Tuesday, December 4, 2012

No Child Should Have To Bury Their Parent Too Young

Done under different circumstances, this might have felt like an honor. Instead, helping my Mom and Dad pick out their burial crypt and my Mom's casket, provided yet another searing reminder that my Mom's cancer is Cancer.

In a powerful cinematic moment from The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, King Theoden tells Gandalf that "No parent should have to bury their child." Prior to that, he laments that with his son's death "the young perish, and the old linger." He cannot believe "That I should live to see the last days of my house." I know that in the "natural order" and "circle of life" parents die and their children mourn them, but my Mom is only 66 years old. I personally lament that I, too soon, have to see the last days of my Mom. I want the "old" to linger in this case.

This past week I helped my mom and dad pick out their burial crypt and my mom's casket. I remember Mom talking about how difficult it was for her to help her mom pick out her casket and make arrangements for her death so many years ago, and until one has to go through this experience they can never know the sheer agony it brings.

My parents assigned me the "job" of recorder for the meeting with the funeral home. That meant I had to pay close attention as the "counselor?" asked for my Mom's vital statistics. As Janelle worked her way through the form, everything seemed natural until she asked for my parents wedding date. My Dad fought back tears as he struggled to tell them, "April 15, 1965." That triggered tears from my sister, Wendy, and my Mom. I helplessly grasped my Dad's arm, desperately trying to offer comfort.

The next "chink in the armor" came when she asked about their wedding rings. I could hear, see, and feel the raw emotion as they decided they wanted to have her wear her wedding rings in the casket and then divide them amongst their four children after burying Mom. I'm losing my Mom, but my Dad is losing his life's partner, the girl he has known and loved since high school.  I don't know why, but discussion of the rings made my Mom's inevitable passing seem more real to me. I dutifully noted that Dad will decide who will receive which wedding ring.

At this point, we made our way back to the casket "show room." My Mom vividly remembered the pain she felt as her own mother "skipped" through that same showroom, squealing with glee at the feel of certain fabrics or the shine on a casket. My Mom did not skip through the coffins, as her mother did. Instead, I dutifully bushed her oxygen tank along as my Dad reluctantly pushed her through the aisle in her wheelchair. Mom what ask, "Art, what do you think of that one" or "Jeff, do you like how that casket looks?" I couldn't look directly at any of the caskets - I have always had difficulty at funerals - they served as a reminder all too real that my Mom would come to rest in one of those pretty boxes.

We turned a corner, and that's when my Mom saw the casket she wanted. It's called the "Ambrosia Opal" casket. Made of 18 gauge steel and "resistant." It has pink fabric and lace with a giant rose over the area covering the heart on the inside, and the handles have roses on them, too. My sister pointed out that the casket was a pink color, her favorite. My Mom's favorite color was pink? How could I reach 46 years of age and not know that? The color and the casket made my Mom happy, and those same features filled the rest of us with an almost unbearable sadness. Our small funeral procession made its way back to the counseling room to finalize details.

Most of the remaining minutes flew by in a blur, but I did record important final decisions:

Programs:
Red roses with greens on cover
Irish Burial Quote: "May the road......."

Thank You cards:
Pink Roses With Cardinal (Thanks family)

Services:
Day 1: Visitation, service, luncheon
Day 2: Meet at the cemetery

Food from Sendiks:
Menu
Cocktail Sandwiches: Turkey, Beef, Ham
German Potato Salad: warm
Cheese and sausage tray
Relish tray


I dutifully recorded all of my parents decisions. Occasionally, though, my Mom would stop and ask, "What do you kids think? I won't be here, so this is really for you." For the first time in my life I answered, "Whatever you want, Mom" and meant it.


When deliberating details of the meal, the counselor asked what kind of potato salad we wanted. Mom immediately shouted, "German!" When Janelle asked if we wanted it warm or cold, my Mom said "Warm. I like my potato salad warmed." It seemed so silly to me at the time, but as you see above, the German potato salad will come "warmed." My mom left all of these other decisions up to us, but she wanted warm potato salad. And that's when it hit me. Almost as cliche, we like to say that we have funerals for survivors. My Mom's desire to have warm German potato salad tells me that funerals are also for the deceased.


[I know this post is running long. Some of you may wish to leave at this point, either because my post has run long or because you do not like reading about death. I understand.]


My Mom cannot get around much as the life drains from her body. For that reason, we left the funeral home and headed directly to the Washington County Memorial Park to select a burial crypt for both my parents. My Dad has soldiered on admirably through my Mom's slow death, but this has taken a horrible toll on him. He looks gaunt, he looks, tired, and he looks so hopelessly sad. Selecting a crypt for the two of them proved more difficult than I thought because choosing this tandem crypt also signaled the eventual death of my Dad.


One at the cemetery, my Mom had but one requirement: the crypt needed to be close enough to ground level that we could all "touch" her when we visited. After a brief search we found one that suited mom. On the lowest level and third in from the end, so she would always have others on either side to keep her "warm."


They say that the only sure things in life are death and taxes. I disagree. Right along with death, we should consider funeral expenses. After one dies, somebody has one final opportunity to make money off of someone. One could not call my Mom's casket "ostentatious" -it's not a pine box, but it's also not a $10,000 solid cherry casket with gold inlays, either - yet it still cost $2900.00. Death certificates run $47.00. Obituaries in the local paper and the Milwaukee Journal will cost another $299.00. In the end, it will cost about $13,000 to bury my Mom [funeral home and burial crypt combined]. Please, do not take these comments as an indictment of the funeral industry - I do not intend them to sound that way.


I cannot explain how much I squirmed and agonized as Janelle totaled up the costs. I could see my Mom start to consider where she could cut corners so as to not leave a financial burden for My Dad. She utterly panicked when Janelle announced a final price of $8048. "Do you have a payment plan?" she asked. Janelle told her that they did not and that the entire amount needed to go into a trust until she died. At this, my Mom, this strong, proud woman frantically begged, "I don't have this amount right now. Not today. What do I do?" Janelle reassured her that she didn't need the money right then that day. That they could come back when she had the money. My Mom has slowed a lot in recent weeks. She cannot always remember dates or places. She does know, painfully so, that it will not be long before she shuffles off her mortal coil. She knows the end will come soon, and she knows she did not start planning soon enough. We will manage to give my Mom the burial she wants. I know my siblings and I will figure out a way to make it happen. I just cannot get the image out of my mind of my Mom trying to figure out how to "discount" her funeral.

Janelle guided us through this agonizing process with deftness, trying her best to acknowledge our loss and mitigate the pain. At one point she even told us, "I can see the love at this table. The difficult funerals happen with dysfunctional families who fight each other over every little detail. Martha, clearly you are loved and have raised a loving family." My Mom liked hearing that, and it served as an outside validation of what she already knew - she was a good Mom and had left her mark on the world. My mom answered Janelle with, "Thank you. We tried."

Not only did they try, but my parents also succeeded. Janelle told us sad stories of people who get buried with nobody left to mourn them. My Mom will have plenty of mourners, but I am not yet ready. We did not have enough time together.

Now that my Mom's cancer is Cancer, I believe more than ever that "No child should have to bury a parent too soon."

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