22 November 2021

Quentin Tarantino: This Dog Has No Reservoir

"Quentin Tarantino: This Dog Has No Reservoir" was originally published on NeoPolitique. 

There's a maxim in politics that says "attitudes shape policy." That small phrase also speaks volumes about filmmaking. Whether it's Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, or Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, attitudes shape film. It seems obvious that such a statement is true. But, how many times do we leave a movie without thinking about the worldview of the film's creator, let alone the message of the film? Today's movie audiences, although quite knowledgeable, seem intent on being entertained, not challenged. To critically examine one's viewing habits requires too much effort; euphemistically, we're cerebrally challenged; realistically, we're lazy. This article seeks to confront this laissez faire attitude and asks the question: are there significant worldview differences between the filmmakers of today and yesterday, and if so, what are the effects on society? To answer this question, let's look at two influential directors and their films: Frank Capra and his Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and Quentin Tarantino and his Pulp Fiction. Both filmmakers and their films are representative of the spirit of their times‐‐their generation's zeitgeist. Even a child can sense that there is something palpable behind Capra's films: a message of hope; a love for America (After Mr. Smith, Capra himself enlisted in the Army for four years to serve his country); an indefatigable faith in the God‐given value of all men. Regardless of one's position in life, Capra made all men and women feel like they could obtain a piece of the American pie, if not bake it. 

Capra, after making a string of successful pictures, had an epiphany‐like experience which pushed him past the myopic focus plaguing many of today's young filmmakers. As a result, he decided his films would incorporate principles that surpassed the ersatz and, instead, promoted the eternal. For the remainder of his life, unlike today's young filmmakers, Capra said that there would be a message attached to his work. 

His films, especially Mr. Smith, carried a message of the common man overcoming tyrannical powers with God‐given abilities. Film critics of the time called this message film "Capra‐corn" because these films patriotically promoted democracy. Was Capra's love of America simply a generational thing? What about young filmmakers today? What is their raison d’être? 

No better example of today's filmmakers can be found than in Quentin Tarantino, one of Hollywood's most respected directors. Tarantino's Pulp Fiction won the Palme d'Or at Cannes and was heavily favored by the critics at the prior year's Academy Awards where Tarantino earned a screen‐writing Oscar for Pulp.(2) He got his first break with Reservoir Dogs, setting the modus operandi for other projects with sharp, eclectic dialogue and pathological characters set in the criminal underworld. 

Although Capra and Tarantino have in common a deep love for the medium itself, the worldviews that shape their films are significantly different. Capra was hooked on filmmaking after bluffing his way onto a San Francisco set to direct his first film. Capra, sans television and film, shaped his films with previous faith‐based experiences and classical erudition. Tarantino, however, grew‐up watching hours of television and frequently going to movies with his parents (he would later incorporate the homosexual rape scene he saw in Deliverance, at the age of eight, into Pulp Fiction). (3) Both television and film played key roles throughout Tarantino's childhood. His mother, in fact, acknowledges that her son was named for a western movie character ‐‐ Quint Asper. (4) 

One could argue that while Capra's worldview shaped the medium of early film itself, Tarantino's worldview, conversely, was shaped by a steady diet of film and television. Capra took the sinew of the American life that de Tocqueville wrote about, and placed it on celluloid for the world to see. Tarantino, however, glamorizes a worldview of pop‐culture because it is all he knows. He offers this slickly packaged modernity – “McDernity” for the fast‐food set ‐‐ to a post‐boomer generation looking for life's answers; answers Tarantino is unwilling to understand or incapable of giving. This inability and indifference seems ubiquitous in the films created by today's young cinephiles. 

Tarantino routinely swings his characters from one violent scene to the next on vines of witty dialogue and rich sub‐text. The conversation between Jules and Vincent in Pulp is a prime example. The two hit‐men, en route to "settle" an account for their employer, discuss the fine nuances between fast food in America and Europe. This dialogue is typical for Tarantino's consumer‐driven films. Yet, no matter how many humorous catchphrases they utter, his characters say nothing transcendent. 

