The Best-Laid Plans…

MontepulcianoCathedral

This fall, we’re going on vacation. In itself, this is not news — we vacation often. This one is not an ordinary vacation. It’s “the vacation of a lifetime.” Five weeks in Europe (mostly Italy) and doing all the things we’ve dreamed about. We’ll be in Munich for Oktoberfest. We’re spending a few nights in Venice. We’re spending a week at Lake Como and one in Tuscany. We’re visiting family. We’re taking a cooking class in Bologna. IN BOLOGNA!

We’ve been to Italy once before and we called that one our vacation of a lifetime. We were pretty sure we’d never get to go back, but once we got home we began planning this one!

So, what’s the problem?

I guess it’s more fear…fear and guilt. Dad’s Alzheimer’s has progressed dramatically. So much so, that he is now under hospice care. He’s still able to walk around the house, but there’s a hospital bed in their living room. He confuses every woman with his wife and often is angry, but there are still kisses all around.  His behavior has gotten increasingly more random (he washed all the remote controls and the telephone in the sink of hot, soapy water yesterday.) He’s just recently gotten over pneumonia and when he catches it again, it will likely be the end.

Back to our vacation. I am afraid he’ll die while we’re on vacation and my mom won’t have me there. I’m afraid he’ll die before we leave an we have to cancel at the last minute. I feel guilty for hoping he doesn’t impact our trip. I feel guilty for being gone for 5 weeks and leaving my mom. I’m afraid I’ll miss something important and I feel guilty for even thinking of all these things.

We’ve bought the travel insurance. I’ve made sure that I can be reached any time for any reason (even as simple as mom calling to tell me who won Jeopardy! or what silly thing happened at the market.) I’ve made all my plans. The fickleness of life is the only variable. The one thing I cannot control.

Where does that leave me? Fear and guilt.

Peace, Love and Broccoli

Growing up, my family was pretty much standard for an early 70’s home. My dad worked and my mom stayed home with us. Us was me and one older brother and one younger brother – all separated by 6 years. Like I said, we were pretty standard for the times; blended family and all. Sometimes, it was just like a bad sitcom gone terribly wrong.

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“My Name is …

One of my very favorite pictures of Dad

It’s so easy to dehumanize an Alzheimer’s patient — to not see them as the people they used to be. I mean, every day things are different. More things are forgotten, some things may be vaguely remembered and even other things are thought to be memories but never really happened.

I find it happening by me, sometimes. Dad loves to pat my arm or ask me hundreds of times if the oak barrel top he made for me years ago was still good. He doesn’t really remember making it, but he knows he should know it and somehow knows he should be proud of it. It’s in there, all mixed up with the stories and thoughts of the Korean War, his childhood and everything else he’s ever experienced. But, in my rush to go about my business or my own desire to talk and be heard, I sometimes don’t hear him. I blow right by. [Read more...]

Careening

Do you ever feel like you’re careening? You know, wobbling unsteadily as if you’re unable to control your movements? Careening to me has always meant something out of control like a rocket fast pinball  — just on the edge of crashing into tilt. Some days are like that. Careening.

My dad has Alzheimer’s. My dad who raised me; not with whom I share genetics but with whom shared his life with me. We all got married when I was 6 – we say that around our family because it was a true marriage of my little family with my dad. While I can remember life without him, he could never remember life without me (even before Alzheimer’s found him.) I was his daughter and he was my dad, from the moment he came into our lives, over 42 years ago. [Read more...]

My name is Pam & I’m a Geocacher…

My name is Pam & I’m a geocacher. Geocaching is a high tech scavenger hunt-type game using a GPS. (see www.geocaching.com for more) we’ve been doing this a few years, and as with any hobby I’m obsessed. It’s happened with genealogy, photography, embroidery, writing…you name it, I’ve obsessed over it to the point of addiction over it!

I’m writing this surrounded by the beauty of the forest of Plumas County, California, where our family has a house full of every comfort. [Read more...]

