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My father's long goodbye did not include words I most wanted to hear

Updated: Friday, June 15, 2007 11:44 PM PDT

Exactly 30 years ago, my father, age 69, died from bone cancer.

Five years before his death, doctors diagnosed him with prostate cancer. While Dad, in denial, spent several months deliberating how he should treat his cancer, it spread to his lymph nodes and that was pretty much that.

The five years between Dad's diagnosis and his death was, for our family, a journey into hell.

My mother, who had known nothing or no one else in her adult life except my father, was in crisis. Two of my sisters lived out of the country without easy access to the U.S. A third sister was a high school teenager. Dad's condition overwhelmed all of us.

In 1977, I lived in New York. Mom and Dad were in Los Angeles. As Dad's final weeks approached, I could think of nothing except him and his fate.

Most Friday nights after work for nearly six months, I took a taxi to John F. Kennedy airport and made the long coast-to-coast trip. And each Sunday night, I boarded the red-eye back to New York.

Sometimes when I visited Dad was home. Other times he was hospitalized. But wherever he was, his will to live dominated his spirit.

Once when Dad was at home, I organized the monthly bills for his signature. A renewal from Sports Illustrated was among the invoices. I asked Dad if he wanted to renew. Even though Dad certainly knew that he had little time left, he replied: "Yes, for five years."

Hope springs eternal in the human breast, even though death is at your doorstep.

In the hospital, Dad never slept at night. We would stay up to watch talk shows and late movies. Although Dad didn't speak of it, I'm convinced that he was afraid to sleep during the dark hours for fear that he wouldn't wake up. But every morning at dawn, Dad would fall off.

Sometimes when I came to visit, Dad would greet me but then turn his back. For the rest of the time I spent with him, he barely uttered a word.

At the time, my feelings were hurt. But I later realized that my frequent trips from New York were a sure signal to Dad that he was critically ill. And, as I also later learned, if you're dying you cannot help but being envious of those who are living, even if they are your own flesh and blood.

Dad was the typical Italian patriarch. Death was never discussed ... not even hinted at. None of us dared to broach the subject. Only a last-minute intervention by our family lawyer insured that Dad wrote a will.

I last saw Dad at the UCLA Medical Center. He had season tickets to the Bruins basketball and he encouraged me to go to the game that night. Reluctantly, I went. And when I returned, Dad spoke his last words to me: "Did they win?"

Since death was a forbidden topic, a lot went unsaid between my father and me. Luckily, Dad told the nurses, as they later relayed to me, that I was "a good boy" and that he was "proud of me."

As comforting as those words were, I wish Dad had spoken them directly to me.

But even more, I wish that I had been more candid with Dad about my own love for him. Although I learned many of life's valuable lessons from my father, I also picked up from him the undesirable trait of keeping my emotions in check.

Three decades have passed since Dad died. I think of him many times each and every day. Gradually, I have been able to block out my tortured memories of Dad's slow decline from a robust and vigorous man to a mere skeleton. Now my thoughts are of our many happy days together.

This year on Father's Day, I'll be in Western Pennsylvania with my son and grandchildren. You can be sure that I will tell them all — many times over — how much I love them.

Joe Guzzardi is an instructor at the Lincoln Technical Academy. Contact him at guzzjoe@yahoo.com.

Reader Feedback

Thanks wrote on Jun 23, 2007 12:18 PM:

" What a wonderful and heart warming piece. Thank you. "

kasey wrote on Jun 19, 2007 1:44 PM:

" My heart goes out to you. I've seen cancer strike too many times, and know how comforting those words could have been. At least you know that he cared and wanted you to be happy. "

Fischgoth wrote on Jun 18, 2007 10:51 AM:

" Joe, having lost my father to prostate cancer twenty years ago this story brought back many memories. In time our memories of our parents seem to be of them in robust and healthy times (thank God.) I personally feel our loved ones are around us and they know we love them. It isn't just saying the words but actions and you showed your father how much you loved him. "

Debbie wrote on Jun 18, 2007 9:26 AM:

" I wish my dad would have told me he loved me. He was an alcoholic. There are so many things I miss from my life since he died. There is a big void in my heart. "

Brian wrote on Jun 18, 2007 8:23 AM:

" Joe, Your endurance through your dad's slow and agonizing death has probably made you stronger and more appreciative of life. Not that I wish this experience on anyone. My dad, however, took his own life in 1969 when I was just 4. I often wonder what it would have been like to know my dad as an adult. Cancer can strike anyone regardless of age or health. I wish my dad had lived on to at least die from an illness instead of a self-inflicted death. "

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