Childhood


Ten years ago from today, I was mourning the loss of my dad, a victim of cancer.  Today, I am celebrating his life and remembering the great memories that we had together.  He was a dedicated family man who only wanted the best for his wife and children.  He was the glue that held us together.

I’ve shared my story to a select few of what the experience was like during last few days of my dad’s life.  And today, I’ve decided to share it with whoever cares to read this.  Ten years marks a big milestone for me and I would love to share the joys and pains of a very important part of my life.  I’m not doing this for sympathy or attention, but only for the sake of sharing so others who knew him could remember him and those who didn’t know him would learn of the legend he left.  This is for my father, who deserves to be remembered through the good and bad.

My dad was diagnosed with liver cancer a month after he came from the Philippines to bury his father.  Doctors said the cancer cells were aggressive, he probably had 6-8 months to live, and it was stage 4.  This was in the month of February.  Shocked and in panic, my mom, brothers, and I did all we could to provide him with vitamins, organic fruits and vegetables, and our undivided attention.  We were very blessed to have close family and friends that came by to help us out with buying and cooking food for him.

As each week passed, he progressively got worse.  He struggled for every breath, and needed a lot of energy that he didn’t have to move around.   The oxygen tank soon wasn’t enough to help him breathe, so we checked him into the hospital.  This was a Tuesday evening.  We all stayed at the hospital over night.  Wednesday morning, he was OK and was able to talk and joke around with us, but by night time he was mostly sedated with morpheme because the pain was too much to bear.  Doctors told us the cancer spread to his lungs.   We slept at the hospital again, and my dad had asked me to sleep right next to him on his hospital bed.

“Good night dad.”  “Good night, baby.  I love you.”  “I love you too, dad.”

Little did I know, that would be the last time he spoke.  Thursday morning came and he was trying to tell me something but no one could understand him.  I gave him a pen and paper, and he scribbled something I could barely make out, “Brush teeth.”  Haha!  My dad is silly.

Thursday night, my dad was transferred to another room.  It was bigger and isolated in a corner.  That wasn’t good news.  Visiting hours weren’t enforced so our family and friends stayed over night with us too.  This was it.  It was just a matter of waiting.  Friday came and went.  Waiting was all we could do.  Saturday morning came and the doctor told us he was unresponsive.  He was still breathing and hooked up to a heavy duty oxygen tank, but the oxygen pressure slowly dropping.  The room was full of people.  Aunts and uncles, friends, cousins, my brothers, my mom, and me.  Someone walked up to him, read a chapter of my dad’s favorite Psalms, and then said, “Go home Edgar.  Your family will be safe and taken care of.  Go home.”  And with that, we said a prayer.  As soon as we all said, “Amen”,  he stopped breathing, and room broke out with screams and wailing.

Every time I think of those last days that I spent with my dad, every hair on my body stands up and tears drop like bullets.  The timing of his last breath to the end of our prayers was unbelievable.  I miss him so much, and I wish I had more time with him.  Ten years is a long time, yet it feel it doesn’t feel like it’s been that long.

Sigh.

I miss him.  He was a GREAT father, and I wish I took more advantage of the time I had with him while he was still healthy.

Here are my top 10 reasons (one for every year that he’s been away :) ) why he was a great father:

1.  We played tennis everyday after school when I was in kindergarden and 1st grade.

2.  After playing tennis, if I had a good lesson with him, he would buy me my favorite rainbow donut.

3.  My dad would stop by my elementary school during recess time just to say hi for a couple seconds.  I was in the 2nd grade.

4.  He would make cool dinners and we were allowed to watch in front of the TV and eat straight from the pot.  We usually had mac and cheese.  Of course this was when my mom wasn’t home to cook.  She would never allow such barbaric mannerisms.

5.  He would bring me to Costco to eat unlimited amounts of samples.  That was our lunch.  He didn’t want to tell me we didn’t have enough money to buy food.

6.  My dad was awesome at building computers.  He built me my own computer and it was one of the fastest at the time.

7.  We moved into a new house in Riverside, and we had a pretty big backyard.  I really wanted a swing, so he built one for me that hung from a tree branch.  Took him ALL weekend, but he finished it!  I was the happiest kid ever!

8.  He taught me how to ride a bike, and as soon as I learned, we rode our bikes all the time!

9.  For every tennis match, school graduation, back to school night, choir concert, and piano recital, he was there with his camera and camcorder, proud as ever.

