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ragnaiceQuestions I Never Asked My Grandfather
Published: 2011-12-01 21:59:16 +0000 UTC; Views: 10215; Favourites: 338; Downloads: 273
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Description My grandfather sits in a wheelchair by the window in the old people's home with his chin leaned into his chest, mumbling incessantly and unintelligibly to himself and drooling a little from the right corner of his mouth. Mom can't come here anymore. She just breaks down at the sight of him so I sometimes come by myself and sit with him in silence for a while.

It's a sad end to a long and hard life, and I morbidly think to myself that if a political party stepped forth now with the legalization of euthanasia on its agenda, I'd vote for it. After two strokes and a hemorrhage, topped with severe senile dementia, what is the point of letting people exist like robots? I know grandpa thought the same. Before his speech was impaired, he often said that the pacemaker was one of his biggest mistakes, and that people should be allowed to go when it was time to go.

Terrible as it sounds, I'm already starting to think about the obituary that I, having the best way with words in my branch of the family, will be requested to write, hopefully – yes, hopefully – within a year. The problem is that even though this person has been around all my life and much longer than that, I know next to nothing about him.

Perhaps I have over-idealized grandparents. They are different from parents. Parents you can see tired, angry and unhappy but grandparents are always in a good mood. They are the sweet, gray-haired, wrinkle-faced people who are there to brush the tears from your cheek and impart wisdom to help you become a better person – unlike parents they can do this without coming across as tyrannical. Where did all that wisdom come from? From the experiences accumulated by a long, long life, of course, but I've hardly ever thought about it like that.

It's strange to think that grandparents have a past. I mean, you know it in a sort of an abstract way, but it doesn't really hit you until you want to say something about it and you have no words. When all you can come up with is: "My grandfather was a good and kind old man with whom I often had enjoyable conversations until he was laid low by various ailments. Then he started talking nonsense and stopped recognizing me and remained so until he died." Then it dawns on you that your grandparents had a life, long before your existence. That they used to be young; children who had grandparents themselves; moody teenagers who slammed doors; adolescents who had their whole life ahead of them.

I do know that my grandfather grew up in the countryside, and it always puts into my mind a grainy, sepia-toned picture of a young man wearing dirty boots and a tattered shirt with rolled-up sleeves and suspenders and a flat cap on his head. It's a generic image which tells me nothing about grandpa.

I never asked him what it was like to grow up there, whether he enjoyed the peaceful but demanding agricultural work or whether he detested it and dreamed of exotic places. I never asked what he wanted to be when he grew up, whether he fought with his parents because he wanted to be a pilot while they wanted him to be a farmer or a banker.

I know that he came to the city to work for the Americans during the war, but I never asked him about his experience of war even if it was only indirect. Was he ever afraid? Was he one of those who lost a girl to an American soldier?

I know through calculations that he must have met grandma around that time. Of course, I never asked how they met or whether he was ever in love with someone else. In my narrow mind, grandparents are a constant, a unit – grandma and grandpa – inseparable until death do them part and even then inseparable in the memory. One without the other doesn't make sense. One or the other with someone else is just utterly mind-blowing. Of course, that's just naïve thinking on my part. Why shouldn't they have had other relationships in the past, way before they became grandma and grandpa? Why shouldn't they have had French kisses, heartbreaks, one-night-stands…Not that I want to know any details about that – and this train of thought must be derailed before causing me brain damage.

I look at grandpa and try to glean some of the old wisdom and comfort from his eyes, but they are clouded over and no more glint with hidden knowledge. I wish I could ask him what his happiest memory was; what he would take, if he was exiled to a deserted island and could only take three things with him.

I help him lean back in the chair from which he has been slowly leaning more and more forward until he is in an uncomfortable position. I guess our roles are somewhat reversed now, though of course, I have a long way to go.

When I stand to kiss him goodbye, he's still mumbling and I strain to make out the words. I've always brushed it off as senile nonsense but, really, it must mean something, at least to himself. I feel like I must know it, like it's the last chance I'll get to gain some understanding of this stranger I've known all my life. It sounds like 'wrong' but might as well be 'long' or 'gone' or something such.

