Bman201740199.jpg

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Submission to This American Life

A little over two months ago I submitted a story pitch. I thought It was insightful so I'm posting it now.
Dear This American Life staff,

A year ago today my father died of complications due to a bone
marrow transplant caused by cancer. As my dads condition started to
drastically decline my first child was being born across town. My
greatest fear up to this moment was that my father and my daughter
(his first grandchild) would miss each other on this plane of
existence. The morning of my daughter's release from the hospital, I
got a call from my brother (who was keeping vigilant watch over my
fathers condition) who told me to quickly come over to the other
hospital and say what could be my final words to my father. It seemed
as if my daughter and father were going to miss each other by a matter
of hours. Luckily through out the day my fathers condition improved
and l was able to put my child in to my fathers arms. It was one of
the greatest moments of my life. My father lived for six months after
the birth of my daughter Sydney. The following descriptions are the
universal realizations I have learned through this experience. It is
followed by more the details and connections of the story.

Here are some of the metaphors I used to describe this passage of my life.

I felt as if I were at the center of a hurricane. At the center
was my core. At the edge of the storm were my limbs and appendages. I
was being swirled around, twisting and turning, folded in and over on
my self. I was mixed with feelings of great joy, love, purity, while
just as strongly feeling the worst hurt and loss. Every thought that
went through my head held this duality of joy and sorrow.

Also the was the realization of the cycle of life. The following is a
passage I blogged during this time. It accurately articulates these
feelings.

"Since I learned of the return of caner to my father's body I
have been filled with dread for this passage of my life. I was so
scared of the timing. I want my Daughter To know her grand father, and
I have been so scared for the worst. But now these fears have turned
to hope. I am beginning to realize that Sydney and my father needed
each other. In this moment is seems to me that the timing was not bad
it was perfect. As I lay in bed trying to fall asleep I visualized
their relationship as a pair of butterfly wings. On either side are
two beautifully adorned wings, broad at the ends and joined at a
single point in the center. Like deep-sea water currents their two
energy's pass back and forth giving each other just what they need.
One cannot exist with out the other. As I am writing this it is
becoming clear to me that I am at the center of this relation ship,
this figure of infinity. I am going to be a father while I am still a
son."

Before, during, and after this experience I have been filled
with a profound sense of joy and love for life. This experience has
only affirmed what I already knew. No matter how entitled we feel we
are only guests for a short time. I do not regret a single moment I
spent wit my dad. Though I wish there were more moments I will always
rejoice fore the time we got. I will not let my self morn for time
that could have been. There is a idea in my head that is constantly
driving me. It is as follows;

In the end we die but whats more important is that we get to
live in the first place. It is for this reason I embrace all that life
has to give me. Good/bad, sorrow/joy, love/hate, they all are vital
experiences of what it means to live. I often think about the moment
just before I die. What will got through my mind? Well after much
deliberation of this inevitable moment it occurred to my that in these
last moment of life we will gain absolute acceptance. We accept all
that our life is and was with out judgement. All the good/bad,
sorrow/joy, love/hate it can not be changed, nor is there a need to.
We will be thankful just to have the chance to feel all those
emotions. This is also the moment we will accept our death. All that
was our life has been revealed to us in its entirety. Life is no
longer a unknown, it is understood and we are free to look forward to
the unknown, death. In other words it is a moment of absolute joy and
a pure expression of what it means to live. It is the realization that
just to have the chance to live, no matter what the life, is a miracle
and you are the recipient.

I carry this realization with me every moment of every day. I
was nervous for the moment my philosophies of life would be tested. As
it turned out they gave me great hope and strength through every
moment of this experience. Today they continue to allow me to connect
with each moment.


A few other details which I would like to add;

I am a photographer and as a habit/ obsession I document just
about everything in my life. As a sort of coping mechanism I recorded
or at least attempted to record all of my conversations with my
father, family, and all those in my life at that time. I have hours
and hours (and hours) of audio documenting this time of greatest joy
and sorrow including the last conversation I had with my father. I
have spoken with my family and they all support me and my desiccation
in telling this story. Also, I have video clips of my dad describing
his cancer, inside his hospital room, and the birth of Sydney (my
daughter). In fact you can see the story of Sydney's birth on u-tube
at the following link. (I highly recommend you follow the link to get
a feel for the quality of the audio and my style)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mv8m2yIjlA

The video was made using a film camera and the voice recording device
I used to record the conversations with my Dad and family.

