They Want To Sell Me.

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There was ghoulishness at the hospital at night. When the footfalls fell away and the lights along the corridors seemed to scream louder than the screeching silence. Doctors emerged from doorways peering at clipboards in their hands. Occasionally an orderly pushed a stretcher by, looking half asleep. I wandered through these corridors searching for something, a meaning to the life of my father who was dying in his small room, and a meaning to my life which was falling apart. I was only 25 but felt like I had lived two different lives.

I sat outside the beautiful little chapel at Mater Hospital and sipped from my bottle of Coke which had alcohol. It offered me a weird kind of comfort, one that I recognised for its fleeting warmth of the moment. I stared at the architecture of the chapel and thought about God and all His children with sickness in them, lying in various beds waiting to heal or to die. It almost felt like He was waiting too like everybody else. I wondered how many had come here to seek God’s intervention on something that had already been ordained. 

I thought about our bodies and how useless they were. Look at my father, a man who had been a bastion of health, an impregnable fortress, a towering figure, his voice able to fold rooms in two. Now a man on his back, small in his final bed, staring at the ceiling, unable to lift a glass of water. How our bodies betray us. How completely deceptive health is. 

It was my turn to watch over my dad that night and that usually meant sleeping over. (Sitting over, was more like it). He was in a private room that smelled of the flowers that were dying. Everything seemed to be dying around him. Just the previous day, the television in his room wouldn’t come on. I fiddled with its power button. “Leave it.” my dad croaked, his voice dry as a bone. “It’s dead.

This particular evening he was in a daze of painkillers while fighting infections. He had bedsores that I could smell if I sat very close to him. When he slept, I sat staring at his helpless face wondering what his face looked like as a child. He slipped in and out of consciousness. When his eyes fluttered open, they’d turn in his head, looking around in panic. He’d then reach for my hand desperately, “Mama, they want to sell me.” He called me ‘Mama’, after his mother, so I wasn’t sure if he was addressing me or his mother. I wasn’t sure of anything at all, to be honest. He’d say unintelligible things, things that seemed insane to the living but might have been real in his realm, this transition to the other life. Or whatever the f*ck we go when we die. I was heartbroken to see him like this. I was also scared. 

I didn’t mind him saying these things when it was only me and him in the room. I could live with that. But when my friends were around, I was mortified. I wanted to hide in shame. I’d avoid their eyes when he rambled on about these things, these people who were trying to sell him. I’d then flee the room and go cry in one of my friend’s cars. 

I wished he would die. 

I can tell you one thing here with great certainty before you finish gasping at that; I probably loved my father more than you could ever love yours. I adored him. I admired him. I liked him. He was a fearless man. He was curious. He loved music. He worked hard. When I was sinking from the bad choices I had made, he was the only one who never let go of my hand. 

Now I wanted him dead. 

I was tired of seeing him this way. Seeing him turn into this man I didn’t know. I didn’t want him to leave me with a different image of him, this vulnerable man, scared maybe and who no longer had a handle on things. I wanted to remember him as my greatest and highest pillar, my hero who always came to my rescue. I was scared that he was leaving me, scared that I would have nobody else who could love me like he did. Mostly, I was selfish. I was sick of walking into that hospital and seeing him in that state. 

At around midnight, I threw my empty bottle of Coke in the trash and strolled back to his room. He was unconscious. I sat in the chair next to him and stared at the veins behind his hand. I recognised those veins, I knew the blood that ran in them. When he stirred awake he started groaning. I stood up and said, “I’m here, Dad.” He touched my hand. His touch, although warm, felt emotionless, devoid of recognition, like touching a doorknob that someone else had just touched. He pulled my hand and urged me to say hello to his father. My grandfather had been dead for years. 

It broke my heart. I started to cry. I tried to make him go back to sleep. I pulled the cover up to his chin. I wiped the tears with the back of my hand and tried to look strong and reassuring. “Why don’t you want to speak to my father?” he asked over and over again. I said, “He’s not here, dad. Your father isn’t here. It’s just you and me.”

He then asked, “Am I making you tired? Do you want me to go?” 

And I said Yes. 

I did, I told my dad that he could die. 

