Endings: Nana’s Life

 

When I was a child, my Nana was the most magical person. She would carry two giggling children at a time up the stairs tucked under her arms, claiming that she was carrying two sacks of potatoes. Every morning she stretched in bed, and when she came to visit all of us grandchildren would run down to the guest room and climb in bed with her and stretch. Arms up! Out! Up! Over! Legs up! Out! Together! Bicycle!

Nana was born in Nottingham, England. Her mother died when she was a baby and her older sisters brought up her and her brother, just a year older. They played in Sherwood Forest as children. Her father was quite strict, and she and her brother were very close, but he was killed in the Great War and she never got over mourning him.

Nana came to Canada to work in a lace factory as a teenager. On the boat from England, she was in second class, but the captain paired her up with a girl who was sailing first class by herself, and the two became pals. My Nana bobbed her long hair onboard along with her friend, something her father would have been horrified to see.

After Nana started working in Quebec, she found that the French Canadian girls were very cruel. They would cut her threads when she went on a break and call her mean names. When her older sister asked her to come to New York City to help her with her babies, my Nana hitched a ride on a motorcycle and came immediately. She never left the US, which made her an illegal immigrant, since she never had a visa or green card or anything like.

Nana met and married my grandfather, a big blustering Irishman, a union man who worked for Con Edison. Their marriage never seemed terribly happy, but they certainly were strong personalities and I loved them both a great deal. Nana, a Protestant, raised her two children as Catholics and shocked the priest at one point by asking for instruction to enter the Church fully. She worked at the school and was always present to help out in the parish so he had had no idea that she was not Catholic!

Nana was a looker, and loved style. She always instructed us grandchildren to avoid debt but only buy the best quality.

In her later life, Nana had severe emphysema and mostly stayed in her apartment. We grandchildren would take the bus to visit her after she and my grandfather moved out of NYC to an apartment closer to my parents. When I was able to drive, I would pick up her groceries and bring them to her house, where she would feed me and we’d play some gin rummy.

By the time I was a senior in college, it was clear Nana was not going to be with us much longer. Always super independent, she refused to leave her home and had a Do Not Resuscitate order on her frig. My family supported her decisions. Right after graduation, my mother asked me to do something for Nana. My mother had to be at a conference for her work — she was a nurse in charge of infection control for local hospitals — but she did not want her mother to be alone. So I lived with Nana for most of the last week of her life. I tried to make her food which she could not eat, or read her books which tired her, or rub lotion on her swollen and cracked feet. One night I fell asleep but was awakened by the sound of my Nana. She had tried to go to the bathroom by herself and had fallen. That was probably the hardest moment in my life, trying to gather Nana up from the floor and get her back together and to bed again. I was so afraid she was going to die there, and I knew I was not to call anyone. I cradled her, my beautiful strong Nana who used to carry me under her arm, and carried her to her room as best I could and tucked her in bed again.

My mother came back from the conference the next day, and came to her mother’s, and she died the next day while I was not there anymore. For years afterward, my siblings and myself would catch ourselves thinking we heard Nana’s voice singing out in our house, but of course she was gone.

I have an old winter cap of hers in my memory box, and it retains my Nana’s smell, a mixture of Jean Nate and her own self. It even has a couple of white Nana hairs caught in the wool. I pull out the cap occasionally to sniff it and think of her. I still love her and look forward to seeing her again.

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There are 31 comments.

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  1. Zafar Member
    Zafar
    @Zafar

    What a blessing to you MT.

    • #1
  2. Patrick McClure Coolidge
    Patrick McClure
    @Patrickb63

    Tears MT.

     

    • #2
  3. skipsul Inactive
    skipsul
    @skipsul

    Beautiful.

    • #3
  4. JustmeinAZ Member
    JustmeinAZ
    @JustmeinAZ

    A beautiful remembrance. This makes me wish that I had been close with my grandparents.

    • #4
  5. Dr. Bastiat Member
    Dr. Bastiat
    @drbastiat

    One of my favorite parts of my job is working with old people.  All of them were crazy teenagers once, all of them have done crazy stuff, but now all you see is some old lady fussing with her knitting.  I love to hear their stories.  Just wonderful.

    Thanks for writing that down – hate to let such a rich life pass without noting it.  Sounds like she had a great ride.  Wish I could have known her.

    • #5
  6. Jules PA Inactive
    Jules PA
    @JulesPA

    Oh, Mama Toad, what a sweet story.

    My granny used to do the stretching in bed thing too.

    • #6
  7. PHCheese Inactive
    PHCheese
    @PHCheese

    Your Nana was blessed to have you.

    • #7
  8. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    You have brought back so many wonderful memories for me of my grandparents.

    Thank you.

     

    • #8
  9. Sandy Member
    Sandy
    @Sandy

    The older I get, the more I seem to think of my grandmothers.  I do have unending pity for children who never knew a grandparent well. It is a blessing to be able to call upon their memory, as you have done so well here.

    • #9
  10. She Member
    She
    @She

    CB Toder aka Mama Toad:I have an old winter cap of hers in my memory box, and it retains my Nana’s smell, a mixture of Jean Nate and her own self. It even has a couple of white Nana hairs caught in the wool. I pull out the cap occasionally to sniff it and think of her. I still love her and look forward to seeing her again.

    And you will.

    What a beautiful story.  And what a special lady.

