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PointsSouth: Articles 2007

Home > PointsSouth: Articles 2007
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Shoshana Walter
The online publication of Poynter's Summer Program for Recent College Graduates.

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Personal Narrative - Shoshana Walter
Editor's note: The original version of this article included the name of the artist, his wife and his friend. At the request of the family, their names have been removed.

It was an awkward goodbye.

The dying artist wanted to stay in the restaurant and talk some more, finish his second glass of sweet tea, but his wife  knew better. Since he was sick, she knew he would get tired soon. Better to leave earlier, while he was still talking and energized, than later. She thanked me for coming and helped her husband out of his seat - my cue to leave.

Instead I stood there with my reporter's notebook in hand, waiting for the scene that would tell me my story, that would give me the answer to all the questions I had about the artist and what he was going through as a dying man.

I watched, silent, while his good friend opened the wheelchair. His wife steadied him as he hobbled out of his seat. I trailed behind as they maneuvered him past a row of cramped tables and chairs, down the wooden steps and finally through the front door and into a bright midday sun.

As I had the entire meal, I wondered why I was there.

His wife turned around and noticed me again.

"Well, it was very nice to meet you, Shoshana, OK?" She gave me a hug, as if to pat me on the head, and turned to retrieve her car from the parking lot.

That left the artist and his friend, by his side. I shook the friend's hand and turned to the artist, who held out his arms expectantly. He was so friendly. He had told me so many stories. He was dying. I knelt down for an embrace - "See you soon!" he exclaimed - and then he pecked me on the neck.

He had probably meant to aim his kiss for my cheek, and in our awkward wheelchair fumbling, he had missed. Maybe he had meant to do it - to add a touch of intimacy to an otherwise removed reporter-subject relationship. I had no way of knowing. I did not know the dying artist. We were not and would never be friends.

But at that moment, I felt sad.

Even though he had said "see you soon," I knew I would never see him again. He was dying and I had no business being there. I needed to leave.

I smiled at him, said goodbye once more, and scurried towards the parking lot. On the way out, I saw his wife lift the wheelchair into the back seat of their car.

It felt wrong to watch. It felt wrong to intrude, yet again, on one of their last private moments, even though they didn't see me watching them. It felt wrong.

I looked away.

***

I did not know how difficult it would be to write about the artist.

When I first set off to write the story, I knew that he was dying. I made sure to approach the subject with a delicate tongue. Death is full of uncertainty, terror and revelations of mortality. I was sure I knew how he felt.

In fact, I only knew how I felt.

My first experience with death was at 13 years old. First my grandmother died of emphysema and then my grandfather, six months later, of lung cancer and grief.

The loss hit me hard. I was already a typical 13-year-old girl - wearing skirts that were much too short, sneaking out of the house and giving boys lap-dances at parties when the parents weren't home. I was trying to understand the world, figure out my place in it. That was all hard enough.

So I was shocked when my grandmother died. I learned she died the same night I learned she had been admitted to a hospital near her winter home in Florida. My father and I had been in the process of buying plane tickets from our New Jersey home when we got the call. I sat next to him on a white foldout chair, too old to sit on his lap, too scared to not watch his face as he grasped the phone.

My relationship with my grandmother wasn't something a teenage girl could appreciate. I hated the knit scarves and hats, the matching neon puff paint T-shirts she made for my sister and me. But she had always been there.

Her death was the first time I ever knew death was possible.

When I spoke at her funeral, it was not so much a eulogy as it was a revelation of all the things I did wrong: I didn't realize soon enough that the emphysema she'd had all my life was so deadly. I didn't spend enough time with her when she was alive. I didn't get to say goodbye.

Maybe, for that reason, I paid extra careful attention to my grandfather. I watched him die. His lung cancer relapsed, the chemotherapy began and he changed.

By the end, he didn't care much to eat. There were no bagels and lox and cream cheese - or all the foods I associated with a trip to Grandma's house, my father's Long Island Jewish home. He was nourished by Ensure milkshakes and inhaled oxygen through a tube. He had never been a talker, but my 13-year-old-self knew the silence surrounding him was more than a mere absence of words.

I tried to make up for all the things I thought I'd done wrong with my grandmother. I spent as much time with Papa as possible. I watched him deteriorate, reminded myself that he was dying. I prepared myself.

But at his funeral, unlike my grandmother's, I didn't speak. All I could do was cry.

***

The dying artist is very different from my grandfather. He still has his wife. He's a talker. He loves to eat food.

But his kiss on my neck reminded me of Papa, who always left kisses ringing in my ears. The touch was so familiar that I parted from Jack feeling like I had lost something.

I had lost something. Amid all the memories and my difficulties dealing with death, I could not find my story.

The day had unfolded with promise. After a couple of phone interviews, I met the artist in person for the first time, interviewed him in his studio, watched him paint and spoke with his wife and a close friend. When they decided to go to lunch, I jumped at the chance to go with them. I thought it would give me a scene for my story. I thought it might reveal a vulnerability, might show how the dying artist was dealing with his reality, over grilled grouper sandwiches and sweet tea.

But once we were there, I knew I wasn't welcome.

I did not order food but sat there as the three friends ate. I wanted to become a fly on the wall, but I was so silent his wife wondered why I wasn't doing my job. "Do you have any more questions?" she asked, numerous times. She didn't trust my hand, slithering quickly across the pages of my reporter's notebook.

I could not think of more questions. My sadness over the dying artist and his wife's distrust muddled my thoughts, and I sat there, waiting for the answers to arrive.

After I left, I tried to make sense of what I had witnessed.

I thought I understood what it was like to die. I had seen it happen to my grandparents. I knew how it felt to lose someone. I wanted the artist's wife to know - I understood.


But I knew I was there for a reason. I had a story to write. The story I hoped to write was an important story, about a dying man and what he would leave behind.

In the end the scenes in my story were not as vivid as I would have liked. It didn't convey the significance I originally envisioned. My memories of death prevented me from asking the tough questions.

But in the end, I did something I wasn't able to do for my grandfather - I spoke. I told the story.
Posted by Shoshana Walter 11:51 AM Aug 23, 2007
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