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Susan Bordo's avatar

Michael, thank you so much for sharing this with us. You are fortunate—and so are we, your readers—to be able to put every moment of this experience into words. It’s one that we all have to go through, one way or another, but most of the time we try to ignore the inevitable reality of it. Some of us, though, find solace in giving expression to it through words, as you clearly do. This post truly makes it clear why “sincere” is the perfect word for your substack. You make a kind of direct, unfiltered contact with your readers that’s rare. (As Mike Weber writes below: “Raw, personal, authentic.”) And at a time when so much we read and hear in the media—from politicians, journalists, celebrities—is professionally motivated bullshit, this is invaluable.

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AlcoHole's avatar

You turn even the most mundane daily routines & doctors nomenclature into riveting prose. That’s indeed a feat!

Thanks for your descriptive depiction of your father slowly breaking down & fading away. I'm a bit older than you, still, I'm going through the process of my father slowly wasting away. It's heart wrenching & yet completely normal as it’s been going on for a long while. My father is also the stoic engineer, solid as a rock, always dependable. He never allowed himself to get to emotionally riled up. He’s even Stephen. It used to drive me nuts that he didn’t engage & show more emotion, but in the end he was like the rock of Gibraltar. Always there. Supportive.

A couple things come to mind. It seems as if you’ve done tons of ‘pre-grieving’ – there is such a thing. Of course, it’ll never prepare you for the actual shock, but it does ease the burden. I’ve grieved my cat, Schlizers, before she left us. Doesn’t mean you’ll miss him less because there’ll always be a hole in your heart.

Another reaction is how these stubborn men didn’t go to the doctor at first. It’s bitter sweet. I’m sure you also harbored a bit of passive anger for your father not having gone to the doctor when he started coughing. 77 really is no time to go – at least in my opinion as my dad is 89.

I hope my father lives to see his 90th birthday. I feel he may just ‘tough it out’ so I’m thankful for every moment I have with him. I know you are as well.

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