    • #10
  11. Annefy Member
    Annefy
    @Annefy

    This was wonderful

    I didn’t grow up with any grandparents – I just found my brother’s obituary from 1964 and was surprised to see my mother’s father listed. My mom took us to Scotland in 1961 so at least I met him.

    My daughter lives in our backhouse with her husband and two little girls so I see them daily. Your post makes me think about what they’ll say about me one day.

    We caught the 18 month old ordering the dog to “march” recently, so I assume that order will be among her memories.

    • #11
  12. CB Toder aka Mama Toad Member
    CB Toder aka Mama Toad
    @CBToderakaMamaToad

    Oh Anne, my Nana used to order us about too! We loved loved loved it.

    • #12
  13. Trink Coolidge
    Trink
    @Trink

    CB Toder aka Mama Toad: I cradled her, my beautiful strong Nana who used to carry me under her arm, and carried her to her room as best I could and tucked her in bed again.

    These words are some of the most poignant, heart-breaking I’ve read in a personal account in a very long time.   Nana must be smiling down on you Mama Toad.   You honor her with the love you’ve shared with us, your fortunate readers.

    • #13
  14. DocJay Inactive
    DocJay
    @DocJay

    A sweet tribute.  Oh for a minute of being held by someone no longer here.

    • #14
  15. CB Toder aka Mama Toad Member
    CB Toder aka Mama Toad
    @CBToderakaMamaToad

    DocJay (View Comment):
    A sweet tribute. Oh for a minute of being held by someone no longer here.

    I still feel her presence and hear her voice when I am smelling that hat…

    • #15
  16. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    CB Toder aka Mama Toad (View Comment):

    DocJay (View Comment):
    A sweet tribute. Oh for a minute of being held by someone no longer here.

    I still feel her presence and hear her voice when I am smelling that hat…

    My father-in-law, whom I loved with all my heart and who I know loved me, left us a rake. Every time I put my hand on that weathered rake handle, it’s as if he is right there with me. Right beside me. :)

    • #16
  17. Hypatia Member
    Hypatia
    @

    “Dear as remembered kisses after death..”

    …crying!??

    Beautiful tribute.

    • #17
  18. Ansonia Member
    Ansonia
    @Ansonia

    No words. It made me cry.

    Beautiful, Mama Toad.

    • #18
  19. Nanda Panjandrum Member
    Nanda Panjandrum
    @

    Bittersweet and beautiful, MT!  Thank you and Pax vobis!

    • #19
  20. RightAngles Member
    RightAngles
    @RightAngles

    PHCheese (View Comment):
    Your Nana was blessed to have you.

    Yes she was!

    • #20
  21. drlorentz Member
    drlorentz
    @drlorentz

    It’s posts like this that keep me on Ricochet. Thank you.

    CB Toder aka Mama Toad: Nana was a looker

    That’s a great expression that has, sadly, fallen from favor: evocative, yet subdued.

    • #21
  22. Mike LaRoche Inactive
    Mike LaRoche
    @MikeLaRoche

    Wonderful story.

    • #22
  23. JLock Inactive
    JLock
    @CrazyHorse

    And Mama T provided this incredible piece as a Mitzvah for group writing! Really fantastic Mama T!

    God Bless.

    • #23
  24. CB Toder aka Mama Toad Member
    CB Toder aka Mama Toad
    @CBToderakaMamaToad

    RightAngles (View Comment):

    PHCheese (View Comment):
    Your Nana was blessed to have you.

    Yes she was!

    It feels too self-serving to like this, but thank you!

    • #24
  25. JLock Inactive
    JLock
    @CrazyHorse

    Mama T somewhow placed the bar higher for what was already the most impressive (and emotionally moving) month ever in Group Writing.

    This one belongs in a book, Mama T. I’ll be rereading this and thinking about it for years to come. Thank you.

    • #25
  26. CB Toder aka Mama Toad Member
    CB Toder aka Mama Toad
    @CBToderakaMamaToad

    JLock (View Comment):
    Mama T somewhow placed the bar higher for what was already the most impressive (and emotionally moving) month ever in Group Writing.

    This one belongs in a book, Mama T. I’ll be rereading this and thinking about it for years to come. Thank you.

    Ohhh — off-topic, but what about a book of the best posts of Ricochet? Along with the comments, of course! Paging @marcin?

    • #26
  27. jzdro Member
    jzdro
    @jzdro

    Thank you, Mama Toad. You have let us in on something precious. It’s appreciated.

    Oh! And in future, when again you think you hear her voice, be sure: you do.

    • #27
  28. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    Beautiful MT.

    • #28
  29. Grosseteste Thatcher
    Grosseteste
    @Grosseteste

    Thank you for the moving tribute!


    This conversation is part of a Group Writing series with the theme “Endings”, planned for the whole month of March. If you follow this link, there’s more information about Group Writing. The schedule is updated to include links to the other conversations for the month as they are posted. Please sign up for an open date!

    • #29
  30. PhilKolb Inactive
    PhilKolb
    @PhilKolb

    What a beautiful memory and wonderfully written.  My wonderful wife has established a nurturing relationship with our three grandkids like your Nana had with you and your siblings.  So their Nana can sow important lessons of life into their lives.  Someone told me a while ago, that Grandchildren are one of God’s greatest gifts(the GREATEST gift being salvation thru Christ) because they bring so much joy to your life.  Ours live three hours away, don’t get to see as often as we would like and we miss them terribly.

    • #30
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