This Is My Husband

MBS headshot“…for it is the fate — the genetic and neural fate — of every human being to be a unique individual, to find his own path, to live his own life, to die his own death.”—Oliver Sacks

Small red marks like infected mosquito bites cover my chest in surprising fury, their rash-like presence upsets and surprises me, just as it did the last time I discovered them. When was that? The night after my 10 hour vigil in the hospital’s ‘Urgent Care’ facility—long and exhausting but not as bad as the 15 hour one that came two weeks before, and just after my husband’s brain surgery. In my state of escalating tension, predictably ever-present during those emergency episodes, the finger nail that always splits on my left hand had apparently been used to worry the skin on my chest just below my neck, causing many minute digs I was unaware of until I saw the bloody marks in the mirror; anguish the toll demanded of all present, including of course the patient himself, my husband.

Is this the man I married fifty years ago? Lying on his side in the mummy’s semi-circle we’ve come to expect from an ancient artifact in a grave, hip and leg bones tracing sharp angles beneath the shroud of sheets; he who was my handsome young husband once, reminds me now of an Egyptian pharaoh buried in 2500 B.C. and just recently unearthed. What a miracle he should look as if he’s only sleeping when he’s been dead so long; but he’s neither sleeping nor dead.  He’s my husband still alive; but barely; smelling of the sickly-sweet tang of homelessness, his refusal to wash since returning from the hospital to die at home another one of his decisions to perish on his own terms; so he certainly isn’t homeless. The sight of his wasted body reminds me of pictures of prisoners in concentration camps during WWII. Even his eyes are sunken in dark sockets, cheeks sunken, breath sunken, voice lost in some starved hollow it can’t climb out of. But he’s not dead, not homeless, not starved by any but his own hand; yet this cadaver is my husband of fifty years. Instead of crying in deluges to clear the air, a cloudburst assuring it will be over in minutes, many short little teary moments suddenly appear and finish all day long; impossible to predict and suspiciously ubiquitous even when my mood seems sunny.

Fighting his personal war already lost against brain cancer, felled by a sneak attack neither he nor anyone else expected until the headache behind his right eye made it all too clear the enemy had breached his citadel, this stranger to us all is still my husband. I know his enemy wins battles every day, but not in my home with my husband or anyone I’ve known, for that matter. They told him there was no hope at all of victory right from the start. Why would he resist and fight then? We still don’t have an answer. Shock undoubtedly rendered us senseless, and my husband who loves good combat mistakenly judged this one that way, too. He knows now, after four months of cascading catastrophes, horrific pain and loss of everything he holds dear, that it was not a good fight; or at least not a fair one.

And so, all of us on this side of death feel we’ve been cheated. No one told us it would be this way and he wouldn’t have even one precious day to enjoy life again in the four months of what the doctors laughingly called living. And he, close to the other side of death, is still mad—never accepting but mad—and the only recourse he feels he has is to finish off the tumor after he dies. Trick the enemy; let it think it’s won; and then burn it up so there’s nothing left of it, either. What he can’t do in life he’ll do in death. He’ll strike back and have the last word after all. Acceptance will never be one of the stages he passes through in this war. He is a very sore loser. I had hoped he’d reach some kind of peace before death, probably for the sake of all of us who love him and have to watch him suffer. But this isn’t about our ends. It’s about his. And therein lies his private peace.

So now I see, yes, this is my husband.

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15 Responses to This Is My Husband

  1. There can be no greater compliment to a writer than to be told a piece was read more than once and the truth of it accepted. What a fabulous tribute. Thank you for sharing your thoughts on it with me.

  2. Sidney, I have read this so many times, absorbing and reflecting on each thought that expresses the reality of Morgan’s horrible, unthinkable suffering and yours too. You have been in my heart and my thoughts for so long while I’ve been waiting for the words to come. They just are not forming the thoughts and love I wish to convey to you. This has not been a fair fight, no fight at all, but the incredible courage it has required ifrom all of you is so evident, for Morgan and you and your boys and their families. This life destroying cancer is incomprehensible, but through your writing, I feel you fighting back and honoring Morgan’s beautiful self and life. I love you, lynn

    • What can I say, Lynn, other than that you certainly did find the words, and they’re all the right ones. You, too are in my thoughts, thanks to them and you.

  3. Sindey, I’ve been reluctant to add a comment, but I feel compelled to. I just finished reading this for the second time, but this time carefully and reflectively, which I couldn’t do before since I feared that readinf of his suffering would shatter the image of the vibrant and courtly Morgan that I’ve held since I first met him. But this is a wonderful tribute to Morgan and his indominatble optimism.

    Thank you.

  4. Sidney, how not surprising that you should capture the person of Morgan so beautifully. Through so many difficulties and triumphs, Morgan impressed all his friends with the fighting qualities you captured in your piece, together with a graciousness rarely matched. Thanks for the gift of such an eloquent tribute. It is a treasure to all who counted him a friend.

    • I’m amazed and delighted that so many different people with varied ideas of who Morgan was have found him in this piece. It’s all any writer could ever hope for. Thank you so much for telling me.

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