Tarantino's characters are primarily interested in surviving the here and now.(5) There is little doubt about the impact that Tarantino's films are currently having on American culture. He brings wit to any script he touches. He was brought in to bring life to Crimson Tide's moribund script, and the results paid‐off. (6) The catchy dialogue that fills and links many scenes of Tide were his touch. Tide was clearly a blockbuster in '95, and Tide's video sales also benefited from Tarantino's signature dialogue. Besides writing Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs, Tarantino also wrote Natural Born Killers and True Romance ‐‐ violent films all. Tarantino has said that he abhors the violence seen every day on U.S. streets, but that violence in film is "cool." (7) 

It's doubtful that Tarantino will ever undergo a similar experience that Mr. Capra went through; realizing that film is not simply to please oneself, but to affect positive change in others as well. The primary difference between Mssrs. Capra and Tarantino is real‐life experience. Mr. Capra's muse was comprised in a lifetime's worth of living, while Tarantino has only been able to draw from a shallow pool of commercial pabulum. After all, Capra gave up millions to serve his country, as did many other Hollywood elite of his generation, during W.W. II. He earned France, Britain, and the U.S.'s highest honors for his service to America and the allied powers through film; his life reflected the same values that were displayed in his films.(8) One can only imagine the horror if Tarantino's life reflected what his films advocate; one wouldn't have "Capra‐corn" but "Terrortino" or "San Quentin Tarantino." 

Undoubtedly, Frank Capra, though accomplished in both science and film, would marvel at Tarantino's prodigiousness. After all, Tarantino's derivative work results largely from his admitted ability to stand on the shoulders of film giants. Tarantino is a masterfully skilled filmmaker and there is something awe‐inspiring about watching an expert work his craft. If only his vision matched his enormous talent. Because Tarantino's films are derivative in nature, and primarily influenced by previous filmmakers and their work, the result is a "closed system." Tarantino draws inspiration not from external sources ‐‐ a la Capra ‐‐ but from the medium itself. In any closed system, a state of entropy exists, and ultimately leads to a slow deterioration of the quality of the base. The base in question here is the message of Tarantino's films ‐‐ which has suffered degradation to the point of non‐existence. 

While Capra's films are tagged as "say‐something" movies, Tarantino's have nothing redemptive to say, even to themselves. Although Tarantino has his Palme d'Or, there is one French award that he surely will never achieve, an award that Capra would surely not trade. Prior to the permanent banishment of English films in France during the Nazi occupation, one French theater played Mr. Smith Goes to Washington continuously for one month saluting the themes of Liberty and Freedom imbued in Capra's film. As those words appeared in the film, and Old Glory waved majestically above the Lincoln Memorial, the French audiences cheered‐on. (9) One can say with confidence that no current Tarantino film could be offered if called upon for a similar task. Perhaps, that film is yet to be made. 

Endnotes: 1. Frank Capra, The Name Above the Title: An Autobiography (New York, NY: The Macmillan Company, 1971), 240. 2. John Fried, "Pulp Friction," Cineaste, 1 April 1995, 6. 3. Tim Farrand, "Filmmaker Mapped Path to Top Like Army General," Reuters, 27 August 1995, 1. 4. Farrand, 1. 5. Fried, 5. 6. Cindy Pearlman, "Quentin Tarantino's Destiny," Sacramento Bee, 23 April 1995, EN13 7. Farrand, 1. 8. Capra, 367. 9. Ibid., 293.

03 April 2018

My Birthday Wish ... Well, Two Wishes


David Spade / Sam Elliott also there that day
CG / MG usual hang in Malibu

There resides in every man's heart, a desire to be heard, to speak, to make a difference.  Okay, perhaps not in every man, but a least in most men.  Most sane men, one hopes.  But, let's be honest, some men don't give two rat turds about making a dent in the universe. About posterity.  Truly.  Sad. Man.  But whatevs.  To each his own.  And, my own? Well, I have two of my own, sons that is. Amazing young, college men, who have more of a clue at their young prodigious age than I (or many of my cohorts) ever did at their age. Truth be told, they are very much like their mother in that regard (driven to get out of school and make a living ... now!).  Don't get me wrong, I encourage and guide and suggest like any concerned parent. And, they'd both tell you I'm a bit too hands-on, I'd wager, and always giving them too many fountain pens and journals to fill, and books to read.