I think about it on the way out and decide it sounded the most like 'wrong.' That is not a word I associate with grandparents. Grandparents are always right. They can't do anything wrong, except pushing the wrong buttons on remote controls. They don't lie or steal or whore or drive illegally – except maybe illegally slow – but then, why not? They're just human, after all – an absurdly surprising notion to my suddenly obviously naïve mind. I mean, this is something I've always known, but somehow never taken in. I wouldn't call it a cosmic realization, but it's striking when it hits you, sort of like suddenly noticing that you're breathing or blinking.

From the old people's home, I go to grandma's who still has enough strength and wits about her to live at home. She seems small and weary and more wrinkly than ever, but she smiles that special grandma smile at me. It's a joyful, loving, accepting, knowing smile and it makes me feel that she has real faith in me and my abilities, despite my own new-found doubts.

We sit down in the little kitchen and grandma makes coffee. After a while of chatting, we settle into silence until I pull up a notebook and pen. Then I look up at grandma who is sitting opposite to me, holding her cup with both her wrinkled hands and smiling, always smiling. "So grandma, can I ask you a few questions?"
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Comments: 216

restlessnocturne [2011-12-09 04:27:43 +0000 UTC]

I lost my grandfather back in May of this year so I could relate to this on a very personal level. It reminded me of some things I wish I had done with him before he left this world. We always used to play chess together and I kept meaning to ask him to play one more time.

But life kept happening for me. Eventually, I would put it off in my mind and say 'I'll ask tomorrow'.

Then he died. And it's something akin to a pang of guilt that I feel every I think about how some incidental plans here and there took precedence over that solitary game of chess.

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ragnaice In reply to restlessnocturne [2011-12-10 01:06:25 +0000 UTC]

Ah, yes. It can be difficult to find time for the past when the future awaits. But then, as long as they aren't dead, old people aren't past though we feel like they kind of belong to it... maybe we need to remind ourselves sometimes and take the time to look into the past with those who experienced it. At the same time, I don't like that people get too plagued by past regrets, it accomplishes nothing. However, I know we can't always control our feelings

In any case, you seem to have had a good relationship with your grandfather. I'm sorry for your loss and thank you for reading.

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Acorn83 [2011-12-09 04:10:10 +0000 UTC]

Questions I Never Asked My Grandfather:
*Why haven't you ever killed a man?
*Do you enjoy wearing cotton panties?
*From where do you hail, traveler?

That's it. I asked him all the other questions at some point.

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ragnaice In reply to Acorn83 [2011-12-10 00:55:47 +0000 UTC]

...I forgot those.

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kristaology [2011-12-09 03:40:30 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for making me cry. INSTA-FAVE!

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ragnaice In reply to kristaology [2011-12-10 00:54:35 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome. I am perversely pleased by having caused so many people to cry Thanks for reading and commenting. And faving

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Doodleniks In reply to ??? [2011-12-09 03:03:06 +0000 UTC]

Awwww. ;____;

Reminds me of my grandmother. She dies when I was young.

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ragnaice In reply to Doodleniks [2011-12-10 00:52:05 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for taking the time to read.

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ozzyp In reply to ??? [2011-12-09 02:40:45 +0000 UTC]

hay its not to late to talk to him ask him thows questions listen to his rambling take in all that u can it will mean more to him than you'll ever know.
im not much one for people but my grandfather was my inspiration my hero i wanted to be just like him, he passed last July i never told him how much he meant to me, it makes me sad i read this and its not for words one of the beast peices iv ever had the plesur of enjoiyng it brot up emotions about the man that was the senter piece of my family thank you

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ragnaice In reply to ozzyp [2011-12-10 00:51:29 +0000 UTC]

Well, I did say the story is slightly more exaggerated than reality. I can, in fact (though seldom nowadays), have almost coherent conversations with my grandfather but he goes his own ways, I have to follow what he's saying, there's no use in trying to direct the talk into paths I want to go, you know? And then he tends to spout his bitterness and regrets

I'm sorry about your grandfather but I'm sure he knew, at least to some extent

Thank you for reading and responding!

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ozzyp In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-11 05:48:59 +0000 UTC]

aaa well it was good very good

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moonwisp-of-hetalia [2011-12-09 02:37:28 +0000 UTC]

My grandfather....died recently of cancer..I relate...

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ragnaice In reply to moonwisp-of-hetalia [2011-12-10 00:45:39 +0000 UTC]

I'm sorry, that's terrible. It's just terrible how many people have cancer, I feel there are far too many that I know about at least.

Thanks for reading.

