Becca smiles. She is lost in her sleep and is seeing her
dead sister Ida. She is chasing a
toddler. She has raised and adored many grandchildren. She is contracted, both in body and in mind, suffering from Alzheimer's dementia for the past five years. She is curled up in fetal position, emaciated.
Becca is our Bubbe,
beloved grandmother to our kids, mother to my wife, lover of stray cats and
dogs, and my friend and mother in law.
She lays dying in our home, not knowing who or where she is.
I met Bubbe almost
34 years ago. She was a blur. A woman in constant motion. She smiled at me and then rushed off to her
kitchen. I did not know that she had
told her daughter: "Why did you
bring him here ?" She is from
Chicago but lived in the capital of the Confederacy where Monument Avenue still
pays homage to Stonewall Jackson and Robert E Lee. They are beautiful statues from a time only
one hundred fifty or so years ago. A
time so brief that it would be a nanosecond in geologic time scale. Recent sediment.
Having raised her
three girls, mostly by herself, she is a fierce champion of women. She made friends easily although she was shy
and unsure of herself. She never benefited from the affirmation from her father or her husband. She was in a sense like Edith,
brave and nice to a fault. Her
determination is palpable when she sets out to bring sustenance to the
table. She has been the main breadwinner
for her family. She was a clerk at the VCU
registrar's office for over 31 years.
She retired early to take care of our first child so that Joan could
continue her OB residency. Her
retirement party was attended by a crowd of her co-workers. She was beloved at her work as she
transformed a group of people into a community.
Mothers and mothers
in-laws. Strange category for men. When my mother died in a land far away, I
categorized it in a dark recess of my emotions and she still remains there, walled
off, an earthen levy threatening to collapse.
Stoic, not many tears, just reticence and sadness, and regret. I should have done more to the woman who gave her all to me. Still, she left, to be with her husband, thinking it would be
easier on me…
My younger brother
blames me for her leaving. He imagines a
Arthurian stand where we do battle with the people who are taking her
away. In fact, it is more of an Overload
dystopia. I am hovelling, and my father, the Overload, gives a command, and I meekly comply.
Immigrants and clash
of cultures and generations and different mores are a broad theme of our
growing up. We harbor kernels of these
feelings. Feelings of being an outsider. An orange in an orchard of apples. Reading books brought me to inclusion as I
became friends with Homer Price and Danny Dunn and the childhood protagonists
of novels of American life.
Bubbe and I shared a
similar thread of being a part of "Stranger in Strange land." It is expressed as a kind of reserved
sadness. We are not the first ones on
the dance floor. We laugh with a slight
reservation. It is hard for us to let
our hair down.
Bubbe passed on in
our home, surrounded by her three daughters.
The hospice nurse predicted that she might die that afternoon, so Janet
and Aryln came to the bedside. She apparently
took a large gasp and then was no more.
I had a date, an
outing with Becca in the summer of 1987.
Joan was on call. It was the fourth
of July, and we were in Norfolk. I had a
rare weekend off but without my spouse.
Bubbe and I were an odd couple.
We decided to go to Waterside where the fireworks were brilliant. We went more like dates rather than son and
mother in law. I remember laying a
blanket on the ground. The crowd was in
an ebullient mood. There was no 9-11
yet. America was prosperous. The warm air caressed our skin.
We lay on the
blanket gazing at the dark sky. When the fireworks started, we were transformed
into children staring at wonder. Like a
magical date, we were the only two people at Town Park. All others receded from our focus. We felt like two co-conspirators, a
connection was forged.
I cannot remember
the specifics of that day except for the
feeling that Becca and I despite our
cultural differences, we were one and the same. She became for me, Becca, rather than my
mother in law.
We buried Becca last
week. As per her wishes, she would lay
in Perpetua in a pine box, at the Hebrew Cemetery. We had to almost bury her twice as we were at
the wrong plot, freshly dug from an incorrect map legend.
She would have really enjoyed the consternation. She literally was rolling in her grave as she
went twice to her resting place.
As I get older, I am
more attuned to coincidences and magic.
Her burial was a special setting.
The June air was crisp with no humidity and the sun was brilliant on a
cloud speckled day. Her passing had
brought all of the kids back home. Miju
and Gideon from San Francisco, Ben and Megan from Washington, Mark and Abbie
and Teddy and Eden from Charlottesville, Reuben from Austin, and Noah from
England. She united our family even from
the grave. Ben read the Caddish. A Merrit Malloy poem:
Love does not die,
people do. If all that is left of me is
love, give me away.
I thought that I
would move on. Becca was 92 years
old. She has seen the world
transform. Yet, her life and death are
ripples in our fabric of life. Her
energy and waves of love would forever change our own path. I see her in m children, in my wife, and in
me. She has always made me smile. Becca smiles ….
(Written one year ago. Rebecca Plotkin, Becca, passed away one year ago. May 29th. It was one day after her 70th wedding anniversary. She was with her husband and her three daughters.)
(Written one year ago. Rebecca Plotkin, Becca, passed away one year ago. May 29th. It was one day after her 70th wedding anniversary. She was with her husband and her three daughters.)