Holy heck, has life changed. Four months into a new year, a new decade, and WTF, we’re living out the movie Contagion in real life. What a fast moving shit storm.
Hell, in early March, I was still in denial about my fucking gallstones. I went ahead and scheduled the surgery for gallbladder removal on April 6, but deep down inside, I was thinking my episodes were just a fluke. I wouldn’t really need the surgery… I would just put it there as a placeholder, and surely, by the time the date rolled around, I would be fine and I could just cancel.
Well, as you know, in mid March, Governor Newsom shut shit down around St. Paddy’s Day. Chaos, confusion, anxiety, uncertainty… My brokerage started hosting zoom calls every morning and goddamn, guidelines and rules for real estate were changing day to day. I found myself spending a little too much time on the news listening to the world unravel and very quickly, I found myself not sleeping, my schedule was totally whack, and I wasn’t getting out of bed. After a few days of that bullshit, I realized I had to start limiting exposure to the news. I wouldn’t say anything about life is near normalcy now, but at least I am functioning again.
Meanwhile, I’d been roughly following the situation for my father on the East Coast. Dad is in Maryland now (he came back at the end of February to do his taxes), while mom is with grandma, living with their caretaker. Lemme say: thank fucking god for these caretakers who leave their own homes and families in Indonesia to come and care for the elderly in Taiwan. I won’t get into the unfairness and social inequalities that create such a system, but certainly, my family benefits from the sacrifices of these dedicated workers. It still blows my mind that for 3-5 years, they do not go home at all— they only communicate with their families through FaceTime or Line or WhatApp. Just breaks my heart and yet they do it so willingly— with kindness, gentleness, and a smile. I’m reminded constantly that the world is such a different place outside and beyond my bubble of privilege.
Anyway, I have checked in with my mother weekly, and you would not fucking believe her progress since she has been under the care of Ani, the caretaker. She can actually follow our phone conversations, and she sounds energetic, lively, even opinionated. A huge, dramatic difference from living with my father. Not that he did anything wrong, but you can see there is a massive difference between living with someone who is specifically trained on taking care of others. Not to mention, the stability of being in ONE place, eating regular meals, getting regular exercise, and interacting with people… I wish we had done this sooner, but no point in that regret. Better late than never, and my goodness: the recovery has been remarkable nonetheless.
And I think dad is feeling better, not having the responsibility of caretaking. He is a homebody by nature, so he hangs at home watching Taiwanese programming on YouTube, tracking his stocks, doing his busy body tasks. He really is a hermit in his natural state.
With all the shut downs and SIPs, I started to worry about his nutrition and meals. Every time I called, he said he was fine: he went to Costco and bought boxes of microwaveable rice, and that’s all he would eat three times a day. For protein, he’d throw in a handful of nuts. I offered grocery delivery, food delivery, everything and anything. Not interested. It was frustrating the heck out of me. Why are you living like a goddamn pauper? Just spend some money to make life easier and more comfortable. Jesus Christ.
Finally, I set him up on Door Dash. Ordered him a steak and grilled fish from Ruby Tuesdays. Thinking that he had been eating rice and nuts three times a day for weeks, I figured the two meals with sides would last at least 3-4 meals. Nope. Gone in two meals. Huh? I offered to order more— Chipotle, Arby’s, Roy Rogers, whatever. “No, no. I’m fine. It’s too much trouble.”
Dad. Door dash is ZERO trouble. There is nothing more convenient than me clicking a few items on my computer screen and pressing Deliver. The food shows up on your freaking doorstep. You don’t have to talk to anyone. You don’t have to transfer funds. Nothing. A few clicks and then food miraculously appears on your stoop. There is NOTHING more convenient that that. It’s practically MAGIC.
I’m telling you: old people are so goddamn stubborn. It kills me.
Thankfully, the steak and grilled fish triggered his appetite, and it finally opened the gates for my beloved NuWave oven, which I had purchased for them years ago. I kept touting how easy the damn thing was to use— just three buttons to cook lamb, chicken, turkey, ANYthing. Resistant, resistant, resistant. Finally, after the Ruby Tuesday’s meal, he went to Costco and bought steaks. I showed him on FaceTime how to cook it up. Salt and pepper on both sides. Set on the 4” rack. Cook Time – 1 – 2 – Start. Twelve minutes later, flip the steak. Repeat. Done.
He actually got excited that the steak turned out delicious. And then he started using the NuWave to heat up other foods, make lamb chops. Jesus Christ. Welcome to the world of the living. It only took like 4 years!!!
Of course a few days after his new enchantment with the NuWave, he was back to rice and vegetables. Too much meat, he said. Ah well, so long as he can have some variety beyond rice and nuts, that’s the best I can hope for. At some point, he’s supposed to give the frozen fish fillets in the freezer a try. Baby steps.