Without Further Ado…

After Mark died and I started therapy, I told my therapist that I didn’t know what I was supposed to do with not only the absence of Mark, but the absence of his career that loomed so large in our lives. Like him it was layered and complex, but one of my favorite things in the course of my work day was when Mark and I would email back and forth about our jobs, and seemingly being the only sane ones plopped against our will into the Land of Misfit Toys. I would laugh out loud at my desk at his takedowns, while across the state line he’d do the same with mine until we had to cut it off to actually do our jobs. My therapist said my life would eventually fill in with other things, and that Mark’s career and the med center would no longer be something I daily missed. Like many things I was told back then it seemed like utter bullshit to me.

By virtue of death, I was suddenly thrown into the job of being Mark’s designated hitter, and three months later went to his department Christmas party. When my ticket number was called and I won a door prize, I walked to the front of the room in my party dress and misty eyes, and wished a sinkhole would swallow me whole rather than having all those pitying eyes on me while I was handed a box of cashews. The following year I went again, that time with Joe and his wife. Was it any easier? I don’t know, I don’t remember any of it. Then Covid hit, the parties came to a halt, and I was so relieved to not have to show up and be on.

In the aftermath of Mark’s death, the med center wanted to honor him with the donations they received in his name, and I was in contact with his department on a regular basis. We mutually decided that a bench outside his building would be fitting, so on a hot summer afternoon I met Joe, along with the head of the landscaping department, to discuss the bench and pick out a spot. I stood there looking at the window of his former office, empty and still unused, and tried to pay attention to what was being said to me. I was so distracted, so shocked at being there without Mark that I kept mumbling “okay” over and over regardless of what was being said.

After years of delays, the bench was installed and dedicated a few weeks ago. I was dreading it and my anxiety was off the charts. The kids pointed out to me that this time around it wasn’t a solo mission, but one that they would be at and that we would all prop each other up. I was sick, tested myself that morning to make sure it wasn’t Covid, and drank cough syrup straight from the bottle so I could get through it without sounding, as Mark would say, like I was coughing up a lung. It was a warm, sunny November day and most of his department was there for it. It was brutal and it was beautiful. The bench is perfect – simple, quiet, the most understated stone. It faces the road alongside his building, the apartment buildings many of his students lived in, and the Vietnam Cafe, now torn down, where he would often eat lunch. The engraved dedication on it was the idea of his department chair and grad student. Whenever Mark would introduce a speaker, a class topic, or his own research, he would set it up and then say, “Without further ado….”, which then Joe said would blow the doors off and always be much ado. In the fastest decision ever made, the kids and I agreed it was the perfect thing to put on the bench.

In those many years at the med center, speakers would often come to town, and Mark (along with other faculty) would be obligated to take them out to dinner. Spouses used to be included and I’d go along every once in awhile, but then they put the brakes on that and Mark would go solo. When he’d get home I’d always want to know every detail. He’d give me the stats on the person and their science, which was very much him, when what I really wanted to know was what everybody had to eat from appetizers to desserts. Every time he’d order a pork chop and every time he’d tell me it wasn’t very good. One night when he was disappointed in his meal yet again, I asked him why he kept ordering that and he said pork chops were his thing whenever he had a work dinner. I don’t know how long Mark had been gone when I was thinking about those stupid pork chops again and how in this entire city nobody seemed to know how to cook one. How is that even possible? It made no sense and then it hit me. He down played every bit of those fabulous dinners because he knew I was at home eating a bag of microwave popcorn.

My therapist was right in that other things would eventually fill in my life to take the place of Mark’s career, and while I am grateful for that it will never be close to what I had. I miss hearing about lousy pork chops at expensive restaurants, papers published, colleagues, Mark’s exuberance and joy of discovering new things. Someone recently told me that they’ve thought of Mark so many times during these Covid years and asked me what he would have done. “I’m not sure,” I said, “but I do know that it would have been his Superbowl.”

With the last piece of business being taken care of at the med center, it no longer feels like showing up and being on is an obligation that is mine to fill. It took a long while and a lot of emotional work for me to get to this point, and like many parts of this journey unseen by most. After I spoke at the dedication, the department admin said to me, “Mark was always so proud of you. He’d come into my office and talk to me about you all the time. Sometimes he’d tell me about something you wrote and made me promise that I’d read it.”

Of course he did, because everything about him was about about blowing the doors off and making people pay attention to what he thought was important.

How do you not miss that?

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10 thoughts on “Without Further Ado…”

  1. Written so beautifully with truth and honesty.
    You and Mark are definitely Soulmates and The world you both contributed to,
    Would have definitely lost much if you had not been united in Love and Life.
    Love to you and the many memories you and Mark have shared with us. ❤️

  2. Thank you for always sharing little bits of your life and loving memories of your relationship with Mark. And, thank you for your honesty. It sounds like you’re living a beautiful life despite everything. All the best to you!

  3. Of course, leave it to me to feel and talk about the irony of this phrase. There is still much ado concerning his life, and your life together. In fact, it’s all ado at this point, and you are “adoing” his legacy when you share these kinds of things with us.

  4. How do you not miss that?

    Right. We go along, filling up the hole with ‘other things’ when it feels like someone amputated our left arm. Sure we are still living our lives, but there are so many things we just can no longer do. We look different, we feel different, we act different, even if it doesn’t seem that way to others.

  5. Just beautiful…Thank you for sharing yourself through writing. I am always so deeply deeply impacted every time I read your writing about Mark and your own inner thoughts and feelings. Through your love of Mark, the essence of his soul comes shining through. So thank you for letting us know him too. It is clear how strong your love was for one another. My heart goes out to Mark and you and everyone who knew him and loved him. Through your writing I have grown to really like your husband. I have the deepest empathy for Mark and for you and everyone who loved Mark for his inner pain which he kept hidden much like he hid the fabulous porkchops from you so as not to hurt you. I am pretty damn sure if Mark had no clue about how much he was loved and how important his life was here on Earth…he knows now. Because through your writing and love of Mark, strangers like me are able to love Mark and his essence too. Thank you. Have yourself a Merry Little Christmas.

  6. Kathy, Thank you for sharing your beautifully written thoughts. I always love running in to you at our favorite shopping places . Hope I see you soon ❤️

  7. Whenever reading your thoughts and remembrances of Mark it brings me back to the visits every year with his students for conferences in Chicago. We really enjoyed those visits and the interesting conversation at the kitchen table. I miss those times and Mark ❤️

  8. Every word is a gift. A tribute to a life shared, love and adoration.
    I will look for this bench the next time I’m at the med center!

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