My father was a doctor all his life. He knew it was his destiny
from early child hood. My brother followed in his footsteps and I
chose to follow the artistic side of my dad. As my brother was
finishing up his residency at O.H.S.U. in Portland Oregon. my father
was admitted for treatment for lymphoma. My brother was by his side
night and day coordinating his care between 10 different doctors. Some
of whom he was still studding under. My father and my brother knew all
the realities of my dad's conditions, procedures and consequences of
his treatment. At times my brother was forced to confront his
superiors on my dads behalf. Throughout all this experience my brother
was tyring to decide which type of medicine to practice. My brother is
now in a oncology/ hematology fellowship at O.H.S.U.

My father died at the age of sixty two the same as my
grandfather whom I never meant. My grandfather died suddenly from a
heart attach on Yom Kippur. I know my grandfathers death weighed heavy
on my dad. As a child I remember my dad getting a page during Yom
Kippur services. One of his patients was having a heart attach. My
dad, brother, and I quickly got in the car and went to the hospital.
We followed him to the room and he sat us down in plain view. From the
nurses station my brother and I watched my dad work to save this mans
life. I was not a easy code but my dad was not going to give up and in
the end his patient lived.Watching my dad save this patients life was
profound for both my brother and I. In fact it was in that moment my
brother committed to becoming a doctor. Many years later my father
ended up dying in the same hospital room. As they were wheeling my
father in to the room he turned to my brother and asked him if he
remembered this room. My brother nodded yes hoping for the same happy
ending. But I think my father knew he probably would not be leaving
this room. When I realized what room he was in it reminded me of all
the generations from my grandfather to my daughter. Even though I
never meet my grandfather I came to know him in that room. I realized
that I am a rung on a rope ladder. Even though from my position it is
hard to see beyond the rung above me (my father) and the rung below me
(my daughter) I can fell the energy and sway of all the generations
before me. For we are all connected on either side by the ropes that
bind us together. If twisted this rope ladder begins to look like a
DNA strand. It is the structure that contains the essence of all
living things. My Dad was devoted to helping humanity and I proud to
be carry his DNA and I too will try my best to help humanity.


The following is a link to a photograph of a tribute I made to my
father in the Temple of Honer at Burningman this year. It was located
at the top of a double helix staircase in the center of the temple.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/aaronrogosin/2949352563/

Thank you for engaging my story. I know you get a lot of submissions
but I believe this one will resonate with your audience. My Dad died a
year ago today and I have given my self permission to begin work on
telling this story. I believe that with your help and guidance This
American Life will be the best format to present my story to the
world.
Thank you for your time and consideration,

Aaron Rogosin

posted by rogue at 6:06 PM 0 comments

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Grief & Hope

Times like these are hard. I get brief distractions from the reality that is my life. I know every moment of my life is reality but I am speaking of the hard reality. I can’t imagine a world with out my father, yet now I'm living in one. Every thing is surreal. I know the world moves on and so will I. Yet deep down in my heart I feel excited for the future. It pains me to commit these words to text because a large part of me wants to feel pity for my self give the circumstances. Still I know its ok to feel grief in these times. When I mourn my dad I think about all the people he affected with his life. Then I start to think of all the people I have in my life. I can’t tell you how many phone calls and messages I have received in the last week. As friends near and far find out the news they all reach out to me with their love and compassion. Even friends only a week old embrace me with a love so pure that it fills my soul with hope. It is this undeniable love that fills my soul and sets me free. Hope is the direction towards which we all move. It is this understanding of love that feels me with joy.

posted by rogue at 10:26 PM 0 comments

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Twenty nine years later

Today is my birthday. Yesterday my dad died. The date is 10/25/2007. A little over 29 years ago my dad watched is last son be born and at just under 29 he returned to source from with I was born. Like every other birthday the weather today is beautiful. We picked out his plot today. We picked a spot on the edge with 3 trees around him and to his left will lay Cathy. I love my father and I will miss him. I hate to see the sun go down because with each passing day his touch, his feel, his words become more distant. It is sad to think that every word and emotional exchange has been said and experienced. I can’t go back.

posted by rogue at 5:20 PM 1 comments

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Hurricane

As of now I am in the midst of a hurricane. I am in the center it is now saturday bight and I have juust soent most of the after noon talkning to ym dad. I thought that I had had a hard day last tuesday but that pailed in commpareson to what has transpired from last thursday to now. Thursday satred witha phone call from shane sayin that Dad had been moved back to CMICU. I just so happend that Sydney had an appoint ment at Dornbeckers hospital for her new borne checkup. So were were going to be up there at 1:15.

