{"id":885,"date":"2012-03-19T12:47:02","date_gmt":"2012-03-19T19:47:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.jeanetteleblanc.com\/?p=885"},"modified":"2015-06-20T17:55:45","modified_gmt":"2015-06-21T00:55:45","slug":"dogface","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jeanetteleblanc.com\/dogface\/","title":{"rendered":"He called me Dogface {memories of my grandfather)"},"content":{"rendered":"

He called me Dogface.<\/p>\n

No, really.\u00a0 He did.\u00a0 It was a term of endearment, I promise.\u00a0 A long-standing joke that wound through the years, connecting my grandfather and I.<\/p>\n

\u201cGet me some more tea,\u201d<\/em> he demanded one otherwise unremarkable summer day.<\/p>\n

\u201cHow do you ask?\u201d<\/em> I replied, teasingly.
\n
\n\u201cGet me some more tea\u2026.Dogface\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n

And so it began.<\/p>\n

That Christmas I found a holiday card in the shape of a dog.\u00a0 I peeled a photo of myself- early 90\u2019s hot-rollered hair and short velvet formal dress- from my photo album.\u00a0 Afew snips of the scissors and a little glue later and my face smiled back at me from the Dalmatian-shaped card.\u00a0\u00a0 I grinned to myself all the way to the college mailroom, imagining his face when he sliced open the envelope.<\/p>\n

On break I traveled home and entered the house to find him – as always – holding court in the straight-backed blue chair by the door.\u00a0 He was clearly antsy with anticipation and I soon realized why. \u00a0In the place of honor on the wall behind his head hung my card, now carefully mounted and framed, with a prominent BEWARE OF DOG sign carefully placed above.<\/p>\n

And so it continued between my grandfather and I \u2013 a backand forth of teasing comments and practical jokes.\u00a0 Both of us amused with our cleverness and determined to one-up the other.\u00a0 I thought it would last forever.<\/p>\n

He was immortal, I believed.\u00a0 Ten feet tall and bullet proof.\u00a0 Sure, we worshiped super heroes and celebrities, but if you asked my siblings, cousins and I to list our heroes, his name always topped the list.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>When other kids bought their grandfathers candy cane festooned neckties for Christmas, we bought Granddad a Pogo Stick.\u00a0 While other grandpas took their grandkids for a relaxing afternoon of fishing, we got World War Two era gloves strapped on for a hard-core boxing lesson.\u00a0 We got plenty of grandfatherly love, but we also ran screaming and laughing in crazed laps around the house while he chased us relentlessly with a big leather whip.\u00a0 Yes, he was crazy immortal.<\/p>\n

From him I learned political theory and a fierce sense of justice and the importance of always speaking my mind.\u00a0 That innate intelligence and good old fashion common sense outweighed formal education, but to grasp tight to every single opportunity to learn, classroom or not. I absorbed his commitment to community and society.\u00a0 I knew, with a depth that can only come from witnessing something for a lifetime, that family – always and forever – comes first, last and always and is the common thread that winds through everything else.<\/p>\n

My concept of romantic love came from the way he loved my grandmother, as if the sun rose and set on her smile.\u00a0 My understanding of home and the value of knowing where the ground was solid beneath my feet came from the unwavering depths of his connection to the land that sheltered my childhood summers.\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0My understanding that smart was good, but good old-fashioned hard work was better was absorbed from the work ethic he embodied.\u00a0 We learned to dig potatoes in the rich earth, and turn rough wood into swords and boats in the workshop, he\u2019s the only one who could manage to teach me to parallel park well enough to get my license. \u00a0Every single weekend of the summer The Saturday Night Party found us gathered in the living room, Granddad ensconced in his blue chair – reigning patriarch of a family who loved him like no other.<\/p>\n

My grandmother, the constant glue that kept it all together, gladly took the supporting role and gave him center stage.\u00a0 It was his pride we sought to attain.\u00a0 His laughter we worked to provoke. The measure of anything we did or undertook, created or achieved was what Granddad would think.\u00a0 His opinion was primary and his satisfaction with our achievements outweighed all other rewards.\u00a0 Not a word of this is an exaggeration, and not an ounce of our devotion was misplaced.<\/p>\n

\"\"It was my grandfather that walked me down the aisle at my wedding, handsome and debonair in a classic black tuxedo, bringing to life one of my earliest wishes. Days later I prepared to leave Nova Scotia for my new life in Arizona.\u00a0 Once, twice, three times I left everyone waiting in the driveway and made my way back to the kitchen.\u00a0 There he sat, in his customary place at the kitchen table by the big picture window overlooking the bay.\u00a0 Not once did he appear surprised to see me return. Over and over I returned to sit on his lap, trying to absorb his essence into my soul. His favorite brown cardigan with the patched sleeves, his perpetually well-shined shoes, his thinning hair, his twinkling eyes.\u00a0 Although I never could have admitted it to myself at the time, it was as if something in me knew that this would be our last real goodbye.<\/p>\n