Jg. for FatScribe
So, those two young men above are my posterity (that squishy fella there in the gray cardigan? C'es moi). My oeuvre is nada. My words, my stories, my scripts, my online consulting, companies, my startups, my business aspirations? Worthless compared to my sons.  I hope (and often pray) that they represent 100x better/more than what I ever could bring into this world, its mesosphere and below, its business ecosphere and its all-around ethosphere.  Wherever they lay their heads, their hearts and their talents, I pray (and expect) that they will add to and not detract from; that they will love more, live more, lie less (if ever) and leverage less (if ever -- from a personal debt perspective) than ole pops did. I pray that they have six kids each in the fecundity department, are as lovely and loving and languid as their mom is in the personality department, and as entrepreneurial, enthusiastic, and ecclesiastical as their dad has been. That's my b-day wish today, viz., for my kids to be happier, yes, but to be better.  Okay -- my two wishes, I'll be greedy -- are represented by these two most beloved cherubs (in their dad's opinion at any rate), that they be oh-so-much-better men that this man.  Hopefully after I'm long gone, their uncles (bio & otherwise) will help see to it.  To know God, and to make him known in whatever they choose to do.

Supreme Collab w/ LV 2018 LA Time Capsule
Meanwhile, like many young men today in the US, UK, Japan, South Korea, and a bit in the EU, my sons are intrigued, piqued, and unfortunately attracted by the shiny object, the objet d'art with the luxe commercial impulse.  They've seen street and skate brands that have been brilliantly handled/marketed with an assiduous and adroit hand to blow their market cap 100x.  What was interesting to observe was the phenomenon of the musical group, clothing label, or restaurant 


I was at the Century City mall today.  The parent company for Louis Vuitton (LVMH) held an exhibit these past two weeks for the history of LV since its luggage heritage humble beginnings.  It was very well done, nicely put together, and very modern as well, for at the end there was a light display with some nice AR (augmented reality) or VFX that made a magic "malle" (fr.: malle or trunk) that took on the shape of many LV trunks over the years/decades.










29 December 2016

2016 Season's Greetings & 2017 New Year's Resolve

2017 Holiday Solipsistic Recriminations

Armani peaked lapel, Pendleton camel overcoat,
tie by Ted Baker, D-Bag by yours truly.
Yep, that's me, heading out to a couple of holiday parties this year. Work parties are a great way to stand out from the crowd with just the right pocket square, tie, or classic brogues. Although I'll write all day long about startup projects (like the ones with LegalZoom, JustLuxe.com, etc.), my little family's goings-on here in Malibu canyon/Calabasas/South Central, and about the restaurants we eat at, coffee joints we frequent (hello Coffee Bean where I saw Brad Garrett today, all 8'3'' of him -- good gawd he's tall), and the various celebs we rub shoulders with (just for kicks and giggles, plus the artist uses the materials available to him or her), I'm not one to usually get in front of a camera like some Instagram/Facebook/Twitter neophyte.  But, whatevs.  Still, apologies for the very rare selfie.  (Now, if the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon holds water, you'll see pictures of me all over the Internet.)

We end the year 2016 name-dropping -- Sniff! -- had a nice little meeting recently with actor/producer Will Smith jumping in at the end that was about a friend/client's product.  Nicest guy, like, ever.  Could be cool if it gets traction. We'll see. Not even close to being the most important meeting for 2016, but it was cool for my pal-client to be sure. Actually, have a fairly important product/project that involves Quincy Jones that is fairly significant, scalable, and salutary ... if it comes through. Mos def keep you all posted on that one -- I just said "Mos def."

And, because it's the end of the year everyone's making lists (and checking them twice), I figure ole Fats should get in on the craze.  So, here goes.  If a half-way successful business fella, with several king-size (okay, regular type) failures does it for ya, I present 11 random points that will sound oh-so-self-important!
______________

No. 1 -- Double-down on good things, and eliminate the unproductive things. 45 mins each morning on email is too, too much.  That goes for relationships, too. Spend time with friends and business partners who appreciate you rather than hanging out with "the right" (folks you think are cool) people that you probably won't talk to in 18 months (or who can't be bothered to talk to you).

No. 2 -- Take ownership of the "total shite" things you've been putting off. Make them A's or 1's on your to-do list and get them crossed off. They say endorphins kick-in for Type-A personalities who know about getting things done. They literally get off getting things off of their (oft-crushed) lists. Go and do likewise, my fine friend who listens to less-than-successful types making lists of eleven!

