If
Norman Rockwell were alive today, Pepperell, Massachusetts would be
the place he'd hang his hat at the end of a long day of painting. Not
being from, or raised in New England, it has taken me a fair while to
understand what it means to be from New England. In truth, I still
don't get it, and probably never will. People from New England are an add breed. These days, I have come to think of Pepperell as a person.
The Town can be mean, angry and depressed in the winter; always
optimistic and upbeat in the spring; pensive and reflective in the
fall; and fun, supportive, and carefree during summer months. But
it's the people who really give Pepperell its meat and bones, its
complexion.
I
am not unlike 99% of others with Parkinson's disease. I live a
mixture of all 5 stages of Elisabeth Kübler- Ross in a single
week. My companion, my caregiver, is not a person but a town,
Pepperell. Here's what I mean.
For
the past 2 years I have lived a life closer to that of a Cistern
monk than a well
educated, articulate, and funny 62 year old white male. When a person
can no longer bullshit others with humor and charm, then-surprise,
surprise-you're left alone with a complete and total stranger for a
roommate. Somewhere in my late 50s, I became acutely aware of just
how unprepared and outright terrible a father I was becoming. Now, the Cisterns are a contemplative, monastic order who live in silence and
communal isolation. Well, the dear Lord has not hurt his knuckles
knocking on my door. Or so I thought.
For
the past couple of years, I've spent without cable, no TV, not even
rabbit ears. That last bit is an odd mention, I agree, but when first
diagnosed with PD, I treated myself to six thousand cable channels. Every day
I would wait for the next symptom to appear, and decided that since I
could no longer go out to the world, I would bring the world to me.
And each day, after too much news, or too many movies, like a Roman
aristocrat at the bathhouse, I wanted to vomit and start all over
again. Uncountable hours I willingly turned over to Bill O'Riley; I
became part of the drama with the Teutle family on “American
Chopper,” dissected what was wrong with Kate and Jon and all those
kids; “Dirty Jobs,” and “Shark Week” dialogue rolled off my
tongue, rote-like. Sad, very sad, that I knew more about designing a
Harley than I did what music and books caught my daughter's
attention. While becoming a movie, writing, and TV expert, I was just
waiting, and waiting more, for that next symptom to appear. All the
while, my daughter was growing up without me.
I
knew one person, and not all that well, in the town of Pepperell, MA, (pop. 12,000). Then as Fate would have it, Life intervenes when you least expect it. I
was in the shower one day, just a singing-a-way and having a great
ole time. Turning off the water I squeegeed the excess water from me.
Holding the make-shift rail I went to lift my right leg over the lip
of the bathtub. Like a bad Elvis impersonation, my right leg began to
shimmer and shake just you'd imagine the King's might have done on the Ed Sullivan show.
“Well, that's odd, “ I recall thinking to myself. Never one to be
to easily fooled, and noticing that I had another leg with which to
try, I turned and attempted to lift my other one over the 2” high
lip. Different leg but the same result. So here was my dilemma.
I
recalled reading an article about a man from Mexico who had been
confined to his bed and bedroom for years. In the end, and 500 lbs later, he needed
medical attention that could no longer be provided to him in his
home. The man needed to get to a hospital. After backing up a flatbed truck, the fire department, with the assistance
of some heavy equipment, cut a giant hole in the side of his bedroom.
Extricating the poor man, there was a picture of him going down the
interstate covered by a tarp and on his way to the hospital.
Meanwhile
back in my shower. Once again I tried the right leg again with no
success. Then the left one again. Then the right, left,
right-cha-cha-cha! No matter how hard I tried to get that man and the
flatbed truck out of my mind, all I could see is the headline of the
local newspaper: “Local Man, Shakin' All Over, Lifted to Safety.”
Finally, in an act of desperation it occurred to me that there was a
way out of this potentially embarrassing situation. Kneeling, I
pulled myself, python-like, over the lip of the bathtub and onto the
safety of the floor. I remained there, on my butt, for what seemed
like the longest time. Then , mustering the courage, I stood. First
one tentative step and, hold it. Then the next foot and, once again,
hold it. Steady as she goes there, Sean. Confidence regained, I practically
ran out of the bathroom and dove onto the safety of my couch. Shades
of the fire department using a hook & ladder to pull me through
my window were quickly erased. True story.
