| Thu
20 Oct 2005
Lately I've been carrying my mobile phone while on
the job because my watch has died and, if I don't
know the time, I'm likely to be late for lunch. And
that will never do.
We've
been working all morning in the 37-degree heat, but
taking regular water breaks, so it's not too bad.
During
one of these breaks I get a phone call. "Is that
Robert Gray?...doctor something-or-other from the
Alfred hospital in Melbourne here."
So
what can this have to do with me?. Why would some
Melbourne hospital be ringing? I don't know anyone
in Melbourne, not well enough to receive a call about
their health anyway...uh oh, my Dad has just flown
down for a 2nd 12th Army reunion.
It
seems that he is very sick, the doctor expressed surprise
that he even made it to hospital. "Most people
with this condition don't get this far" he said,
"And those that do only last 24 to 48 hours".
"24
to 48 hours" and he got the first symptoms yesterday.
Bloody hell, and here I am working up in far north
Queensland.
They
say they'll run some tests and get back to me.
By
lunch time there are no results, but I do get a call
from my Dad. He sounds very weak, and it's obvious
that he doesn't expect to see me again.
Not
if I can help it.
The
job will get along just fine without me, but how fast
can I get to Melbourne? Pretty fast as it turns out.
I book a direct Cairns-Melbourne flight on the web,
leaving first thing tomorrow morning.
Chris
packs me a bag and we hit the sack early, we'll have
to get up at around 3AM and drive down to Cairns.
Fri
21 Oct
Up at three, a quick breakfast, and we're on the road.
The drive is uneventful, and by six I'm sitting in
seat 23C as a guest of JetStar.
There's
nothing to do now but pray for a tail wind, and hope
I get there in time.
On
arrival I'm tempted to hire a car, I will need one
while I'm here, but I don't think it's a good idea
right now. It will take time to organise, and I'll
probably get lost on the way to the hospital.
I
hail a cab.
Half
an hour later I'm at my Dad's side. He looks pretty
good all things considered and, as it transpires,
I am to have several days with him.
Later
in the evening I catch another cab, this time to Margaret's.
Margaret is a long-time friend of my Dad's, and indeed
much of the family. Dad was staying with her until
he got sick, and now she has offered to look after
me while I'm in town.
Sat
22 Oct
I hire a car from a "rent a bomb" mob. It
turns out to be a very nice Mitsubishi Magna, automatic
and electric everything. It's a 1985 model, but that's
OK with me, especially for about half the cost of
a new car, and anyway it will spend most of its time
in the hospital carpark.
Most
of the day is spent at my Dad's side, usually reading,
or watching him as he sleeps.
His
breathing is very shallow and erratic, he often breaths
out and doesn't inhale for 10 seconds or so. I watch
and watch as the seconds tick by, until finally his
chest expands. Under the circumstances it's very unnerving,
each time I wonder if he has taken his last breath.
Our
family has never been big on displaying emotions,
there's always been a "next time" to tell
someone how you feel about them. As I watch my old
man lying here though I realise that this time there
just may not be a next time.
I
resolve to tell him I love him when he wakes.
Sun
23 Oct
My cousin Marian has flown down from Darwin to be
with us. Her daughter Jennifer, a fourth-year medical
student studying near Melbourne, has also taken time
off work to be here. They are both particularly fond
of my old man, and he of them.
Between
the three of us we are keeping a 24-hour vigil.
Tue
25 Oct
Dad wakes up, takes one look at me, smiles, and says
"I'm still alive then". Obviously I don't
look angelic enough for there to be any confusion.
Wed
26 Oct
For days now I've hardly left my Dad's side, sleeping
in his room overnight and only leaving to grab a meal
or go for a walk when someone can relieve me.
He
is very cheerful and always smiling when awake. The
situation is of course quite distressing, but not
to my Dad, he constantly tells me not to worry, that
he's "had a good innings" and is ready to
go, which of course just makes me more distressed.
Yesterday
he was pretty much out of it, but he rallied today
and so, at around five, I thought I'd duck home (to
Margaret's house) for a decent meal, much more of
this hospital food and I'll be joining my Dad. He
seems OK, he's sleeping and has Marian for company.
And besides it's only about a ten-minute drive if
you sneak in before the rush hour.
It
costs me $48 to get out of the car park, it's actually
more expensive to park the car than hire it. I rush
through the streets to Margaret's, she has been warned
of my coming and is preparing dinner for me so I won't
be away too long.
On
arrival I take the top off a beer, take a swig, and
sit down ready to eat.
The
phone rings. My Dad is dead.
Marian
assures me that he never woke, so I didn't miss any
last words, but damn it I should have been there.
I
return to the hospital and everyone gives me some
time alone with him to say goodbye. It's a somewhat
one-way conversation of course, fortunately there's
not much to say, we've been lucky to have had so much
time together over the past few days, and in fact
have said all that needed saying.
Thu
27 Oct
My Dad never wanted anyone to fuss over him in life,
and so it will be in death. He wanted to be left to
the teaching hospital, to be useful right to the end,
but thanks to the bureaucrats and the red tape that
won't happen. We will have him cremated instead, and
his ashes will be spread somewhere nice.
There
won't be a head stone, nor any inscriptions, but if
there was I'd borrow a phrase from one of his nurses,
and it would simply read...
Don
Gray
20 Mar 21 - 26 Oct 05
"A lovely man"

Goodbye
Dad, I'll see you in about 30 years.
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