10.  My first official dance was with my dad on my 18th birthday.  I was in a gown, he was in a tuxedo, and we waltzed across the dance floor in front of our family and friends.  I guess that will take place of the father/daughter dance for my future wedding.

A recent picture of you and 15 interesting facts about yourself.

1-  I am currently addicted to donuts and soy caramel macchiato’s.  I’m a Starbucks gold member.

2-  I enjoy buying new things, even if they are small and cheap, like socks or pens.

3-  I enjoy listening to Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin.  I barely started listening to their music THIS year.  Yes, I know, I’m VERY behind.

4-  Running is something I love and hate at the same time.

5-  My iPhone is attached to my hip.  Sometimes it sleeps right next to me.

6-  I love to read, but I have a bad habit of reading books half way and never finishing them.

7-  Lyrics. I ALWAYS butcher them.  I used to think that the “Grease” song, “You’re the one that I want” was really saying “Yonamanamanat!”

8-  My dad taught me how to play tennis ever since I could start walking, talking, and holding things.

9- I am barely starting to explore new things in Los Angeles.  I’ve lived in Southern California my entire life!  I just learned of the La Brea tar pits!

10- I never thought I’d want to live outside of LA (or southern California), and now I’m actually considering it.

11- I avoid watching the news like it’s a scary horror flick.  There’s something about it that scares me and depresses me at the same time.

12-  Purple is my favorite color, yet I don’t own one piece of clothing that is purple.

13-  Call me old fashioned, but I like having dinner at the dinner table.  No TV, just dinner and good conversations,…and maybe a bottle of wine. ;P

14-  Within one year, I moved to 4 different cities.  I think this was 2007-2008

15-  Have a receipt that has a survey on it?  Give it to me!  I love filling those out.  I’m dying to win the sweepstakes for Target, Best Buy, Rite Aid, and other stores that offer survey prizes!!!!  I WILL win one of these days.  If not that, then definitely the lotto. :)

I don’t remember much when I was younger, but I DO remember taking this picture with my dad.  It was a cool spring day in the city of Orange.  I can remember for the LONGEST time that we would go to the tennis courts EVERYDAY and he would play until it got dark.  As I got older, I got better in tennis, and I was rallying with my dad in no time.  It’s sweet to see that my dad introduced me to tennis when I was so young.  I never understood why, but now that I’m older, I understand that it was his way of spending time with his only daughter.  I’m grateful that he wanted so much for me and him to have the same passion in tennis.  I will never forget the unending weeks and months of playing tennis and getting donuts after a good tennis lesson.  No wonder I had so many cavities!

I’ll admit that I don’t think of him much (since he passed in 2001), but I guess we all have our own ways of grieving…but when I do, the memories of him still feel so vivid and fresh in my mind, almost like I just saw him yesterday. I always wonder how my life would be now if he were still around.  I wish I had more time with him.  I was 18 when he started to get sick, and within 3 months of learning that he had cancer, it was his time to go.  If only I was more mature about my relationship with my dad, things would be completely different.  Now, I feel like I could have done so much more to show him how much he meant to me.  I hate thinking of the “if only’s” and “what if’s”, but if I had one more chance to say my last words, I would definitely take that opportunity to tell him how great he was.

Now that I feel like I’m more mature than I was when I was 18, I can understand why my dad beat the hell out of me.  I was his girl, his ONLY girl…his youngest!  But now I understand why my home was a piano/tennis playing prison.  He just wanted what was best for me and he didn’t want anyone to hurt his daughter.  I was never able to thank him for loving me so much, so…if it’s not TOO late, thank you, Daddy…I love you too.

 

Telling someone that you liked them seemed so much easier when you were younger, didn’t it?  I remember writing my first “do you like me” note when I was in the 3rd grade.  Of course I was shot down with a circled “NO”.  I felt pretty stupid and ugly, but I didn’t know any better!  I just thought that meant I wasn’t pretty.  I remember telling my dad that the boy I liked didn’t like me back.  I’m sure that made my dad’s heart sink.  How could his little princess be shot down by some stupid boy, right?  Then, that is when my dad told me to wait for the boy like me first, or in filipino terms, wait for them to “court” me.  WTF?  I was confused. As I got older, I sent a couple more “do you like me” notes and never had one return with a big “YES”.  I finally learned my lesson after the 3rd time of rejection.

I wonder how that would work out today if we used this note system instead having a guy propose on ONE KNEE asking me to marry him.  I’d rather have this note instead of the one knee gesture.  But that’s just me. :)

I guess it’s already happening….on twitter.  Whatever works.

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