On February 13, 1998 a friend and co-worker passed on to wherever we go
after this life after a 16 month battle with lung cancer.
She had found a lump on her neck. She went to her family
doctor and he immediately knew something was wrong. The bottom line was
that she had cancer all through her body, so much so that it took
almost two months to trace back where the cancer had originated.
By
then it was almost Christmastime, and she started treatment. From the
first she knew the cancer was terminal but the hope was to prolong her
life.
She was a talented crafts person and spent her first Christmas with
cancer making the homemade gifts she loved to make, including for her teen-aged grandson and her co-workers: and that Christmas we got the
final homemade ornaments she made for us every year.
By that first February after her diagnosis she was no longer able to work.
Sometime that summer, she called me at work and invited me to a picnic
lunch. She drove down to her former office, picked me up, and took me
to a local park, where she unpacked a lovely picnic set, complete with
tiny salt and pepper shakers. She was having a good day. We had a
lovely lunch. She said she did not feel sorry for herself, that
although she had quit smoking years ago the diagnosis did not come as a
shock because of what her husband and she had loved to do-restore old
homes. During this work, she had been exposed to asbestos.
She lived in an old Victorian home, which she and her husband had restored.
At the time we picnicked, our office was falling apart. Due
to mismanagement, people were leaving, one after another. As summer passed into fall, the
last three of us from before this regional manager was hired quit.
One of us got another job right away. The other two of us, along with
our former office manager (another victim of the mismanagement), decided
we would visit our former co-worker and have lunch with her every week.
We did for several weeks, but she was getting weaker and weaker and
we stopped-although we kept in touch with her husband.
Her second Christmas was not filled with homemade gifts. Instead, we
went to her house (it was the first time I had been there) where her
husband gave us a tour. She tried to show us around but had to quit when
she couldn't catch her breath.
She was under hospice care.
In January she and her husband were watching the Winter Olympics ice
skating. She had fallen asleep on the couch but when he tried to wake
her, she would not rouse. He called Hospice, and they came over. They determined she had
suffered a stroke.
She never regained consciousness.
The Tuesday before she died, the three of us visited her bedside. She
lay on a bed in the living room, a radio nearby softly playing the
country music she loved. Medicine from a morphine pump dulled her pain. Her husband
told us that although it seemed like she was in a coma, she did
have some awareness. If we wanted to, we could talk to her and she
probably would understand, but would not be able to respond.
What do you say? What can you say? I spoke to her for a couple of minutes and said goodbye to her. I squeezed her hand.
I would love to imagine that she tried to squeeze it back.
On Saturday, February 14, I got "the" phone call saying she had passed the day before. My spouse was at work. My then young son was
going to a birthday party in a couple of hours and I did not want him
to know I was crying. I vacuumed the floor, silent tears running down
my face.
Her husband and her loved
each other deeply. I think she always expected him to "go" first but
that was not to be. She was only 56 years old.
At the funeral home, photos of her family and her artwork were placed near her coffin. At the church service, the family invited the three of us to go to the graveside with them, as if we were family. We declined as we felt the family should be together.
The three of us kept in some touch with her husband but finally, as these things go many times, we drifted apart. Her husband died several years ago. He had remarried and I hope that marriage was happy.
In our flood of 2006, I lost almost all of the homemade ornaments she had made for me. What I have left goes on our tree each year and I treasure each piece.
I still think of her every Valentine's Day.
Rest in peace.
Thinking of you.
ReplyDeletewww.rsrue.blogspot.com
...cancer takes people of all ages.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful tribute to your friend. Cancer sucks.
ReplyDeleteIt is so sad when we lose such a close and dear friend. You keep her alive with your memories and by writing an homage to a dear person who touched your heart. Thank you for sharing your bittrrsweet memories
ReplyDeleteA sad Valentine's Day recollection and, although I obviously didn't know her, I am sure she would love the fact that you remember her so vividly. Our loved ones are always alive in our memories.
ReplyDeleteHow very sad. It is good you remember her, though.
ReplyDeleteThat's very sad when someone leaves this world untimely, especially someone close - a family member. a friend, a neighbor.
ReplyDeleteThe least we could do is to keep them alive in our memory.
This is such a heartbreaking story. You are writing a good tribute to her.
ReplyDeleteSound like a lovely kind human. My she rest in peace.
ReplyDeleteThis was a beautiful touching tribute to your friend.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written.
ReplyDelete