Last picture in my series

I suppose this is about 1985. Sandy doesn’t look good, but the children do. This is no accident. Whatever happened to her was second to her children. The stresses in her life were building up, and probably are related to her death. Her marriage was over, the serious stress related to the health issues and multiple hospitalisations of Kim, and more, were beginning to have a visible effect. I was in Sri Lanka most of the time between 86-91, but I was sending my children to school on Vancouver Island in BC Canada, and during their holidays they would drop down to Bend, Oregon, to be with her.

Sandy left California with a man that her daughter hated and moved to Oregon. How did she end up with Rich? I suppose he was kind of an escape. I knew of her problems with his behaviour, but I also knew that during the move to Oregon she depended on him to help with Daren and the move. She needed him for that.  And, Daren must have picked up from Rich his life’s profession and love of nature in Oregon. I wonder if Daren also picked up his Republicanism from Rich– can’t really say. I gave Rich credit for his help, and so did my sister. But that definitely put me a odds with Kim, and threw me in the enemy’s camp. The fact is, I hardly knew Rich, and I  recognised him for his role with Sandy, believing that Sandy was in control and making her choices. That was good enough for me.

When I have more time, I’ll insert some of her thoughts when she discovered at my dad’s house that she had terminal cancer and not much time to live.

My final time with Sandy is when she visited the Netherlands and France, and the wedding of John. This was a tough time for Sandy, she knew she was dying, but she was going to put forth the effort to be at the wedding. Lack of will power is not a family problem. We must give to our difficult mother some of the credit for that strength.

Before that her arrival in the Netherlands, I had been in touch with John since his arrival in Amsterdam in the summer of 1993. In 1993 we travelled to the states to be at a “family reunion” at my mother’s place in Colorado. Sandy told me to be sure that our correspondence didn’t fall into the hands of our mother. My mother was known for checking around for information during her visits.

But back to her trip to the Netherlands in May 1995. Of course, there was the wedding and Haarlem as well as to some of the famous places in the Netherlands, and a trip to France and Belgium. I attended the wedding dinner, a formal affair, and she asked me to help her. She asked me to speak for her, because she couldn’t do it. It was my honour to do so.

After the trip to the Netherlands, she went to California to be at Kim’s graduation. She also writes and tells me about Daren and Thia. Not much question that she has her thoughts focussed on her children as her life slowly begins its inexorable and sad march to the transition. I don’t believe in death; I believe she is alive and well in another dimension or “world of God” as Bahá’í say.  I received letters in July, giving news, and saying that things were going well. But she only had a few weeks to live.

Until the letter of 6 August 1995. News of a brain tumor, steroids affecting her concentration, cracked femur, radiation. Kim was with her and, her comment: “She has never seen her mom so weepy.”

By mid-August Sandy had to focus on priorities. In her last letter on 6 August, she said “I’m having a more difficult time dealing with the cancer this time around because the reality that it is spreading is real….. Love, Sandy”

She died on 30 August.