August
22, 2005
Monday
I had to get the news by e-mail.
I was in Vermont on Friday, my fifth day in the region, the third day
of the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. I don't have a phone in the
apartment I rent, and my cell phone doesn't work on the mountain. After
the usual breakfast with my friends, I went over to the library before
the morning lecture to check my e-mail. Among the messages was one from
Ron labeled "My Mom." I opened that first.
Ron's mother, my beautiful, beloved mother-in-law, died in her sleep
sometime before morning rounds on Friday at the nursing home where she
had lived for two years. She'd turned 90 in April, and had been in a
slow but steady decline for many months. Back in October she'd been
certified for hospice care. This requires your physician to determine
that you have six months left. The care, in the form of a visitor
several times a week, usually at meal time, was designed to improve her
cognitive functioning and social interaction in an effort to enhance
the quality of those last months.
And it worked. Eva brightened some and remained oriented in time and
place and person, or reasonably so. If you greeted her or made some
remark to her she would respond appropriately, but she would not
continue the conversation nor would she initiate one. She gained a
little weight, a result of her visitor's encouraging her to eat and
engaging her in conversation about the food, about the restaurant her
husband's family operated for many years, about the memories of the
rich and full life she had lived. At the six month mark, however,
hospice care was withdrawn. It had worked so well that she no longer
qualified. (This cycle is not uncommon for individuals who are not
beset by a specific, progressive disease such as cancer.) In the four
months that followed she did lose some of the ground that she'd gained,
but not all of it.
Her death was unexpected but not unanticipated. I called Ron as soon as
I read the note. He was calm and in charge, as I knew he would be. Lynn
was with him. He was adamant that she report to her field hoackey
training camp on Saturday and that I continue with the conference
obligations and activities that I had through Saturday afternoon. The
funeral was set for today.
I left on Saturday at about 4:00, reaching home about 1:00 a.m. Lynn
came back from camp late yesterday afternoon. By this morning the other
grandchildren had assembled, as well as a host of friends and extended
family. We had visiting hours in the morning, the funeral Mass at 11:00
followed by interment, and then the traditional buffet at the Italian
Club in her home town of Hershey, Pennsylvania, the site of so many
family celebrations of the past.
Ron insisted that Lynn return to camp and I return to Vermont. There
would be time to bind up the wounds and stitch up the loose ends later.
In 2000 my mother-in-law, widowed for two years and beginning to show
the first signs of profound aging, moved to an assisted living
facility. For her next birthday I put together a scrapbook of her life,
the only such project that I've actually completed. At the time I said
to myself, if not me, then who? If not now, don't bother. I'm glad she
had it for the short time she did, especially as she began to fade into
herself, becoming more and more unreachable. It was something her new
neighbors and caregivers could look at to learn something of the Eva
they hadn't been able to know. I have it back now. And I have one more
page to add:
Eulogy Spoken for
Eva Petrucci DeAngelis
by
Margaret Yakimoff DeAngelis
August 22, 2005
Who can
find a virtuous woman? asks Proverbs 31. Those of us who knew Eva
Petrucci DeAngelis had certainly found one.
She was born in 1915, the oldest of
four children of
Italian immigrant parents. She graduated from high school, married
young, worked in her husband’s family business, and later in the town’s
family business, the office of the chocolate company. She kept her
rosary in her purse beside her Tic-Tacs, both of which, I am told, she
used daily. Like the woman described in Proverbs, she rose while it was
yet night and provided food for her household. She opened her hand to
the poor, she opened her mouth with wisdom, and she did not eat the
bread of idleness. When we talk about what made America great in the
first half of the twentieth century, it is people like Eva, and Tony,
and Flash, and Ezenne, that we mean.
She was 67 years old when I met her.
I married her son somewhat late in my life, and produced her fourth
grandchild. My daughter, Lynn, was blood of her blood, but Eva treated
me as if I were as well. When she was 75 she accompanied Lynn and my
niece and me on a day at Hershey Park. After about five hours of rides
and shows and park snack food, she announced that she needed to be
getting home, because she and Tony were going out to dinner. As I
prepared to gather up the girls so I could drive her, she stopped me.
“Oh, I don’t want you to lose your parking space,” she said. “I can
walk.” And she did, two miles. On my best day then I couldn’t have done
that, and I don’t expect to be doing it when I‘m 75 either.
On another such day out and about
together, after we’d dropped Eva off at home, Lynn turned to me in the
car and said dreamily, “I just love Grandma.” Because I was fond of
probing my five-year-old’s mind, I asked her, “Why do you love
Grandma?” Lynn looked at me, perhaps for the first time but certainly
not for the last, as if I were incredibly thick, and said, “Because
she’s Grandma!”
And that’s why I loved her, too. She
was a woman of courage, and a woman of peace. She had a habit of prayer
in which she sought to know the will of God for her life and to carry
it out with grace and good cheer. She was a great model to me of
acceptance and forbearance. In the last decade of her life she buried
her husband, her brother, two sisters, and a number of her friends. She
moved from her own home to an assisted living facility and finally to a
nursing home. In none of these losses did she complain.
In recent weeks she would say to
visitors, “I’m glad you came by. I’m going home soon.” We took that as
a sign of an increasing loss of orientation in time and space. Last
Thursday she said to one of her dearest friends, “I’m glad you came by.
You know, I’m going home tomorrow.” And so she did. And there is not a
doubt in my mind that as she whispered in prayer, “When, oh Lord?” the
answer came, “Now,” and her heart, forgiven, leapt into the Savior’s
welcoming arms.
Eva has gone before us with the sign
of faith and rests in the sleep of peace. Once, back in second grade or
so, my friends and I learned that heaven consisted of one’s being able
to “behold the beatific vision” for eternity. We asked Sister what this
meant, and she said, well, you looked at God and he looked at you, all
the time. That was a bit abstract for seven-year-olds. I understand it
better now, but I still want to fall back on something more concrete.
So I turn to the poet E.E. Cummings, himself a man of faith, who
imagined what heaven would be like for his beloved parents. The poet
writes:
If there are any heavens my mother will(all by
herself)have
one. It will not be a pansy heaven nor
a fragile heaven of lilies-of-the-valley but
it will be a heaven of blackred roses
my father will be(deep like a rose
tall like a rose)
standing near
swaying over her. . .
[whispering]
This is my beloved . . .
(suddenly in sunlight
he will bow
& the whole garden will bow)
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