At this blog we talk a lot about caregiving and cancer. We
also talk about caregiving for an aging parent and caregiving for a loved one
with dementia. I’ve never liked the idea of a hierarchy of suffering. I have
always hated that talk of, “man with no shoes meets a man with no feet” which
always feels like a way to shame someone’s pain. When we suffer we suffer. When
caregiving is hard it’s hard.
So when I read Emily Rapp’s new book I had to keep
challenging myself on this, “no hierarchy” idea. Her astounding memoir is called,
“At the Still Point of the Turning World” in this book Rapp writes about caring
for her son Ronan after he is diagnosed with the always fatal, always terminal
Tay-Sachs disease. He was nine months old. He would not live past three years.
But Rapp took on that very hierarchy fallacy in her story.
She talks about the way that we-- and even she—have a tendency to measure
suffering, grief and death: what’s worse: an old person versus a younger
person, an adult versus a child. But Rapp, who is fully entitled to say, “I
win; I have the worst caregiving role” does not play that card. Rather she uses
her story to show all of us what it’s like to fear and to suffer, to anticipate
death and then to grieve...and she shows us most stunningly how to have a life
that while not joyful, also includes joy while she is Ronan’s mother and
caregiver.
I know this may not sound like the book you want for spring
break or the beach—but it really is. Rapp is so smart and so literate and so
personal in detailing exactly what a howl of pain is like that you want to stay
very close to her and say “Thank you for letting me know about this intimate
part of being human.”
In a late section of the book Rapp describes a workshop she
attends on “Being With Dying” to prepare herself to be with her toddler as he
dies. She shares this lesson:
“At Upaya they taught
us that to be fully present with a person who is dying you must have a strong
back and a soft front. Most of us live with the reverse. We are outwardly
defensive, and because we resist compassion we are actually weaker.”
Please take a look at, “The Still Point of the Turning World”
by Emily Rapp.
1 comment:
I am afraid to read that book. Emily Rapp is a fantastic writer, an amazing writer. Ronan's story was so compelling, and I found that any blog post that I ever read from Emily, about Ronan was riveting.
Yet, I still feel terrified of the book, but I feel a bit more invited after reading your post today.
Ronan, may he rest in peace, died not too long ago. Unspeakably sad, tragic.
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