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  <title>domesticat.net</title>
  <subtitle>Much ado about the usual nothing.</subtitle>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/03/seek-and-ye-shall-find"/>
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  <updated>2008-03-19T11:53:46+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Seek and ye shall find</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/03/seek-and-ye-shall-find" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2003/03/seek-and-ye-shall-find</id>
    <published>2003-03-19T20:07:40+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-03-19T11:53:46+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="arkansas" />
    <category term="cancer diary" />
    <category term="family" />
    <category term="memories" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Death does not take reservations; it comes and goes of its own free will, leaving the living to tend to the resulting disruption.</p>
<p>I am still tending.</p>
<p>So it's been one year.  I can look at my watch and remember where I was.  A year ago by the tickings of this watch, I was at Colter's.  I showered.  I had been instructed to get some rest.  While I slept on Colter's bed, Jeff worked on Colter's computer.</p>
<p>The future hung over us, shadowy and low.  We knew my father's death was imminent; the oxygen saturation of his blood had begun to drop the day before.  Previously, his mask had provided him with eighty percent oxygen.  We knew that moving him to 100% oxygen would not save him - nothing would - but if it kept him comfortable, that is what we would do.</p>
<p>But - no.  That is not the way to remember.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Death does not take reservations; it comes and goes of its own free will, leaving the living to tend to the resulting disruption.</p>
<p>I am still tending.</p>
<p>So it's been one year.  I can look at my watch and remember where I was.  A year ago by the tickings of this watch, I was at Colter's.  I showered.  I had been instructed to get some rest.  While I slept on Colter's bed, Jeff worked on Colter's computer.</p>
<p>The future hung over us, shadowy and low.  We knew my father's death was imminent; the oxygen saturation of his blood had begun to drop the day before.  Previously, his mask had provided him with eighty percent oxygen.  We knew that moving him to 100% oxygen would not save him - nothing would - but if it kept him comfortable, that is what we would do.</p>
<p>But - no.  That is not the way to remember.</p>
<p>I speak about my father's death because I understand it better than his life, which always was - and always will be - a mystery to me.  I would regale you with stories about childhood times with my father, except that I remember almost none of them.  He worked swing shift for most of my life, and so my most clear memories are of the changing face of dinner.</p>
<p>When on midnight shift, he would be asleep when my mother and I arrived home from school.  The TV would speak in hushed tones while my mother cooked dinner.  She and I would eat our dinners at the normal time, and then she would prepare a plate for my father.  She would leave it in the microwave for him to find later that night.</p>
<p>When on first day shift (which we called "days"), he would have dinner with us.</p>
<p>When on the second day shift - or, as we called it, four-to-twelve - Mom declared dinner to be "Seek and ye shall find."  In other words:  your hands ain't broke, kid.</p>
<p>When Jeff and I married, the concept of a 'family dinner' was amusing and a bit foreign.  My family could be best described as a nominally-aligned coalition of autonomous states.  My father was alternately a late-night reading presence or someone whose sleep schedule needed quiet accommodation.  My mother was an impressively-dedicated teacher, whose nightly ritual of paper grading was shared with the cat.  My sister (much older than me) moved out before I was ten.</p>
<p>My dinner usually came served up with a book on the side.  I liked that.</p>
<p>We each had our own worlds, with our points of intersection, but for the most part we lived separate lives.  I met some of my father's work friends for the first time at the visitation after his death, names I had heard of for years but whose faces and handshakes I had never known.</p>
<p>He talked <em>about</em> us, it seems now, possibly more than he actually talked <em>with</em> us.</p>
<p>With that said, the process of commemoration becomes more difficult.  To do nothing but remember the manner of his death will not do; we are more than the manner of our passing.  What to do in its stead?  I do not know.  </p>
<p>Nevertheless, it has been a year, and whether or not I mark it, the winds of war seem prepared to mark it for me.  I stand unprepared for both war and paternal tribute, staring out of sunny windows that just this morning glared grey with thunderstorm and tornado warning.</p>
<p>Accept these words in lieu of the tribute I don't know how to write, and which I probably wouldn't publish if I did.  </p>
<p>Not everything needs to be said.  Sometimes a whisper just has to do.</p>
    ]]></content>
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