The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Remembering Our Loved Ones Through Story
Episode Date: April 26, 2022In this hour, the people we've loved and lost, their memories preserved in these stories. Mothers, partners, and the colorful residents of a nursing home, with special excerpts from the Moth'...s new audio book. This episode is hosted by Moth Artistic Director, Catherine Burns. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Catherine Burns Storytellers: Sharon D'Orsie goes on adventures with her aging mother. Adrienne Lotson worries she's not cut out to be a chaplain. Writer Elizabeth Gilbert shares her struggle in dealing with her partner’s terminal illness and what it taught her about living.
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Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know
the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's
storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute
story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and
pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's
theMoth.org forward slash Houston.
This is The Moth Review Hour from PRX, and I'm Catherine Burns.
I've worked at the Moth for more than 20 years, and one of my favorite parts of my job
is all the people I get to meet.
The storytellers, of course, but also their friends and family.
There's so many people who I'd never get to meet in real life, but who I've had the
privilege of getting to know a little bit when their loved one tells a story about them.
This is especially true when a storyteller is talking about someone who has died.
Through our stories, we're able to keep the people we love alive long after they leave
us.
I think of comedian Mike Dastofano's wife, Franny.
Two weeks later, they sent her out of the hospice
because she started to get better.
She was thrown out of hospice for not dying.
And all these she could pull that off.
She was a young Italian girl
and she was not interested in suffering and dying.
Like who is, but she was extra not fucking into it.
Or Kate Teller's memory of her late mother, Lisa.
We're laughing about this, and she throws her head back like she does.
I note the shape of her nose, and that her head is so small, she buys her glasses in
the children's section at Lenscrafters.
And I can see this because in the candlelight I can see the side, the arm of the glasses,
where it says Harry Potter.
To tell a story about someone who has died is to conjure them back to life, if only for
a few minutes, and allow hundreds and thousands of people to meet them.
This week's theme was actually inspired by Sharon Diorci, whose story about her mother
Adrienne is the first step in this hour.
I loved Adrienne and hope you will too.
Sharon told this at the Houston Story Slam for a partner with Houston Public Media.
Here's Sharon Diorci, live at the mall. Applause. Okay. Shortly after my dad died, my mom moved in with me.
There we were, two single ladies, one widowed, one divorced, separated by 23 years, but joined by 23 chromosomes and at least 23,000 memories.
And that was the start of the adventures for my mother and I. My mother was smart,
she was kind, resourceful, and feisty.
She also was petite about the size of a chickadee.
And she quickly determined that her favorite adventure was going to an expensive restaurant
for dinner. And she would order two lemon drought martinis,
a creb cake for an appetizer,
an entree in cream brulee.
I was still working at the time,
but sometimes I wanted to have some fun.
So I would say to mom, pick out your clothes mom,
we're going on an adventure.
She liked it, we had fun.
And she neither planned nor paid.
But every outing that we had had a situation
that made my list of things not to do.
For example, I took her to an authentic 1880s Thanksgiving dinner in Plymouth, Massachusetts. my mother is the one who asked if her apple cider could be traded for
a lemon drop martini. Then there was the first time that we went dog sledding
along the Canadian border. Outside of the path, the snow was really deep.
It was up over my knees, higher on my mom's body.
And when we took a break to rest the dogs
and relieve ourselves, my mother and all of her snow clothes,
kind of waddled into the woods to pee. However, she did not
like to follow directions, so she froze her ass. She had the
humiliation of having to call our guide Pierre to get her upright. Then there was the time I took her
to the vagina monologues.
She loved them.
But about midway through,
she kept going like this to the lady next to her.
Like, did you get that, you know?
And I'm thinking this is a problem.
Well, before long, she whispered in a very loud voice
to this stranger, I know all the nicknames for vagina.
If you need any help, just ask me.
My husband was a sailor. My last example was I took her to Reykjavik for a spa vacation for her February birthday. Besides not following direction, she never paid attention to her surroundings.
So, she went out of the door of the spa and found herself in the hotel lobby,
locked out of the spa, wrapped only in a towel, where everyone else in the lobby was
mirroring a parka.
She did not speak Icelandic.
Well, dementia finally ended my mom and
eyes adventures.
I was her caregiver for the last six years of her life. And as she was dying,
I was sitting next to her. I held her hand and the hospice nurse said she's ready to
go. Tell her that she has your permission.
And I said, Mom, you can go now.
You can go to heaven.
But nothing happened.
I tried another approach.
I said, Mom, do you know what St. Peter has waiting for you?
Lemon dropped martinis, crab pigs, and cream brulee.
And she died.
And, and the hospice nurse said,
the hospice nurse said, by God I've never seen that.