***<\/p>\n

Months later a package arrived at the small one bedroom apartment that Sam and I called home.\u00a0\u00a0 It was curiously lightweight and marked by his familiar black scrawl.\u00a0 I remember looking up at Sam quite confused,<\/p>\n

\u201cIt feels empty.\u00a0 I wonder what on earth it could be?\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n

He laughed and replied.\u00a0 \u201cIt\u2019s a big ole box of Dogface, of course\u201d.<\/em><\/p>\n

I chuckled and rolled my eyes at what I thought was a lame joke, tearing into the brown paper wrapping with the enthusiasm of a child who has never gotten over the mysterious thrill of the postman\u2019s delivery.\u00a0\u00a0 And when it was open all I could do was laugh out loud.\u00a0 \u00a0He was right.\u00a0 Of course he was. It was <\/em>a big ole\u2019 box of Dogface, after all.<\/p>\n

The package contained small soft doll, of sorts.\u00a0\u00a0 With the body and clothing of a witch, a studded collar encircling her neck, the gift might not have made sense were it not for the hard plastic dog head that was perched on top.<\/p>\n

My grandfather, living in an 81 year old body ravaged by ageand by cancer and heart disease, had retained enough of his inner mischief to cook up this scheme.\u00a0 Purchasing a child\u2019s doll and a rubber dog toy, dismantling their pieces and stitching them together to create the pi\u00e8ce de r\u00e9sistance in our ongoing game.<\/p>\n

\u201cBrilliantly played<\/em>,\u201d I told him when we next talked, imagining the great glee he must have taken in the orchestration of this.\u00a0 I immediately began trying to come up with a way to top him. \"\"<\/a><\/p>\n

I never got the chance.\u00a0 He was taken to the hospital about a half hour from home.\u00a0 I remember talking to my aunt and agonizing about whether or not I should make the very expensive trip home.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou\u2019ll know when it\u2019s time\u201d,<\/em> she said softly with the resolve of one who has faced loss many times, \u201cyou\u2019ll just know\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n

And I did.\u00a0 I knew.\u00a0 And mere days later I was flying back home.\u00a0 Leaving the warm, dry desert and returning to a province blanketed in the thick snow of deep winter.\u00a0 And I found the most vibrant, vital man I had ever known lying in a hospital bed, unable to muster the strength to speak more than a few words.\u00a0 \u00a0His clan had gathered, as we always did, around him.\u00a0 We occasionally fell silent and he would motion with his hands as if to encourage our voices to surround him still.<\/p>\n

I was in denial.\u00a0 He would recover, and return home to white Dutch Colonial with the bright blue trim that he – a Canadian country boy – had built for his young American wife shortly after they were married. The home where she had birthed their children and together they had raised their family.\u00a0 The home where we had learned all that we ever needed to learn about roots and family and love.\u00a0 Of course he would return there \u2013 and be there always.\u00a0 How could this not be true?\u00a0 There was not even room in my heart for any other possibility.<\/p>\n

The night before the very last my younger brother and I took our shift with him while everyone else went home.\u00a0 That night we watched a man with more dignity than any I have known before or since accept our love, even when it meant that we supported him while he went to the bathroom.\u00a0 We knew, even in the moment, a kind of hallowed and humble gratitude for the gift of that sleepless night.\u00a0\u00a0 For a long time I held on to every word we exchanged but now \u2013 trying to write of them for the first time, I find that the edges are fuzzy, and cannot be captured on this screen.\u00a0 What I do recall was the privilege of being able to bear respectful witness to this man as he bore the collapse of his body with profound grace and solemn dignity.<\/p>\n

The night that was to be the very last was a night of snow.\u00a0 Heavy and white, it blanketed everything.\u00a0 Howling wind and drifting high, until it was finally quiet; muffling sound and suspending time as we lived the life of palliative care, deep within the small country hospital.\u00a0 And we were all there, very nearly.\u00a0 Moving in and out of his room and the family room nextdoor.\u00a0 Eating and curling up together, giving love to him, and to each other as we all breathed the half-formed breaths of those who waited for the inevitable.<\/p>\n

But still, I didn\u2019t believe.\u00a0 Didn\u2019t really understand.\u00a0 Didn\u2019t want to know.\u00a0 Couldn\u2019t comprehend that we were in the final stages of our dance with a man who had claimed every last moment of his life as whole and solid and his to have and experience fully.<\/p>\n

