Grandpa

This September I lost my Grandpa.

I know it is a normal rite of passage to lose a grandparent, but the pain of this lingers. He was my last one. He was 96 when he died. I’m so lucky to have had him all that time. I know all these things, and I know he was more or less ready to go. He had been put in hospice in April, but the exact reason that he was getting sicker and less able to do things for himself remained a bit of a mystery.

I said goodbye more times than I can recount, because for nearly 6 months we just didn’t know what the next day might hold. It was a torturous process and while I’m thankful my aunt was able to care for him during that time, it was also a very challenging time for a million other reasons.

When he died, nobody told me. Nobody called. My sister finally got ahold of me with a cryptic text late that day and told me, but she assumed someone else had told me first. As it turns out, I was the last person in the family to find out. But there was enough time while he was declining for one aunt to call the other aunt and have her fly from Florida to be with him. I’m glad they were both there with him, but I was tremendously hurt and sad. I don’t know if that was something he wanted, or if it was my Aunts’ decision, but it was a disappointment. Death moves fast and unpredictably. I know this from my dad’s death. I’m trying to view it through that lens. I just wish I’d had another final chance to say goodbye, given our closeness.

I have been slow to process all of it, really. Having lost my dad almost 5 years ago, my Grandpa remained such a prominent figure in my life. In some ways, where my dad and I often didn’t connect well, my Grandpa and I did. He rounded out gaps where I sometimes felt frustrated with my dad, and gave me leadership and guidance that I often really needed and wanted. He made me feel so seen. He and I spoke on the phone a few times a week typically. He was so much more than a Grandpa, he was a superb friend. He paid attention to me in a way few people do. He knew what I was up to, who my friends were, what my challenges were, how I thought about politics and people, and so much more. I tried to offer him the same. I called him to chat, to hear his perspectives, and to ask him questions about how to approach things I was struggling with. It hurts my heart to not have him around anymore, and because when he passed I didn’t get to say a last goodbye, I don’t have a good sense of closure on it. Sometimes still want to call him. Then have to recollect the fact that he is not with us anymore.

Upon returning from his memorial weekend in Milwaukee, I learned that my boss had taken a new job and was leaving. I was unexpectedly thrown into a more prominent leadership role in my organization, and as of yesterday, I was hired formally into that role. It felt like the hand of my Grandpa, with a lifetime of hard work and leadership behind him, putting tasks and work ahead of me to keep my mind busy and to keep me from dwelling on sad things. I wish he had been here to help talk me through my interview preparation and to ask me questions about the work, like he used to do. I miss his thoughtful way of saying things like, “In other words” as he would explain a concept from a book or an idea. I miss his calm, his gravitas, and his care. I am so lucky to have had him and so sad to have lost him.

Adventures of other kinds

Yesterday, Rick and I took the opportunity to see as much of Medellin as we could via public transport.  We took two trains, and two gondolas, which took us to the edge of town, and then up into the mountains to the Parque Arvi.  It’s a 17 square kilometer park  in which we spent a few hours hiking before making our way back down into the city.

It was the first healthy dose of fresh air we’ve had in the time we’ve spent in Colombia, and we loved getting up into the cooler temperatures or the piney forests above the city.

On our way back into the city we rode the gondola with a sweet Colombian family.  They had a nine month old baby girl, Maria Luna, with them.  I loved her.  I caught myself staring at her little baby feet and wanting to softly pinch her little toes.  I felt it immediately – the yearning to have one of my own.  Or five. I know Rick felt something like it too, as she stared in awe of his pellirojo hair and crystal blue eyes – she clearly hadn’t seen many people who looked like him before!  He lowered his sunglasses and peered at her, and then slid them back up his nose and hid.  She was enamored of him – which I get completely. 🙂

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I have intermittently been hit by baby yearning pangs – I vividly remember the first time, because I was 19 and I thought I was crazy.  I saw a little girl being carried by her mom in Fraser, Colorado.  The spring sun was shining, mud season was upon those of us who had worked at the resort, the tourists had left, we were all in transition, and the town was quiet.  I was driving down the road, enjoying the beautiful Grand Valley and caught the glint off the little blond head in the sunlight – suddenly I wanted to be in the mountains, raising a family too, regardless of the fact that I was 19 and single.

In my previous relationships, serious as they were, I was always squeamish about kids.  Mostly I was sure that I’d end up as the primary breadwinner and the most involved parent, and that scared me a lot.  Now, whether it’s maturity, a better distribution of labor in my relationship, or simply my age, some of the details of the implementation matter less to me than they once did.  Though I think I’ll always have an appetite for adventures, the adventure of having and raising a family is definitely closer on my horizon than ever before.