And I said, I couldn't go with her on this
adventure, but I sure hoped it's same for you to remember to go to specs and
croakers. Or I'm gonna catch hell.
That was Sharon's Eorecy. Sharon moved to Texas for her first job after graduate school and has stayed for 50 years.
She was a corporate engineer, an entrepreneur, an educator, a caregiver, and a writer.
Periodically, Sharon and her friends gathered to drink limondrop martinis and tell Adrienne
stories.
To see stunning photos of Sharon and Adrian,
go to themoth.org.
Coming up, a student chaplain in nursing home
gets schooled by her charges.
That's when the moth radio hour continues.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and presented by PRX. This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
This is the Mothradio Hour from PRX. I'm Katherine Burns. In this hour, we're talking about remembering those who have left this world by telling our favorite stories about them.
Here is Adrian Lotzin, live at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, Massachusetts.
and hand over theater in Worcester, Massachusetts. It was a magical night.
I don't know what's shown brighter.
The stars in the sky are those in the field
at the conclusion of the Olympic Games.
I was running all over the field in Atlanta, Georgia,
congratulating all the athletes,
marveling at their medals, giving them hugs
that transcended language barriers.
My friends thought that I lived such a glamorous life
as a sports attorney, and yet what they didn't know
was that I was miserable.
I was that little kid, the one that wanted to make
a difference in the world, you know,
find a cure for cancer, bring about world peace, and this wasn't it. But I didn't know what would be it. And so that night,
and for two more years, I struggled, and I tried to figure out what it would be. Now, I
wasn't raised in a religious household. But I remembered clearly how a local church reached
out to my family when my father passed away to give us comfort in our time of grief.
And I also remembered that, particularly with the Black Church, it was a public square where political and economic engagement happened, and I wanted to be a part of that.
So, I decided to leave my very successful career in the law and go to seminary to go into ministry. And I happened to pick a seminary that was very social justice oriented and believed
in experiential learning.
So I found myself as a student chaplain at an assisted living center in Atlanta, Georgia.
Now this assisted living center was average age 80, overwhelmingly white,
overwhelmingly female, and 100% good southerners.
So I show up my first day with my box.
The senior chaplain meets me, shows me to my office,
and she says, put your things down, get a little comfortable,
but meet us down in the main meeting room
for your first staff meeting in five minutes.
She walks out the door and in walks Joni. meet us down in the main meeting room for your first staff meeting in five minutes.
She walks out the door and in walks Joni.
Joni has a bouffant hairdo, a string of pearls, little platform heels, and she says, hi, I'm
Joni.
A long time resident here at the assisted living center, I play the piano every week at
Bible study.
Now, you're going to start Bible study reading the 23rd
Psalm and you're going to end it with a hymn called, A Lone in the Garden. Hi, Joni, how
are you? Nice to meet you. Listen, Joni, I have a meeting I need to go to, so why don't you and I talk
a little while after the meeting. Joni sits down and proceeds to tell me about everyone who lives in
the living, in this assisted living center what all their problems are and how I should pray for them.
Thanks, Joni.
That's wonderful, but I really have to get to this meeting that I'm now 15 minutes late
for.
She says, don't worry, dear, you're going to make a fine chaplain.
Off she goes, I run out to make it to the meeting and I see a guy sitting in the corner
scowling out the window.
He strikes me as rather odd. In the 20 minutes that I've been at the assisted living center, he's the meeting and I see a guy sitting in the corner scowling out the window. He strikes me as rather odd.
In the 20 minutes that I've been at the assisted living center, he's the first person I've
seen with a full head of hair.
And it's not great.
Something's going on here.
It's like, go to my meeting and I'm told what my duties are.
I'm to go to the hospital to make hospital visits.
Visit some of the seniors who can't leave their homes.
Just be available for them.
Just before I leave, they say, now listen, you may have noticed the guy sitting out there
near the window looking really mean.
His name is Jimmy.
He's really mean.
He's not happy.
He hates it here.
His kids dropped him off.
They don't come visit him.
He's from Brooklyn.
Don't take it personally.
I go straight to Jimmy.
I said, so, Jimmy, they tell me that you think the best pizza in the
world is from Brooklyn. And everybody knows the best pizza in the world is from Manhattan
with queens playing a close second. He looks up at me, who were you? I said, hi, I'm Adrian,
I'm the student chaplain. Is it anything I can do for you?
Booze and broads.
Booze and broads.
Can you do that?
No, Jimmy, I can't do that, but I'm the student chaplain.
Is there anything else I can do for you?
Gambling.
Gambling.
Can you do that?
You know what, Jimmy?
That I can do.
I ran into the office, I pulled out the deck of cards that I keep with me because you
never know when you have to play a game of solitaire.
