I am sharing things very few people know. I have held
these thoughts and memories very close to me over the past 5 years and only
shared bits and pieces to various close friends and family. I wonder if I am
going to be sharing things I will be judged for. I worry that I will lose
friends or family over this. However, after much prayer I feel that for me I
must get these things out of my head. Because this is a hard topic for me to
write about, I will be covering it in a few parts. I don't know how long each
part will be. I will know in my heart when it's time to start and stop each one….
On 8/24/2007 my
brother, Tony, died. It was a Friday evening. I'd been with him and my mom for
the last 48 hours in his one bedroom apartment. I didn't go to work, didn't go
home to my boyfriend. Just stayed where I needed to be.
Around noon Tony
started making this noise. I am not sure I can explain it to you. The hospice
nurse called it the "death rattle". To me it sounded like he was in
pain, it was loud and has haunted me in my sleep ever since. I was allowed to
push his morphine drip every 15 minutes. I did, I didn't want him to be in
pain. That was always my fear, that he was in pain and I couldn't alleviate it for him.
The hospice nurse
instructed me to crush a pill up on a teaspoon, add two or three drops of water and give it to him. He'd stopped speaking the day before and wasn't eating or drinking anymore. It wouldn't make the sound go away, but it would quiet it down a bit. The pill
was an anti-anxiety, calming med. I remember looking into his eyes and begging
him to open his mouth so that I could help him. He did because he trusted me. I told him to swallow and he did. I don't know if he understood why I was doing it, but I hope so. About 30 minutes later he calmed. He was still breathing "funny", not
quite a gasp but not a full breath, it was shallow and persistent. The noise went from ringing through the apartment to only being heard if you were in the same room as he was in.
Mom and I talked to
him, mom more than I, through out the day. I was in denial. I didn't want this to happen. I didn't
want to be there with him, but knew I didn't want to be any where else. I
kissed him a few times through out the day and made sure the morphine was being
used. I lay my head next to his and whispered it was okay to go be with Grandpa, to find my dogs and love on them. I told him I'd be
okay. I lied.
I was laying on the
floor of his living room looking at a mail-order catalog (funny how certain
details never leave your memory). He was in the hospital bed facing the wall,
with the window to his left. Mom was sitting on the couch by me when suddenly
she got up and went to stand on his right side. She called my name twice… I
stood up because the tone was one I'd never heard before. In that moment I
noticed two things, the room had grown quite and I was shaking. I remember
looking at my mom and watching tears stream down her cheeks. She held her
finger to her mouth making sure I understood to keep quiet. I nodded and the
tears started to fall.
The day had been
overcast with little pops of sunlight on and off. Suddenly a beam of sun hit
the wall my brother was looking at, it was beautiful. I watched Tony smile so big and bright and as his mouth formed the word "Grandpa" his eyes lit up. I
covered my mouth with both my hands so not to scream. I felt the scream choking
me, tearing at me to be let out. He took one last breath and died. In those two minutes, my world as I knew
it ended.
I went around the head of the hospital bed and in to my mother's arms. We cried and shook. She let go of me to call my
dad to tell him his son had passed away. It was the worst call she's ever had
to make.
As she talked with
dad she went in to the small kitchen to be alone. I don't know if she saw me or not, but I
went back to the left side of Tony's bed and crawled in next to his body. I
hadn't been able to hug my brother for a month because every touch hurt him. I
laid there holding him and bawling. I ran my fingers through his beard over and
over again. I told him I loved him. I wiped my tears on his blanket. I promised
I'd never forget him. I kept telling him to come back. I told him I didn't know
how to live without him. I told him he couldn't leave me. I begged him to
breath again….
~ The Composer
Thank you so much for sharing such a personal and painful experience. Love and healing thoughts being sent your way. Your brother's physical self may be gone, but while he's in your heart and your thoughts he lives on forever, with you, until the day, hopefully in the far distance, where you are reunited.
ReplyDeleteI truly believe he is watching over you and your children, and feels the love you have for him.
My goodness...
ReplyDelete