His face just turned soft with hurt and he started crying. I’d never seen my dad cry. Never. He was a lion. He was tall with wide shoulders and a sturdy personality. No challenge he wouldn’t rise to. People feared my father. He was mercurial. My dad walked around with a lion’s hair in his pocket. A real lion’s hair. (Another story, another day). If anyone could get a lion’s hair it was my father. It was meant to inspire fear in everyone around him. He wasn’t one to cross. One time he hit a guy so hard that his left cheekbone sunk into his face. Nobody ever challenged him. He was alpha. Now the alpha was crying. I did something nobody else had done to him; make him cry. 

I didn’t feel remorse seeing him cry, I got angry. 

I don’t know why, but I did. I walked away, left him there in his tears, and I locked myself in the bathroom and cried. When I emerged from the bathroom he was asleep. I sat in the same chair I had sat in for many nights and days, waiting. I read a book; Shoe Dog, by Phil Knight. I was only reading it because my friends were reading it. I was tired of it, to be honest, tired of everything else. Tired of the hospital room. Of the nurses who came in with their trays bearing medicine and things. I was tired of this life of sitting here waiting for my father to be better or to die.

When the sun came up I couldn’t leave the hospital fast enough. I picked up my bag and quickly snuck out of the room before he could stir awake. I wanted to put a great distance between me and that hospital room. I wanted to run away from him and his impending doom. I was happy to go back to my life, which was full of doom itself, but at least I wasn’t obsessed with the idea of being sold or seeing dead people. I went to the gym but I was so tired. My tired was tired. I couldn’t run on the treadmill without grabbing at the side rails. I bench-pressed a few weights and sat staring at the floor. So I went home, opened a bottle of whisky and proceeded to drink myself into a stupor l in my gym clothes. It was the only way I could sleep. I blacked out on the sofa. 

When I woke up the doorbell was ringing. It was Rhoda, my cleaning lady. I opened the door and went back to the sofa. She drew open the curtains, opened the windows, and cleaned around me like I was a log not to be moved. I eventually showered and drove back to the hospital. 

When I walked into his ward, I found a woman lying there with an older lady holding a bottle of water while she sipped it through a straw. I looked around confused, as if they might have hidden my dad under the bed. I stepped back and confirmed the ward number. 

“Where is the man who was in this room?” I addressed the older woman. 

“What man?” she asked. The sick lady looked at me. Her eyes were as white as rice. If rice would stare at you it would look like that lady.  

I left the door open and went to the nurses station where a plump nurse sipping tea from a big mug informed me that my dad’s condition had deteriorated in the night and had since been moved to ICU. My heart fell to my feet. In the ICU I found him plugged on beeping machines. A tube ran from under his nose. He couldn’t talk. He could only communicate by squeezing his hands. I wanted to say I was sorry about last night but the same squeeze to say hello was the same squeeze that I received when I apologised.

My dad died soon after. 

He left me with an astounding amount of guilt. His death buried me under that guilt, that I haven’t come out. That in my moment of impatience, and anger, this man who would give up the world for me, in his greatest hour of need…I pushed him off the ledge. I told him I wanted him to die. And he died, thinking that I was tired of him. That I was a burden to him. Oh, that will never leave me. 

~ As told to Biko by an anonymous reader.

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37 Comments
  1. Reminds me of the day before my kid bro passed on, 11 years, a month and a week ago (at Nairobi West Hospital) – how we let our Loved Ones go in those hospitals (although Mater, by dint of being where we all were born, always seems more Maternity Hotel than hospital – but I’ve been in its morgue once (tale for another day) – so away from that Wing …

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  2. I didn’t quite finish reading this. I felt like I wrote it. Bits of it.

    It’s been 3 years & sometimes in the morning as I wash my face in the sink, I wash away the tears as well.

    Coz, why I am whole grown ass man, still pining for my old man.
    Wondering if he would approve of the life I have built?

    Man. Fuck it!

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  3. In Loving Memory of My Sister

    It’s been 4 years and 9 months since my dear sister left us on December 1st, 2019. Even now, I struggle to comprehend her loss. She was so young, so full of life. The journey through grief has been long and difficult, with moments of joy sprinkled among the sadness, memories that remind me of the light she brought into our lives.