And I come back and I say, Jimmy, I don't know how to play poker.
I lie.
Can you teach me how to play poker?
And he says, yeah, okay.
So we play a couple of hands of poker.
I lose him miserably.
And he throws the cards down.
He says, this isn't gambling.
There's no money.
Give me a couple of days, Jimmy.
I'll figure it out.
I come back a couple of days later with a jar full of pennies.
Sit down with my jar full of pennies.
We get to playing.
I start beating Jimmy ridiculously.
And Jimmy says, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey,
I know when I've been hustled.
I've been hustled here. And this is by the way, not gambling. These are pennies. I said, hey, hey, hey, hey, I know when I've been hustled. I've been hustled here and this is by the way not gambling
These are pennies. I said Jimmy pennies of money money is gambling. We're gambling. Let's play
And he says aren't you a minister? I said, yeah, and he goes, won't you get in trouble for gambling?
Yeah, probably, but let's have some fun until that happens, shall we?
He's like, okay.
And Jimmy begins to tell me his story.
And we play poker for pennies two times a week
for several weeks.
And he tells me that he's from Brooklyn,
that he was adjacent to, but not in, the mafia.
That is...
That is...
That his children convinced him to come down to Atlanta but then moved him into the assistant living center and never come to see him. Jimmy was
right about one thing. I got in trouble. I was called into the office and they
said you are the minister. You don't get to gamble. You don't get to gamble
publicly. And I said wait a minute. Jimmy's doing well. You don't get to gamble. You don't get to gamble publicly. And I said,
wait a minute, Jimmy's doing well. You said the guy didn't talk. You said he was mean.
Look at him. He's laughing. He's having a ball. And they're like, yeah, yeah, that's
all well and good. But you don't get to gamble. You're the minister. Okay. Great. So I said,
let's think about this. Tell you what we do. How about at the end of every game,
I scoop up the pennies, put them in the jar,
put the jar back in my office,
and then technically there's no gambling happening.
They agree to that, and I said,
aha, I've got to use my lawyering skills, so.
This is good.
This is good.
So among other responsibilities I had was visiting the sick
in the hospital.
You go, you get a list of the residents who are in the hospital, you go and see them
tell them, we once thinking about them and you pray with them.
And one day I'm at the end of my rounds and I get on the elevator and there's a woman crying
hysterically.
And I said, hi, how are you?
And she said, oh, I'm terrible.
I said, oh, okay, and got off the elevator.
And something said, get back on the elevator.
You're the chaplain, help this woman.
So I back up. I get back on the elevator. I said, chaplain, help this woman. So I back up, I get back on the elevator,
and I said, ma'am, is anything I can do to help you?
And she said, yes.
My boyfriend was in a really bad motorcycle accident.
And they won't let me see him, because he's an ICU.
So could you go see him and pray for him?
So I said, sure, I can do that.
I can handle that, no problem.
So I'm like, up, up, up, see as I go to ICU,
I go see the ICU nurse, I show her my badge, student chaplain,
and I say, hi, I'm here to pray for the gentleman
who was in the motorcycle accident.
And she says, oh, roommate, I go to roommate,
and there's a group of doctors and nurses
and technicians surrounding a bed.
And as I walk in, one of the nurses
moves one way, one of the doctors moves another way,
and I see the person in the bed.
There is no skin on his face.
Half of his eye is hanging out of the socket.
His teeth are a mangled mess.
I leap back and scream, oh my God, what happened to you?
The room freezes, the doctor turns around,
he says, get out, get out now, and I say, hey, I'm the student chaplain, get out, go stand over there.
And I'm shaken by this, and I go, and I stand in, I hang my head, and they do whatever they do,
and the doctor comes out, he says, let me tell you something. You're supposed to be a professional.
That man is on the brink of death.
He does not need you to come in here and have the kind of reaction you had.
Now get yourself together.
Get yourself together.
Go in there.
Do what you're supposed to do.
Be a professional and then leave.
So I walk in and there's only one nurse left in the room by this time.
And I said to her, is there any part of his body I can touch that won't cause him pain?
She points to one hand.
So I grab his hand and I say, sir, your girlfriend asked me to come and pray for you
and his eyes well up with water.
She wanted me to tell you that she loves you, and she's not going to leave this hospital without you.
I pray for you, and I pray for him him and when I'm done he's crying.
And I walk out and I'm thinking, I don't know if it was my lack of professionalism being
called out for my lack of professionalism, the tears that he had because I didn't know
if I was causing him pain by touching him, but I felt like maybe I'm not really good at this.
And I felt really, really awful.
I got in the car and I was like, wow, you know, maybe?
I don't know.
I know what I'll do.
I know what I'll do.
I'll get myself together and I will liven up Bible study.
