We were at the beach for two weeks with a poor Net connection, and it was too frustrating to try to post anything.
The first warning of trouble came while we were there: my father had had a fall and was in the hospital, but he was okay..
My father and I were close: I usually called him every day, but it had been difficult to call from the beach because the Net connection was so poor. I’d begun to use my international cell phone (when I could get a signal), which sends a call from the southern coast of Mexico to London, England, to Oakland, California. The miracle of modern-day communication!
“I’m in the hospital!” he said, dismayed, and then he was overtaken by pain and there was nothing more I could say except “I love you!” I didn’t know then that these would be my last words to him … at least words he could hear and understand.
And then, back in our winter home in San Miguel de Allende, we got the call: my dad was dying. I flew to California to camp at Motel 6 and sit by his bedside with my family in the Kaiser hospital in Hayward. “Comfort Care” were the instructions on the whiteboard: and that’s exactly what he got. Excellent comfort. (Such great nurses there.)
My dear 95-year-old dad passed away peacefully in his sleep in the early hours of January 31. I wept in Motel 6 and on the airplane back to San Miguel.
Getting to work is its own form of comfort — that and working on the memorial and mailings and all the busyness of death.
I knew that at 68 myself, I was lucky to have a surviving parent, especially a dad who was so perpetually cheerful. He lived in the beautiful home I’d grown up in the Berkeley hills.
He was a ham radio operator all his life, and his ham radio buddies made the last call to W6UMP (my dad) and wished him well in his new life.
And so, if I’ve been a bit slow posting here, please understand that it has a lot to do with a sad and overwhelming love, as well as helping to prepare for my dad’s memorial (which is going to be wonderful, I know).
What I have done
• Continued to update the facts regarding Hortense’s life into Aeon Timeline (in preparation for the outline: alarmingly overdue).
• Made a final draft of my NET PROMO FOR WRITERS AND OTHER LUDDITES in connection with the workshop I will be giving on Sunday the 17th. I plan to publish this as an INK e-book. Basically, it’s everything I know and then some.
• Sent in the “final” draft of IN THE SERVICE OF THE SHADOW QUEEN. Bar a few tweaks, it will likely go into copy editing now. I’d always been a little perplexed about the dedication. I had thought of dedicating it to my dad, but I’d dedicated a book to him before. But even so, two of the characters in this novel are so very much like him. And so: without a doubt, the dedication now reads:
In memory of my father, Robert Zentner
(1917 — 2013)
whose lovable eccentricities are reflected
in several of the characters in this novel.
I’m so sorry for your loss! It seems we’re never prepared to lose a parent that we hold so dear. I hope you find peace soon.
Thank you, Heather. My ever cheerful father would not be pleased were we to carry on in gloom. I’ve been making a blogger site in his memory: a moving and satisfying thing to do.
I’m so sorry to hear about your dad. You brought tears to my eyes. He sounds like a wonderful man.
Lilian, thank you so much. He was a very dear man. He will be missed. x0x
Sandra, I am so sorry to hear of your father’s passing! May you be comforted by wonderful memories of your life together. Much love to you!
Cindy, thank you so much. It means a lot to me.
Dear Sandra,
Hold on to those memories of your father.
As my father said, “The memories of you that others hold dear — that is the eternal life.”
I will hold you in the light.
– Carl Stieren
Thank you, Carl. I love what your father said. So true! I might use it at the memorial. xoox
Love and peace to you, Sanda. I am so sorry for your loss.
<3 Kelly. Thank you for your note. It's a fact of life (and death), and so very poignant.
Sandra, this is still all so fresh. My deepest condolences. Your father sounds like a wonderful man. I guess being a ham radio operator was his ‘Twitter’. I like how, as we get older, our parents’ ‘lovable eccentricities’ add a warm patina to our treasured memories of them. May family and friends bring you comfort as you heal your heart.
Thank you so much! Yes, very fresh. You will appreciate that the table of food at his memorial will be graced with big bunches of his very favourite: black liquorice twists. He hated vegetables, anything green, ate junk food and sweets, yet was hale and healthy to 95. Go figure!
That’s amazing, Stephanie! My sympathies. Those hams were a special group, and yes, precursors of the Net. I hope to see you at the Conference … x0
O Sandra. I am so very sorry. I wish I could have come and given you a hug in person. I remember meeting him at your bookstore reading here. Sending much love.
Thank you so much, Susan. I’ll take that virtual hug! x0x