FRESH
YARN presents: Sunrise...
Sunset By
Lori Ada Jaraslow
I
was at Ralphs in North Hollywood when my cell phone rang, piercing the silence
in the meat and dairy aisle. I rummaged frantically through my knapsack and picked
up before the last ring. It was my sister, Risa. "We got the news about Dad,
Lor, and it's not good. It's pancreatic cancer." I slumped over the porkchop
case. "He has weeks to months to live." I dropped the Armenian feta
cheese I was holding, and ran out of the store. Somehow, I got home and called
my father. Alma
Brookes, a caregiver originally from St. Marten, now living with Dad in his Manhattan
apartment, answered the phone. She has a dark, rich voice that sounds like it's
coated with molasses. It has a lilt, like gentle waves washing ashore. "I
don't understand these doctors, Lor, the liver is the next door neighbor to the
kidney. They are like a brownstone, close together. You know how many times they
lookin' at that kidney? I took him to all his doctor visits, I never missed a
one." She was crying. I assured her that there was nothing she could have
done differently, then I asked her how much time she thought Dad had. "The
doctor say when he start to jaundice, it would be fast, maybe days. And, Lor,
he already lookin' yellow. You come home now and stay with us. We got space on
the floor in the livin' room. I'll put him on. JERRY," she hollered, "it's
Lori." "Hi,
Daddy." "How
aaaare ya?" My father elongated vowels for dramatic punch. "Good,
um, listen
I'm coming to New York. I want to hang out with you." "Teeerrific,
Lorsch
what's the occasion? Anything special?" "Um,
well
I just
want to see you. I miss you. I love you, Dad." "Me
too, Lorzhabee, see you soon." With
the prospect of losing one parent, I dialed the other. "Hi, Mom, have you
heard? Are you okay?" "Oh,
come on," she growled, "we haven't been together for twenty-eight years.
I'm fine. Why're you crying?" I didn't answer. "Mom,
will you see Daddy before he dies?" "Did
he ask to see me?" My mother's going to need an e-vite to my father's funeral.
"Listen,
Shirley Bilsky's father lived for a year and a half after he was diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer. I think they're jumping the gun here." "Mom,
the doctor said that when he jaundiced it would be very fast, maybe a matter of
days. And Alma said he's already yellow." "Oh,
really?" rebutted Mom, "What does Alma know from yellow? Since when
is ALMA an expert on YELLOW?" I
was in Dad's apartment on 96th and Columbus in 48 hours. He lay in a hospital
bed. "Hi,
Poppy. How are you?" I smoothed his matted hair. "Pretty
good, Lorsch." He looked awful. "I'm so happy to see you, Daddy."
I stifled tears. "Get some rest, I have a big voice over job for you tomorrow."
My father was an actor. I thought this might perk him up. "Does
it pay well?" He asked. "Scale
plus ten. I want you to teach me that Russian lullaby you used to sing to us.
Hey, Dad... can I get in bed with you?" "Sure."
I lay
with him and with as much energy as he could muster, he stroked my back."
Two minutes later, he picked up his head. "Could you give me a lift to the
bathroom?" "Sure,
Daddy." He shuffled slowly and daintily. I walked alongside him for safety.
When we were halfway there he stopped abruptly. He attempted a soft-shoe with
the walker, and sang to the tune of Tea for Two, "Da, duh duh, duh dudududu
da duh." I roared with laughter. "Hey,
he said, "you're laughing, and I'm dying heeere." Our bathroom jaunt
took forty minutes
round trip. That
Sunday, we had a few guests. I got bagels and lox; Alma made Caribbean chicken
and pig's feet. A winning combination. I didn't touch the pig's feet
too
many Weight Watchers' points. Our family totaled twenty including my sister Abby,
her husband David, their kids Leah and Daniel and my sister Risa, her husband
also named David and their two kids Mara and Sam. Alma's brood totaled forty including
a range of folks--her best friend Lena, her daughter, Rachel, Rachel's very pregnant
ex-lover, Sophia, and her daughter Cinnamon. This gathering allayed my fear that
Dad was spending too much time alone. Apparently he had a bevy of broads from
the Bronx caring for him, and, in fact, it seemed as though his apartment had
become somewhat of a community center. He sat in his chair that Sunday smiling
and drinking from his sippy cup. Though he barely spoke, I sensed that he delighted
in the festivities. The next day he was exhausted and couldn't get out of bed.
