 |
 |
Clara Less |
| |
Clara Less
A Tribute From:
Rosanne C. Less, Donor Daughter
My Mother was 73 when she died on April 22, 2004, following a stroke
on April 2 which left her fairly vegetative. My siblings, my Father and
I had to make many difficult end-of-life decisions in those 20 days. Given
that my Mother was an elderly and sickly woman (congestive heart failure,
hypertension, diabetes, severe arthritis, breathing problems and 30+ year
cancer survivor), she occasionally mentioned over the years that, while
she believed in the Gift of Life, she felt she had nothing to donate,
especially with her post-cancer status. "What would they want with an
old, decrepit body like mine?" she would rhetorically ask in discussing
these issues. I am happy she was wrong.
When my phone rang at about 5:25am on April 22, I already knew in
my heart what the cryptic "You'd better come quick, she's deteriorating" call
meant. Driving on I-75 from Grosse Ile to Dearborn's Oakwood Hospital, I
noticed that the sky was still the edge of night but not far off in the
clearing the dawn lurked. In that one moment watching the sky, I knew
instinctively she was gone.
As my siblings arrived one by one, it was my brother, John (who
trained as a chaplain at Children's Hospital, Detroit) who had the presence of
mind to respond to the hospice nurse who said there was a call from the Gift of
Life. Despite the many disagreements my siblings and I had had in the last few
months of my Mother's life, when the suggestion came to donate her corneas,
this was the one thing we could peacefully and unanimously agree upon.
My only experience with organ transplants up to that day was based
on items I was on news shows or other TV programs. I remember one episode of
NYPD Blue where a detective needed a heart transplant and received one
only because a young rookie officer had been shot in the head in the line of
duty. I remember vividly how the senior officer had to talk to the young,
soon-to-be widow about how a man on his squad needed a heart. The wife was
bewildered, shocked, and kept saying that was the kind of thing her husband
always would have decided. Finally, she consented when she understood that the
man her husband had been had ceased to exist due to brain death. It was a very
touching moment of television. Somehow, in the midst of my sorrow that morning
in April, that episode played over and over again in my mind. Still, I had no
idea what would happen to my Mother's eyes, or even if they could be used in
other people. At the very least, I knew they would go to medical research.
My Mother was a "closet" doctor in that she loved the pursuit of medicine,
though she never went to medical school or even to college. She had medical
books - I mean treatises and textbooks from college bookstores - that
she routinely referred to regarding her ailments or anyone else's. She
was extremely proud of my sister, Joan, who is a pediatrician. When Joan
was a med student and still living at home with my parents, she and my
Mother would talk about whatever surgical procedures, diseases or techniques
Joan had just learned.
Even in my Mother's last years, with all of her ailments, no
doctor could get anything past her without 100 questions and, God forbid
otherwise, 100 answers that met her satisfaction. She would have been
fascinated with the entire process of removing her corneas and how the
transplant process worked. I can just imagine her spirit hovering over that
operating table as her corneas were placed in the two gentlemen who received
them. I think of it almost in humorous terms, like the Junior Mint episode of
Seinfeld. Had my Mother been able to see into the future, the details of
this procedure would have been not-miss dinner table conversation when we were
growing up.
The gentlemen who received my Mother's eyes should know that she was
a voracious reader. She could never adjust to bifocals and always read
with her glasses off. Even after she had several mini-strokes and lost
some peripheral vision, that didn't slow her down. She read everything
from cookbooks to Vanity Fair Magazine to Andy Warhol's Diaries - pretty
hip stuff for an older woman, huh?
The men who received my Mother's eyes should also know some of the things
she saw in her lifetime. She worked, met my Father, got married and entered
the suburban life of Donna Reed, circa the late 1950s. She lived in Chicago,
where my three youngest siblings were born, for about five years. She
was an award-winning cook at the Michigan State Fair; she had lots of
correspondence with famous writers (cranked out on her old Remington typewriter);
she wrote various cooking columns for local papers over the years; she
hunted for treasures at estate and garage sales (she had a real eye for
a bargain); she loved the ocean, seashores and seashells, vintage clothing
from the 1940s and earlier; she dabbled in antique refurbishing; she collected
Native American and Mexican art.
My Mother saw Italy twice. She was a bona fide Italian aficionado. She
was transfixed by the Sistine Chapel in Rome, the statue of David in Firenze
and the canals in Venice. She saw the famous Three Tenors tour at the
old Tiger Stadium, even though it was very hard for her to walk by that
time. She saw all five of her children graduate from college, four from
professional school with a commitment to helping others.
My best memory of my Mother is when we were waiting for our flight to
the U.S. at the Milan Airport. It was 1994 and the war in Bosnia was raging.
My parents and I were sitting there at 5am and we had these box lunches
from the hotel for our breakfast. My Mother was not a morning eater and
didn't want hers, and asked me for mine, too. When I asked her why, she
told me she was going to give them to these four Bosnian refugees sitting
near us. When I tried to explain to her that these were the same people
who were engaged in raping and ethnic cleansing, she told me it didn't
matter - they were hungry. So she took my box and hers and gave them to
these people, who were too proud to beg but quickly and discreetly devoured
the contents. I am 51 years old. That is the most profound memory I have
of my Mother, and the incident I believe best demonstrates the type of
person she was.
I have an organ donation notation on the back of my driver's license,
as do a number of my brothers and sisters. The experience of my Mother's
Gift of Sight has made that medical possibility a more real thing in my
life, not just something that happened on a TV show. My Mother didn't
die a tragic or horrific death, like the people did on September 11th
or a young person killed by a drunk driver or a police officer killed
on the job. She was an elderly person whose time in the natural cycle
of life came to an end. Still, the pain and sorrow of the morning she
died was no less to my family and me than if she had died in some tragedy.
When I am having a bad day or a tough time about missing her, I think
back to that morning and how we woke up to sadness, grief and a forever-changed
reality
Yet I also now go to the thought that, somewhere, two other
people who were blind or nearly blind woke up that same day with no hope,
but eventually heard news that was joyous for them and forever changed
their realities for the better. Talk about the circle of life - it reminds
me again of that morning in Milan.
The men who received my Mother's eyes need to know that they didn't
just get corneas, they got beautiful, big, sparkling, brown eyes that
first attracted my Father to my Mother - eyes that always had an impish
gleam, no matter how dire the situation. But they also need to know about
the person behind those eyes.
Nobel Prize winner Eli Weisel (who survived the Holocaust) says whoever
survives a test, whatever it might be, must tell the story; that this
is the person's duty. I have survived the test of losing my Mother - not
perhaps a horror test like losing a child or something worse, but a test
for me nonetheless. My Mother was my best friend. In this letter I have
tried to tell my Mother's story. I hope it serves whoever reads it well.
If my story about my Mother and the profound impact of her Gift of Life
has had on me changes just one person's belief in organ transplantation
and donation, then I guess God's work on earth has truly been my own (to
quote former President John Kennedy, another one of my Mother's heroes).
I welcome the opportunity to become an Eye-Bank Ambassador and to share
this experience with whoever wants to listen.
Thank you for the opportunity to have shared a part of my Mother with
people who I know are grateful, happy and curious about her big, brown
eyes. Here's hoping that those brown eyes are never blue again.
Sincerely,
Rosanne C. Less
|