    What haunts me the most is that she passed away alone, in the quiet of a spa massage room. I wish I could have been there to hold her hand, to say goodbye, to tell her one last time how much she meant to me.
    She was incredibly beautiful, inside and out.

    When I saw her for the last time, there was a calmness in her face, a peace that gave me some comfort. Though she’s gone, her spirit lives on in the memories we shared, and in the love that continues to fill my heart. I miss her every day, but I find solace in the moments we had together, knowing that she is at peace.

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  4. Lemme tell you guys a few signs that will let you know a loved one is dying for sure.
    1. Hallucinations but especially Speaking to dead relatives
    2. Cold limbs especially feet
    3. Suddenly snoring in their sleep or seemingly chocking
    4.sudden burst of energy from an otherwise very sick patient
    5. Loss of bowel and bladder control.
    So sorry for your loss man, I lost my mum too recently and sometimes I wonder if I should have been there by her side that night she would have been happier exiting this realm.‍♀️

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  5. The uneasiness that comes over one when they look upon their hero gone weak, its unfathomable.
    Seeing our heroes (read parents) getting weaker and smaller with age still fills my heart with dread.

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  6. An undeniably profound blow by blow narration this one. I partially,if not entirely, relate to this story. Methinks that it’s arguably devastating to witness our once esteemed and virile heroes(read kins and kiths) being reduced to a pale shadow of their former selves. Sorry for the loss Biko.

  7. I lost my sister 5years ago and my heart sinks everytime I read or hear ‘loss’ stories. A part of me knows this kind of pain. I write articles but I have never had the courage to write about her loss. And the reality that I will lose other people that I love someday scares me.

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  8. My heart goes to all of you guys going and who have gone through this. I love you and surely Jesus does. I cannot relate to the trauma this can bring. Be comforted!

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  9. This one hits very close home. I went through such with my dad. a strong willed man. a man who grew up fending for himself and eventually the family. a man who sometimes saw asking for help as a sign of weakness, a man I never saw/heard beg for anything. He always pulled his weight. seeing that man lay on the bed, wearing diapers, being changed, being fed, overall being helpless and totally dependent on someone(mum and my Siblings) really took a toll on me. In his last days, he was admitted in hospital. he had his share of ‘hallucinations’, the last conversation we had he was telling me how the nurses make rounds selling medicines to the patients. Without money you don’t get medicine. how he would refuse the said medicine. he wanted me to take him home that night, saying we don’t have to get permission from the doctor (strong willed man to the very end)
    That day I stayed with him way later than the visiting hours. My final act of service for my dad was changing his diaper(yes, we would change his diaper while he was admitted – KNH for you). After removing his soiled one and before putting on the fresh one, he soiled himself again. he was so apologetic. and I was a bit pissed off. but my anger was mainly because of seeing the man I grew up adoring, admiring, a man respected by all, being reduced to that. it was painful. I finished changing him. he reluctantly accepted my goodbye as I left for the night. That was the last time I talked to him.
    The next day, he deteriorated and was taken to ICU, he couldn’t speak or react to anything we said. We didn’t know if he recognised us.
    The day he passed on, I was the last one to visit him. The doc gave me the progress of what they had done, and didn’t sound so optimistic. I left the hospital somehow knowing we won’t find him in the morning.
    The call came that we had been summoned to the hospital early the following morning. As we made our way there,deep down I knew. we got there and it was confirmed to us. He rested at 8.10pm, I had left his bedside a few minutes to 7pm. Seeing what he went through those last few months I finally understood why it’s referred to as REST. Sickness can be so humbling and takes a toll on even the care givers.
    So I understand the writer.

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  10. So sorry for your loss. This has hit home to me too.

    I went through the same ordeal with my maternal uncle in 2020. Though I was not there during his final moments, I have been there for all his hospital moments from the day he was diagnosed with cancer to the very last moments when even hospitals could not keep him anymore and they had to let him go die at home. The transformation he went through was so painful I would never wish that on anyone alive. Cancer is a beast!!!!!

    1. Damn we shared the same ordeal, my maternal uncle dying to cancer in 2020.sometimes you feel soo sad you just want him to rest. He died peacefully in his sleep at around 10pm.he just said now I want to rest.