I called
my mother. "Hi Mom, I was going to come see you for Mother's day but Dad's
not doing well so I need to stay here. Will you see him?" I asked. "Nah
he
doesn't want to see me." Alma yanked the phone out of my hand. "You
listen to me, Sylvia. In the middle of the night Jerry say to me, 'When is Sylvia
coming home? Will she be here for dinner?' You can not hate your husband more
than I hated mines. He was a dog, but if that man were dying I would go see him
in a second for my kids, because THEY loves him. I would do that for them."
Alma handed back the phone. "What
does she charge, fifty an hour?" asked Mom. "Should I come tomorrow?"
The
day arrived for my mother to visit my father. She
shot into the apartment like a pistol, "Jesus, it's hot in here, can you
open a window?" her request out before the door was closed. She scanned the
room. "Humph
he must have gotten a decorator." Alma
hugged Mom warmly. "Sylvia how you doin'? You look like a hippity-hop teenager.
You cannot be 81 years old. Did you drive your fancy Toyota Camry into the city?"
"Achhh
please
I took the bus, I'm an old lady," she replied. My
parents were separated the day after I graduated high school. Nearly three decades
and three cancer bouts later, my mother said, "I don't want to be buried
next to that shmuck," and she filed for divorce--after a twenty-seven-year
separation. They were separated longer than they were married. And I don't know
why I can't let go of things. Mom
turned to Dad. He sat in his wheelchair in the living room, his head hanging down
from weakness. "How are ya, Jer?" Mom stared at him detached and sad
simultaneously. Alma and I scattered. As I left the living room, I turned back
to look at my parents. I felt as though I was watching a slow motion silent movie
behind a gauze scrim; grief muting my senses. They spoke for maybe a half-hour,
and then Alma and I reappeared. "Oooh
Jerry," Alma teased, "You're eyebrow's are up, you look excited." "Yeah,
he's excited because I'm here," Mom said sarcastically. "I'm
not kidding you, Sylvia, that was the most Jerry has talked in a while."
"Yeah,
well he's making up for the thirty years he didn't say a fuckin' word to me."
My father
laughed. "It's good to see you, Syl. When you coming back?" "Yah,
yah, I'll be back next week," she lied. And I knew it was the last time they
would ever see each other.
I
hugged my mother and thanked her for coming. Alma and I went out to the balcony,
where we would chat, smoke Marlboros and take turns sitting on the broken Porta-Potty.
My father
was a feminist with sexist leanings. He marched on Washington for women's rights,
but I'm not sure if he was more interested in the women or the rights. "Alma,
do you think he slept around on my mother?" "You
think my name is Alma?" she bellowed. "I been having trouble with this
breast. So one day I lift up my shirt (she lifts up her shirt for a reenactment)
and I say, Jerry, is this one bigger than this one? He get a BIG hard on and say,
'Why you don't get in the bed with me?' It's a good thing I don't like the older
men, Lor, your father would have had me in TWO seconds." WHY DOES
EVERYONE FEEL SO COMFORTABLE SHARING WITH ME? I wondered. "I
aks him, Jerry were you a good father?" Alma said. He say, "Nah, Sylvia
do that more." He say he not around when you were a kid. He worry about you,
Lor
say you got it the worst." I excused myself, went into the bedroom
and perched next to my father. "Daddy, I don't want you to worry about me.
I have a lot of wonderful things in my life, a lot of love; I'm going to be fine.
