At least one record is absolutely accurate. Someone takes some kind of social adaptation history. The question: What helps you relieve stress? His answer: Reading. What are the symptoms displayed when stressed? Says Terence: I yell at someone. The answer is carefully recorded in his records.
So how many different people look in on Terence during these four days in the hospital? Reviewing the records today, I find the names of twenty-seven people, including nine with M.D. after their signatures:
Susan Domchek, M.D.
Elliot Jerud, M.D.
Hanhngo, R.N.
Neil Wimmer, M.D.
Francis Wilson, M.D.
Anila George, R.N.
Helena Yu, M.D.
Tiffany Gehringer, R.N.
Jeffrey Arkles, M.D.
Maureen Hufford, R.N.
Larissa Shelton, R.N.
Heidi Kapustka, R.N.
John Woo, M.D.
Andrew Bowen, M.D.
Nondas Davis, C.N.A.
Warren Gefter, M.D.
Robert Tabak, pastoral care
Audrey Caspar-Clark, L.D.N., R.D.
Ashley Adams, transition manager (social work intern)
Deborah Lowenstein, L.S.W.
Cathleen Ross-Fredericks, discharge manager
Steve Chickman, Praxair
Jonathan McCaffrey, P.T.
Joan Coynern referred for Penn Care at home
Melissa Maynard, R.N.
Wanda Warren, U.C.
Kathy Zegan, R.N.
That clearly isn’t everyone we see, as the lab technicians aren’t included, nor the orderlies who push Terence down for more scans, nor the nice ladies who deliver the meal trays and empty the trash and deliver fresh towels.
It isn’t hard to see why health care takes up 17 percent of our country’s economy. It isn’t hard to see how all these costs add up.
• • •
On November 11, before discharging him, a doctor props one of Terence’s scans on a light board so I can clearly see the blizzard of white spots, hundreds of tumors covering his lungs.
“There’s been substantial progression,” he tells me.
Substantial? I’m alarmed. I’ve just been talking to Dr. Flaherty, and he tells me there has been “some” progression. Which is it?
Without ever breaking professional courtesy or discretion, each manages to convey just how wrong he believes the other to be.
“These specialists see things theoretically,” says the hospital doctor. “Sometimes they can’t see the patient in context, what he looks like when he’s in the hospital.”
Says Dr. Flaherty: The folks in the hospital—interns, residents, and fellows—don’t see that many cancer patients OUTSIDE of the hospital. And they don’t see that many with metastatic kidney cancer—maybe 0.1 percent of their cases. They don’t understand that the course of kidney cancer in the lungs is different from that of actual lung cancer.
So Dr. Flaherty is not fazed by the growth. In any case, he and I want to move on to the next link in the daisy chain of newly available drugs. Sutent, another targeted therapy, has been approved for a year. It works as Avastin does, by stopping cancer’s ability to build extra blood vessels to feed its growth, but in a different way. One two-hundred-dollar pill a day. A shot at more life. Sutent might have more serious side effects—rashes, fatigue, stomach distress, strokes—but Terence is game. He begins taking it on November 15.
Dr. Flaherty is optimistic about Terence’s chances. He’s seen Sutent do remarkable things with even sicker patients. He expects it will do the same for Terence.
“Tell Terence that happier days are just ahead,” says Dr. Flaherty.
Terence believes Dr. Flaherty, I am sure.
In retrospect, I realize that he is starting to believe something else as well. Just home from the hospital, he draws a line down the middle of a sheet of paper. On one side, he orders me to list things to throw away. On the other, things to keep. I won’t hear it.
“Stop it!” I snap. “You’re not going to die.”
“Just do it,” he says.
We begin holding two contradictory thoughts in our minds at once. The latest copy of our will has been languishing in a pile of paperwork for more than a year. On November 15, we head downtown to sign it. I drop him at the door then head to park the car. When I return he is so tired, he can barely make it up to the lawyer’s lobby. Still proud, he won’t use the walker outside of the house. He leans on his cane.
The attorney in charge is my friend Abbe. Three years later, over dinner, I ask her: When you saw him that day, did you know what I wouldn’t admit? Did you see that he was going to die?
She doesn’t hesitate for a second.
“Absolutely!” she says.
And then she stops. She is remembering something.
