I've Been Replaced by Someone Younger and More Attractive

Long time, no blog. One could almost say that the Death Writer, or at least my blog, is officially dead. My last post, dated May 14th of last year, was about my toxic thyroid nodule and my plan to undergo radiation treatment. Well, that didn't happen. It was FAKE NEWS!!! I opted for surgery instead and lived to tell the tale!

See, it's not so bad! Simon's cat thinks otherwise.

Actually, here's a pic of me about two days post surgery with Sonya Reed's daughter. I drove her to the Mountain View Unit to meet her mom for the first time. If you've read Death Becomes Us, you know who I'm talking about.

Yeah, the wound is pretty frightening looking right there, but now it's neatly covered by my middle-aged neck wrinkles!

I now have a nifty scar on my neck that looks like I was in a knife fight with a very skilled plastic surgeon. Even better, I have half a thyroid that is functioning well. No medication for me (yet) and I avoided radiation. Surgery for the WIN!

Speaking of Death Becomes Us, I have some really exciting news. DBU is now available on Audible and iTunes! Many members of the book club I attend listen to their books and apparently this is now a thing. As a book preservationist (and someone who just loves the feel, look and smell of a book) I haven't jumped on this trend, but

ACX

made the process very simple. I didn't think anyone would want to listen to my monotone for 8 hours, so I held auditions. Since DBU is a very personal story, I had HUGE EXPECTATIONS. I didn't want Siri droning through my prose. After cringing at people's attempts at my neurotic voice, I was about to give up on the idea of going audio. But then...then

Lisaun Whittingham

auditioned. I knew after she read the first sentence that she was the one. Not only does she have a great smoky voice, she did a wonderful job interpreting the text. She's also gorgeous, not that that matters, but it's kind of cool to have someone "playing" me who is younger and much more attractive. She can be in the movie version. HELLO HOLLYWOOD!

She also has way better hair.

Well, my friends and random strangers, that's all the news that's fit to print. I'm glad you stopped by to read my blog post. The Death Writer blog meant so much to about 12 people, so thank you for stopping by to pay your final respects.

If you would like to purchase a copy of Death Becomes Us for yourself, your mom or that weird Uncle whose birthday is coming up, you can follow this

link

. You'll laugh, you'll cry and you might even learn a thing or two about biohazard cleaning, hospice, cognitive behavioral therapy or even death row.

Carpe Diem and all that.

Pamela

P.S. If you would like to WIN a copy of Death Becomes Us, leave a comment on this post. Tell me the last book that you read or listened to. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!

The Death of my Cat, Violet

"It is one of the beautiful compensations in this life that no one can sincerely try to help another without helping himself." Ralph Waldo Emerson

On Sunday, September 4, my sweet Violet died suddenly and unexpectedly while I was out of town visiting her first mama. She was seven years old, which is far too young for a cat to leave this earth.

Needless to say, I am deeply saddened by her absence. I've had five cats in my life, and Violet was by far the sweetest most loving cat I've ever had the pleasure to know. Her kind and trusting demeanor had nothing to do with me. She was born outside of the Mountain View Unit, the women's death row facility in Gatesville, Texas. There, she was tamed and cared for by my friend, Sonya Reed. Sonya wrote about Violet in the Readers' Write section of the The Sun. You can read it here. For two years, Sonya cared for Violet and sent me letters about how much she loved her. But then, the prison declared that they were going to capture and euthanize the feral cats around the prison and Sonya panicked. She convinced the warden to let her capture Violet so that someone could adopt her.

I didn't want Violet. I was afraid that having a feral cat would be too much work and that my other cat, Judy would protest. Well, as luck would have it, I ended up with her in my care.  I wrote about this strange adoption here

.

Violet on her first day inside my home.

Initially, Violet was scared and skittish, but the power of Fancy Feast and salmon treats from my intrusive hand won her over. She loved to eat and within months, she went from being a skinny, flea ridden kitty to a fluffy little bundle of awesomeness.

This is Violet doing her Cher impersonation.

About nine months went by and Violet got really sick in the middle of the night. She could barely breathe, so we loaded her in the car and took her to the emergency vet. That night we learned that she had heart worms and was given a rather dire prognosis. 

I administered steroids to keep her lungs opened up, but the poor girl wouldn't eat. Finally, a friend on Facebook suggested I give her raw egg. And it worked. That stimulated her appetite and she made a full recovery. Within a year, she was heart worm free.

On the mend in 2012.

From there on out, she was back to her old self. Her recovery was a tiny miracle. The vet said that cats rarely recovered from a heart worm infection. But Violet defied the odds.

Until now.

I was away visiting Sonya. For the first time in six years of visitation, we were allowed a contact visit, which meant that we could sit across from each other at a table and eat crappy vending machine snacks and hug at the beginning and end of the visit. And we did.