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moonwisp-of-hetalia In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-10 22:34:55 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, he's in a better place now, at least. It's like this says, it hurt more, I think, to see him suffering.

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heatherazzi [2011-12-09 01:37:39 +0000 UTC]

My grandma just died a few months ago (she was in a home, too, with dementia and poor eyesight) and you're right about the over-idealization part. I'm lucky that my mum tells me stories about her (and my grandpa, who died before I was born.

Fortunately, I'm at an age where I can talk to my parents about the things I didn't get to talk to my grandma about.

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ragnaice In reply to heatherazzi [2011-12-10 00:42:20 +0000 UTC]

Thank you. Yeah, it's almost like from a child's (or a naive person's) perspective, grandparents are just one-dimensional people...oh, the disillusionment and yes, parents can be useful in that capacity when they want to share (mine don't).

Thank you for reading. I'm sorry about your grandmother

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heatherazzi In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-12 00:32:00 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much.

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PrincessRapunzel1995 [2011-12-09 01:27:34 +0000 UTC]

My eyes teared up reading this... It's so beautiful.

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ragnaice In reply to PrincessRapunzel1995 [2011-12-10 00:38:02 +0000 UTC]

I didn't consciously mean to make anyone cry but I'll take it as a compliment. Thank you for reading

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PrincessRapunzel1995 In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-10 02:47:00 +0000 UTC]

It's written very well. And I loved it!
You're welcome.

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madgenius2013 [2011-12-09 01:13:55 +0000 UTC]

This is an amazing piece of literature. It is filled with so much heartfelt meaning, and I truly believe that this completely deserved the Daily Deviation it got.

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ragnaice In reply to madgenius2013 [2011-12-10 00:34:53 +0000 UTC]

I am deeply honored Thank you!

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madgenius2013 In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-11 00:17:25 +0000 UTC]

Absolutely no problem at all!

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FlameStreak3 [2011-12-09 00:33:48 +0000 UTC]

This is worth one thousand DDs, for the one thousand heart strings you pulled with this story.

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ragnaice In reply to FlameStreak3 [2011-12-10 00:34:20 +0000 UTC]

Ah, wow, thank you so much!

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ShadowyZman [2011-12-09 00:24:36 +0000 UTC]

I recently lost my grandmother. This is so beautiful...

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ragnaice In reply to ShadowyZman [2011-12-10 00:33:51 +0000 UTC]

I'm sorry but thank you for reading

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ShadowyZman In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-11 05:28:36 +0000 UTC]

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LadyScipio In reply to ??? [2011-12-09 00:17:26 +0000 UTC]

Wow... This is truly quite beautiful... Thank you very much for sharing.

~<3

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ragnaice In reply to LadyScipio [2011-12-10 00:33:02 +0000 UTC]

You are welcome and thank you for reading it

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ChristyChan10 In reply to ??? [2011-12-09 00:14:34 +0000 UTC]

This mad me cry with longing for time when I couldve talked to my grandfather. "My grandfather was a good and kind old man with whom I often had enjoyable conversations until he was laid low by various ailments. Then he started talking nonsense and stopped recognizing me and remained so until he died." makes me relate so well to my own situation.

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ragnaice In reply to ChristyChan10 [2011-12-10 00:32:36 +0000 UTC]

Thank you so much for reading

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ChristyChan10 In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-10 02:44:56 +0000 UTC]

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ThePurpleHayz [2011-12-08 23:52:28 +0000 UTC]

I love this! I never got to ask my great grandmother many questions, I was very young. My grandpa too. But I can certainly ask my grandmother!

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ragnaice In reply to ThePurpleHayz [2011-12-10 00:16:15 +0000 UTC]

That's good Thank you for reading

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emedeme [2011-12-08 23:39:08 +0000 UTC]

This so reminds me of my grandfather and me... Very touching, you really deserve the DD. Beautifully done

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ragnaice In reply to emedeme [2011-12-10 00:14:38 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much

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StumpyTheStump In reply to ??? [2011-12-08 23:38:03 +0000 UTC]

This is so beautiful. It really expresses how we should cherish those we have and come to know and love them before they're, and we're, gone. I suddenly have the urge to call my own grandparents right now.
Thank you for this lovely writing.