No. 3 -- Make the "good-enough now" your freaking arch-nemesis of the "perfect one year from now." Just get sh*t done, bud; perfect it later.  It's called iteration, so iterate as you go, on-the-fly like, brotha.

No. 4 -- As I always tell my reps and my sons and my friends. "Activities drive opportunities!"  Don't wait around for things to come to you (never be an order taker), make it happen (be a chef cookin' things up, not a waiter taking orders)!

No. 5 -- If you don't A-S-K, you don't G-E-T. It's not just a truism, maxim, or promise, its a bloody curse because believe me, someone else is asking out your future wife, getting the money for your project, and landing that dream job.  What?! Tell me I'm wrong, people. Seriously, is a "no" going to kill you?!

No. 6 -- Make a list of the "giant goals" in your life right now.  Those goals you'd love to have accomplished, you know the ones you talk about and your friends go, "oh, sure!" dripping in sarcasm:  Marathons to run. Books to finish/start. Scripts to write/pitch to studios.  Dream houses to build in your future/fave state or country.  Now ... focus on the ONE thing that you cannot imagine LIVING without if you were on your death bed and staring down into your end-of-life bucket list. What isn't there that is truly bumming you out right about now? What would embarrass the hell out of you if your friends/family were there going, "yup, she never was going to accomplish that restoration of the ole McPherson Estate. She was such a dreamer, not a doer."  Screw that noise! Get pissed off. Let shame and anger work their pokey little fingers into your crawl and make you good and uncomfortable and DO something about it.

No. 7 -- Live within your means. Be debt-free. Life is just better when that debt-free goal is indeed your reality, pal o' mine.  I hate that there is any debt hanging over my fat, pudgy face and bald head like some Damocles Sword and she ain't pretty, and sleep, she ain't sweet with that drama all up in my business.  Trust.

No. 8 --  Tell your kids, parents, friends, and loved ones you love them.  Often.  Hey, Dear Reader, I've only known you since 2009, but ... uh, um, I love ya.  "I don't know if a "ya" counts as an  official "I love you" but I'll take it."  (name that Nancy Meyers movie!)

No. 9 --  Be grateful. I just sent a letter to a friend who did me a major solid, like, ten years ago. Changed my life. Each Thanksgiving I send such letters to folks to remind myself and them what their largess did for me and my family (Ben Stein was one such fellow one fine day in Malibu -- still need to write about that).

No. 10 --  Write a journal. Keep a diary. Make a record of your life and share it with your family. Chronicling your family history or even simply tracing a narrative of your personal life stories can be a gift for the next generation.  I double-dawg dare you.

No. 11 -- When you're about to go out with friends, and then some creepy little voice tempts you to cancel, excuse-make, LIE, or call an (Omaha!) audible like Tom Brady... tell that little soul-sucking creep to piss-off and GO OUT with your friends or family.  Events, happenings, concerts, museums, trips to the local landmark are what memories are made of ... not hugging a piece of the ole sofa on a Saturday morning or Tuesday during must-waste-my-life-tv!  We miss you when you cancel on us. We'll see you out there on the court, at the movies, or at Bible study.

That's all for now.  Let's both of us commit to live life to the fullest for 2017!


02 December 2016

Death, Taxes and One Man's Slow End to His Life (VSED)

DFT, gone at 86. RIP, pop.
Prologue:  Many of you, Dear Reader, were aware of my mother’s passing five plus years ago when I shared briefly about her death.  Although the vast (like 98%) majority of what I write here on FatScribe is true, or based in facts with a verisimilitude to what actually happened in my life, it was difficult to share about Joan’s passing.  She was an amazing woman, my mom, who wore her heart on her sleeve, who taught her children to love deeply, and who was a lifelong procrastinator, which perhaps explained why she lingered about this place 16 years after she had a massive stroke that would have killed the average momma Grizzly bear. She loved life.  Lived it to the fullest, did she, until the bitter end. (Bitter because of the C-Diff infection she caught from her hospital which needlessly ushered her into the afterlife at the age of 79.  But, c’est la vie, n’est pas?)  And, thus began the slow descent into depression for my dad, when his lovely reason-for-being departed before he did, which, I can assure you, he did not expect nor especially want. In the end he chose to starve himself to death, rather than go on with his wine and dinners with grandkids and adult children and bridge games with other octogenarians.

