My
Sophomore English classes are writing poetry this week,
and I write with my students.
Today all the poems I wrote were about Bill's hospital stay.
--Jeanine, 2/15/2000
by
Jeanine DuBois when
tubes protrude
when my husband lies still
when my
heart asks, What next?"
when the future is an eternity
when now
is all there is
monitors
tubes
charted levels
eyes crying
breath
held
life a question
no answer
today
by
Jeanine DuBois looked
deep and still "I'm
sorry," he breathed. "I
know," I replied profoundly
sad
I
knew
meds
maxed
That day
to
nurses' hugs
wondering looks...
"Are you OK?"
That day
into my
eyes
profoundly
hushed
your death was near
And I will never be the same.
by
Jeanine DuBois your
eyes with me
in another world
to
and fro
You hear a voice
eyes back... roaming again
I'm here
You listen
Tomorrow -just 12 hours left
God -
the God you've sought all your life -
will enfold you
and kiss my finger
I think...
you know
Cindy saw
it, too.
It's right.
Time for peace.
My
Sophomore English classes are writing
a narrative essay on a moral choice this week.
I wrote the following essay as an example,
but it turned out much longer than their 300-word assignment.
--Jeanine, 5/3/2000
And, I'm
grateful to say, all of Bill's daughters and I
have been able to sort out any hard feelings.
Let me caution you about reading this essay, however.
If
you are squeamish or would find it hard to see the decision
for Bill's life from my perspective, I don't suggest you read
this.
by
Jeanine DuBois, 5/3/2000 I must
move:
Personal Narrative Essay on a Moral
Choice
Listen
to my heart. That's what I learned.
Sixty-seven
days my husband Bill lay in intensive care, teetering
between life and death. The day before his liver surgery,
he'd signed an advanced directive for me to remove life
support if he were terminally ill. Every time people go
through surgery, they're told there's a chance they may die.
Bill's chance was one in a hundred. In the doctor's office,
it sounded routine.
But
the tubes, the dialysis, the breathing machine, the feeding
tube, the blood pressure medicines, the blipping monitors...
they didn't look routine. And why wasn't he waking up? Three
weeks had passed, and still he was not conscious. The doctor
even let me bring in our furry Sherbert buddy, our orange
tabby cat. Anything to bring Bill
around.
I
feared that some day I might have to make the choice Bill
had asked of me, to remove life support. I looked deep into
the eyes of his nurses and asked loaded questions, like,
"Have you seen people this ill recover?" Their answers were
at once cautious and honest: "Well, to be honest, not very
many, but sometimes they surprise us."
Meanwhile,
a couple well-meaning friends said things like, "How can you
just let him lie there?" Oh, God, their questions tortured
me. As if it were easy. But in my heart, I couldn't say that
he was terminally ill, so I had another reprieve... another
day I didn't have to make the dreaded
decision.
And
then, after three and a half weeks, there were those awesome
days when Bill rallied. He became able to nod his head "yes"
or "no," eventually to move his arm, look in our eyes, kiss
our fingers, and even mouth some words, like "more blankets"
and "I love you."
Daily
I visited, sometimes slept in the fold-out visitors' chair,
and hourly plied Bill with every gift I could offer: the
phone held to his ear, an answering machine overflowing with
love and support; cards read to him, conscious or not;
visitors writing in his hospital memory book; stress relief
massage lotion rubbed into his sallow, listless limbs; arms
and legs stretched in physical therapy; salve rubbed on his
cracked, bleeding lips; a watery sponge swabbed in his
moisture-starved mouth; restful, dreamy, or spirited music
played round the clock. I watched the ebb and flow of his
vital signs on monitors, chart printouts, and nurses' faces.
Always, there was hope.
But
those last three weeks, Bill just slid down hill. The night
he went into atriol fibrillation with six nurses and two
doctors scurrying to his aid, he wasn't expected to live.
But he did. Then, however, the blood pressure meds were
maxed, and still he was reading 56/43 or 52/38. His wound
infection had grown and looked like a deep cavern. It made
me catch my breath to see it. The doctors had also embedded
a chest tube which, in three days, pumped out four liters of
bloody looking fluid from around his
lungs.
And,
yet, hope returned. Doctors removed the chest tube, and
there were days when he opened his eyes, smiled, and nodded.
How could I give up hope on someone who could still
sometimes mouth, "I love you"?
And,
yet again, a friend asked, "How do you think he feels lying
there?"
Well,
the day did come when I knew in my heart that Bill was going
to die. That was the night his blood pressure dropped to
78/13. I just knew. I prayed, "God, show me" and called his
family and mine. "He may not make it through the night," I
told his children. "Be ready to fly up for the memorial," I
told my California family. The next day, my friend Laurie,
who had written many songs for Bill, awakened early in the
morning and wrote another song for him:
"I
Will Walk You to the Light."
The song spoke of the "brightest light that we will ever
know, the Light that calls you Home." (© Laurie Schaad,
11/30/99) I felt at once uplifted by God's promise, saddened
that Bill was truly dying, and reassured that my intuition
was right. Meanwhile, his out-of-town daughter arrived from
Florida that night.
The
next day, a friend woke up at 3:33 with a dream in her mind.
The time struck me, since in Biblical numerology, three is
the number for God. She dreamt that Bill's body and spirit
were attached by a golden umbilical cord, and that for his
spirit to be free, the umbilical cord had to be cut.