  11. May you find closure and acceptance. Reminds me of my cousin who passed on just the other day. The first time I found myself in a cold storage in disbelief of how he was lying there lifeless in a fridge with older men.

  12. This has made me cry for my dad after a long time. The pain my dad went through was unimaginable yet I couldn’t release him… sometimes when I know he is not in pain any more…I feel a bit happy. my last interaction with him was squeezing of the hands.

  13. This feels like my story, same hospital, same emotions.
    I watched mine die though, saw the hallucinations, the call for his mother or maybe me since I’m named after his mother.
    Him taking his last breath, trying CPR and it not working, seeing death. These are emotions that I carry through life, they are hard sometimes, give me strength at times, but can never be forgotten

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  14. Whoa, it’s been a month and a few days since I lost my dad, and weeeuh nothing prepares you for such a loss. He died in my arms on the way to the hospital. The tears wouldn’t come then until the day he was buried. I’m hanging in there as of now, some days good, some days bad, but still here…..

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  15. This is such a trigger.I lost my dad last year June 5th. I wanted him to die too. He was in so much pain. He had become a ghost of himself.My God! I never once visited him in the hospital he passed on in because I couldn’t stand seeing him like that…and the weekend I had decided to finally go see him,I still postponed and he died on the Monday that followed..I feel like this story was given in my voice…woiiiiii!!!! I hope to forgive myself someday for giving up on him.

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  16. Brings to memory my elder brother who passed on in 2015. His last words that day I went to see him in the slums of Tassia, “Mutisya, uni ningutwawa sipitali”(Mutisya, will be taken to hospital tomorrow), have haunted me for the longest time. They break my heart to date. What with the last words from a dying man! They cling in the head with such a powerful, magnetic tenacity.

  17. The weight of that guilt is enough to bury a man alive.. Words can build, destroy, upgrade, degrade..
    Forgive yourself, Blood..

  18. The greatest challenge once you hit your 40s onwards as adult is parenting your parents. Everyday I dread the thought that my parents will suffer frail and weakness in their sunset days.

  19. sometimes, we need to let them go. assure them that we are ready for their transistion…sometimes they hold on for longer just so we can permit them to transistion.

  20. Just realized that most people don’t read through to the end judging by the comments of “Pole Biko and sorry for your loss’. Truth be told, this old man sounded like Biko’s description of his old man. The weight of death is too heavy to bear, may s/he find peace with their thoughts.

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  21. A chance to say goodbye, rare…. many are just called to be briefed on how the traction just happened … Its off the planet, the call of the Heavens and the shy response to repose of the souls …… we heal

  22. Pole sana to the Anonymous. I feel her. I saw my own Mum ail to death. In the village, 26 years ago. She ailed for long, transiting from the strong mother she was to a weak, frail, unconsciuos and finally lifeless (in that order literally) tiny body. We were dirt poor, and, on her last days lying on the earthen floor of our mud hut (in the village those days, they put you on the floor when you are gravely ill), she liked requesting for rice to eat, which we would get her and on some occassions fail to afford. To date I detest eating rice. On the day she passed on, as she began to kick and stretch out, I left the house and ran outside. Our elder sister kept shouting “Mama tho! Mama tho!” (Mum is dying! Mum is dying). A person’s death would be officially declared with a loud wail let out by mostly the eldest female person around. Our elder step mother did this part at around 1pm on 25th March 1998. Then it was over!

    I joined campus in September that year, having breezed through a good national school courtesy of my step sister who paid my fees. God granted His favour on us. When I got my footing, in 2006, I built a semi-permanent house for our Mum on the spot where her hut had stood (and collapsed into a heap of soil). 12 years later. I brought the semi permanent structure down and in its place put up a permanent 8-room bungalow (It is the biggest in the village). I did and do not consider the few millions I spent on it in any financial terms, but that my Mum “has the biggest house in the village among her peers.”

    I doubt this will ever leave me. I shed tears every time I remember these details.

  23. The fickle nature of life…. we just never get over it. years later still feels like the other day.

    https://thewallflower254.wordpress.com/2023/08/07/dear-dad/