Abbe is a taut, professional, politically connected Philadelphia lawyer. Yet I remember seeing her dissolve in tears several years earlier at a social gathering of women as she talked about her mother’s then-recent death. Now she is remembering her mother.
“We knew my mother was dying,” she says, slowly. “Yet somehow
I talked myself into thinking it would be okay to go on the vacation we had planned.” No sooner did her family arrive in Hawaii than she got the call. She barely made it back in time, and only one of her two children made the flight.
“How did I think it was okay to leave?” she now asks herself. “What was I thinking?”
As we talk, we realize together that she was thinking what I was thinking: I see this. I understand this. I can’t believe this.
She knew her mother was dying. She simply couldn’t believe it. “I was just unable to imagine the earth without her in it.”
I know the feeling.
Thanksgiving comes. Cousins Margo and Glenn arrive with Miles and Jane, their children, who are just a few years older than Terry and Georgia. Later, after Terence’s death, I ask Margo: Did you make the eleven-hour drive from Cincinnati to Philadelphia because you suspected he was dying? No, she says. We knew he was very sick. We didn’t know he was dying.
We turn the Thanksgiving kitchen into a war zone of pies. Pumpkin pies. Apple pies. Cherry pies. Margo, Jane, Georgia, and I roll and knead and chop and slice. Lemon meringue. Key lime. Pecan. Hardly traditional Thanksgiving fare. No matter. Whatever anyone wants, we bake. In the living room, Glenn sits at the grand piano. “Ain’t Misbehavin’.” “On the Sunny Side of the Street.” “Take the A Train.” Terry lugs a snare drum up from the basement. The only clue that something is different this year is that it is Cousin Miles, not Terence, on the bass fiddle. Terence sits and watches.
Later that evening, we play charades as usual. Terence plays only one round, from his chair, then settles back to watch.
Margo takes one last picture of Terence, sitting on our sofa in the family room. It is easy to see how we can all fool ourselves into feeling … if not normal, then almost. Terence looks tired, sitting
there in his familiar red plaid shirt. His glasses are off. His face is a bit flushed, and a tad thinner than usual. But mostly he just looks like Terence.
As Margo, Jane, Georgia, and I clean up, and Terry and Miles mess around with their music in the living room, Terence talks intently with Glenn. After I help him up the stairs to bed, he recounts the conversation.
“Glenn and I agreed on one thing. We have had terrific lives. Whenever we go it will be okay,” he says. Yet he adds: “And whenever we go we’ll feel ripped off that we didn’t get more.”
That feels right to me.
He continues. “We also agreed that we are incredibly lucky in our wives. Neither of us can believe how lucky we are. Margo is such a dear,” Terence says. And, he adds, Glenn returned the compliment: “ ‘Who wouldn’t want to be married to Amanda?’ ” Terence reports that Glenn says.
Terence tells me this with pride.
It is only much later that I realize what a gift Glenn has given Terence, and Terence, in turn, has given me.
Sitting on that same sofa a few days later, after Margo and Glenn have gone home, I suddenly panic. We’ve been tempting fate. All along we’ve been focusing on Terence. What if he winds up fine and I do not? What if I suddenly die and he lives on? Who will care for him and the children? I realize we haven’t planned for that chance at all.
“If I’m hit by a truck, I want you to marry Alix,” I say. “She will take care of you and the kids.”
My sister has a huge heart. She is divorced. She has two daughters Georgia and Terry’s age. She is smart and witty.
“You want me to MARRY Auntie Alix?” he asks. He does his annoying dropped-jaw you’re-a-moron astonishment face.
I stop to consider. I think about the things Terence and I fight about, still. The piles of projects. The cabinets stuffed till they cannot close. I think about our basement. Boxes of twenty-five-year-old videos splitting open and spilling over the basement floor. Darkroom equipment. Punching bags. The stacks and masses of mingled things that I am only able to inventory slowly in the years after his death: Six jars of mustard. Fourteen Phillips head screwdrivers. A band saw, twenty-one extension cords. Cases of emergency food dating back to 1993. Books on building bird-houses. Boxes labeled “Medieval music.” “Passion plays.”
