i wish

heart attacked

heart attacked
Written by Cathoel Jorss,

I just got a letter from my mother explaining she has been in hospital for five days with bronchial pneumonia. Mum is in Brisbane and I am in Berlin and no one told me.

She’s 78 years old and had a hip and a knee replaced this year, since my father’s death. This is the sickest, ie closest to death, she’s ever been. It is hard to be the survivor of a 50-year marriage. People often die on the heels of their spouses.

A few years back I rang my Dad on his birthday. I sang happy birthday to him over the phone. I was in Adelaide and they were all in Brisbane. He told me they had taken him out for a steak dinner. He described the wine, he loved sparkling shiraz. We chatted for perhaps twenty minutes. Then Dad said, “By the way.”

Casually. “Your brother’s in hospital, we think he’s having a heart attack.”

I have the feeling one of these bright days I might get an email. Mum died last Tuesday, she was cremated at Mount Ommaney, it was a lovely ceremony. On our first day back from the family holiday on the Gold Coast I got a phone call from the brother whose own heart would later be attacked, or is it attack him. It was the first day of the year ten years ago. “Dad’s had a stroke. He’s still alive.” My brothers and even their friends had all assembled at the hospital, they’d left it so late in the day to call me I could not get on a flight til the next day. I remind myself very many people have these stories that make painful experiences more painful. This morning my heart aches and I am questioning this old ache. I have the feeling by now I ought to be used to it. I always hope it will let me learn to dance more wisely and the creaks be a species of jazz.

6 comments on “heart attacked

  1. psm says:

    Come home, lovely. See Mrs Puss too. x

    • Cathoel Jorss says:

      Oh how I would so love to! Thank you for this generous thought. Aber es fehlt die Euros, as a German might say – I lack the cash. I would take that Puss and stash her under my arm and see how she liked Berlin’s ferocious winter xx

  2. Jess O says:

    I don’t know if those old aches ever go away. I’m hopeful. Creaky, but hopeful.

    • Cathoel Jorss says:

      I hope so too, for both our sakes. Very sorry to hear, Jess. Maybe it’s like rheumatism which comes on in particular weathers.

  3. Bill says:

    “I always hope it will let me learn to dance more wisely and the creaks be a species of jazz.” Beautifully evocative!

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