Ten Years

Jun 30, 2011 by

Dear Mom,

 

You’ve been gone for ten years.

 

When you look at it on paper, 10 years sounds like a long time. A decade, double-digits, a reason for a high school reunion.  But when I close my eyes, ten years later, I’m immediately back in the ICU, listening to the hypnotic beeps of the monitors and the stifled sounds of the hallway, dizzy from the smell of sanitized hospital stuff and patients’ last breaths.  I am instantly transported back to your bedside with my head pounding as I concentrated on your every move.  I am again paralyzed with the fear of missing your last breath or the miraculous recovery I think I still held out for.  I remember how badly I had to pee.

 

There’s really no other way to describe the night you died but to say time stopped and my world shattered. We were with you until the end, when you finally succumbed to the fight that your body could no longer take. You were brave, you were scared, and you were beautiful.

 

The beeping, the smells, the stifled air, it was all too much. And I really, really had to pee. I think I sat there for 18 hours, maybe more, not flinching. I don’t remember. I wouldn’t leave. I couldn’t.

 

You were lucid, even funny, then very confused.  You talked to people who weren’t in the room and were nagged by a discomfort in your leg.  Slowly your body started to shut down. Christy eventually coaxed you to where you needed to go.  It took some time, as you didn’t want to leave.  Truthfully, I didn’t want you to leave either and I think you knew that.

 

Eventually, we all told you it was ok to say good-bye.  I told you to go. The words were almost impossible to form let alone say out loud. I sat motionless, watching you finally, gracefully go.

 

My world shattered. Time stopped.

I really had to pee.

 

I don’t like to think about you in that room and what it was like after you stopped breathing; after they disconnected that insufferable beeping monitor and the florescent lights that were too bright.   You looked yellow, but somehow, in your true manner, still very, very beautiful.

 

I kissed your cold forehead and I knew you were no longer in the room. You looked peaceful.  It’s absolutely true that when someone’s soul has left her body it is obvious. Yours had clearly, finally, moved on, and I felt some relief at that.

 

I don’t remember if I said anything more to you than: ‘I love you,’ because I’d never wanted to run away from anywhere so fast in my life.  But then again I still had to pee…

 

In ten years so much has happened and I have written to you every day, in my mind at least. This is to make up for the fact that we used to talk on the phone every day, sometimes three, four times a day, and now nothing, silence.  Since you don’t answer, I thought maybe if I started writing it down, you’d answer me in some other way.  At least I can hope.

Love,

Sara

Always smiling and joking. Our last visit to the Emergency Room - 2000

 

Next month in July marks 11 years since my mother, Susan, passed away from cancer. I’ve held on to this post for awhile, not sure whether or when to share it due to its personal nature. Today, felt right. It basically shares one of the reasons why I’m blogging and revisits that evening in the ICU. I’ve been reading Meaghan O’Rourke’s book, The Long Goodbye lately and have found it deeply moving and cathartic. I guess this is why I decided to post this ‘letter’ now.

With love,

Sara

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The Club – a documentary about motherless daughters

Feb 22, 2011 by

Whoa. There’s a documentary out there called The Club that looks long overdue to have been made.

‘The Club’ is a documentary-in-progress exploring the lives of several women around the world all bound by their shared experience of prematurely losing their mothers.

Carlye Rubin and Katie Green follow 5 women that lost their mothers before the age of 25 and discuss the impact. As Rosie O’Donnell says in the film, losing your mother is like being part of a club, one that you never want to join. I have always said that.

I think this will be an amazing film and I look forward to hearing when it gets released.  Here’s the preview from the Club’s website:

The Club Trailer from The Club on Vimeo.

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The Trip of a Lifetime

Feb 10, 2011 by

Mom and me - March 1993

In my junior and senior years of high school, we were required to complete a project for ‘intersession’, a 2-week period around spring break where you took an internship or completed an independent study instead of going to school.  The purpose was to give us a glimpse of the ‘real world’ and what possible careers lay ahead.  Personally, I think it was really to pad our college applications.

For my junior year, I did something very serious, I interned at a law office.  It looked good on my thin resumé. But in my senior year, most of us were waiting to hear back from colleges and there was no reason to do something just for the sake of looking good on paper. So my mom proposed we go to Europe, specifically Paris, Venice and Florence.

She wanted me to see Europe as she had at my age when she lived there for 3 years right after high school.  I jumped at the offer and pitched to the school that my intersession project would be a ‘photographic essay’ of Europe. I had no idea what a ‘photographic essay’ was, nor was I even remotely interested in photography at the time but they approved it anyway.

Room view at Hotel le Meurice, 1st arrondissement, Paris

It was the trip of a lifetime with just me and my mom.

I have no idea how she paid for it or got us the reservations and tickets that she did. Looking back now, she must have been planning for months and must have called in every favor she had owed to her.  The itinerary was packed and I was totally clueless as to the amount of effort that must have taken.

Il Latini restaurant - Florence, Italy

We stayed at the best five-star hotels, ate incredible gourmet meals and saw every cathedral and piece of art possible.  We shared incredible experiences: were guests at a private opera dinner, attended a fashion show at the Louvre in Paris, and even found ourselves invited to a private classical concert at Vivaldi’s church in Venice.  Mom had a way of just making things happen, that was part of her magic.

As opulent and glamorous as this trip was, that was not what made this the trip of a lifetime. What made it so special was the time we spent together, exploring, sharing and laughing.

One of my favorite memories from that trip didn’t even happen in Europe. It was actually the 3 days we spent snowed-in back in New York, waiting for the airports to reopen so we could leave.  We did nothing but watch Brideshead Revisited, make snow muffins and give ourselves facials, together.

This trip marked the beginning of a special turn in our relationship. We had started to evolve from being mother and daughter to being real friends and I got to know her as a person and not just as my mom.  She was smart, funny, and beautiful.  She was vulnerable and imperfect – she was human.  I got to know her for who she was and she confided in me who she thought she was going to be.  When she passed away seven years later, I lost not only my mom, but also my best friend.  Today, I still grieve for them both.

I hope to be able to give my kids an amazing experience like a trip to Europe to see all the beautiful things there, to give them a trip of a lifetime. At the moment, it’s not feasible.  In the meantime, I will invest in spending time with them and hope that they too will one day count on me, not just as Mom, but also as a friend.

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