I pause and think. Auntie Alix, my generous, funny, red-headed sister, is an obsessive tidier. Closets organized with related items in little baskets. Towels stacked by color, all folds facing the same direction. Her two-car garage actually has room for two cars. Tools aren’t in mountains; each is precisely hung. There is no clutter in her house. I stop giving her gifts. It’s more efficient to send them straight to Goodwill, I tell her, after spotting a present in the giveaway pile barely a month later. The family jokes that it isn’t safe to put our purses down when we visit her house, lest she toss them out while we are eating.
“Okay,” I say. “Bad idea.”
In the meantime, Terence’s face has gone white. “Don’t ever talk about that again,” he says.
“About what?”
“You are the center of my life,” he says. “If anything happened to you, the light would go out in my world. Don’t ever talk to me about it again.”
So he knew, I think later, what it would be like once he was gone and I was alone. He knew what it would feel like. We never speak about the end—of either of us—again.
• • •
I continue my preparations for what I expect will be this new, tougher phase of our life. I find the protein drinks online. I order a case. There is a bodybuilding shop near my office. I buy protein bars in all flavors, dozens of them. From the Philadelphia Parking Authority, I get forms for a handicapped license plate and download the application to get a parking spot right in front of our house.
Each day it is harder and harder to get him up and down the stairs. He has lost weight, but he is still a big man. I begin to research installing a stair lift. Yes, there will be room for one, even in the curving staircase of our Philadelphia rowhouse. Meantime, he lives upstairs. I bring food up to him.
He is no longer able to get in and out of bed alone so I hire a health aide. The woman the agency sends is as close to perfect as I could ask—a quiet, cheerful, religious older island woman with a soft and delicate accent.
I try to make Terence eat. He hates the taste of the protein shakes. I add vanilla. I add ice cream. He hates the protein bars too. I slice them into tiny pieces and try to get him to eat a sliver at a time. Whatever he craves, I buy. Cold grapefruit slices. Chicken noodle soup. Clam chowder. Eat, Terence. Eat. Just try. You’ve got to stay healthy so you can get better. I count the calories he consumes in one day: 210.
Every day he swallows a Sutent pill. Every day I look for signs that it is starting to work. Every day he seems a little weaker, a little more confused.
“Roll to the left,” I say one morning.
He rolls to the right.
“No, sweetie. The LEFT,” I say, trying to hold back my irritation. I’m in a hurry for something. For what? I no longer have any idea.
He looks puzzled. I nudge him in the right direction. Something seems odd.
Terry notices it too.
“Mom? Is Dad okay in the head?” he asks me one afternoon.
“I’m not sure,” I say.
With his question, I think about what I’ve been pushing to the back of my brain, that what I have considered Terence’s exhaustion may have suddenly changed into something else. This is the first time I’ve thought of it directly. I am still ignorant of what it means. And odd as it seems, I stay ignorant. So why can’t my mind go there?
Why can’t I say the word “die”? Why can’t I even think it?
Several years later, I consider my thoughts about my father, who died two years before Terence.
I think about how for years, without being really aware of it, I carried an imaginary picture of what my father’s last days would be like. In my mind we sit on a rise in the sunny backyard of the Victorian house where he and my mother have lived for forty-seven years. Deep purple clematis twine around the trellis nearby. The sun is warm, but the air is chilly. His legs are covered with a plaid cashmere blanket. In my imagination, he is in a rattan wheelchair, very FDR. In this picture, Daddy doesn’t talk much. He has never talked much. But from time to time he tells me something about what it was like in the Azores, where he was stationed during the war.
What really happened was nothing like that. Instead, on April 20, 2005, my mother left the house to run an errand. Daddy went upstairs to nap. When Mum returned, one look at the bare foot poking out from under the covers and she realized he was gone.
After Terence dies I come to understand that I have also carried a fantasy about how he and I would end our days together. My mental picture is of a hospital bed—we have spent so much time in hospitals the image is burned in my brain. My imaginary
dying Terence lies slightly raised. Beside the bed, a tape recorder plays Dixieland, the volume turned down low. We have a tape for each of the children’s arrival into our lives—Vivaldi for Terry, Holst’s
The Planets
for Georgia—so my imagination supplies a tape for Terence’s leaving. Sitting beside the imaginary hospital bed, I read him poetry—Ginsberg, his favorite. Cavafy, mine. Finally we settle on Wordsworth, which we both like. We talk softly about the things we remember.