Hey, Dad, you feel like singing?" "And
how," he replied with more enthusiasm than I'd seen since my arrival. I turned
on my tape recorder, and he began, his once beautiful baritone, scratchy and waning
"Vee
is du gesele vee is da shteeb, vee is da maydele vaymin hablib, us is
da gesele us is da shteeb, us is di maydele." (Very
roughly translated: Where is the little girl? Where is the house she once lived
in? Where is the street the house was on?) "Come
on Dad, big finish," I encouraged him. "VAYMIN,
HABLI
oy oy oy oy oy." He grabbed his side in pain. "Daddy,
I'm sorry, I'm sorry, are you okay?" "I'm
fine, Lorsch. I'm getting better." On
Mother's Day weekend everyone dispersed. Alma's friend Lena came to relieve Alma.
I realized in hindsight that this was the weekend that Dad's body began to close
shop. He was unable to keep food or liquid down. In the middle of the night, I
heard him wretching. I opened my eyes and saw Lena's wig hanging next to me on
Dad's clothes rack. She stumbled off the pullout couch, bald headed, her breasts,
(NEVER IN MY LIFE HAVE I SEEN SUCH ENORMOUS BREASTS) each one the size of a newborn,
jiggling wildly in a tight T-shirt, no pants, just pantyhose, as she ran into
the bedroom. Think
Scary Movie Four. We stayed up all night with
Dad. At 5:40 a.m. Lena threw on her hair and clothes and disappeared. At 6:00
a.m. she returned. "I got a surprise for you," she announced. "Happy
Mother's day, baby." She carried two McDonald's platters with pancakes, toast
and potatoes. Of course that week I was on a no carb diet, but it was such a sweet
gesture that I ate it. She told me about her parole officer. When she first arrived
in New York from St. Marten, she worked for the Social Security Department, passed
on secret information and got caught. There I was
six a.m. on Mother's day,
my father dying in the next room, sharing a McDonald's platter
with a felon. My
family and Alma returned to Dad's apartment on Monday. Alma took one look at my
father and ran to the phone. "Rachel," she said to her daughter, "Jerry
only gonna last a few more days. You come over and perm my hair tonight for the
funeral? What I'm gonna do without him, Rachel?" she cried. "Thanks.
Loves you too." While
Alma stayed with Dad, my sisters and I bustled about making plans. Chava Koster,
the rabbi we chose, was out of town but assured us she'd be back in time. We communicated
through e-mail, though secretly I longed for papyrus scrolls. She suggested we
read a book of Jewish customs. There was so much to think about. Should he be
buried in a shroud or a Brooks Brothers suit? The Jews like to bury the deceased
as quickly as possible. Sometimes a family member sits with their beloved for
twenty-four hours guarding the body, like a sentinel. It's called shmiro. I considered
doing this, especially after I found out that Dad would be alone in a fridge until
the funeral. Abby checked out the cemetery in Jersey. She learned that the plot
Dad purchased forty-eight years ago for himself and Mom, which then overlooked
a beautiful garden, now overlooked a Marshalls. We found out that if Mom was serious
about not wanting to be buried adjacent to Dad, she could request a different
location. The cemetery was not unlike a condo. My
sister Abby, who is an architectural preservationist and lives with her family
near Princeton, is one year older than I and we were raised sort of like twins.
Risa, nine years older, is a prominent choreographer. We piled into a cab and
went to Riverside Memorial Chapel on 76th and Amsterdam to take care of business.
People in the "death industry," are not hip and cute like Claire on
Six Feet Under. They are expressionless and sun deprived. Cliff, a young
Pacino type with a stutter, greeted us. First we had to choose the chapel. We
picked the larger of the two because it had a piano and big, pretty, stained glass
windows, and we were hoping for a good turnout. "I'll
t-t-take you to the caskets." Cliff said. The showrooms are in the basement."
There were two of them. Think Anne Taylor and Anne Taylor's Loft. We entered the
more upscale of the two. The first casket was horrifying, $60,000.00, gaudy, very
Carmela Soprano. The next one was $70,000.00 and King Tut- ish. "Could we
see something simpler?" I asked. And he led us into the Loft. "What
about th-th-this? Orthodox Jews are buried in a p-p-lain pine box," he offered.