That's what I'll do.
Because Bible study was deadly dull.
And I said, I can get this right.
I know I can get this right. So I show up at Bible study was deadly dull. And I said, I can get this right. I know I can get this right.
So I show up at Bible study with new scriptures
and new hymns because we're gonna live in this thing up
and we're gonna have a good time.
So I walk in, I pass out all the new hymns,
I say to Joni, hey Joni, here's some new music
we're gonna play and Joni looks at me and I say,
okay, here we go.
And I start to sing, no one joins me and I'm singing. And I hear this rustling me and I say, okay, here we go. And I start to sing, no one joins me, and I'm singing, and I hear this rustling noise,
and I look at all the ladies, because only the ladies went to Bible study, are getting
up, and they're grabbing their walkers, and they're grabbing their canes, and they're walking
out, albeit very, very slowly.
I am in the middle of a full-fledged Bible study revolt.
I look over at Joni, Joni shakes her head and walks out,
and the only person left was the lady who slept
in the front row every week during Bible study.
I go back to my office and Joni's sitting there,
and Joni says, dear, let me explain something to you.
We read the 23rd song every week because Mrs.
Song is so redded to her husband every night before he died.
And so it has a lot of meaning to us.
We sing alone in the garden every week because many of us
have visual and memory issues.
And we can't learn new songs.
I suggest that before you try and get people
where you want them to be, you understand where they are and meet them there. And then
she passed me on the back of my hand and she says, don't worry, you're going to make a fine
chaplain someday. And such was my life at the assisted living center from one crisis to another,
setting off the sprinkler system when I tried to sneak a meal in the community kitchen
because I didn't want to eat jello delight.
Or the time that I allowed the blind ladies emotional support cats escape during a visit.
Always followed by a reprimand in the front office which they called lovingly coaching and
mentoring. Followed by
Joni's visit, wish she would explain to me what I did wrong and how I could do
better. Always leaving by patting my hand and saying, but don't worry dear,
someday you're gonna be a fine chaplain. I realized that I was not cut out for this.
I have made a mistake and I just needed to get to the end of this experiential learning
experience and get my life back together.
So I'm wrapping up my responsibilities my last week of hospital visits.
I go to the hospital and I see a man in a wheelchair being pushed to a car.
And I say, he looks remotely familiar.
I'm not sure where I know him.
And then I see the woman pushing him.
And she looks at me.
She recognizes me.
I instantly recognize her.
It's the lady from the elevator.
That's the guy from the motorcycle accident.
Oh, oh my goodness, he made it.
He's alive.
He, I did something right. I did something right.
I did something right.
He survived the motorcycle accident.
Wait till I tell Johnny.
Wait till I tell Johnny, I did something right.
So I go through my hospital visits.
I can't wait.
I get in the car.
Wait till I tell Johnny, I did something right.
I get to my office as a note to come immediately
to the front office.
And I thought, whoa, some other disaster happened. And I'm about to have my nice mentoring and coaching
session. So let me just get ready for that. But I'm going to tell them the man lived. And
I walk in, they tell me to have a seat. And I have a seat. And they said, Adrian, we just
need to let you know that Joni died last night. She had a sudden heart attack in her sleep.
And Joni died.
Her family is going to hold the funeral here, and we would like for you to read the 23rd
Psalm.
You can do that, right?
I said, yep, I can do that.
I can do that for Joni.
So we come to the funeral.
I stand up to read the 23rd Psalm.
I see Jimmy walking in a suit and tie.
I didn't even know Jimmy owned a suit and tie. There he was, coming to Johnny's funeral. And I open the Bible, and I say,
the Lord is my shepherd, and I drop my head, and tears well up. And I begin to cry. And cries turn into sobs.
And sobs turn into whaling.
And I'm standing there in front of everyone,
whaling and heaving and crying and crying.
And suddenly I see coming towards me,
Joni's son.
And Joni's son comes and he puts his arms around me.
And he's comforting me.
It's going to be okay.
It's going to be okay.
And I'm thinking, I can't even get this right.
I'm supposed to comfort the family and I'm a mess
and I see out of the corner of my eyes,
the senior chaplain just shake her head and hang it low.
I was like, this is a disaster.
So we get through the funeral.
A few days later, I'm there to pack up my belongings
because I only have a couple of weeks left.
So I'd say, why am I going to get a start on that?
And I get a note that I need to be seen in the office.
And I think, well, they can't even wait a couple of weeks
to the end of this thing.
They're going to let me go today.
They're going to say, you're not cut out for this.
It was a nice experiment.
But hey, we learned something.
You, and I'm not supposed to be a minister.
Good luck. So I go in and to be a minister, good luck.
So I go in and they said, please have a seat. And I'm preparing myself for this.
