Current:Home > MarketsMy dad died 2 years ago of this rare, fatal disease. I can't stop thinking about this moment. -AssetScope
My dad died 2 years ago of this rare, fatal disease. I can't stop thinking about this moment.
View
Date:2025-04-12 18:08:05
I will never forget the moment my dad's eyes danced with recognition. One of the last times his bright blue eyes met mine and meant it.
The sun poured in that gorgeous spring day in 2022 and pierced the dozen windows of our living room. It lit up the light green walls, too, and illuminated the bright teal kitchen backsplash. Woodpeckers pecked the gray siding outside, birds chirped within earshot of every bedroom. A tire swing – long unused – hung in the side yard. If I listened closely, I could hear a younger version of myself asking Dad to push me harder. Faster.
The living room TV stared back at us. Blank. The news was usually on in the morning at this hour if someone was home. Dad was never here at this time on a weekday. But everything changed when he started showing symptoms of aphasia – yes, like Bruce Willis – that turned out to be the one-in-a-million, always-fatal neurodegenerative condition known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD).
He died weeks later.
"Dad, why don’t we go through the worksheet?" I urged. Like I used to when I was a kid and needed help with math homework. My 8th grade math "problem of the week" became our problem of the week.
But this time the worksheet wasn't mine. It was his. Homework from his speech pathologist. His aphasia kept getting worse, not better. He started forgetting things too quickly. The physician he once was became a too-distant memory.
Dad, do you remember your name?
"Hey Dad, what’s your name?"
“Mark,” he said. Right. Good.
“That’s right! What about my name?”
“Mark.” He said it like he was trying to say "David," but was defeated. No one prepares you for when your parent looks at you and can't remember the name that they chose. I had first experienced this a few days earlier during another beautiful spring day, on a walk through a park near my childhood home. I asked him my name after a trip around the large pond, after being warned he might not remember. I didn't look at my reflection in the pool. I couldn't bear the horror that would reflect back at me.
“No, I’m David," I stammered. "What about your wife’s name?”
“Mark.” No. Again. Lisie. Her name is Lisie. Your wife of almost 31 years.
“No. What color is this folder?” I asked, frustrated.
“Red.”
“Yes!” My blue eyes lit up like wave pools and met his. He looked at me, but almost through me. Not totally registering my presence but not missing it, either. Like he was stuck between worlds.
The speech pathologist gave us this "red" trick. For whatever reason − one I’ll research another time − asking him the color of this red folder grounds him. Brings him down to earth from wherever his mind is at this point.
Maybe he’ll get better, I thought, every time he gets this right. But then I asked him to name objects around the house – a remote, a blanket – and we’re back at square one. Repeating the name “Mark,” or the color “red.”
His favorite song
“Dad, why don’t we listen to some music? Maybe ‘Take Five?’” He shrugged. I'm not sure whether he heard my question but either way it gave us both a break.
"Take Five," by Paul Desmond, is his favorite song. A jazz staple. I scrolled to my Spotify app and started playing it.
The drum beats began. Then the saxophone swung in, the star of the show. Dad played professional jazz in the Catskill Mountains of New York many years prior and wouldn't let anyone forget it. He played the clarinet, too, in a trio with a flutist and violinist, for decades. He often pulled out either or both instruments for family gatherings like Passover, for informal recitals. These memories swarmed my mind, musical notes leaping around like the plague of frogs.
“Da-da-da-duh-dah-“
Wait.
He was … singing along? The same man who can't say my name, my mom's name, sometimes not his own name, knew the tune of "Take Five?"
He wasn't smiling. But he was singing. Somewhere, in the recesses of his brain that the CJD prion proteins were destroying, he remembered. Remembered playing "Let My People Go" at the Passover Seder with unnecessary (but beautiful) jazzy trills. Remembered visiting jazz clubs across New York City, probably hearing "Take Five" over and over again. Remembered reminding me to play the clarinet myself when I definitely haven't practiced, not once, even though my parents paid for private lessons.
He looked at me this time. Really at me. How was this possible? Why was this possible?
Did it mean anything?
How I think about 'Take Five' now
I wish it meant something. That maybe he was getting better, that the music would somehow shock his brain into working well again. That he could say "David" without hesitation like he did for nearly 30 years of my life.
What I gather it meant: CJD hadn't totally sucked the life out of him yet. The rapid decline was in full swing, of course, but it moved in slow motion too. In moments like this, both painstaking and poignant, melancholy and magnificent, terrible and true. Dad was dying but he was also still Dad. My dad.
We took a break once the song finished. His eyes returned to that stuck place. I filmed his humming, though, and I'm glad I did, so I can look back on it now. Do tears sting my eyes? Yes. But two years later, I press play on "Take Five" and think of him. Sometimes I hear it out in the world, and imagine him humming along. Or better yet, jamming on that saxophone.
If you'd like to share your thoughts on grief with USA TODAY for possible use in a future story, please take this survey here.
veryGood! (698)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Southern Baptists to decide whether to formally ban churches with women pastors
- TikToker Melanie Wilking Slams Threats Aimed at Sister Miranda Derrick Following Netflix Docuseries
- Federal judge strikes down Florida's ban on transgender health care for children
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Man charged after firing gun at birthday party, shooting at sheriff's helicopter, prosecutors say
- AP sources: 8 people with possible Islamic State ties arrested in US on immigration violations
- ICE arrests 8 with suspected ISIS ties
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Rihanna Reveals the “Stunning” Actress She’d Like to Play Her in a Biopic
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Federal judge strikes down Florida's ban on transgender health care for children
- Judge faces inquiry after Illinois attorney was kicked out of court and handcuffed to chair
- One of several South Dakota baseball players charged in rape case pleads guilty to lesser felony
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Jon Rahm withdraws from 2024 US Open due to foot infection
- The Federal Reserve is about to make another interest rate decision. What are the odds of a cut?
- King Charles III portrait vandalized with 'Wallace and Gromit' by animal rights group
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
The US cricket team is closing in on a major achievement at the Twenty20 World Cup
Do you regret that last purchase via social media? You're certainly not alone.
A jet carrying 5 people mysteriously vanished in 1971. Experts say they've found the wreckage in Lake Champlain.
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Is honeydew good for you? A nutrition breakdown
Run Over to Nordstrom Rack to Save Up to 40% on Nike Sneakers & Slides
RTX, the world's largest aerospace and defense company, accused of age discrimination