For hours it was the same.\u00a0 Same quiet hushed tones.\u00a0 Same cycles of in and out.\u00a0 Same sharing of memories and quiet laughter and held back tears.\u00a0 Same knowledge of the precious gift of this, of our connection, of what we had been given.<\/p>\n

It was all the same until it wasn\u2019t, and as his breathing changed so did our energy. Somehow we all knew.\u00a0 Were all called back to his bedside without anyone saying a word.\u00a0 And we surrounded him and filled that space.\u00a0 Fully present with our bodies and hearts and souls and memories and gratitude and love.<\/p>\n

My family encircled his hospice bed.\u00a0\u00a0 All of us.\u00a0\u00a0 His children.\u00a0 His grandchildren.\u00a0 His beloved wife. Together we spent our last moments with the man who had built us, a family of uncommon closeness.\u00a0 A man with a life force so strong and vital that it filled the room and also filled my heart and lungs and soul the way it had always filled my life.\u00a0 And we spent his last moments the way we had spent so many moments with him \u2013 together. Hands tightly clasped, arms around one another, we stood guard and witness as his spirit left the room.<\/p>\n

This, twelve years later, stands as one of the only experiences of my life that I can name as Holy. \u00a0Where life balanced on the cusp between the physical universe and what exists beyond our comprehension. \u00a0There was a presence in that room that cannot be named or measured, and perhaps it was only what love feels like when magnified and crystalized by that sort of devotion.\u00a0 \u00a0Perhaps that sort of love is always Holy \u2013 it\u2019s just that we don\u2019t remember to stop and pay attention until a moment of irrevocable magnitude causes us to pause and open wide enough to take it all in.\"\"<\/p>\n

Yes, it has been twelve years since that stormy night that changed everything.\u00a0 And still, I remember him with an immediacy that proves to me that death is not an ending, not in the face of that much love.\u00a0 It\u2019s only a continuation really, of what has been taught and learned and lives in us always.<\/p>\n

And still, they call me Dogface sometimes, their voices an echo of his teasing tone, their faces bearing traces of his lineage.\u00a0 And I don\u2019t mind.\u00a0 It keeps him close to me.<\/p>\n

***<\/p>\n

We were digging through a crate of old memories last year.\u00a0 Shoeboxes of letters from college roommates, concert ticket stubs and tattered photographs of old boyfriends.\u00a0 Journals with youthfully loopy handwriting chronicling days long past.\u00a0 \u201cMama, It\u2019s like a time capsule of your life,\u201d <\/em>said my wee girlie, as she lifted bits of the flotsam and jetsam of my past from the depths of the bin.\u00a0 And then there was Dogface.\u00a0 Face cracked, limbs torn but still containing every ounce of his humor and love. \u00a0\u00a0And I picked up that raggedy doll and held it close as tears came to my eyes and I remembered.<\/p>\n

Yes, he called me Dogface.\u00a0 And yes, it was a term of endearment.\u00a0 I promise.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

He called me Dogface. No, really.\u00a0 He did.\u00a0 It was a term of endearment, I promise.\u00a0 A long-standing joke that wound through the years, connecting my grandfather and I. \u201cGet me some more tea,\u201d he demanded one otherwise unremarkable summer day. \u201cHow do you ask?\u201d I replied, teasingly. \u201cGet me … <\/p>\n

Read More<\/a><\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4739,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[446],"tags":[394,393,152,155],"yoast_head":"\nHe called me Dogface {memories of my grandfather) | Jeanette LeBlanc<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jeanetteleblanc.com\/dogface\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"He called me Dogface {memories of my grandfather) | Jeanette LeBlanc\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"He called me Dogface. No, really.\u00a0 He did.\u00a0 It was a term of endearment, I promise.\u00a0 A long-standing joke that wound through the years, connecting my grandfather and I. \u201cGet me some more tea,\u201d he demanded one otherwise unremarkable summer day. \u201cHow do you ask?\u201d I replied, teasingly. \u201cGet me ... 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Whiskey heart & back alley daydreams. Alive in the shatter. Courting the muse. Seducing the paradox. Blessed be.\",\"sameAs\":[\"https:\/\/www.jeanetteleblanc.com\",\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/peacelovefree\",\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/jeanetteleblanc\"]}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"He called me Dogface {memories of my grandfather) | Jeanette LeBlanc","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.jeanetteleblanc.com\/dogface\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"He called me Dogface {memories of my grandfather) | Jeanette LeBlanc","og_description":"He called me Dogface. 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