Which brings me to pop, Don T., the curmudgeon with a heart of gold. I called him dad even though he was my step-father.  You see my biological father, whom I have always irreverently (with a modicum of respect) called “biological sperm donor Bob,” left before I was born.  But, my dad, however, came into my life when I was 3 yrs old and my mom was at her personal nadir, on welfare with 7 boys to care for, and reeling from despair.  Joanie, sweet mum, you see, married all 3 of her high school sweethearts. Her first marriage produced 6 boys.  Her second marriage, which lasted little more than a year, was an inarguable disaster, but produced my little brother, Chad, boy #7.  And, so it was that my dad swooped in at the exact moment his marriage (with 4 children) had ended in divorce and my mom was more than ready to be rescued.  What my dad lacked in EQ and warmth and understanding, he more than made up for in his preternatural instinct to provide for, and he loved to provide and care for Joan, as well as his own children, my amazing step brothers and sisters. Whilst he was not a “man in full,” to borrow a phrase from Tom Wolfe, he was a man full of obligation.  Gen X’ers and Millennials are all about “rights,” whilst my dad’s generation was about duties, and he met all of his obligations, and even took on those of others when asked.

Our blended family was like the cinema verité version of The Brady Bunch.  It was raw, real, and really loud. Always.  My dad’s routine was to come home – always to a house, garage, backyard, and driveway filled with his kids and his kids’ hangerson – where he would take his dinner and walk upstairs to his daily respite and fortress of solitude: his bedroom and television.  And, since 1971, his bedroom in this house in Malibu Canyon nestled against the Santa Monica Mountains, was the place he spent 80% of his time when not on the road flying around the world, bringing IT hardware to a world desperate for US technologies.  He did business in all of Europe, Eastern Europe, Asia, and yet, he never made it to Australia, which, ironically, was to be the terminus for his very last business trip.

After he had helped navigate a startup as a key marketing and sales ops exec, the public offering saw a billion-dollar tech company grow rapidly in the early 80’s.  He met with Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and others who would leave much larger footprints in the Valley’s burgeoning tech industry.  Before he retired (at the age of 51), he was asked to go on one final trip to lock-up an important busdev deal in the previously noted Australia.  On the plane trip across the Atlantic, they encountered such a violent storm that the plane he was on literally rolled-over and was forced to land in England.  Immediately upon exiting the 747 he called his CEO from a phone in the Ambassador's lounge and gave notice.  He drove to Switzerland (Zermat) and learned to ski solo over the course of 10 days, calling it a day and putting a stylish and very Swiss “schuss” on his career.  The swift punch of reality would also send him for another shocking loop-de-loop when under a Jimmy Carter administration his stock and capital gains would be taxed (federal) at a whopping 78%.  Millions of his hard-earned lifelong sought-after revenue down the proverbial drain which is our rapacious and wasteful government.  Ugh.  Ever the loyal Dem, he would not or could not bring himself to carp or complain against the President from Georgia (‘jawjuh’) or his tax-the-rich scheme; he would, however, routinely show me the six-figure checks he would send to the IRS quarterly. He stayed the lib, and I became an instant lifelong conservative at the age of 14.

Dad’s retirement lasted only a few months, and he would go on to startup two other ventures, but leave most of the heavy-lifting to his now-older sons and some former business acquaintances.  These two companies were soon performing very admirably also, but he refused to let them grow too large for fear of the actual work that would eventually, he feared, suck him back into fulltime workload.  Instead he bought a second home in Tahoe (Nevada, to help avoid state taxes) to keep his inchoate skiing skills sharp and rented a home in Kailua/Kona, Hawaii, where we would scuba dive and fish for sailfish and Marlin. He and my mom even caught a 1,195 pound Marlin that would have been a world record had they not double-teamed the landing of this HUGE fish, which last time I saw, it was hanging 20 feet off the ground in the Kona airport, where my little brother snuck “Kona gold” marijuana into my suitcase for fear of getting busted.  Ahhhh … little brothers. Someday I’ll write about him.  Anyway, now all four of them are dead. The fish, the father, the mother and the brother.  Damn. Sucks. Growing older.

T.S. Eliot said that "April is the cruelest month."  He didn't know October. My mom, dad, and little brother all died in October. But, it's also a month of births for my family. Three of my siblings and my sister in law all have birthdays in October.  Circle of life and whatnot, writ large right there in black fountain pen ink, highlighted in orange, on my humble little family's calendar.