I said, we wanna read you a letter
that Joni's son just sent us, and I thought,
oh, this is gonna be a bad one.
Yeah.
And he said, my family and I have always felt extreme guilt
over moving our mother into an assisted living center and we sat with that guilt for years. But when that lady
chapter broke down while reading our mother's favorite prayer, we realized that
she was truly loved and this was her home and that she was cared for and all of
that guilt just lifted off of our shoulders.
So as a thank you, we like to give you
and it turned out to be the largest gift
by a private individual to this particular
assisted living center.
The senior chaplain gets up, she walks past me,
she puts her hand on my shoulder, and she says,
you've become a fine chaplain.
Thank you.
Dr. Adrienne R. Latson calls herself a Renaissance woman with a Peter Pan streak.
She's a cultural anthropologist, administrative law judge, author, public speaker, minister, and performance
artist, but she says her true passion is traveling the world
sharing and hearing stories. For the Moths 25th
anniversary, five of our longtime story directors spit 18
months putting all our knowledge about storytelling into a
book. It's called How to Tell a Story, the essential guide to memorable storytelling from the
moth, and it's full of tips on how to tell your own stories, whether that's on
stage at the moth, or in a job interview, or while giving a toast. But we
wrote a lot about this topic of honoring our loved ones by telling stories
about them. Telling stories is a way to make sure precious memories of beloved family members get passed
on to future generations and cement them at our collective memories.
Here is the Moth's Senior Curatorial Producer, Suzanne Rust, on how she honors her parents.
This is excerpted from the audiobook version of How to Tell a Story.
I am forever weaving stories about my parents into conversations, and my children, who
never got the chance to meet my wonderful mother, often toss their stories back to me, and
through them, they have a pretty good idea about her.
Talking about my parents is like sprinkling a little handful of fairy dust that brings
them back to life for a few moments.
I'm a big believer in celebrating my parents' birthdays every year.
I make their favorite meal and pour them a drink,
vodka and tonic for her, Roman Coke for him.
But really, it's just another excuse to talk about them and have a good laugh or cry
and repeat our favorite stories about them.
That was my fellow radio host, Suzanne Rust.
A final tip.
If you're trying to capture stories of a loved one, especially someone who is elderly and perhaps
suffering from memory loss, try recording them while they go through family photos.
The pictures can trigger memories that might otherwise be lost.
That's what the MOT's executive producer, Sarah Austin Geneste did.
Again, taken from our audiobook.
My grandpa Jack was in the Throws of Demenshow
when I recorded him talking about his life.
He had no short-term memory left,
but with the help of photographs,
my grandmother and I were shocked and delighted
to know that his long-term memory was still intact.
With each black and white photo we revealed to him, he was transported.
He told us of his lake vacations in the summer as an only child and his doting parents.
He said,
My father was an insurance salesman.
He cared so much about his few clients.
He kept visiting and asking if they were all right and if they needed more insurance.
They didn't need more insurance, he needed more clients.
The photographs lit up not only detailed memories from the past, but also his dry sense of humor that we worried had vanished.
That was Sarah Austin Geness. Coming up, the writer Elizabeth Gilbert
tries in vain to manage the illness of her headstrong wife. That's when the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by the Public Radio Exchange, PRX.org.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Katherine Burns.
In this hour, we've been talking about how people live on through the stories we tell
about them.
Peter O'Guerro wants Hosted to show a new Bedford, Massachusetts.
And after a teller shared a story about Luzia loved one,
Peter reminded the audience how the simple act
of hearing that story brought their memory to life.
And it's a really beautiful thing.
I get to, I'm very lucky.
I get to hear lots of stories.
And you know, they say that when we die,
we really die twice.
You die once when your body's gone.
And you die again when your name is said for the last time.
So when we tell stories about the people that we lost, they stay alive, you know. So I implore you to please, you know, tell the
stories about the people that you love that are gone, so they'll never be gone, you know. You
just say their name again, they're still alive. On the count of three, everybody say the name of
someone that they love that isn't with us anymore. Just on the count of three. Everybody all together. One, two, three. And they're still alive. They're still
over here with us. Thank you so much. Yeah. Yeah. That was Peter Aquaro at a
Moth and you Bedford. A few years back, I got to know someone truly remarkable.
When her partner Elizabeth Gilbert took the moth stage
at St. Anne's Church in Brooklyn Heights.
Here's Elizabeth, live at the moth.
APPLAUSE
Last summer, I was walking down the street
in New York City in the East Village, and it was a glorious day.
And the sun was bright, and I had the love of my life on my arm and she was dying.
Really dying.
