Nonna -
I could tell you one million stories of my Nonna. I know that when I am old and grey that I will be sharing stories of my Nonna with my grandkids. I will hear them say, "we know --- and Nonna said --- " I have been trying to gather the words to describe this season of life but all I can do is be flooded with memories. I wake up in the night and play another one and another one then I fall asleep with tears streaming down my face. I find myself heartbroken and hopeful in the same breath, I find myself ready for her to find peace and rest but then find myself wanting her to be healed and live until I am old and grey. My Nonna lost the love of her life in July of last year, since then it has been a rapid decline. Nonno knew something was coming, he moved them to my parents house a couple months before he passed. He knew that Nonna was slipping, her memory going quicker than we thought. She was his main caretaker for years and years. She waited on him around the clock and she never once complained, oh well let me take that back - the only time she complained was when she wanted him to get up and move because, "all he does is sit, sit, sit - I need to see movement," she would say in her thick Italian accent.
Nonno knew that when he passed Nonna needed to be somewhere safe and so he moved them here. And Nonna has been here since, she's gone to visit her home in Florida a couple times but she can't stay alone. She is unable but you tell that woman she can't do something and she's going to show you. The other day she stood up walked towards the back door, looked at my dad and said - "bye Chris I am going to be with my Neapolitan people, you can follow me with this if I must have it." Pointing to her oxygen tank like it was a carry on. My dad giggled looked at my mom, shook his head and simply said, "mom, come sit back down please they are too far away, we can see them later." Im telling you she is stubborn. She was walking down the busiest street in our town four weeks ago, we would tell her to come inside and she would yell at us - "I grew up in Italy walking everywhere, I am a city minded woman, I am just fine." We couldn't say anything back - so my parents would sit on the porch and watch her to make sure she was safe. We have been calling this Nonna - Nonna 2.0 because this Nonna is keeping us all on our toes. Alzheimer's is a terrible, terrible disease and I wouldn't wish it on a soul.
Now before we get into the Nonna memories that I have been playing in my head for days now, let me tell you that our time with Nonna is coming to an end. We do not know her timeline, we know that hospice has been called in. We know that she is sadly filling with fluid - Nonna loves to tell the story about how Yahweh healed her form cancer when I was a baby, I was just born and the doctor removed her kidney and she came to meet me. When she tells this story its made to sound like the came to my birth 2 hours post op, but it was a few weeks. Needless to say, she has once kidney and there has never been an issue until recently. She has always and will always be the healthiest person I know. She recently got pneumonia and it took off quickly. I do not want this to become a medical post because the medical things are making my head spin, but what you need to know is that one minute she is fine and the next she is touching heaven. The other night she laid in bed - saluted Nonno and told him that she would see him soon. The next night she was speaking only in Italian and speaking to her father. She is ready in every sense, but then she's not. She sees us and sees the kids and then she begs to stay, I hear her praying for her body to be healed. It's been the most difficult two weeks of my life, I can say that with certainty. It feels like I am walking in a cloud - not sure what to expect or how to expect it. So now that I have given you all of those boring nasty medical/sad facts let's get to the good part, the part that Nonna wants to hear.
When I was a little girl my parents would take me to Nonna and Nonno's house to stay for a week or so in the summer time. They lived 20 minutes from the ocean and she cooked homemade meals. My parents were sending me to the best summer camp a girl could ask for. When I was there I had 3 cousins from Georgia who would come and stay too - and let me go ahead and tell you this, by the end of summer we could make a bed better than the Hilton, we could set the table for the Queen and we could wash dishes better than the dishwasher ever dreamed.
On beach days we would all wake up early excited for the beach- duh. I was 7, which makes the others 13, 13 and 12 . We would wake up, MAKE OUR BEDS, eat our bowl of Cheerios and then get on our swimsuits. We would then clean the kitchen, pack our sandwiches, pack our water in the big red thermos and then we would apply sunscreen knowing good and well that our hopes were too high we would be reapplying sunscreen again before we left for the beach. If there is one thing to know about this beautiful Italian woman it is that she is going to take at least two hours to get ready even if it was just for the beach day. We would be ready, packed, reapplying sunscreen for the second time and then we would draw straws on who was going to ask her if she was ready. We were only drawing straws because we knew the answer, we would quote it walking down the hallway to her bedroom - "I am coming, I am coming, I am coming, I have to brush my hair and then I am done." Knowing she in fact was not coming yet. Finally when she was dressed, she would run thru the living room - tell our oldest cousin to go crank the Buick and blast the AC. Then without hesitation she would rush us to the car as if we had not just applied sunscreen three time waiting on her. We would get in the car, oldest in the front and the other three in the back seat, she would crank up Carman - Do I Do and we were on our way.
