I wrote this piece in 2009, a few years after my dad passed.
The Man In The Room
As I walk into the room, my eyes
are drawn to a man sitting on the couch, lost in thought. I watch him for awhile, taking in the
changes. His balding head once shiny is
now dulled by age. His eyes once bright
and sparkling blue are now clouded as if in a fog. The look on his face is nearly vacant – or
merely lost in thought.
I find myself wondering where he
is, not physically of course, but mentally.
Time travels in the brain.
Perhaps he is in one of the many
homes he was shifted around to as a young boy, not having any permanent place
to call home due to parents unable to sufficiently care for him.
Maybe he is on that Navy supply
ship out in the Pacific during World War II.
A time remembered not only for the loneliness of being away from home –
but for the love letters written home to a girl he hardly knew.
Could he be thinking about the job
he held for over 30 years? A tool
designer by trade – the pen and paper type as computers only came in to play in
the last years at work.
Then again, could he be thinking about his family – five
children all grown up? Or is he
remembering them as children sitting down to dinner each evening promptly at
five thirty when he returned home from work?
I’ll never know where he was that
day, sitting on the couch staring forlornly at the mustard yellow walls of the
living room – for when I enter the room with a smile on my face and say, “Good
morning, daddy!” his frown becomes a smile as he raises his arms up to give me
a hug and says, “It’s good to see you.
I’m so glad you’re here!”
*Note: Undiagnosed at
the time, my dad was going through what we now know was dementia.
The photo below is one of the last really good ones of him at my Uncle's house down the street as he enjoyed a barbecue.
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