Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2014

My Father's Passing: First Thoughts


This is not the longer essay I’m writing on this. This is just sort of an interim explanation. More like a small garden in which to display some first thoughts.

“My dad died.”

It’s a phrase that should mean something. It’s a tree that should have deep roots, that should tear the soil in the action of saying it. There’s a social transaction in the phrase. The sayer can utter it and the receiver acknowledges it and tries to suss out the okayness of the sayer. Death has weight and we pass the heft of it back and forth between us as if sharing it will lessen it, will lighten what we can’t hold onto. And yet-

The phrase is empty for me. And I wish it wasn’t.

My mom and dad split when I was 3. He was an off and on again presence in my life. A birthday present sender, a forced phone conversation. Every few years I saw him in real life. The acceleration of adolescence put him at a disadvantage. By the time he tried to get to know the new me, I was already onto the next phase. It was a losing battle. Neither he nor I were ever great at correspondence or really thinking of people outside of ourselves.

The last time we talked was an accidental misdial on my phone six years ago. The last time we saw each other was a decade ago. By then, Candace and I were adults and we’d let go of the father concept. I’m sure he wanted something. But he was either too proud to say it or too hopeless it could be recovered. Either way, I was over it.

And then he died. On July 31st, my sister texted me that she had to talk. I was worried that something was wrong with her new baby. I called her. She said, “Jimmy died.” That’s how far from father he was. Candace gave up on calling him ‘dad’ years ago.   called him that still mostly because it was some anchor I’d left out in some harbor I thought I’d revisit someday. But someday is gone now.

I didn’t even know how old he was until I saw his obituary today. I scribbled in a fake birthdate for him on my marriage certificate. Probably means Val and I aren’t really married. Oops. 

I didn’t know if he was living alone or remarried. I didn’t know he was in bad health. I didn’t know he had diabetes. I didn’t know if he had friends. I didn’t know if he was happy. If no one had told me he’d died, I wouldn’t have wondered if he was alive or not. It might have been decades before I found out.

We were that far apart. And now we are much farther.

I’m not sad that he’s dead exactly. I didn’t feel anything when my sister told me. I’m more sad for the possibilities. For what we missed. The absence of a father is a robbery I’ve dealt with my whole life. A missing piece of my psyche maybe. It feels metaphorically like a cliff behind my right foot, a place where I could never rely on footing.

Even this chance has been taken from me. I don’t get to feel this experience deeply. I don’t get to miss someone and count the days until we meet again on the other side. I’m sure we will. But it won’t be a reunion. It’ll be like running into your professor at the grocery store. Maybe we’ll become friends then. I’m a friendly guy. I don’t hold grudges. Another thing he never got to learn.

I'm, in all sense of the word, 'okay'. At some point, I'll say to someone, when they ask about my dad, that he's dead. And they'll feel sympathy for me, assuming that we were close, that I felt great pain at his loss and I'll have to decide whether or not to correct them. And I probably won't. I'll probably just let them believe I've suffered life's inevitable tragedy. And that it felt and looked just like theirs.

But it didn’t. And I regret that. For me and my sister.

Safe journeys, dad. 



- Shamus

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Reverse Bucket List


It's New Year's Resolution time and that means it's time to make lists of crap we will be passionate about for a brief period of time.

Instead of resolutions, I'm going to make a reverse bucket list.  For those of you who don't know what a bucket list is, it's a list of all the things you think you need to do before you die.  If you've ever made a bucket list, first off, why are you such a death obsessed psycho? Second, why can't you just let your life flow naturally, taking experiences as they come or as you pursue them?  Third, that movie The Bucket List sucked.  I already saw that movie and it was called Space Cowboys and it was way better because it was in space.

So a Reverse Bucket List is a list of things you NEVER EVER IN YOUR WHOLE LIFE WANT TO DO OR HAVE HAPPEN TO YOU.

Valerie and I both did this.  You should check out her list. VALERIE's Reverse Bucket List

JAMES BEST'S REVERSE BUCKET LIST

I Never Want To:

1. Watch Valerie fall out of a hot air balloon just past my grasp as I scream, "NOOOOOOOOO!!!"

2.  Be caught making fun of a T-Rex. By a T-Rex.

3.  Get gut shot out in the desert and be left by bad cowboys to die.

4.  Live through an ice cream shortage.

5.  Be forced by unforeseen future circumstances to have to hunt bunnies and kitties for food.



6.  Spend a night alone with a moo cow in a doorless, windowless room.

7.  Watch anything starring Miley Cyrus.

8.  Eat something living that is eating me at the same time.

9.  Take a road trip with the radio stuck on the Top 40s Station.

10.  Learn what the "that" is in the lyric "I would do anything for love but I won't do that".

11.  Have to pry live lobster claws off of my face or private parts.

12.  Attend any concert by any teen or child performer on the Disney channel.

13.  Ever be in the same country as this bug.



14.  Break down next to a cornfield in the middle of the night and walk through the corn to the farmhouse.

15.  Have to be in a war and be responsible for war-like activities.

16.  Pull a tapeworm out of my mouth or butt.

17.  Be awake for any kind of surgery where I'm going to see my own flesh meat.

18.  Find out that I, as I suspected, did not fit in very well at prison.

19.  Time travel to a time before deodorant or milkshakes.

20.  Discover I'm a terrible shot during a zombie apocalypse.

21.  Have some sort of nightmare surprise party where all my ex-girlfriends are waiting to tell Valerie how terrible I was to them.