Right about now you’re asking yourself, “I thought ole Fats was going to talk about how his dad asked him to help end his life?!”  Okay, you’re right, Dear Reader.  But, we needed a little bit of a backstory as they said in my screenwriting classes at UCLA.  Backstory and conflict. My boring stories usually have conflict, or embarrassment, or awkward moments with me acting the fool.  So, here’s the conflict.  My dad always thought he would die in his 50’s -- or in his 60’s at the latest – and he lived 26 years beyond that.  5 years after mom was gone (which was the sole raison d’etre for his life), my octogenarian father would oft-opine why do I even bother to get up in the morning?!  A 50-year plus contract bridge masters champion, he would daily play bridge with his partner, Ray, down at the club and then come home to an empty house.  His life barely had meaning for him, if any at all. A world-class life, er, glass is half empty sort of guy, he could find the "Bah! Humbug!" in every Christmas party.  In the evening he’d have dinner with one or more of his children and grandchildren, but occasionally he’d have to eat alone at one of 5 regular restaurants he’d dine at habitually. Chinese was Lakeview; Italian was Vincitore or The Landing; sushi was Sushi Wasabi; Mexican was Casa Escobar; and his all-time fave? An Americana style chop house of sorts called The Gallery in the mall that is owned by Tom Selleck.  Wine was a constant companion.  Always the wine.  If you didn’t “cork” (charge a corking fee to) Don, he’d give you $5k in business annually, plus tip 40% to your waitstaff.  White was Sauvignon Blanc from New Zealand, and red was Shiraz from Australia. Screwtop, no “real” cork, cheap but rated in the 90’s by Wine Spectator or Robert Parker? Done. He’d buy it by the caseload. Twenty Twenty Wines on Cotner in West L.A. loved Dad (Bob’s gonna miss that annual $6k to $8k). You'd wish ole Don could curl up with a glass of that tasty wine of his with a good book in front of his lovely fireplace and while away his dotage like you see in the movies. But, meh.

And then one recent fateful night he fell – hard -- during the middle of the night. (Fateful nights always come when you least expect them.)  When I got to him, I wanted to call an ambulance. No, he insisted, but would I be so kind “as to help him piss?”  Of course, pop.  That night he still went out to eat. With contusions on his head, and barely able to walk, he forced himself (willed himself is more apt) to dine with me and my brother Gilbert where he joked about elder abuse with the busboys.  Soon after, however, he became bed-ridden, where I was all too happy to play nursemaid to his nascent Gandhi hunger strike.  You see, he began a poor man’s hunger strike.  Barely eating. Maybe an occasional Ensure, or a cookie or snack, but no food to speak of, and water was ONLY when I gave him his regimen of pills.  After 8 days or so, with his excruciating back pain, not eating, and my providing baths, arse wiping, almost daily sheet changing, we eventually had to place him in one of the backgammon chairs from the living room where as kids we never were allowed to go, a rather painful position for his injury, as several of us brothers carried him down the stairs to a car and off to hospital to get some hydration and food in him.  The E.R. doctor gave him his excuse: He had several fractures in his lower sacrum (lower back), and would require a move to a therapy center, and 4 to 6 weeks to fully heal.

From that time in the hospital forward, Dad decided to stop eating completely.  And as long as he was compos mentis, we couldn’t force him to eat nor the hospital or rehab center to force him either.  He refused to drink his Ensure (2x a day was his norm) and eat his fruit and cookies or eat any meals delivered to him. After 10 days at the rehab center, Medicare would not sign off on further payment unless dad would show progress.  He began to tell anyone who would listen to “give me a pill,” and the always clear and imprecatory “I want to die.”  But, as soon as we reminded dad that Medicare would not pay for his stay unless he showed progress, money talked and dad listened.  He stopped grabbing passersby and shouting “kill me, please!” (slight exaggeration) but instead played the game of standing for a few minutes and walking bare-assed down the hall as part of “therapy,” then opening his ensure and taking ½ sip and letting it sit with the other 7 or so bottles opened and ½-sipped, then pushing his fruit around his plate with a metal fork. The game worked for several more days, Medicare paid, with my dad pretending to eat his fruit for my sister, but by then, my dad was hallucinating and his ersatz hunger strike was now all too real, and I lied to the rehab center and to the hospital and invented a follow-up appointment to get my dad treatment. The center ordered an ambulance to deliver him for his “appointment.”  I knew he’d be dead in a day or two if I didn’t push.  Big mistake, which I will regret until the day I die.  But, I thought, “Hey, if we can get dad healed and help him get past his back pain, he’ll be right as rain and then able to play bridge again, go out to eat, and drink vino with his kids!”  Those were obviously my wishes and not my dad’s.

