I stared out the window that overlooked my backyard. I looked up at the stars in the sky, then back down to my girlsā play set.
āDad, where are you?ā
I studied every part of my backyard.
āI can see everyone else; why not you? I canāt see what you look like now! I need to see you.ā
I sobbed as though I could expel the heartache from my body through my tears. But no matter how hard I cried, the excruciating pain refused to leave.
I collapsed onto my couch and observed the house that I had moved into less than four weeks ago. The house I had moved into to be closer to my dad. But my dad would never get to walk through my front door, because he had died suddenly less than twenty-four hours ago.
Two days earlier I had spoken with my neighbor Alison, whom I had just met when we moved in. Her father had unexpectedly been diagnosed with an advanced brain disease, and his prognosis wasnāt good. He was a wonderful man and I had been privileged to meet him on one occasion.
I had told her, āI know itās hard to see any gifts in your dadās condition but let me point out one. I counsel many people who are devastated because they never got to say good-bye. You have been given an opportunity to hold your dad, to sit with him, and when the time comes to say good-bye to him. Say and do whatever you need to now in order to be okay with his final moments. One thing that I cannot do as a medium is to hold those lost to me. I can somewhat touch them but not hold them. Itās not the same. See the gift.ā
Later Alison and I would recognize the significance of our new friendship.
My fatherās death came at the end of a fun weekend. On September 20, 2002, I traveled to California for my cousin Vanessaās wedding. I was happy to be there with my husband, Joe; we needed a break. During the ceremony some unusual disturbances were taking place. I snickered and squeezed Joeās hand.
I knew that my dadās sister, my aunt Olivia, who had passed six years earlier, was making her presence known. Iād never doubted she would be there; Iād only wondered how sheād make her presence known. After the wedding we followed my cousin Markās fiancĆ©e to the reception; she missed our exit and we ended up on a small road trip. It made us a little late, but when we arrived we were ready for a good time.
The timing of our arrival would later seem very important. We walked into the ballroom and I heard a familiar song. That moment will stay in my mind forever. The mariachis were playing āMy Way.ā First of all, Iāve never heard that song played at a wedding, because itās hardly about unity. Second, mariachis donāt typically play that song, because itās in English. I whirled around and I looked at Joe and my cousin Mark.
Oh my gosh! Thatās so strangeāthatās what Iām going to play someday at Dadās funeral!
āMy Wayā is a perfect song for my dad, not only because he was a free spirit but because he had an air of Rat Pack coolness about him. He had been a professional ballroom dancer for decades, and we used to listen to Frank Sinatra together. He wore a big diamond pinky ring, and when I was seventeen I began wearing my own as a way of connecting to my dad. Everything he did, he did with style.
Two years earlier, I had made a prediction. One day after having lunch with my dad, I came home and told my husband that I had a strong feeling my dad was going to die at age sixty-seven from a massive heart attack. Since then I had been on a crusade to prevent it. I shared my prediction with a few friends and family members. My friend Stacey and I had already gone to the mall and picked up a Sinatra CD with āMy Wayā on it. I told her Iād need it for my dadās funeral. I was simultaneously planning his funeral and trying to prevent it. My dad promised heād go have his heart checked out, and he did, several times; the doctors said all was well.
I snapped back to the reception, and as the song ended I felt sick to my stomach.
āShake it off. Dad is fine,ā I said to myself as I prayed it true. I had sent him to every heart institute in our area. He exercised regularly and ate right. He listened to me. Intervention, right?
It was Friday, and I had just talked to Dad the night before. Iād planned to call on Sunday when I got home. He was coming over for lunch the following Saturday. I missed my dad the whole time I was gone. Iād moved to central Phoenix from Gilbert, Arizona, so that we could spend more time together. I was eager to see him more often. I had been in Phoenix for only three weeks, and I was still unpacking.
Sunday morning, we were hanging out with my cousin Mark and my friend Laurie, waiting until we had to catch our flight home in a few hours. The phone rang and Joe answered it. After listening briefly, he looked at me and said, āAllison, your dad died.ā
I felt as if all the breath had been sucked out of my body.
āYou mean my grandma? Dad couldnāt be gone!ā
The look on Joeās face told me he was. My heart shattered instantly. I could not think straight.
I was so angry with God: āYou canāt take my dad! I live with ridicule and doubt from others and I still do what Iām asked to do. I have done everything youāve asked of me without hesitation, but a condition was that you not take my father!ā
I was only thirty years old, with no father. My daughters would have no grandfather; two of them would be too young to remember him clearly. I counsel others on grief, and I could not give myself peace of mind. I was instantly empty. I had nothing left to give.
As I flew home, I watched people go on with their lives. I wanted to say, āStop! My father has died and everything must stop!ā
But it doesnāt work that way. I know that. I was being irrational, but I couldnāt help myself. As I grappled with my pain, I realized that I was Dadās next of kin and I had a funeral to plan.
Death is funny in that it brings out the best and the worst in people. It casts light on the truth and makes life blindingly clear. The reality was starting to set in. I went to pick up the personal items heād been wearing, and I slipped his pinky ring onto my finger next to my own pinky ring, where it will always stay. I had no sense of time, of hunger, or of any of lifeās normal routines. Everything had all smeared together into an ugly, distorted mess. I told my husband that I didnāt want to sleep because every night that I slept was one more day since Dadās last breath. I didnāt want Dad to become a distant memory. I didnāt know how to function, and I was frustrated because I couldnāt feel him as I do others who have passed.