She had advanced pancreatic and liver cancer and the tumors had grown and they had spread
and she had recently discontinued all chemo and medical treatment because it was hopeless
and all she wanted at this point in her life
was to try to find small ways to enjoy whatever
was remaining to her.
And what that meant on this day was
that she wanted to try to mobilize to get herself out
of the house and walk to Tomkins' Square Park
and get a self-service crink on.
Now, Tomkins' Square Park was four blocks
from where we lived.
But it truly might as well have been Kilimanjaro
for the amount of effort that it took her to do on this day.
And she was on her cane, and she's leaning her full weight
against me, what's left of her full weight,
because she's gotten so thin.
And I've got my arm around her,
and I can feel her little bones through her sweater,
and my heart is breaking.
Because this day signifies a turning point in her illness
that I had known was coming and I had dreaded was coming and now it is here.
And it is the day where she has now gotten so frail and so weak that we can officially
say that this once formidable person is now completely dependent on me.
And the reason that so particularly heartbreaking,
it would be heartbreaking for anybody,
but the reason it was so painful in this case
is what you gotta know about my girl,
is that for the 17 years that I knew Reya Elias,
I never once saw that woman walk into a room
that she was not the most powerful person in that space.
Never once, didn't matter what.
She was so tough, so strong, so hot.
She was a Syrian-born Detroit-raised glamour-bunch lesbian punk rock, ex-heroin addict, ex-fellon,
rock-and-roll, music star artist, filmmaker, hairdresser, writer, phenomenon of a human being.
And in the circles that we rolled in, Rea was legend, not just because she was so tough
and so street smart, but also because she had this enormous, capacious, generous heart.
And she was ferociously protective of anybody who she cared about.
If you were lucky enough to be one of the people
who Raya loved, she would just tuck you under her arm
and name you as one of her little cubbies,
like we were all the little wolf cubs
and she was the mama wolf.
And she would just take you through the world
and you were never in danger when Raya was there.
I have never experienced a feeling like it.
And that's exactly why I fell in love with her
and why I blew up my entire life
to be with her was precisely and expressly
because of that power.
But now she's powerless.
And as we're inching along the sidewalk on Avenue A,
I'm feeling that for the first time,
and I'm feeling how the tables have turned,
because now I've got her tucked under my arm.
And now it's my job to protect her from a world
that she used to dominate effortlessly.
And I don't know if you've ever taken care of somebody
who's sick and dying, but when somebody who you love
is very fragile, one of the things that happens
is the entire world starts to feel incredibly perilous.
Every crack on the sidewalk is something that could
trip her and she could hurt herself, every crack on the sidewalk is something that could trip her
and she could hurt herself,
every kid on a skateboard,
every big dog could knock her over.
So it's my job to keep her safe
and I've got her bundled up
and I'm navigating her down this world.
And it's so terrible to watch her decline
that the one consoling thought
that I'm having in that moment is,
thank God she has me.
Like, thank God, or what would we do?
Like, who would protect her if I wasn't here?
And at that moment, the super sketchy guy
on a bicycle comes terracing up the sidewalk super fast.
He's like this gross, meth head looking crusty bearded,
nasty guy, and he's got a furious face,
and he's tearing so
fast up the sidewalk, careening into pedestrians, and he's coming right at us, and he almost
plows us over, and I managed just at the last minute to grab Rea and pull her out of the
way for safety, but he clips her.
He hits her on the arm with his bike handle bar as he goes by, and I'm like, oh my God,
my baby.
At which point Rea turns on her heels and says,
get the fuck off the fucking sidewalk, motherfucker.
And the guy, the guy screeches to a halt, drops his bike,
grabs his crotch and goes, some my dick bitch.
And Rea goes, if you had a dick,
you'd be driving a car and I'd bite you
like a fucking loser.
And I'm like, whoa.
Kids.
I'm from Connecticut.
And I need everybody to just take it down, I know.
But I'm also looking at her and I'm thinking,
what are you literally backing this up with?
Like she weighs 87 and a half pounds at this point.
And I'm thinking, what are you going to do, Ray,
if this guy comes at you and then I see it,
he's not going to come at her.
Because she's locked eyes with him
and she is communicated to him very clearly
that she is the alpha and he is the mutt and everybody can see it him most of all. He drops his eyes, grabs his bike,
and scuttles off. And Rea keeps on inching down the sidewalk with her cane, gets her soft serve,
finds herself a nice little sunny spot in the park, smiles up at me and says, today's a good day babe. So yeah, this
story that I had in my head when rea got sick about how helpless and dependent she was
going to become, that never actually happened. Because somehow despite the advances of the
disease, rea managed to remain the apex predator in every situation
that she came into. And every plan that I had made, because you know I made plans to take care of
her. Every plan I made based on my perceived idea of her helplessness, that all blew up too.