For
days afterward, people of this Town, without ever knowing
specifically what, knew something was acutely wrong with me.Through
a series of phone calls and knocks at my front door, the "face" of Pepperell
was checking in with me to be sure I was OK. First, there was the
sweetest person in the world, Tracy, owner of the Pepperell
Family Pharmacy. Tracy looks and acts exactly like you'd expect
a Norman Rockwell grandmother to look and act. When I first moved to
Pepperell, on her own, she helped me with my Parkinson medications
until my insurance coverage was straightened out. Tracy is a modern
day, small-town saint, and has followed in the footsteps of her
mentor, John M., Sr. Between the two of them over the last 30
years, they and their pharmacies have anonymously helped more people,
and wanted less credit, than I have ever been exposed, ever. Small saints, indeed, in an ever
more frightening and violent world.
Al
S., was the manager of my apartment building, but also has his
business office located here. Al pointed out where to find this and
that around here, but, in the following months, became my small-town guide. Now the thing that was anathema to me before, but I have grown to respect now, is that Al, in essence, has
been doing the same job, with the same people for the last 25 to
thirty years. One foot in front of the other, day in and day out,
through humid summers and record-breaking winters. Quietly raising a family
with all the challenges and victories that go along with that endeavor. Here
is my point: At 68, when most people are retired, Al and his partner
(in his 70s), still put in a day's work. He would not-and could
not-have it another way. It isn't the job that defines Al, but rather
the routine that gives him, to this day, structure great meaning to his days. Amazing. Their number, it seems, is legion in Pepperell.
Al,
like most people in Pepperell, is deeply spiritual, but would never
flaunt religion in your face. And they all share a common
denominator, namely, these are people who have found a way to
love what they do. They don't work for a living, but receive life out of working.
People like Al, Tracy, Deb at the Lawrence Library, or Susan at the Senior Center, exist everywhere in this world. But they never really
'appear' in sprawling, metropolitan, hip, social, ladder-climbing
developments of 2015. Here in Peperell people like them bubble to the
surface, help, listen, vent, or advise, and then retreat once again
to the anonymity Pepperell affords them, to put one foot in front of
the other again.
Pepperell
and its inhabitants have absorbed my Parkinson's and me in a way like
no other place I've lived. I can walk to nearly everything: grocery
shopping, doctor appointments, pharmacy, and the Catholic church, dry
cleaner, restaurant. Ah, but there is no movie theater-maybe
someday. Last Sunday I was speaking to a friend, a relative by
marriage, Cathy Heywood, who still lives in the town I was born and
raised, San Benardino, California .“A guy was shot at the gas
station at 40th and Mountain Ave. That's too close,”
she aptly pointed out. There is no crime, to speak of, in Pepperell, not compared to SoCal,
at least.
Finally,
I attend Mass almost every morning. The Irish have a saying, “Sin at night
and pray the rosary in the morning”. You get the idea. It isn't
that I go and pray for anything, really. It is simply that the inside
of the church is a familiar place to me, and a great space to begin my
day. It helps me remember what is and what isn't important in this
life. That's all. I know what a privilege it is to start my day like
that. By noon most days I have forgotten what it is that I was
remembering that morning. But, it helps me to try and make
“something” out of my Parkinson's disease. And the Catholic church is peppered with more small town saints, but they'd never let on. That is simply the way they want it.
No, Pepperell would never register on the Southern California "cool" meter. The people you see on daytime TV, almost always wrinkle-free, tanned, 30-40-somethings who believe that "character" is a small acting role for someone with a face made for radio. No, if there is such a thing as "spiritual evolution," then the petri dish for that slow growth toward God is right here, right now, in Pepperell. Thank God for that fact.
No, Pepperell would never register on the Southern California "cool" meter. The people you see on daytime TV, almost always wrinkle-free, tanned, 30-40-somethings who believe that "character" is a small acting role for someone with a face made for radio. No, if there is such a thing as "spiritual evolution," then the petri dish for that slow growth toward God is right here, right now, in Pepperell. Thank God for that fact.