As an adult I physically cannot imagine taking 4 kids to the beach by myself, but she did it. She grew up on the ocean in Naples Italy - "street, rocks, ocean." it's what we have been told our entire life. The ocean was her friend, the ocean was her second home - so taking four kids was nothing. I vividly remember looking in the rearview mirror on beach days and seeing her talking, in between songs you could hear her praying in the spirit, that's how she did it - how she did beach days with four kids.
We would get to Dunes of Panama, park in our spot, put our lunch box and red thermos under the pavilion by the pool and we would head down to the ocean. Now, this was not a chill ocean time - this was full on swim camp and boogie board camp. I proudly tell people that I learned how to swim in the ocean, my Nonna taught me. We would be in the ocean for hours, HOURS. There was no time for sunbathing or sandcastles - this woman meant we were swimming in the ocean and we never, ever wanted to get out when it was time to go. We always ended our beach days at the pool, we would go up to the pavilion we had reserved hours before - sit down and eat our cold turkey and cheese sandwiches on sourdough bread, we would pass the family bag of Doritos and the red thermos of ice cold water - then she would cut an apple for us to each have a couple slices. I can still taste the water from the red thermos. After an hour in the pool we would get back in the Buick, the leather seats burning our first layer of skin off - Nonna would crank the car and blast Carman, I would look in her rearview mirror and I would see her praying in the spirit again.
We would get home, all take our showers, cook a full dinner, sit around the perfectly made table, we would hold hands, Nonno would ask the blessing - say, "buon appetite," lean over and kiss Nonna and then we would all share stories about our beach day. After dinner we would all clean the kitchen - one putting away leftovers, one cleaning off the table, one washing and one drying. Then we would all sit in the living room have a bowl of rocky road ice cream and watch I Love Lucy while Nonna rolled her hair.
I am telling you - The best summer camp a girl could dream of.
These stories of Nonna could last forever - when I was a little girl I would get scared in the night. I would sneak into her bedroom, go over to her side of the bed and tell her I was scared. If Miguel does this now, I scoot over and let him get in the bed with us, but not Nonna - she would get out of bed walk me down the hallway and in to the living room, she would turn on the lamp look me in the eyes and say, "there is nothing but ministering angels in this house," then she would walk me around the entire house saying the same sentence over and over, asking me to say the same thing. Telling me that there as nothing to fear. She would then walk me to my bedroom, we would say the prayers again and she would rub my hand until I fell asleep.
When I would get up in the night thirsty - she would walk me to the kitchen, turn on the light above the sink fix me a glass of water and say shhhh as she ran her hand from the top of my head to the tip of my toes as if the water was traveling inside my body. She would take my glass, kiss my head and say - "okay body you are not thirsty anymore." She would walk me to my bedroom, we would say the prayers again and she would rub my hand until I fell asleep.
Nonna and Nonno had an old radio/stereo in the living room - when we were getting ready for the beach or cooking dinner she would play 98.5 and this was back in the day when Savage Garden was a thing. Well you remember that old song 'I wanna stand with you on a mountain. I wanna bathe with you in the sea. - you know what I am talking about. Now imagine this, an Italian woman with a thick thick accent singing this song and making up a dance with me, her 8 year old granddaughter. We did the dance so many times one summer that it's a core memory for the both of us, I know for a fact that on a good day we could still preform and sing it.
I am telling you endless memories and I haven't even touched the ones of her praying over us and calling us because she felt the holy spirit telling her to call. And calling at the exact moment we needed. Knowing that I could walk in her house (I did this once bc I was in town documenting a birth, I was there until 1am) I called her when I was on my way to her house to sleep and we both giggled while we made turkey and cheese sandwiches at 1:30 in the morning.
My Nonna isn't doing good.
I am not doing good.
We are not doing good.
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But let me tell you what we know.
We know that when its time she is going to beam to heaven
We know that she is going to meet her Yahweh face to face
We know that we will miss her laugh and her thick Italian accent forever
We know that every Christmas we will make cartellate and I will hear her say - Callie you were 2 years old and we couldn't find you and you snuck into the dining room to steal a cartellate
We know that every memory made with her is so delicate and precious
We know that this season of not knowing when but soon is coming to an end
We know that she loves her children, her grandchildren and her great grandchildren so very much
& for those who know Nonna know this one - We KNOW that if it wasn't for her, none of us would be here.