As I drove home, I called my husband to let him know I was on my way home and he sounded different, but I didn't suspect anything. It wasn't until I walked in the door that I found out that Violet had died that morning. There was no indication that she was ill. She just died.

Erik took her body to the emergency vet to be cremated and we will get her ashes on Friday. I am filled with all sorts of uncomfortable feelings...anger, sadness, heartbreak, why me? Why now? Why wasn't I there? It sucks. There's no getting around it. But, I am so grateful that I was able to spend five years with her. She was a special cat and I will never forget her.

Monday Mourning

I met Sonya Reed several months after I'd met and written about Khristian Oliver.  She sent me a lovely letter to thank me for being there for Khristian on the day of his death.  A friendship blossomed.  We send each other letters, I visit her when I can and I adopted Violet, the cat she saved from being euthanized by the prison.  

DW:  Who was the person that died?

SR:  The person I lost was my husband, Khristian Oliver. 

DW:  How old were you at the time?

SR:  I was thirty-seven.

DW:  How old was the person?

SR:  He was thirty-two.  He'd been on death row for almost twelve years.

DW:  Was it a sudden death or did you know it was going to happen?

SR:  We knew it was going to happen.  We hoped it wouldn't, but there's a certain inevitability for people with a death sentence.  The only thing I can remotely compare it to is that it felt similar to having a loved one die of a terminal illness.

DW:  

Did you and Khristian talk about death? 

SR:  We communicated several times a week via letters and the prison wardens allowed us a one hour phone conversation on his last day.  It was immeasurably precious and far too short.  I cannot possibly describe what it feels like to be someone's last wish.  It was surreal.  I cried through the entire conversation. Bless his heart; he tried to be stoic, to comfort me, but I could hear the fear in his voice.  He said, "I think they're going to get me, baby."  I could hear the surrender too.  He wanted to live, but he also bore an enormous burden of guilt.  He told me, "nothing they could ever do to me is worse that what I've already done to myself."

DW:  Had you experienced any other deaths in your personal life before this person died?

SR:  I experienced death early on when my grandfather, whom I was close to, passed away.  My older brother was killed in a car accident when I was six.  That's when I first started having panic attacks.  Also, being from a rural area, I experienced the deaths of pets and other animals more than I care to remember.  I always took the deaths personally, as if there was something I could have done to prevent them.

DW:  Were people supportive of your grief or did they shy away when you were grieving?

SR:  I experienced such a wide variety of reactions from others when Khristian was executed, it's hard to classify them as either supportive or shying away.  An execution is not a normal death and given that it was on the news, most people here at the prison were curious, at best.  I felt like I couldn't get away from all the voyeuristic type questions; "what were his last words?" and "what was his last meal," etc.  So many people were incredibly insensitive to my grief while trying to satisfy their curiosity, but there were some who were genuinely supportive and just let me be.  It's impossible to find private time in a women's prison, but that's all I wanted to do--to grieve alone.  It seemed everyone felt that their words of comfort or advice were the very ones I needed to make it through, but nothing anyone said or did could have ever made it better.

DW:  Is there anything you wish you'd done differently with this person?

SR:  I have so much regret concerning Khristian, it would take a book to write it all down.  I wish I could have saved him.  I wish I had been more assertive with him and saved someone else, too.  I wish I had shown him more that I loved him as much as he loved me.  I wish my love could have healed his emotional damage.  I wish I'd take him to the beach.  He never got to go.  After he was sentenced to death, and the subsequent appeals were lost, one by one, it became increasingly important to me that he know that he was loved and cherished.  That his life had merit and value.  That he meant something important to someone--that if he died, his life would not have been in vain.  I can only hope that I did that for him.

DW:  Was he buried or cremated?

SR:  He was buried, but I was not allowed to attend the funeral and have not seen the grave site.  I hear he has a beautiful Celtic cross headstone, but my only concern is that there's a place for me next to him.  I wrote a memorial, a eulogy of sorts, which his sister read at the funeral.  It helped me to feel a part of it.

DW:  Did you learn anything about the grieving process that you'd like to share?

SR:  Knowing beforehand that there are psychological steps to the grieving process helped me to an extent. I'd recognize my thoughts or behavior and think, "ohhhh, that's where this anger is coming from."  Being there for Khristian's mother helped a great deal, even though I didn't recognize it at the time.  She'd been through what no mother should have to endure.  I just listened and gave her love.  In those first few months, I think being there for her gave me the strength to keep going.  When depression finally hit me, it was being there and caring for a little cat that saved me.  Violet gave me a purpose when I felt I had absolutely no reason to keep going.  Even now, almost four years later, I am still committed to saving these helpless prison cats. 

You can read about these cats on Sonya's blog,

here

.

DW:  Last but not least, were any songs played at the memorial that were important to the person?  

SR:  I so badly wanted Khristian's favorite song played at his funeral  Sophie B Hawkins' "As I Lay Me Down."  It's ironic that his favorite song is one of goodbye.  His sister was unable to find it and they played something else.