The year 2020 is coming to an end. It is likely to be recorded in history as The Year of the Great Covid Pandemic. For many it has been a year of quarantine, sequestering, forced lockdowns, job loss, illness, and death. For me, it has been a mixed bag, miraculous in one respect, tedious in others, enlightening, and very saddening.
It started in a very normal way with typical cold and windy upper mid-western weather. But from the start I experienced dread as well as hope. There was dread because I was scheduled for reconstructive surgery of my right hip at the end of February and after 42 years of deterioration, a successful outcome was questionable. Hope because perhaps I could walk again without pain; dread because my father was in his 90s, and not in great health; hope, because of all people I know, God was mostly likely to smile down on him.
I saw my father for the last time, the weekend before the surgery. At that point he was in palliative care. He knew the end was near, and as I departed, he whispered in my ear “I wish I could go with you”. That broke my heart.
On February 27th, the surgery began. From what I gather, it was lengthy, and touch and go. It wasn’t exactly just a standard joint replacement, but a complete re-construction. As the anesthesia began to wear off, I knew immediately that something was missing. A mind can do wonderous things if given time and 40 years of slowly increasing discomfort allowed for a lot of adaptation. But, when the pain was suddenly gone, I knew I had left a dark place. Even with over 12 inches of sutures up my side, my thought was “so this is what it feels like to be normal”. By evening, I had made 2 circles around the post-op floor. albeit with a walker.
For over forty years, every time I saw my father, he would ask me how my hip was doing and if the pain was bad. He worried. So I called my mother and told her to let him know that the surgery was successful, and I was alright. He could finally stop worrying. He died three days later.
I had scheduled 2 weeks of time off from work, after which I would work online from home for 8-10 weeks. However, by the next week, everybody was sent home to work. The Covid lockdown had started. For the next 8 weeks I stayed in my house except for the 1 hour of physical therapy, 3 times per week. The worry was that the re-lengthened right leg’s muscles would not stretch easily and there were years of atrophy from which to recover. Therapy was predicted to be long and difficult. I knew within the first two weeks, such was not the case. There were several activities that I loved, but years had gone by since I had given up on ever enjoying them again. I could hike, maybe even backpack, get in and out of canoe without flipping, and maybe even Telemark ski down a backcountry bowl. My whole attitude about life changed. I started walking, first around our 11 house cul-de-sac, then the neighborhood, working up to 2 miles. When the weather warmed, my two friends from work, joined me in hikes at the local forest preserve. They pushed me hard. I started to refresh my old 1980s era backpacking equipment. My son in Colorado, sent me a new JetBoil backpackers stove for Father’s Day.
The first week of June, I joined him in Colorado for my first hike in many years at altitude in the Rockies. On a return from a visit with my mother in Minneapolis, I picked up a new Wenonah Kevlar solo canoe. In August, I managed 5 days of strenous hiking in Rocky Mountain National Park. And, in September, I drove to the Snowy Range, west of Laramie, Wyoming and for the first time in 28 years, went solo backpacking for 5 days.
So, I feel as though my life has restarted. So many things forgotten have been re-learned, from lugging my home on my back around a mountain, to simply tying the shoe on my right foot. I even jogged across a parking lot to beat rain drops into the grocery store. Time is flying by so fast, and I have a short window to enjoy many things not done in decades.
My cousin Diane reminded me with a posted quote of poetry by Robert Frost,
“Two roads diverged in a wood, and I
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.“
But all my life, I took the well-traveled road with less risk, bowing to more responsibility, living up to my father’s example of always doing what needed to be done, without complaint. In 2020, I suddenly discovered I had made a full circle, and was again at that fork in the road, and this time…
Check in occasionally. I will tell you what lies down that less traveled way.

Oh, Kerry, even though I am crying right now because of your dad’s last words to you, I am so happy for you! I can’t begin to tell you how much I admire your spirit, your fortitude, your depth, and your courage to take the less-travelled road. I know you will find meaning, solace and joy in your journey. I look forward to experiencing some it vicariously.
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