Saturday, February 27, 2021

I LOVE LIVING

Fall trees at Dillon Nature Center, Hutchinson, Ks. 


We met that fall morning in the parking lot outside the hospital. She reached in her trunk to pull out a basket of scrape booking materials. "Would you like some help with the basket?" I asked.  

"No, I'm fine today. Thank you." With a heavy breathe she continued, "I may not feel this good after the treatment today. The days get really long for me."  

My heart took a double beat with her heavy sigh. Here she was smiling and looking at the sunlight. With a joyous expression on her face and a glisten in her eyes, she looked around at the hospital complex, of concrete, bricks, and asphalt, and then the sky. "I love living, Letty. I don't want to die." 

I LOVE LIVING

"So do I, Sue. I love living." But the words stayed on my tongue. I wasn't strong enough to repeat her words. I knew her cancer was more serious than we wanted to acknowledge, and I cried inside for her. For her zest for life. For her abundance of joy that she spread to all around her. For her family and selfishly, for me.

Prairie Dunes Country Club, Hutchinson, Kansas
It was a cold January and we were celebrating our sixtieth birthdays at Prairie Dunes. Sue was a friend who laughed like I did when it came to telling stories about plucking hair from our cheeks our round table of women took turns topping each others stories about aging, and asking over and over 'what next.' We laughed especially hard over the long black hairs that hung from our chins. Gads! you could see the look of agony as personal stories flashed through our minds of chin hairs. The next time it was the pitiful stories of shaving our mustaches for the first time.

Here we were at sixty trying to laugh out loud at our new 'old' bodies. Month by month we poked fun at our fragilities from puffy eye bags to sparse eyebrows; from wrinkles to 'wisdom spots' on our faces and arms.  

The friends all joined in the laughter with stories. "Ladies," one woman who confessed to being older than sixty placed her arm on the table, rolled up her blousy sleeve and continued, "This is why we wear long sleeve blouses all year long." Then she curiously rolled her skin back and forth using her index finger. She even went on to show us how she could pinch and pull up loose skin. We snorted we laughed so hard. I think it was after that story that the club gave us space to gather away from the lunch crowd. 

Perhaps we had shared a bottle of wine or beer at the luncheon that day. We seemed louder and funnier than ever, when Sue dropped her voice, gathered our attention and then pointed at her chin. "Look. Look at me." In silence we looked. "See."  She pointed to a camel colored mole, then she began to wisp two white hairs back and forth. Her cackle erupted, "I have become a HAG and I'll pull your little hairs out one by one."  Our table roared with laughter. We loved to be in her audience.

WE LOVE LIFE.



Months passed. Things happened.

I often arrived to sit with Sue on Wednesday afternoons for a couple of hours.  Sometimes I helped her paste things into her scrape book for her children. Other times we shared our joys, sorrows, funny moments we experienced from golfing with other women, all told with a desire to share our lives and love for living. We still played golf on warm summer days. We saw hope on the horizon.   

Prairie Dunes Country Club, Hutchinson, Ks. 

On a late spring day, I walked her to the car to say our evening good-byes. Tears I'd never seen before began to flow. Catching her breathe between sobs she said, "Here. I have to show you something." I watched closely as she put her basket in the car and pulled out a plastic sack. Shaking and crying she reached inside and pulled out an object that looked like a prop from a HALLOWEEN movie. It was a brownish toned mask with tiny holes along the forehead and down one side to the ear. 

It was my turn to gasp and catch my breathe. Holding the mask away from her like a dead animal she sobbed, "The cancer has metastasized in my brain. They told me that I now have to come back for radiation."  I reached for a hug. As she rested her head on my shoulder, she sobbed, "I don't want to wear that mask. It's dark. It's ugly. I don't want sting rays shooting through my head." We cried. 

At last she sobbed, "I just want to live. Doesn't God know that I LOVE LIVING?"

I don't remember being able to come up with words of encouragement. I do remember we continued to share what we loved best about living, to the point that we compared our crooked toes right there in the room full of patients all receiving chemo. 

Sue Wagler

January 23, 1948 - September 03, 2010

Surprise Lilies by night 

Dear Sue, 

I hear your words "I love to Live. I love living," ringing in my head these days. I noticed out my window that a few bulbs are reaching up through the cold mantle of earth. Our perennials. Sue, you are my shining example of a Perennial. I pray that I may never forget how much joy living brings us. Did I ever tell you that I LOVE LIVING, too?


A View of Life as a Perennial

Click on this link to read another story about living and loving life as a Perennial. 








6 comments:

  1. Good Sunday, Letty.....but where do I begin. My mind is flooded with so many responses and gladness from my morning reads from you! My first decision, will be to pace myself and read but one of your humorous, tender, thought-provoking pieces at a time as my sensories and own memories are happily on overload right now. I want to sit at that table among trusted friends and validate that my body oddities are also some of theirs! I want to look at every flower in my garden and see just who is my secret twin in life. And finally, I remember teaching at Jefferson and having Kim Conrad’s and Jenny’s special kids for PE and one day, pudgy, sweet, Tommy gently grasped my gesturing right hand as I was giving directions and he put it in the palm of his hand, my hand laying flat, facing as if I were going to bounce a ball, and he examined my veins and skin, petted it and then in his not quite perfect speaking voice, quietly looked up at me and said “you’re old.......” and I looked at my hand and looked at his sweet, honest face and smiled and uttered to myself.......”I’m 33.” Terri Street also remembers that and we laughed and i privately cried inside.
    Like I said, memories so clear and flooding my peaceful Sunday morning and I am happy and my heart is warmed on this joyous day. Thank you for your written words that afford your readership the opportunity to see our own world and illuminate our own memories. dc

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  2. That was a sad & heartfelt blog for your friend. rs

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  3. Your tribute to Sue and your zest for living is very moving. As we face the fragility of life, acknowledging our own mortality, treasuring each day and embracing the “love for living”, our souls find restoration and impetus for focusing on what truly matters. Your blog helps to remind us!

    On another note….I have been doing a series of small landscape paintings. I would like to try and paint the winter scene from this blog. If you are ok with that, would you mind sending me a copy of your photo jpeg image? I find I can really get “into” a painting if it has some tie to a memory…So fitting, as that’s where I met you and enjoyed rounds of golf. AND what a great, fun memory of several of us getting a little tipsy…ok, more than tipsy..and doing the Schmeel, Schmazel….walk, linked arm and arm down the fairway at Prairie Dunes!! ls

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  4. Very powerful, Letty. My mom also had brain metastases so she had to wear a shield, too. She also died in 2010, so this really hit home with me. nv

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  5. Thank you, for the laughs and the poignant good-bye to a dear friend. You let us see inside your life. This is beautiful.

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  6. Joan Koenig
    Mon, Mar 1, 2021, 6:47 PM
    to me

    Letty, thank you for sharing about Sue. She surely did love life and tried to live every day to the limit. She was one of my closest friends when I moved to Kansas. I am so happy that I was able to share 10 wonderful years with her. She never wanted to miss out on anything that was going on. I recall one day when we were golfing Bobbi Wells and I were whispering, so not to disturb her golf game, and she got really mad and said “you girls were talking too loud when I was hitting the ball”. I said Sue I was whispering!
    We all knew what she wanted was to know what we were talking about. We sure had a good laugh. I too miss her so much. She was like a sister that I never had.jk

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