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Grief

Tears on My Pillow

 

It could never go on forever.

 

Never does.

 

Not life. Not happiness. Not this. Not any one friendship.

 

Me?

 

I’m thinking this, only days after watching Bruce Springsteen sing elegiacally in Kansas City of his own city — by intimation, by extension, of his friendship with the dead Clarence Clemons — of a city, their city back then, of Clarence, lost now, of their friendship, their love, this, theirs, now, a city of ruins.

 

The Boss then slow-stepping sideways into lights lighting the far corner of the stage that had so long been the Big Man’s.

 

“Now, there’s tears on the pillow,” Bruce, so haunted himself, went on to sing, “…you took my heart when you left/ without your sweet kiss/ my soul is lost, my friend.”

 

And me, the palliative doc, watching, listening, feeling, hearing in Springsteen’s voice, seeing in his shadow, itself shadowing a cone of light, the ghost of one friendship past, the ghosts of life itself.

 

Bruce, all at once, without the friend of his life.

 

Me, counting the loss of so many lives in my life.

 

My mother. My father.

 

Just this week a much-loved uncle. And before, aunts, uncles, grandparents. Friends, too. And only this past weekend, yet another patient.

 

Call him Jim.

 

Just 50.

 

Wife, three kids, the youngest, a daughter, only a girl, herself just 11.

 

Beautiful farm, our outpatient nurse-practitioner had told me.

 

A house Jim had himself built.

 

His whole life, for all he knew, for all any of us ever know, ahead of him.

 

Only then, a year ago, at another time of thanks, to find himself ill, to find himself losing weight. Only weeks later, only days after a new year suddenly made unhappy, a pathologist telling the tale: cancer, and mere months later, by CT, cancer…cancer everywhere.

 

Jim’s father had died at 44.

 

Jim himself explaining that he, young then, had felt robbed by his dad’s death, only now, tears flowing, to have death thieve from his own children their chance to have their own dad there.

 

His college-aged daughter all too soon graduating without him at graduation. A son, in high school, no dad to see him through high school to college, to marriage, to grandchildren. That little girl, herself with her whole life ahead of her, only knowing her dad this long, these few 11 years.

 

“My dad is going to die,” that little girl had told our social worker some few weeks ago.

 

My own brother was himself 11 when our mother died of breast cancer, me then all but 30.

 

To this day, I cannot know what Patrick experienced then at 11.

 

What I remember, these 31 years later, is Patrick making our mom laugh, often over nothing, she so sick, he coming in from school, his smile, whatever words, her face all at once alit, until one day, one June, the light that had been our mother went out.

 

And after that, Karen and I making Patrick, my brother, our son.

 

And now little Maria, her dad gone.

 

Her big sister away at college. Her older brother coping as best he himself can. Their mom, the widow she could never have imagined herself being, certainly not now, never this young.

 

And me, all these years after my own mother’s death, often in those years contemplating what that had meant to Patrick back then, now thinking the same, wondering what thoughts now darken Maria’s thoughts these few days after her dad’s death.

 

And what would I, were I with Maria, tell her tonight…

 

Tell her that her life might be still be life; may yet be the life her dad would have wished for her; that some day, not any day soon, she may yet get through a day without thinking of her dad, of this, her loss…

 

Maria, only then, like me, these 31 years after I lost my mother, 18 after saying goodbye to my father, remembering…

 

Remembering what was.

 

All that love suddenly lost. Maria knowing, in the end, what I already know, that there is no end to this, this grief, even when life itself ends.

 

Back at Jim’s farm, his wife, their children, this week look out to the evening trees.

 

And me here this evening, not so many miles from that farm, wishing that family sweet veils of mercy, those of which Bruce sang in that same song, those veils drifting through those same evening trees. Bruce’s next question, as for me once, for my brother, too, for Jim’s wife, for his children, the question that is now, has always been…

 

“Now, tell me how do I begin again?”

 

 

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Encourage the Struggling Providers

What do we do when our lives are so full of suffering that we just cannot hear about it any more? As palliative care providers, it is our job to join with patients and their families in their agony and sadness. We do this several times a day, every day. But what happens to us and our work when we have had our fill? Read the rest of this entry »

Seeing Your Doctor Tear Up

End-of-life care specialists learn to deal with the emotions that come along with our job in different ways. Many of our habits are a reflection of what was modeled to us in medical school, and our own underlying belief system. Read the rest of this entry »

After

After It comes to this, doesn’t it? Read the rest of this entry »

Memorial Day

.......the song was inspired by The Book of Ecclesiastes. ...A time to die... We seem to have forgotten. Read the rest of this entry »

Memorial Day: Flowers from yesteryears

A woman from the American Legion was sitting in front of the post office selling tissue paper flowers. I placed a donation in the box and picked a flower. Read the rest of this entry »

JPM Honors All Mothers Worldwide: Happy Mother’s Day

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Preparation for End-of-Life Encounters: Guest Post by Virginia Seno, PhD., RN

Most people wish that they knew what to say and do, and how to be when approaching dying, death and grief. Because we’re uncomfortable and unprepared for end-of-life encounters, we either stay away, say and do things that don’t help; or act in ways that are neither becoming nor helpful to the people about whom we care. What if you did know what to say, what to do and how to be in end-of-life encounters? Read the rest of this entry »

American Board of Internal Medicine releases new MOC module on Hospice and Palliative Medicine

We have achieved a huge milestone for palliative care. Earn 10 MOC credits by completing of the new ABIM Hospice and Palliative Medicine Self Evaluation Module! This module consists of 25 multiple choice questions, rationale for the answer choices for each question and a set of references. Read the rest of this entry »

Does preparing for, and witnessing a ‘good death’ make the grieving process easier?

We have lots of losses before death actually occurs. Grief starts with loss. Read the rest of this entry »

The Experience of Loss

These images are from a series of prints completed during the months following the death of my father. He became very ill very quickly. It was a difficult time. The evaluation and treatment did not make sense to me. When I became aware of his illness, I began Read the rest of this entry »
Can We Talk?
Watch and share this five minute video about the need for prophylactic end-of-life conversations. Laura Heldebrand, an ICU nurse tells her mother's story.
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