“I think we’ve gone too far.”
“I dunno. The map says something like five miles out or blah, blah, blah.”
“Five miles or blah, blah, blah? I’ve been driving forever. Where is this place, Death Valley?”
“Lemme check.”
“Yeah, check to see if it’s in Death Valley because that’s where we’re headed.”
“Just keep driving and let me check the map.”
My brother, one of my sisters and I were all headed due east and had been for quite some time. One of my other sisters and her husband were following behind in their car and I could see twin expressions of consternation in my rearview mirror as they contemplated the same question I was at that moment; Where the hell are we going?
We were looking for Euclid Avenue and driving through some of the worst shit holes in the Central Valley to find it. Not that “shit hole” really differentiates between where we were and a good chunk of the rest of the Central Valley, but trust me… these neighborhoods were especially nasty. I never thought I would see strip malls that a check cashing place would have been too good for.
Anyway.
We were looking for the turn off to the hospice my grandmother was dying in (still is in fact. No, she’s not gone yet. Did you know that once an Alzheimer’s patient starts refusing to eat or drink any more it can take them up to two weeks to starve to death? I didn’t. I figured once she started refusing water she would pass within days if not hours and that, would mercifully be that. No dice. On top of the minor indignities of chronic confusion, getting lost in her own home and forgetting how to operate a light switch my grandmother gets to experience gut-wrenching hunger pangs and severe dehydration as her organs fail one by one in a total system shut down that is undoubtedly agonizing to experience and can take up to ten to fourteen days. That’s what is happening right now. My grandmother is still alive, but barely, and suffering and just thinking about it makes me wonder why chimps and gorillas are considered “lesser” primates. I mean hell people, even Koko would have had the good sense to give doctors the finger and pull the plug by now. Us? The ones who have mastered verbal communication and can drive a car? We let our loved ones suffer horribly until the end and then pat ourselves on the back for picking out an urn in their favorite color.)
“There it is!” My brother threw his arm across me and pointed to a crumbling side road as we flew past doing about seventy-five.
Shit. I pulled my truck around. My sister and brother-in-law were still behind me wondering why they had given me the map in the first place. We had not spent five seconds on Euclid before the conversation in our vehicle went to hell in the proverbial hand basket.
“What’s this place called?” My sister asked from the back. “Alexander Cohen? Co-HEN? Co-HUN? What kind of name is that?”
“Cohen, like the ‘h’ is a ‘w’. It’s Jewish I believe.”
“There are Jews in Modesto?”
“No Annie, Modesto has no Jews because they’re all in the government and Hollywood. They just built synagogues to give the rednecks a place to spraypaint swastikas.”
“Whatever Steph.” My sister said. Supposedly she loves me but it wouldn’t be a horribly big surprise if she were secretly plotting to kill me for being such a sarcastic bitch to her. Like now. “Whatever Mr. Co-WEN was, his hospice house was on the left back there.”
Shit. Pull the truck around again. That’s when we came face to face with the single largest senior complex I ever hope to see in this lifetime. Several buildings. Walkways. Pools. Apartments. A shuttle was picking a bunch of people up for a trip to a local Indian casino. It was like a geriatric Mecca.
“Ok…” My brother said and started riffing through a mess of papers. “We’re supposed to go to the Alexander Cohen House. Not Samaritan Village.”
“Alright. So Alexander Cohen House is the hospice building?” I pulled through the gate and futilely started looking for signs pointing the way. It had occurred to me that putting up an arrow pointing to the hospice would be like building a glue factory next to Churchill Downs. “I have no idea where we’re going.”
“Yeah, let’s ask for directions.” My sister piped up helpfully from the back. “There’s someone. Right there. Stop.”
“Him?” I looked at a guy that my sister was pointing at. He was barely upright and was badly contorted. “Holy crap he’s convulsing. Quick. Matt. Get out and help him.”
“He’s just practicing his golf swing. See? He’s holding a club.”
“Are you sure? It looks like he’s trying to commit suicide with it. Maybe we should ask him if he wants a ride to the Alexander Cohen House.” I said, but my brother had already jumped out of the vehicle and was talking to the man in question. This guy seriously looked like he could have voted for Abraham Lincoln. After a short conversation my brother came bounding back and leapt into the truck.
“He says it’s just over there.” He pointed and I drove ‘over there’ where we found the place within fifteen seconds. “Check it out, employee of the month gets their own parking space.”
“Huh. Yeah. I wonder what you have to do to become employee of the month at a hospice.”
“You know what Employee of the Month’s car needs?”
“What?”
“An ‘I heart Kevorkian’ sticker.”
“Very nice. Oh hey! There’s the parking spot for ‘Patient of the Month’”
“Really? Where?”
“Right there.”
“How can you tell?”
“There’s a hearse. Duh.”
“You’re an asshole.”
I wish I could say that my brother and I make these jokes because we’re nervous and uncomfortable and that we really don’t find anything funny about death at all but that would be a lie. When this type of shit happens my brother and I crack each other up like a couple of stoners watching the carpet grow. We exhaust ourselves laughing because we’re insensitive, callous, and probably a lot of other adjectives that have previously only been applied to people like Stalin and Idi Amin.
I have no idea why. I mean, I really do love my grandmother. I hate seeing her in pain. I don’t find dying funny at all. I don’t like to see her or anybody suffer. I especially don’t like seeing my grandfather’s heart is broken into a million pieces several times a day when my grandmother wakes up just long enough to fix him with a blank expression that betrays not a hint of recognition. I don’t think it’s funny at all to watch my grandfather cry and cry because his heart is weighted with regret about his chronic infidelity or the fact that the only opportunity he has now to make it up to my grandmother involves changing adult diapers and sponging her mouth while we all hold our breath and hope she passes peacefully. It’s not funny in the least. In fact, it’s really fucking horrible.
Yet for some reason my brother and I laughed like a couple of jackasses anyway. At least until we got inside. That’s when we shut up because even though we are a couple of sick idiots who haven’t mastered the art of “grieving appropriately” we aren’t completely stupid.