At his funeral I saw my cousin Mike, my dadās namesake, and we embraced. Mike handed me the most amazing picture. It was of my dad and Mikeās dad with their arms around each other at Mikeās wedding twenty years ago. They had the most brilliant smiles on their faces and were obviously having a great time. Mikeās dad had passed away ten years earlier. I was so grateful for the picture. I extended my hand to Mike and placed my dadās gold watch in his hand. It had been his favorite; āMikeā was engraved on the back, and he wore it every day.
āMy dad would want you to have this,ā I said.
Mike smiled. āAllison, my dad engraved this watch for your dad. I recognize his work.ā
I believe that Mike and I were prompted by our dads, so that each of us would bring a token of their love and hand it off to the child who missed a father. The watch gave my cousin not only love from my dad but a sign from his dad. The picture gave me a sense of happiness I thought Iād never feel again, as well as the gift of a visual of how he looks on the other side. I couldnāt yet reach my dad, but he reached me.
Then I suddenly felt angry. āI am standing at my fatherās funeral!ā
I looked up at the stained-glass ceiling of the church, and once again I railed at God: āHow could you take him like this? Why should I ever listen to you again?ā
I heard a soft female voice say, āYou were given the gift of two years to say good-bye.ā
The voice was right. I had been given two years! Even though I wasnāt with my father at the moment of his passing, I had been saying good-bye every time I saw or spoke with him. I had been saying good-bye with my every word and action for two years, and I knew it. I had known my fatherās days were numbered since the day I received his age and cause of passing.
It had been a blessing and a curse at once. I reflected upon my last conversation with Dad. I had told him, āHold on, Dad, Iāll help you when I get back. Donāt you leave me; I still need you. ā
He didnāt answer me, so I told him I loved him and hung up. Itās interesting that I couldnāt separate the medium in me from the daughter. My words had clearly been acknowledging loss. I just wouldnāt see it, because this time I just had to be wrong.
It dawned on me that if Iād had a choice I never would have let him go. So God decides when itās time for our souls to move forward, when itās time to leave this life. None of us would simply relinquish our loved ones, or ourselves for that matter: āOkay, God take āem away! Good-bye!ā No, I donāt see that happening.
Initially, I was unable to make contact with my father because I was blocked by my own pain, but eventually he reached me. The week after he passed away, I received phone calls from two of my dadās dance students. The calls were independent of each other and neither student knew that I am a medium. I know my father didnāt tell them. His response to learning about my ability had been āWell, donāt tell anyone!ā
They both shared with me that they had a dream in which they saw my father. They said he looked really good and happy. In both dreams they had conversations with him and he told them to call his daughter and tell her that he was okay. They were both hesitant to call me, being worried that I might think they were crazy. Kind of funny, isnāt it?
When loved ones canāt seem to reach you, theyāll try until eventually they find a way. I find great solace in knowing that Dad was able to send energy to soothe me through others. We should all be grateful for those kinds of signs and messages; theyāre priceless.
I hired mariachis for Dadās funeral, and of course I had them play āMy Way.ā In addition, Marines came for the flag ceremony and one of them played āTaps.ā Dad had been so proud to have served his country. I planned the funeral he would have wanted and a wake he would have found amusing, with lots of pictures, stories, and good friends. I knew that Dad was going to be there at his funeral and wake; I wanted to give him a send-off that he could revel in. I did, and now I try to live without regret. The only thing that was strange was that I didnāt clearly see him the way I usually see the āguest of honorā at a memorial service.
We do whatever we need to in order to process our pain, and I grieved in my own way. I felt that if I heard āBe strong!ā one more time, I was going to scream. I didnāt want to be strong, and furthermore I didnāt want to worry about doing or saying the right thing. If you canāt fall apart after losing your father, then when can you? Death is all about falling apart. You have to fall apart so that you can rebuild yourself. My dad died, and I am not the same person anymore. I will never be that person again, but I have learned from his death. It has definitely added several new layers to who I am as a medium.
I try to observe the strengths of those who have passed and incorporate them into myself. One of my fatherās strengths was laughter. He had a good time and so did everyone around him. People loved him because he made them feel good about themselves. I now make an extra effort to be social, to stop and smell the roses with my friends. The biggest compliment you can pay to people you have loved and lost is to keep a part of them alive in yourself, memorializing their significance.
Seven weeks after my dadās passing, my friend Randy died of a heart attack at age forty-nine. As I sat grieving with his three teenagers and his beautiful wife, I realized that Randyās kids were not only proud of their father, they were also aware that heād had a terrific life. They were mourning, but every other statement was about something Randy had achieved or had taught them.
Erica, Randyās exceptional nineteen-year-old, said, āMy dad will never walk me down the aisle at my wedding. He wonāt be there to see his grandchildren.ā
What could I say? She was right. How unfair was that? I realized how lucky I was to have had my dad for thirty years. Some people have even less time, or none at all.
But she wasnāt waiting for my answer; she went right into another great story from one of their many summers at the lake. Looking down, Randy is surely proud of his phenomenal kids.
āMy Wayā was played at Randyās memorial, too. I sobbed, processing what I hadnāt finished at my dadās funeral. Once again, the song was perfectly fitting.
Part of the reason I wrote this chapter is that so many people out there beat themselves up over the death of a loved one. They think that had they just taken their mom to a doctor, had they just known sooner that something was wrong, they could have prevented the passing of those they love.
I should be an example to all. I knew that Dad was going to pass and I knew the cause. Trust me, I did everything to prevent it but found out it was not in my hands; it never had been. When I am given information from the other side that benefits my client, or even helps to save a life, I am still only a vehicle. The information was going to get to them one way or another; I happened to be the conduit. But when someoneās number is up, itās up. I hope I can help alleviate th...