Ordinarily Bill would cut his own cord, but because of the
machines, he was unable to do so. He needed our help to cut
the cord by removing the life support. This was truly my
answer to prayer. By this time, six doctors were convinced
that there was no hope of Bill's physical recovery, short of
a miracle. So, that night we had a family meeting with the
doctor and nurse. We decided to follow Bill's wishes the
next day, after family had more time with him. Then he would
be given Morphine and Versed, so that he would be
unconscious without pain or struggle, and only the blood
pressure medicines would be turned off. We felt that left
room for a miracle if God chose to eliminate the most
life-threatening part of Bill's illness.
I
suppose that makes it sound simple. Far from it. Two of
Bill's other daughters weren't ready for the decision. At
the family meeting, they wouldn't sit near me or look at me,
and eventually screamed at me and walked out of the meeting.
Months later, after Bill had died and we'd had a partial
healing of feelings between us, one daughter yelled at me
that I had killed her dad. That thought had been my fear
when I first faced the possibility of having to honor Bill's
wishes and remove life support. Back then I had even gone to
a counselor and talked about my fear. But I knew, just as
the counselor and other friends assured me, that if the time
came to make the decision, I would know I wasn't killing
him. I trusted that and listened to my heart. My friend's
dream was the answer I'd awaited.
The
night before Bill died, I put down the hospital bed railing,
cuddled close to him, and spoke with him as his daughter
Cindy watched. Although Bill had been incoherent and
agitated for three days, he now miraculously looked me in
the eye and listened. I reminded him of the advanced
directive, his last written request, told him that six
doctors felt his body had given out, and told him what we
planned to do with the medicines the next day. I caressed
his head as I told him that he had sought God all his life,
and the next day he would wake up in God's arms. As sick as
he was, he shook his head "yes" and kissed my finger. And
from that moment through his death, Bill was
peaceful.
Many
more signs reinforced that the time was right, and I had
made the right decision. I'm so grateful for the peace I
have still today about doing the right thing. It took
soul-searching, and research, and courage on a daily basis.
But, in the words of Laurie's last song, this time
from Bill on the
morning of his death, "I
must move:
This is some kind of liberation.
It is time to go,
Let my spirit flow,
And it's time for me to move.
Time
to move;
It's time to move.
I have loved you all,
And I love you still,
But it's time for me to move.
This is Divine revelation.
I am led to go,
Let my spirit flow,
And I know that I must move...." (© Laurie
Schaad,12/2/99)
In spring,
2001, when Sophomore English classes wrote
an expository essay about the true colors, the essence, of a
classmate,
I wrote this essay about my husband Bill as an example.
It turned out a little more extensive than the assignment,
but it's close enough to serve as an example.
by
Jeanine DuBois, 2/3/2001
Expository Essay on the True Colors of Bill
DuBois
My
husband, Bill DuBois, was vibrant, often larger than life,
right up until the day he died. His curiosity, humor, and
dedication molded him into a man who was well-loved by many,
a man who touched hearts and lives irrevocably.
Bill's
curiosity, like a neon question mark, was the first trait I
noticed. When he would read something considered a source of
wisdom, he would break it down into the smallest, yet most
significant little words. For example, he emphasized the
words, "...trudge the road
of happy
destiny," not to happy destiny. "Life is not a
destination; it's a journey!" he exclaimed. Soon I
discovered that Bill's curiosity stretched to the study of
the heavens, an interest we both shared. At first he read
books like The Amazing Universe and Space, Time,
Infinity. Then he got increasingly
sophisticated telescopes, starting with a $1 yard sale find
and concluding with a $600 Edmund Scientific. Bill explored
still further on OMSI trips and later through extensive
reading and study of other cultures, particularly ancient
Egypt. Because of Bill's interest in the world beyond him,
he frequently had something interesting to
share.
Many
friends and admirers loved the way Bill could spread his
wisdom with humor. He wanted to write a book, but never went
beyond writing one lovely vignette in which a little child
sat in an overgrown, old-fashioned garden, looking at
gladiolas, dandelions, forget-me-nots, violets, and mustard
greens. Finally, the little boy said to God, "God, I don't
get it. How do you tell a weed from a flower?" and
God replied, "Don't feel bad. I never could tell the
difference myself!" Sometimes Bill's humor was light and
ridiculous, like the Rodney Dangerfield jokes he was so well
known for, or the times he would flip his false teeth uppers
half way down and make a menacing face, mimicking a
werewolf. Often he had his own clever sayings that caught
the listener by surprise. A classic was his line, "I had my
nose broken in three places: Connecticut, New York, and Los
Angeles." And I still smile today at his conclusion of a
speech with, "and that's no fried ice cream!" Bill's humor,
whether comic relief or poignant insight, nestled around us
like a warm baby blue blanket.
Whether
curious or humorous, underlying most all of Bill's choices
was a powerful dedication. He even used to say, "When you
get desperate, get dedicated!" And that's just what he did.
An activist, Bill supported and participated in Portland's
Coalition for Human Dignity, KBOO radio's Ol' Mole Variety
Hour, distribution of The Alliance newspaper, and
attending Solidarity meetings. Within Bill's family, he
dedicated himself to showing love and support through long
talks, walks, and faithfully helping eat turkey and
rutabagas on all special occasions. Perhaps Bill's greatest
commitment, though, was in his search for God. He read,
chanted, prayed, meditated, visited all kinds of teachers,
like Swami Muktananda in Los Angeles, Dadaji from India, and
the Rosicrucians in San Jose. Bill's search for God ended on
Thursday, December 2nd, 1999, when, as I told him the night
before, he would wake up the next day in God's loving arms.
I see Bill's dedication as the circle and triangle symbol
which he so thoroughly loved: a golden circle for eternity,
a golden triangle for the Trinity of God and of Self: mind,
body, spirit.
Today
it brings me great joy to know that Bill's curiosity, humor,
and dedication live on in his grandchildren and all whose
lives he touched.
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