Yes, We are Your Family! – part 3

This is my story …

At Christmastime in 2006, Joe mentioned he hadn’t gotten an email from Italy. Someone suggested we check right that very minute and there was that email saying, “Yes, we are your family!” That someone was me.

You see, Joe is my father-in-law – Steve’s dad; a man I have loved and respected for nearly 30 years. I’d known for a long time about his desire to find his family and the amazing connection he feels for everyone who shares his blood or Joe with Fulviohis name. That’s kind of a foreign concept for me, for while I have always been interested in family history, I don’t collect cousins easily. I’ve found a couple that I really like, but mostly I try to get rid of my family!! I’ve always said, just because you’re related doesn’t mean you have to like someone! Joe is completely opposite.

Whether we were invited or we crashed their plans, we ended up planning our trip to Italy with Steve’s parents.  As the weeks got closer, [Read more...]

Yes, We are Your Family – part 2

This is Fulvio’s story…

After a few false starts and lost mail, Joe learned real story of how the letter arrived in his family’s hand. Joe had been close in knowing the village’s name — he thought Agordo, but it was Agordino. Very close, but not exact. Agordo is actually a bit bigger than Agordino. A woman named Marina had received the letter and, while not related, knew the family in Agordino. She raced over and burst in the door, exclaiming, “You have family in America!”

Fulvio, his wife Luisella and Fulvio’s mother, Maria live in the house that Maria’s grandfather had built well over 100 years ago. They were sure they had met all the family, though there were not many, that existed. They insisted that Marina was mistaken — maybe even a bit crazy!

Maria was in the garden with her granddaughter, Barbara and heard the commotion. Marina showed the letter to Maria and Barbara and to everyone’s surprise, Maria said “That is my father!”, pointing to Joe’s great-uncle in the picture. Everyone rushed inside and compared the picture to one of her father on the wall and the connection was made! The dates Joe included in the letter matched up, and an email was sent! An historic day for both families! [Read more...]

Yes, We are Your Family! – part 1

This is Joe’s Story…

Joe always thought he had family in Italy. Real cousins, not just random genes floating around in some strangerFederico and Maddalena‘s system. His father was from Italy, as were all of his grandparents. So, it stands to reason that there should be some people around that were related, but where?

Growing up, Joe had heard of a small village called Agordo. Nestled at the bottom of the Dolomites, Agordo is in the Belluno region on the eastern side of Italy. He had heard that his grandfather, Federico, was from this village. Joe had traveled to Italy before, but had not been as close to this area as he was in the fall of 2006. Joe and his wife were traveling alone through Italy and were staying in Venice. They’d been traveling by train all along, so Joe stopped a taxi driver to ask if he knew of Agordo. [Read more...]

I Worked My Bananas Off!

I’m tired. I’m also happy.

Yesterday made me very, very tired. I worked my bananas off….really. Have you ever made Gnocchi (nyowk-kee)? You know, that wonderful, pillowy, potato, dumpling-shaped pasta that goes so well with spaghetti sauce? The one we only have at Christmas because it takes all day to make in quantity? The pasta that’s only made for those you love? … that’s the one! I put the potatoes in the oven to bake pretty early since I still had to clean house (natch) and make the sauce.

The potatoes were cool enough to put through the ricer — a unitasker that makes the most wonderful mashed potatoes. Truly indispensible in making gnocchi, but hard to use if your wrists are big babies, like mine. I did get them all riced and piled up on the counter. Made a well in the center and dropped the eggs in the middle. I put the recipe at the bottom of the page for reference.

Riced Potatoes

Using my very best Mario Batali impression, I sprinkled flour over top and swirled it all around making the dough. Adding more flour to make if workable, but not tough, [Read more...]

Eulogy to an Unknown

This summer, just one month before his 70th birthday, my father died. Not the man who raised me, but the man whose genes I carry.  A distant cousin emailed me, along with a link for his obituary–it was true. I don’t remember him in any way, but I cried and cried. When I told my mother, she cried, too. [Read more...]