Like many families, ours has a policy of alternating
holidays. Some years we celebrate Thanksgiving with Pam’s side of the family
and Christmas with mine. Then, the next year it flips. This year Thanksgiving
will be a Dunnevant affair. Patrick will be home; Jon will be here, all five of
us together, which in and of itself, makes for a special day. But in addition
to my five, there will be twenty others, and this year we will all be gathering
at the smallest house in the clan.
Dad doesn’t travel well anymore. His safety and
comfort dictate that Thanksgiving will have to be at his place. To accommodate twenty
five people for a sit down dinner will require a herculean effort and a space
utilization plan which will be the envy of NASA. There are only three usable
rooms, and all three are filled with bulky furniture, ill-designed for hosting
twenty five of anything, much less people. There is a porch, and a large yard,
and if the weather is nice, I plan on spending a lot of time outside. If it’s
pouring down rain, well…we will discover what Noah must have felt like. But,
you have to understand, my Dad is worth it.
Lately, it’s been a struggle for him. Next month he
will turn 89. He is increasingly unsteady, falls a lot, and has difficulty with
almost every activity of daily living you can think of. On Thursday nights and
some Sundays, I’ve been helping him with his shower. Each week he struggles
along without complaint, ever gracious, ever thankful for every single thing we
do for him.
Sometimes it’s hard to watch. Sometimes anger stirs
inside of me when I see how hard his life has become. The anger always
surprises me. My Dad has lived an amazing life full of great accomplishment. In
the twilight of his life he is surrounded by a loving family, and a world full
of friends and admirers. His great faith and gentle spirit are the stuff of legend
to those who know him. And yet, when I watch him struggle with his failing
body, when I watch the tedious effort it requires for him to do even the most
simple task, I fight against the anger.
So, this year for Thanksgiving, twenty-five of us
with cram ourselves into his tiny house because we are thankful for him. He
will eat everything on his plate. His grandchildren and great grandchildren
will hug him, and he will smile and laugh at the little ones. We will miss Mom,
but none of us will miss her as much as Dad will. Still, there will be no
complaining, no whining from my father, and it will be this amazing strength,
this resignation, this acceptance of life as it is rather than how he wishes it
to be, that will force me to let go of my anger.
I hope one day to become half the man that my father
is.
He is a special friend and wonderful man of faith. The three days in hospital after my stroke my mind doesn't hold all the memories, but I do remember the sweet visits of your dad. He was so faithful and encouraging and I appreciate him.
ReplyDeleteThank you Mary for your kind words. Dad had a gift when it came to visiting with the sick. he loved to do it and was amazing at it.
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