Articles/Essays – Volume 52, No. 2

Judas

Everybody, well or ill . . . imagines a boundary of suffering . . . beyond 
which, she or he is certain, life will no longer be worth living . . . [A]t various 
times, I could not possibly do without long walks on the beach or rambles 
through the woods; use a cane, a brace, a wheelchair; stop teaching; give 
up driving; let someone else put on and take off my underwear. [But o]ne 
at a time, with the encouragement of others, I have taken each of these . . . 
steps. . . . When I reach the wall, I think I’ll know. 

—Nancy Mairs, Waist High in the World 

Surviving my mother by twelve years, my father  
became my perfect friend, 
having evolved from the anxious and overly-protective
father I’d known as a teenager. 

I stopped by regularly, alone, both going and coming,
during monthly drives to southern Utah 
where I escaped for quiet to write.  
I developed a need to sit beside him. 

Mostly, he listened 
as I handed him my heart, giving it wholly to him. 
He handled it carefully like a secret.  
He could see inside the singular heart of his second child,
the one most like him—headstrong, quietly confident—
even as I poured out questions, even disagreements,
about the faith that was his life 
and second nature. 

Occasionally, about a certain grievance, he asked why 
I felt the way I did and listened to my explanation,  
nodding, yes, he could see that. 
He stayed deliberately on my side.  

His mind was sound, his body agile, his heart 
not only good, but strong. Then at 97 
he swallowed Tums until they found the cancer. 

Some of my siblings and I were with him 
when the specialist told him what to expect, giving him
a few to several months.  
He sat quietly  
while everyone cheered him on— 
he’d be reunited with his wife, our mother. His parents. 

He lived alone, stubbornly took care of himself, 
sometimes saying he was not ready yet. Life 
was still enjoyable. 

Very near the end as the two of us sat close— 
his vision and hearing nearly gone— 
and the distance between us was a whisper, 
he confessed he wished he’d been given a choice 
for treatment. That day in the specialist’s office. 

I felt like Judas.