he knew how to laugh |
Here is part of the note I sent my friend the next evening:
R, you're an unwitting angel, and it was grace that you contacted me when you did.
I begrudgingly called my dad last night. I was tired and wasn't going to, but I remembered what you'd said about your parents, and I did. And when he ended the call "mentioning" that he had only the night's dose of a medication he needed, and that he was supposed to take it morning and night, I went rather begrudgingly to pharm, bitching that he could've let me know last week, and spent $50 that I knew I wouldn't let him pay back. But I stopped at Trader Joe's and got him some OJ and licorice scotty dogs because he loves them, and went to his house, and we had a good visit. He told me a couple of stories from his youth, and then he looked tired, and I asked if he was ready for me to get out of there, and he was. I told him I loved him and gave him a very tender kiss.
Today during my 11 oclock session my client's cell rang. She was sheepish and asked if I minded if she checked; she was waiting for an important call . To give her a little privacy I turned toward my desk just in time to see my phone light up (it's silenced during sessions, of course). It was the independent senior center where my father lives. I picked up and they said my dad had collapsed and ambulances were on the way.
...
Not long later, with family soothing his brow and holding his hand, he peacefully took his last breath.
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I thank you so much for your urging to enjoy those minutes.
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Born during the depression in the small town of Pawnee Rock, KS, Bill was the youngest child and only son of Anna and Louis Svoboda. His father was a jack of all trades, doing whatever work he could to support his family. Bill arrived during a difficult time. The Czech immigrant community and most of the midsection of the nation were hit hard by overfarming, drought and poor economy. When the Dust Bowl swept through Kansas, Bill contracted osteomyletis and “the dust pneumonia” at age 2. He spent much of his young life in hospitals, enduring more than 40 operations by age 18. They were horrific-- ether was used, "and I used be so scared when they came at me with that mask; I thought I would suffocate-- Sodium Pentathol was the best thing ever invented." Last Tuesday he told stories about those times, and that “I would have been a genius if I hadn't been in a coma for months" as a kid. I said, "You mean a SUPERgenius".
Bill lost most of the use of a hand during this time, as well as all of his teeth by age 18 following a car wreck and related to the osteo. But he remained Wild Billy. He learned to drive at age 7 and would go on whiskey runs with his grandfather during the prohibition. He was spoiled and beloved by his sisters.
Despite his physical hardships, Bill was a strong man, and loved labor, biking, tennis and being outdoors. At 24 he met and married a nursing student from Memphis TN he’d met through his sister. He was smitten by the “glamorous big city girl”, though he found out later she was also from a rural family. They settled in Topeka, KS and raised their four daughters. Bill really, really wanted a son, but once he realized that was not to be, he made sure his daughters were strong and independent, and he advocated for equal opportunities.
bill and ruth's sitting rooom |
Here's a piece one of them wrote about him (thank you, Juliana, for this gift):
There so much about Bill that I remember. He was really there, I mean there there, In a way most Dads couldn't be. He was a gritty Tom Waits kinda character who made us laugh all the time, mostly with corny jokes, but funny just the same. While most the adults were smoking, he did it like it was part of his outfit, you hardly noticed the cig, because it was there just like the T-shirt was. There was no affectation or elegance about it. He was one of those people who could lean over, cigarette in mouth and, say, tie your shoe and when he was done he hadn't gagged on the smoke or gotten it in his eyes like everyone else would have. He was facile, as he was with everything else. He fixed everything, he fixed up their house, he fixed the car, he fixed the camper that Jana and I "camped" in in the back yard. He sang silly songs like " A Boy Named Sue" He made up a poem about me. "My name is not Lisa, my name is Julie, my hair is unruly..." He drove us everywhere and never complained. He seemed to enjoy getting that extra time with his girls. He made me feel like one of his girls. When we moved on to college, he showed up to help with moving and broken apartment parts, and sometimes he hung around and talked. He had a dog named Gouda.
And he was also there for me when I was grieving and so young. He knew just what to do. He was soft in the right places too. There is little hollow place in my heart for him today. Rest in peace Bill.
And he was also there for me when I was grieving and so young. He knew just what to do. He was soft in the right places too. There is little hollow place in my heart for him today. Rest in peace Bill.
memorial shrine at the wake |
He made the worlds’ best cocoa fudge and popcorn; and his beef jerky had a national reputation.
He was no saint. He had trouble expressing vulnerability and related emotions. He could do happy and goofy, but it was never easy for his to talk about the tender stuff, or his own vulnerability, so sometimes what came out was angry or curmudgeon. Those were his protectors. He’d been through a lot, and that was what worked for him. But we knew him despite himself, and we knew his poet’s heart, and the sweet boy in him, and all the rest as much as he could let leak through. He told terrible jokes, made terrible puns, and had no trouble at all proudly mispronouncing words and watching us cringe at them.
He loved his family, and told us often. He was proud of his girls, all of them.
I know this is a long one. I miss him bad. A week ago, he was telling me stories.
"When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight." --Kahlil Gibran
Don't forget to treasure those moments.
3 comments:
As the husband to "one of the sisters", I only knew Bill in the last few years where he was struggling with the loss of his wife and the slowing down of his life, but in the last few months where he was close to family, but still independent and not burdened with a s*%t load of worries the boy in him emerged again - we saw wild bill again, slowed down by the speed of his wheel chair, but still rapid of thought and wit. Good speed and better health on your next journey where ever that is, even if it is only in our hearts.
I only met Mr. Svoboda a few times but he made my family and I feel as though we were part of his family. He was a warm and genuine man. I feel honored and blessed to have known him and have shared a Thanks Giving with him at his home in Kansas a few years back.
God Bless You Wild Bill, I will always remember your light. Thank You <3
I got to know Bill when he was in Minneapolis staying with Shelly and Tony after an operation. I loved his humor and upbeat manner while recovering. He was a great guy and I am glad to have known him.
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