22.  Be cursed to wear only European styles for the rest of my life.

23.  Somehow make it to the Star Wars universe and have Yoda tell me I have absolutely no Jedi aptitude. (There was so much sadness in my fingers as I wrote that.)



24.  Instead of a werewolf become a were-something that sucks.  Like a were-donkey.  Or a were-Michael Bay.

25.  Be in an eating contest of black licorice.

26.  Have my life turned into a movie and then find out it sucked.

27.  Wake up in some nightmare world where I have to play team sports everyday.

28.  Have the recipe to Coca-Cola destroyed or forgotten.

29.  Wake up and find out the only thing playing on tv for the rest of time is Two and a Half Men and Everybody Loves Raymond.

30.  Find out all my suspicions about horses being dirty murder hell creatures who just want to chomp off my mister parts is totally true.  In the most literal way.

31.  Have my whole life narrated in my head by Gilbert Gottfried.

32.  Live in some sort of police state where chocolate and peanut butter could not come together in holy matrimony like God intended.

33.  Die from anything I could get in the game Oregon Trail.





Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Day 22 - The Suburbs




I don't know where this comes from. I think I was listening to "The Suburbs" by Arcade Fire. And I wrote these first two lines and then thought they were stupid and then went to write a poem about a funeral which I got bored of and came back to these two lines. The whole poem was sort of a surprise and fun to write. But suddenly my trial version of Word ran out. And I couldn't type it.

So I rallied Aaron, "To the internet cafe! I need to renew Word!" And here we are. So I typed it here. It's definitely my humor. Tomorrow is my last day in Canada. If I have time or wherewithal, I'll post another poem or two today or tomorrow.


Everyone is the Same and Everyone Likes It

Sure, the suburbs are barnacling the Earth
I’m not saying they don’t.
It’s just that I lived okay,
safe in shadows of optimally placed trees,
biking down double sized avenues
to a friend in a house that looked
just like your house. And inside
a family that looked kind of like
your family. Comfort to open a door
into a familiar maze of living
walk the same amount of steps
from hall to den to stairs to
your not-room filled with better
toys and softer pillows but besides that
same and same, and you echoing
each other’s words about
your shared teacher and assignments
until one day your friend dies
unexpectedly and your family dies
too out of the blue, so you
could sit in his chair at his table
and could eat a consolation meal
just as good as you’re used to
and his parents ask,
“Billy, did you have a good day?”
And you say,
“My name’s not Billy.”
And they laugh and say,
“Couldn’t it be?”
And it could.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Day 5 - Poem 2, A Jolly Roger and a Burrito


Second poem I wrote today. I actually have a third I'm working on as well. I had a lot of sitting time today before work. This one I wrote at a Chipotle. I learned a long time ago how to tune out music and chatter and just work.

My Skull

Let’s understand each other
I keep a totem, a grinning skull
that balances on the jaw
between light and wall
it chews my pens
it nods along for my story moods
we love to be wrong together
to love destruction, cherish doom
my laugh and his laugh are a merge
of macabre moods
I’ve had it long
Since when my mother said,
“I will die of this, soon or not soon”
and it appeared, following
on my usual home route, rolling
with the sound of a dropped bowl
let’s also understand
I know her ghost
always the same ghost
he wears his brown suit loose
he stretches into a father’s skin
I can hear him creak the porch
jimmy at the shingles
some nights his lips will find window seams
and he’ll inhale our home’s breath
taste the progression of her health
and that’s when my skull will tell me
of worse deaths than I know
than I will live, and we laugh enough
to fill the house again with rare air

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Day 4 - Sometimes My Brain...


I had so many false starts this morning. Some days are easy. Even if I don't love what I'm writing, I finish something. This morning felt like I was pushing a sleepy elephant out of the way. I've never done such a thing. It just seemed appropriate.

Your One Person

When you found it,
you wanted to be ashamed
and want seems enough.
To keep one thing for yourself,
even if it’s death,
when home is so stuffed with living
seems an ok trade in the world.

It is just very medical,
so science class pull down chart colorful,
the way the skin gloved at the wrist,
the open labyrinth of guts.
The smell is not unlike the fetal pig
you and Jenny M. touched hands in.
Not unlikeable really.
Sometimes likeable is anything different.

Victim of the flood.
With the face buried, it could be
anyone you needed.
Even better versions of the living.
It’s ok to have one person
be just yours, be only for you.
In this life, a lot of things are ok.
Learn that here.