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ragnaice In reply to StumpyTheStump [2011-12-10 00:13:59 +0000 UTC]

I hope you did
Thank you for reading

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13-hikarii-13 In reply to ??? [2011-12-08 23:37:58 +0000 UTC]

This is one of the most inspirational pieces of writing I've ever read! Honestly...It's so...I'm at a loss for words. I'm visiting my grandma this weekend and I'm just going to talk to her and ask her about her life. This is brilliant!

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ragnaice In reply to 13-hikarii-13 [2011-12-10 00:07:12 +0000 UTC]

Those are big words, wow... I'm happy to hear this affects you. A heartfelt thanks for reading

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misamiera In reply to ??? [2011-12-08 23:37:18 +0000 UTC]

Beauuuuutiful Definitely inspires me -- I've been getting my grandma to tell me stories lately. I think the biggest realization is that we all have stories, and they're all so interesting. Maybe we'll be telling stories to our grandchildren, right?

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ragnaice In reply to misamiera [2011-12-10 00:02:10 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, hopefully. Good for you initiating that interest in the past, my realization came a little too late but I'm getting bits and pieces from here and there (some of which I didn't really want to know).
Thank you very much for reading

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PokemonTrainerHaley In reply to ??? [2011-12-08 23:32:58 +0000 UTC]

This was actually quite lovely, you have quite the way with words. :'D
It also made me think back on my own experience I had not too long ago.
My grandfather died back in November, a few days before my birthday infac, but he was in so much pain, two cancers were taking a toll on him, and finally, it tore him down and he lost his fight.
But the last time I seen him alive was in that hospital bed, before they started to take him off the medication that kept him alive and let him die peacefully with pain meds. aiding him.

I remember him as my kindly, warm hearted, stubborn, and fatherly figured grandfather. I remember his kind smile and gaze, his eyes that were so full of life.
But when I saw him in that hospital bed, he looked in pain, he had troubles breathing, he wanted to speak to us. His eyes weren't lively any longer, but, he reconized me. I was with my mother at the time, he was her father after all, she asked me not to cry, and honestly, I tried not to, but I broke down in tears when I saw him.

I remember my last words clearly I said to him.
I remember jokingly smiling and telling him in a rather shaky voice, "Hey, I brought you some pocket lent."
That was a joke between him and I, he'd always ask if I had some money to spare, I'd always would move my hand around in my pocket and tell him, "Nope, just pocket lent."

Anywho, when I told him that, he smiled at me, he still knew who I was, he still remembered.
I leaned over his bed and kissed his forehead after that. I started to walk out with my mother until I stopped and looked back to him and said my final words I'd ever speak to him; "Hey, be good now, alright?"
He winked at me, and I slowly winked back, feeling ashamed when I felt a tear run down my cheek when I did.

Eh, enough of my rambling; my point is that I now think that I didn't know his past life that well.
I never did ask him so many questions, such as the ones said in this.
Nice job on writing this piece, it's lovely, just, lovely. :'3
Really deserves the DD. Really does. :'3

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ragnaice In reply to PokemonTrainerHaley [2011-12-09 23:55:22 +0000 UTC]

I am truly touched by your story. I'm sorry for your loss but you are lucky to have been able to say goodbye. I have already lost two grandparents but they were so far gone with Alzheimers that they couldn't communicate anymore and I had become so detached from them that it was a relief when they died.
Thank you so very much for reading this and sharing your story.

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PokemonTrainerHaley In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-10 01:10:26 +0000 UTC]

I'm so sorry about your two parents, I truely am.
And I have to say your story really touched me, too. :'3 Thank you for typing this.
And you're very welcome, and thank you for reading. :'3

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ragnaice In reply to PokemonTrainerHaley [2011-12-10 01:44:08 +0000 UTC]

I am very moved by all the personal stories I've received in response to this little piece. I've never felt so much like a part of a community on this site, it's pretty wonderful. I'm realizing that there are people behind the weird usernames and avatars...

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PokemonTrainerHaley In reply to ragnaice [2011-12-10 03:00:03 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, it's pretty amazing to find this out, too.
I've read through the comments, too. :3 I actually was mailed by user who read my comment, telling me their own story, too.
It's just so neat to be able to become so close to other users on here. :3

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ragnaice In reply to PokemonTrainerHaley [2011-12-10 11:13:58 +0000 UTC]

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Lazulelle In reply to PokemonTrainerHaley [2011-12-09 22:08:24 +0000 UTC]

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