"It
looks like something you'd ship tomatoes in," said Abby, as I reached into
the casket and pulled out a clump of hay--the kind they use in nativity scenes.
"It's
only f-f-f-ourteen hundred dollars," said Cliff brightly. "I
don't care, my father isn't going in the ground in a freakin' apple crate,"
I said. "I'm
s-s-s-o s-s-sorry miss, um, knotty pine?" "Too
Crate and Barrel" replied Abby. We busted out. Weeks of anguish were released
in torrential laughter. Since Abby has strong feelings about wood, we put her
in charge of the decision. She chose a simple blonde ash casket and we went to
the office with Cliff to do some paperwork. "Are
you interested in a c-c-casket nameplate?"
What's that for, I wondered, so the other dead people can learn his name?
"Aftercare p-p-planner
book?" Cliff asked. Even
if there IS an afterlife, and it's a busy one, I thought to myself, a Dayrunner
seemed excessive. "We
won't need any extras. Why don't we start The New York Times notice?" Cliff
helped us with the wording. For example... adored by grandchildren, or
dear brother of
"OH MY GOD." Risa yelped. "WHAT DO
WE SAY ABOUT MOM?" I made a suggestion. "How about, resented by
former wife, Sylvia Walter Jaroslow?" In
the thick of it all, Risa's dance company had a benefit on the Lower East Side.
Dad was a big fan of Risa's work, and this would probably be the first concert
he ever missed. A bunch of us went. When we returned to Dad's that evening, Abby
and her family and the hospice people had gone home for the day. Alma was still
there and Risa, her kids Mara, 24, a statuesque P.I. and Sam, 11 going on 40,
and I joined her. At
10.30 p.m., Sam and I went into the bedroom to give Dad his morphine. "Oh,
my God, Mom," Sam called loudly, "It's happening, come on Mom, it's
happening right now, Grandpa's going. Come quick. Grandpa's going now, Mommy,
right now." Everyone ran into the bedroom and surrounded my father. Risa
wailed, "Daddy, Daddy." "Jerry,
Jerry," Alma cried out. He took two very deep breaths, stuck out his jaw
and clenched it twice. An excruciating, deafening silence ensued. Suddenly, a
stream of red liquid shot out of Dad's mouth. Alma said knowingly, "That's
the bile." When I wiped the red liquid off my father's mouth, I realized
it was the cherry applesauce she insisted on giving him the day before. Finally
Alma said, "Close his mouth, Lor," and I did. Then I read a prayer aloud
beginning with
"Dear
God, Please take the soul and spirit of Jerry Jaroslow into the sweetest corner
of your mind, the most tender place in your heart
" We
rubbed Dad's skin, talked and held each other. We fell apart like a tag team;
one person on the floor sobbing hysterically at a time, the others comforting
that person. An hour and a half later, it seemed like it was time to call the
people who would escort Dad to the funeral home. My niece Mara took over, as the
rest of us were too undone. Risa gave her the number and she dialed. "Hi,
I'm calling to ask if you could come get my Grandpa. 135 West 96th between Amsterdam
and Columbus. North side. Half an hour? Great, thanks." She hung up.
Risa bawled, "No wait, I don't want him to go. Mara, call them back and see
if we can have more time with him." "Okay, Mom." She dialed
again. "Hello? Yes, I'd like to cancel an order, please. 135 W. 96th St.
Somebody else died after grandpa? I see, so it's either fifteen minutes or they
have to go to Brooklyn first and it could be an hour and a half. Uh
go to
Brooklyn, we'll wait. Thank you." Sam was exhausted. "I'm going
take a nap," he said. Mom, please, when they come to get Grandpa, wake me,
okay? I'll never forgive you, please; I want to be with you guys when they take
him, okay?" We covered Sam with a blanket and he was asleep on the living
room floor instantly. The
people arrived. Mara buzzed them up and opened the door. Two thugs in suits,
straight out of Goodfellas, stood in the hall. "Good evening, ma'am.