And my whole planning had been based in this idea that I was powerless to stop her from dying,
but by God I was going to make sure that she had the gentleness, the safest, the most zen, the most enlightened,
the most cushioned death that a human being could possibly have,
but she didn't want any of that that I was providing
as a turned out, because I didn't want gentle.
That's not how she rolled.
So she didn't wanna talk to the bereavement counselor
that I brought to her house.
She wanted to watch football afternoon with her nephews.
And I made her all this beautiful organic food
to keep her as healthy as we could keep her.
And she didn't want it.
She wanted to live on Oreos and cigarettes
and did live almost exclusively on Oreos and cigarettes.
For a solid year past her original expiration date,
as she called it.
And of course, I got her signed up with hospice
because I wanted to make sure that she had
the best and safest quality home care.
And then Rayya got kicked out of hospice
because she wouldn't let the nurses in
when they came to check on her.
So they'd come for their weekly check-ins
and she'd send them away.
She didn't want to deal with them,
didn't want to look at their faces, didn't want to deal.
So hospice throughout, which causes me to beg of you
and of the universe, who the hell gets kicked out of hospice.
Like how is that a thing?
But that's what happened.
And I went through all this trouble
to rent and create this beautiful apartment for her
to spend her last months.
And with everything that I could imagine
that she could possibly need a dormant building
and an elevator and wide hallways
for the inevitable wheelchair that would be coming
in an extra room for a caregiver
if we needed a night nurse toward the end, everything
that you could possibly imagine
this beautiful soft, sunny space.
And then two weeks or sorry, two months before she died,
Ray had decided that she didn't wanna be in New York,
that she wanted to move to Detroit.
She wanted to go back home to be with her family and to party with her friends from 30 years
ago, so she moved.
My fragile terminal cancer patient moved to another city, and what did I do?
I did what I'd always done with Raya.
I followed a scampered after her, like, the little cub, that I'd always been and blew
up my life once again just to try to keep up with the she-wolf.
So even Raya, not even Raya, tough as she is, of course, was tough enough to withstand
pancreatic cancer. And the disease continued to eat at her and by November of last year
the doctor said, it's any time now. She's on borrowed time already, but it could be at any moment.
And knowing that she was so close to the end, Raya called to me and said, it's anytime now. She's on borrowed time already, but it could be at any moment.
And knowing that she was so close to the end,
Reya called in her ex-wife, Gigi, who she'd been married to 10 years earlier
and asked her to come and help take care of her.
And she had also already called in her ex-girlfriend, Stacy, from 20 years ago.
And she had me.
So now what Reya's got is a hot blonde from every decade of her life waiting on her hand
in a foot with devotional love, which is Rea Elias' version of course, of hospice. And
that totally worked for her, the Charlie's Angels way of being taken care of. And we did
it. We did it because we were crazy about her because she was that mac daddy and she still was. She managed to
live till Christmas, I don't know how, but she pulled it off, it was important to her.
And on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, she couldn't get off the couch and she was in
and out of awareness, but she knew that we were there and she knew that we were loving
on her and she was happy. And at midnight Christmas night we put her to sleep and at 4 o'clock
in the morning I had to wake her up to give her her pain medication and I couldn't rouse her.
And this was the first time that it ever happened. So I just laid with her for an hour and waited
for another hour and I tried again, I couldn't get any response from her another hour and no response.
And by the time that the light of Don was breaking through the snow,
storm outside, I could hear that her breathing was ragged and her lips and her hands were
turning blue. And I knew it's it. So I went and I got Stacey and Gigi and I said, it's
now, you know, come. And what happened next was so exquisite. It was so beautiful.
It was like the three of us, these three women
who had loved her so passionately for her whole life.
We just knew what to do like it had been scripted
or that we were born to it.
We just came into the bedroom and Gigi put on sacred music
and Stacey Littlecandle.
And then the three of us, as one, got on the bed
and we wrapped
our bodies around her body.
And we took turns telling her all the last things that she needed to know if she could
still hear us, that we loved her, that she was incredible, what a grand and stellar life
that she had lived, that we would never be the same for having loved her and been loved by her
that she had forged our hearts in the furnace of her power that we would always love her
and that we would never stop telling the world her name.
And then it was like this silence descended and it was like this portal opened from some
distant uncharted part of the universe
and this river of the infinite entered into that space and we could feel it
that it was taking her very gently from us.
And that's when Raya opened her eyes and said,
what the fuck are you guys doing?
And we're like nothing.
Nothing.
She's like, what's going on?
I'm like, definitely not a bet's, bet's her death watch.
She's like, no, that's not, like wiping sheets of tears from our eyes.
She goes, babe, why are Stacey and Gigi in our bed?
I'm like, they're not.
