyland, but they never could afford it when he was young, and then through his first wife plus four kids, his brief second marriage, and his marriage with seven kids to my mom, he never could afford it. So we, two of his daughters and our families and one of his sons and his family, took him to California. We helped my elderly parents pay for Disneyland and their hotel. We surrounded him with love as we celebrated his life and 78th birthday to come, doing just what he wanted to do.
(Dad enjoying Disney with us.)
He only did California Adventure, Disneyland, a beach, and church while there, spending the rest of the time in bed. He fell on the slick floors of the hotel a couple of times. But he came back okay. We got him home. He and Mom drove up to my brother's house to pick up his beloved Pom-poo. Mom went out for a few minutes, then she came back in to find him speaking incomprehensibly, in a way that seemed to indicate he'd just had a stroke.
Over the last several days, he's been tested and prodded as all family that could rushed to visit, including three kids and some grandkids from his previous marriage. We have started to pull together to support him. It turns out it wasn't a stroke but possibly a seizure, though we're still not sure.
I miss him. I miss my daddy and wish I'd hugged him a little more, talked to him a little more often, just given him more of myself. I know when he leaves here, he'll go see my brother, who he loved fiercely and who died the month before Alli did. I know his mother and several other family members are waiting to embrace his return. But in the meantime, we'll do the best we can for him. I just wish we could do more.