RESIDENCE REMOVAL!" said one, kind of upbeat and casual, like he was delivering
Szechwan from Hunan Balcony. "Is dat da body over there?" he went on,
as he walked toward my sleeping nephew. "No, this way," Mara redirected
them. Risa felt it would not be good for Sam to see his Grandpa being taken away,
so she didn't wake him. The rest of us crumpled and hid in the living room while
Mara guided them. They took him out on something that looked like a cross between
a stretcher and a dentist's chair. We went down in the other elevator just in
time to see them pulling away in a dirty, old, banged up yellow station wagon.
It was among the saddest moments of my life. I expected a shiny black hearse like
in the movies. My Sis promised me there would be one for the funeral. As I turned
to go back into the apartment, there was one of Dad's Depends on the curb on 96th
Street. It was two a.m. The
following night, Alma's boyfriend, Anthony, stopped by after working a twelve-hour
janitor shift, to shine the shoes Dad would be buried in. I was sitting on my
father's bed deciding what to sing at the service. I was going over "Sunrise
Sunset," when Alma ran into the bedroom galvanized, "Lor, that's the
song. You got to sing that. You got to sing that," she repeated. She was
jumping like she had seen the Lord in the living room. "You sing it so beautiful
in your voice, and it's like sunrise
you born, and sunset
you dead."
"I
hadn't quite thought of it that way, Alma, but you're right. Do you know that
Daddy sang this song in a musical he starred in on Broadway called Fiddler
on the Roof? Daddy's sister Ruth was also in the show, and so was I. "You
are shitting me," she screamed, and the decision was made. On
May 20th, 2001, hundreds of people came from all over to honor my father. He would
have been thrilled; he had a full house. Friends and family greeted us in a green
room. Mom was already there when I arrived. "Mommy, are you doing okay?"
I hugged her. "You're gonna put your hair up, aren't you?"
she asked. After thirty years of therapy, I left it down. "And don't forget
to pull the mike away from your mouth when you sing
otherwise you're too
loud." Before
the service, Abby, Risa and I went into the chapel to see Pop. He looked peaceful
and dapper. Risa was relieved. She begged them not to touch his Einsteinian eyebrows,
and they hadn't. The service was beautiful, moving, funny, and sad. Here's how
it went. Funeral
Setlist 1)
Klezmer music (a gorgeous haunting lament) Steve Elson on clarinet, Art Baron
on trombone 2) Me, singing
"Every Time We Say Goodbye" by Cole
Porter, Jimmy Roberts on piano 3) Rabbi Koster
Eulogy 4) David Tobis
(Risa's David) eulogy 5) Risa, Abby and me
eulogies 6) David Robinson
(Abby's David) The Intention, poem and eulogy 7) Jimmy Roberts (hilarious eulogy,
including imitations of Dad) 8) Me, singing
"Sunrise Sunset" 9)
Jerry and Hazel Tobis (Risa's in-laws) letter 10) Rabbi Koster's closing speech.
We walked
in a procession ushering my father's body to the shiny black hearse. We were cloaked
in warm, crying kisses, when a woman with blonde, cotton candy hair came over
to me and shrieked, "UGH when you sang 'seedlings turn overnight to sunflowers'
I LOST IT, you have GOT to sing that at my funeral, I'm putting it in my will." In
the days that followed, I stared and slept in Dad's stark apartment. I fielded
calls, everything from the mailman wanting to know his forwarding address, to
Omaha Steaks wanting to know why he cancelled his steak subscription. One warm
night I wandered downtown to the half price theatre ticket booth. There were hundreds
of people in line. It was five to eight. I got on the end of the line, though
I was certain it was too late and crowded to get a ticket. Out of absolutely nowhere,
a TKTS guy walked right up to me, and asked me what show I wanted to see.
"Bells are
Ringing," I said. "Why?"
He took me straight to the ticket window, past hundreds of anxious tourists and
theatregoers, and got me an orchestra seat. "Why
are you doing this?" I asked. "No
reason, ma'am," he answered plainly. "I just do it sometimes." And
I knew Dad was floating above me in midtown.
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