At the hospital the original E.R. doctor came to see my dad when he recognized his name and readmission.  Dr. P. took one look at what was going on, and reluctantly ordered the IV fluids that we desperately wanted him to receive, and then he ordered me and my sister (the executor of my dad’s will/trust that I had originally drafted out of law school before my mom died) into another room where he educated us on seniors who voluntarily ask for cessation of food (VSED or voluntarily stopping eating and drinking).  It was a shock to say the least to listen to Dr. P. walk us through this exit strategy that many senior citizens choose.  Like his trip and fall in middle of the night, Dad stumbled upon his “excuse” with this new back injury … and now he had his VSED. He was in a hospital setting. He was injured. And, he was mentally sound.  There was nothing we could do to force him to eat.  Dr. P. warned us that we could go through this peaks and valleys routine for the next few months, or we could simply accept this decision by my dad and let him die … this ridiculously slow, oft-painful, but in the end pain-free death.

The transformation that Saturday after he was hydrated was miraculous.  That night I sat with my dad with some half-dozen of my family and nephews and we watched the UCLA football game. He was no longer tripping balls and hallucinating, but even joking around with us. After everyone left, I asked my dad one final time if his plan to die couldn’t be assuaged, to which he replied, “Goddamn it, John, I want to die! Just let me be, wouldja?”

Dr. P. referred hospice care to us.  Over a dozen of us, his family, met with the hospice group the next morning. It must be said that these professionals were a Godsend. I met and worked with a half-dozen of this group’s employees, and every single person was a consummate professional, courteous, and overly attentive. Extraordinary to find such helpful and comforting people at a time of real need in one’s life. 

My dad had already frontloaded his refusal to eat the four weeks after his injury (he ate maybe twice and then an Ensure every other day).  After we left the hospital he ate only once, 4 bites of vanilla ice cream the night his children and grandchildren came to say goodbye to him.  He did something he rarely did: he shook the hands of the elder children (and one personal friend of 45 years) in a purposeful way.  I was my dad’s nurse the entire 8 weeks, and tried to leave the room when he was saying his goodbyes. But, I overheard my oldest brother (who’s 16 years older than me, and was never particularly close to my dad, again our step-dad) say goodbye to Don, they shook hands and he said to my dad, “thank you for all that you did for me.”  It was profound, take my word. There were lots of profound moments, but that was one I thought I should share.

Over the next four weeks it was a long, slow, slog of a waking nightmare watching my dad die.  The hospice group provided all of the medical accouterments: the dozens and dozens of adult diapers, and “chucks,” which is a bed lining, and the protective gloves and the masks (which were quite welcomed by yours truly) during changing.  They also provided the meds (thank Christ for the meds). They provided the cleansing gels which I used constantly to wash him multiple times daily, as well as the bathing gels which I used every odd day.  But, for some reason, the hospice could not provide any wipes; I’m not sure why that was.  Must be a Medicare or a reimbursement thing.  My 16 yr-old son and I swapped out my dad’s bed and furniture for his hospital bed (we left the tv, natch).  And thank God for it, the moveable hospital bed.  He was weak, but still surprisingly strong.  I never wanted my siblings to experience what I had to go through the last 2-3 weeks. It was tough. Even now, weeks later, I still have hives from the stress.  But, only one of us needed to go through it, and since I moved in with my pop after my mom died, it was logical I should be the one.

My dad twice during this time asked me (right before he moved into a semi-comatose state), “When?” as well as "What's the regimen for how long this is taking?" which surprised me. He thought it would have been over quickly, and frankly I did not.  I knew that people survive weeks starving themselves to death. The RN that would visit our home twice a week was extraordinary.  Now, because I want to forget this experience desperately, I literally have forgotten her name.  If I tried I probably could dig it out from the recesses of my muddled brain, but I’d rather not presently.  But, she was a rock star. God bless that woman. She prepped me for something that surprised me, but gave notice to his imminent departure: terminal restlessness.  My father began to fight me to leave his bed. He had someplace to go.  “John, I have to go!” “Son, let me out!” He’d grab my arm occasionally, and sometimes he’d bargain to just sit in the chair that I had placed bedside.  He was too weak to do this, but for some stupid reason, I helped him into the chair twice. He sat there for 30 seconds and then told me, “I have to go!” and try to leave, and then I’d have to lift him back into bed.  Don’t do this if you ever have to help a loved one during these “end of life restlessness” fits.