posted by rogue at 1:22 AM 0 comments

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Butterfly Wings

Over the last few days much of my strife and fear has pealed away to revel a new hope that is beginning to gush forth like a long buried spring finally reaching the surface. My father’s health has significantly improved. Last night he was moved from the CMICU (Cardiac Medical Intensive Care Unit) back to the BMT (Bone Marrow Transplant) unit. Though there is a long road of recovery ahead things are getting better and I feel they will continue to do so. For this I am much relieved. Since I learned of the return of caner to my father’s body I have been filled with dread for this passage of my life. I was so scared of the timing. I want my Daughter To know her grand father, and I have been so scared for the worst. But now these fears have turned to hope. I am beginning to realize that Sydney and my father needed each other. In this moment is seems to me that the timing was not bad it was perfect. As I lay in bed trying to fall asleep I visualized their relationship as a pair of butterfly wings. On either side are two beautifully adorned wings, broad at the ends and joined at a single point in the center. Like deep-sea water currents their two energy's pass back and forth giving each other just what they need. One cannot exist with out the other. As I am writing this it is becoming clear to me that I am at the center of this relation ship, this figure of infinity. I am going to be a father while I am still a son.

posted by rogue at 1:39 AM 0 comments

Saturday, March 24, 2007

north keorea

I am a ping-pong ball being played between fear and hope. I am bouncing around on so many levels I have become dizzy and warren.

posted by rogue at 11:20 PM 0 comments

Hope and Fear, The Future

Things have been a little more than a bucket full of drab lately. My Dad has been having one complication after another throughout his bone marrow transplant procedure. Last Thursday he had a heart attach. He has an a-fibrillation rhythm of his heart. As I write this he sits in the cardiac intensive care unit at OHSU. The only thing that improved with his move was the view from his room, though all he can see is the nurse’s station and the hallway. So that was last Thursday and today is Saturday. With each day we have little specks of hope balanced by set back. Today it looked as if he has a bowel obstruction, but on the up side his white blood cell count is up .1%. To me he seems to be better today but as I look at the faces of my family of doctors I get the sense that I’m missing something. I was able to hear him speak form the other side of the room. This is a marked improvement. We try and talk about the baby as much as we can. He is excited for Sydney's arrival. What a strange mix of emotions. Each day leaves me exhausted. I stand poised between two precipices of utter joy and consuming fear. In times like these all I can do is pray.

posted by rogue at 9:34 PM 0 comments

Monday, March 19, 2007

Threshhold

Throughout my life I have always had an innate awareness of the moment. I think about it constantly. In life there are moments that reality as you know it shifts with no hope of return. It is in these surreal times that I see the tale of my life being played out in slow motion. At this moment I am nervously anticipating a life-changing event. I stand poised before this threshold and I feel the same as ever, with all the same hopes, fears and goals. However I know that there is this moment that I am careening towards in which my life will forever change and there are no breaks on this ride. With each advancing second I feel the waves of nervous anticipation rising. The reality of Sydney's birth is pressing on my mind. To stand before a moment like this is so rare and precious. At times I wonder if colors will look brighter and food taste richer after she is born. As of now I feel comfortable with the way I view the world but change is coming and for the first time I’m scared for it. In the end I think what I will experience is a new form of love. As the moment draws near I am excited to awaken this sense, this love, which I have never known. It all comes down one moment. With such a momentous event one might expect a flash or boom to go off at the start of her life. But like all things, I’m sure this imperceptible moment will swiftly move into the past and I will be left on the other side of the threshold looking back, forever changed.

posted by rogue at 10:08 PM 0 comments

Contributors

  • Skuz
  • rogue
Links
SkuzBlog

Previous Posts

  • Submission to This American Life
  • Grief & Hope
  • Twenty nine years later
  • Hurricane
  • Butterfly Wings
  • north keorea
  • Hope and Fear, The Future
  • Threshhold
  • DAD
  • Viloence permeates our culture

Archives

  • February 2005
  • March 2005
  • April 2005
  • January 2006
  • April 2006
  • May 2006
  • October 2006
  • November 2006
  • December 2006
  • March 2007
  • April 2007
  • October 2007
  • December 2008