They're just dropping off some mail.
You know, like kicking them out of bed.
Gigi's running to turn off the music.
Ray is like, why is this not like a fucking candle in here?
Stays like it does in.
We're just nuts, my shampoo.
And Ray is like, you guys are weird.
She sits up in bed, lights a cigarette, looks at me and goes,
Babe, what's today's date?
I said, it's December 26th, my love.
And she said, cool.
I want to hit that 60% off sale today at Lululemon.
LAUGHTER
So that's what we did.
A couple hours later, we're all at Lululemon.
There's Raya in the dressing room,
surrounded by her attendants trying on ATHLEASURE WHERE, for some future that she's still very much intending to have.
Somebody once told me, and I wish to God that I had got it sooner, that there is no such
thing as a dying person.
There are living people and there are dead people. And as long as somebody is alive, as long as they have any sentience or sense about them,
you have to expect and allow them to be who they have always been.
Never more important than at the end of somebody's life that they get to be who they are and
who they always were.
And I think that goes a long way toward explaining why Raya was so resistant, why she was so so stubbornly oppositional to every story that I had in my mind about what her death might
be or should be.
She just wasn't having it.
From the beginning of diagnosis till the end of her life, she was like, I'm not your story
horror.
Like you don't get to script this.
I'm Raya fucking Elias.
My life, my death, I'm doing it my way.
You don't write this one. I'm doing this one.
So it was just a handful of days after Christmas when she did die.
And hers was not a gentle death. I'm sure he will be shocked to hear.
She went down fighting and it was rough. And even there at the end, I still had stories in my head about what I wanted it to be and
how I wanted it to go.
And I had this very, very dreamy, romantic idea about Rez's last words would be to me that
she would gaze up at me from a soft pillow and say, I love you.
Or thank you for everything you did for me.
You're getting the idea.
Raya Elias' last words to me were, no baby, no.
As I was trying to walk her from the bathroom to what would be her deathbed, no baby, no.
It was the last steps that she was ever going to take in her remarkable life.
No, baby, no.
Her legs didn't even work anymore.
No, baby, no.
I got this.
And what I got, but I only got it at the very end, was that Ray had didn't want my help.
She didn't want my pity.
She didn't want my planning.
She certainly didn't want my pity, she didn't want my planning, she certainly didn't want my story.
The only thing that Ray wanted for me was that thing,
which I had always so effortlessly and naturally given her,
which was my devotion and my awe.
She just wanted me there in the room in love with her,
and bearing witness as she took that last ride.
She just wanted me standing back in
amazement and horror, but mostly amazement, watching as she went down, as she came out of this earth,
not gently, but like a ship going down in a storm at sea, like the force of nature that she was.
And in the end, the only thing that I could do for her and those last harrowing hours was nothing.
It was nothing except a surrender to my powerlessness
and to have to let her go and to have to watch her go
and she went down swinging and battling
to the last awful breath.
And it was brutal and it was beautiful and she was brave and I
howled like a wolf when she was gone and I will never stop telling the world her
name.
Elizabeth Gilbert is the best-selling author of nine books of fiction and nonfiction, including Eat Pray Love and City of Girls.
Elizabeth was raised on a small family Christmas tree farm in Connecticut, but she currently
lives in New York City. Elizabeth was raised on a small family Christmas tree farm in Connecticut, but she currently lives
in New York City.
And for those of you who aren't familiar with her, Raya Elias was a Syrian-born writer,
musician, hairdresser, and filmmaker.
She was just 57 when she died.
In her own book, Harley Lockeau, a memoir of hard-living, hair, and post-punk, was published in 2013.
On the one-year anniversary of Reya's death, Elizabeth sent me a link to a
Neil Young song. She wrote Reya S.B. to ask you to play the song for her so, so
loud today. We hope you'll be inspired by this hour to tell a story of your own, maybe about someone
you love who's no longer with you.
That's it for this episode.
We hope you'll join us next time for the Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison and Catherine Burns, who
also hosted and directed the stories in the show.
Co-producer Vicki Merrick, Associate Producer Emily Couch.
The rest of the Moss leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Sarah Austin-Jones, Jennifer
Hickson, Meg Bulls, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham, Marina Klucce, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant,
Inga Gladovsky, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi Kaza.
Audio courtesy of Random House Audio from How To Tell a Story by The Moth. Special thanks to
Devon Sandefur in his series on Reeling Stories of Brooklyn-based organization providing a platform
for people of color, women, and others who have been pushed to the margins of our culture.
Most stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers, our theme music is by the
Drift, other music in this hour from Blue Dot Sessions, The Swing Growers, and Neil Young.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by PRX for more about our podcast for information on pitching us your own
story and everything else good or our website themoth.org.