So now we had to adjust the bed so that my feebled though freakishly strong-willed father could not get out of the bed.  I had to jury-rig his bedspread over the top of his bed rails which kept his legs in.  This all came about because I was behind in his meds delivery, reacting to his state.  After 2-3 days of “fighting” my father and his “end of life restlessness,” I determined to get in front of this scenario and administered the cocktail of drugs he was on proactively, not wanting to fight my father any more.  It worked. He was on morphine which helped with his back injury and pain, and lorazepam and haldol for the restlessness and agitation, and all were administered sublingual with a syringe.  When there were fever spikes I had to administer suppositories.  When he eventually developed a productive cough (death rattle), there was atropine to give my dad, which was odd because this med is typically used as eye drops.  Anyway, once the nurse spotted this in the charts that I fastidiously tracked and prepped (which she taught us to use), she contacted the doctor to get his approval and he responded one step better and doubled-up the dosage of the drugs my dad was given every 4 hours.  My pop was fast-tracked onto the super drug highway toward his ultimate demise in a much more pleasant state.  It wasn’t any easier. Sleep was tough. But, once my father experienced another of life’s final indicators that death was near, a massive excretion of water from all of the cells in the body from a sort of “endorphin” rush to ease the pain from his self-imposed starvation, the result was the release of a massive amount of fluids.  The nurse told me that with his spiked fever, and this, his end was 2-3 days away most likely.

I checked on my dad at 1am, and my brother set his alarm and checked on dad at 3am.  At 6:45am he woke me up and said he thought our dad had passed.  We both checked for vitals. He was warm, his eyes were open, but he was gone. We waited 10 minutes and observed him, but we knew.  I was with both of my parents for days and weeks before they passed, but missed their ultimate passing, for which I’m glad. Small blessings.  I made a promise to my dad two months prior that I would not let him go to some “old folks home” to die.  If he was going to go in this miserable fashion, he was going to be home in his own bedroom.  Plus, to be honest, I was the longest cohabitating “kid” to be with my dad during our lives, so it was my honor to escort him out of the house he said he’d never leave unless it was “feet-first.”   And that's what 5 or 6 of his children did after he passed, viz., watch two professionals who deal in human remains come and take their dad away for the very last time.

Epilogue: I hope and trust that anyone -- whether visitor or Dear Reader -- reading this account of my dad’s passing is not offended by the style and nature of the narrative that I offered up here in this space. It was something I had to get out and onto the page quickly, and if it seemed a bit flippant, it wasn’t intentional. My dad wanted to die.  He was ready, however much his children disagreed, to leave this planet. My dad was very much not a religious man.  His formative and very early years were in households of Seventh-day Adventists, but he stressed to me (the religious conservative) that he was agnostic about the whole afterlife issue.  Near the very end I prayed over and for my dad. I read to him.  Occassionally he'd look up, and we'd hold hands. It was rough to go through. So, back to the title of today's piece; of course I never helped my dad end his life in any impolitic fashion, merely loved my dad the best way I could and helped him along as his life wound down. It was odd and sad for us that loved my dad to watch him choose this path for his off-ramp.

My first memory of my dad? I was 3 years old, hiding behind my mom's couch in San Diego, wondering who this stranger was in our home. I was playing peekaboo as kids do at that age. My dad rescued my mother and brothers and me from welfare life. Even though I never got the emotional investment that all men crave from their dad or father figure, we did have a loving relationship. And for that I'm grateful. He loved my sons, and they adored him.  Their victory each time they saw this grumpy man was to make him chuckle. They'd score a small victory, then noisily clop down the stairs, "Dad, I made grandpa laugh!"  My dad was loved by all of kids and especially his grandchildren and great grandchildren.  He loved them in his inimitable way, and they loved him back in kind, in their own fashion, whatever that meant for them.