Papa

A look behind Andrea’s curtain after Dad’s passing

As background, here is a short link about my estrangement with Dad, and another link about his life.

Arlene and I converged in Benicia on the day my Dad passed, Friday Nov 5 2021; she came from Denver, I came from Hawaii where we were all on vacation with Jenny and Russell.

Arlene and I were entirely in sync with everything that had to happen after the passing of a parent. The Trust, the finances, contacting friends, planning a ceremony, clearing out the house…we worked very well together.

One of the odd aspects to this time was that you insert yourself wholly into your parent’s life. They are your parent, but they also have lived a life that is private and that you haven’t been privy to. This is especially the case as you read their emails and texts, which you really have to do in order to make sure that everyone (many people you don’t know) is informed of his passing and invited to his ceremony.

The unfortunate dependency of my estrangement with Dad was Andrea; she was (indirectly) partially responsible for the estrangement (it was her rampant deception that overwhelmed my ability to tolerate any deception with my Dad), but also in a position (along with Arlene) to mediate the end of the estrangement. But that would have been too humble (and too humiliating) of Andrea. Little did I know, however, how Andrea was taking an opposite approach and venting to my Dad about me in such mean, horrible and inappropriate ways. For example from 2021:

 

The lie about Kino in the text above is broken down here.

Or this:

 

 

 

 

Finally, there was a bank receipt that my Dad kept from January 2018 for $5000 that he gave to Andrea. Confused, I asked Andrea about it:

 

 

The only problem with this is that I paid for the flights to Europe in 2018. So….was Andrea like Mam, extorting money from Dad? This wouldn’t surprise me.

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My estrangement with Dad

In March 2015 Dad had knee replacement surgery; this was his second knee. The first knee replacement surgery a year prior had gone so well that Dad decided to do the second, too. Arlene spent the first 2 weeks with him post surgery while he mended, I spent the next 2. It was during this time that I learned about Mam, a younger (married) woman from Thailand who was working Dad for money (she had a gambling addiction).

Dad’s hearing wasn’t that great, so he would have private (but loud) phone calls with Mam, usually about money that she needed/wanted. One phone call was about how she had withdrawn money from his bank account (he had given her his bank card) which caused his property tax checks to bounce. Another was my Dad pleading with Mam that she must know how much he loves her since he has given her…over $100,000! I had to login to his Vanguard account too confirm that, and it was unfortunately true.

Near the end of my 2 weeks I confronted Dad about it, and he denied everything. I explained that I empathized with his being lonely and wanting a partner, but that he was being taken advantage of and coming out the fool. He was adamant that nothing was amiss. I left, so disappointed and truly disturbed about his lying.

A few weeks later Arlene had a heart to heart talk with him, but nothing really came of it. No apologies from Dad (not for his actions – that’s his business – but for his dishonesty). In June 2015 Dad and I went to an A’s game for Father’s Day. I honestly did not want to go, but had already bought the tickets. We rode BART to the coliseum, and it was crowded so Dad sat in a seat while I stood a few rows away. He received a call from Mam, who seemed irritate that she could not find the money Dad had left her at his house. He explained loudly (for all to hear) that the money was under the utensil tray in the top drawer.

This was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back.

With a handful of exceptions, I never spoke again with Dad after that game. I had to tolerate deceptions at home with Andrea, and I had no appetite to participate in another dysfunctional relationship with my Dad. I’ve mentioned elsewhere how he was predominantly an absent Dad and Grandfather while we lived in Tahoe:

– During the 24 years we lived in Tahoe before his passing, he visited only 5 times: twice were due to me asking him for assistance around the house (he never hesitated if you asked for help working with his hands); once was at Christmas when he had no other plans; once was with Arlene when Andrea and I were away riding bikes in Oregon; and the last time was just for a day at Annika’s High School graduation.

Over the years when I mentioned we would be in the Bay Area, he aways expressed interest in seeing us – but it was still slightly indifferent. As if, “great” if you make it and “I understand” if you don’t. When Annika was very young I appreciated his flexibility and lack of pressure, but after a while I wondered how badly he wanted to see any of us. This feeling was exacerbated when I learned, years later, how often he and Joanne would cruise up to Reno for a night. He never – not once – called and suggested meeting in Truckee, or in Reno, for a meal or to see his grand daughters.

Dad passed away on Nov 5th, 2021.

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The ongoing challenge of living with deception as a parent

Last week (Dec 5th) I met Bob Wright for dinner. He is interested in doing a supported one week dirt bike ride down the length of Baja Mexico, April 23-30. It sounds like a really fun trip; I know that Andrea will be done with work and the girls done with nordic, so my leaving wouldn’t create that much work for Andrea (all the logistical necessities of having kids).

That night I ask Andrea if she would be OK with my leaving. She says that she (she does not mention the girls) was intending to go to Austria for the ski trip to Lech (see here for that story in 2022) around that same time. You see the difference: before deciding on a trip, I check with Andrea. Andrea simply plans a trip, no coordination.

But, of course, it’s worse.

Andrea didn’t mention the girls at all with respect to her trip to Austria. So I asked if she could make it back by the 23rd, then we could make both our trips work. She simply replied “I can work it out”.

Today (Dec 12th) I learn from the girls that Andrea was already talking to them about Austria around the end of April & start of May. Their plan was to be there for the Lech ski trip; for Inga’s birthday; for May Day. Etc.

The best guess at Andrea’s thinking when I brought up the potential Moto trip: While she had been assuming that I would want to come along on any April/May Austria trip, now she saw an opportunity to make the Austria trip work without me. Otherwise, when she mentioned Lech she also would have mentioned the girls coming to Austria as well – which might have meant I’d not go to Baja, but instead to Austria.

Our married life has been one constant challenge, and numerous failures. I learned in 2002 not to trust Andrea with my emotional well being. I learned in 2012 not to trust her at all. I learned in 2016 not to trust her with our money. But all along I assumed and hoped that for the sake of our daughters she would be honest about all things parenting. I’ve written numerous posts about how this isn’t true, this is simply another.

The looming question: would the girls be better off if we were to divorce? For a long time I didn’t want to break up our marriage as I didn’t want there to be a single day that I didn’t see the girls each morning and each night; selfish needs for sure, but I thought the environment we had created for the girls was healthy and positive. I’m no longer sure of that, and just a few weeks ago when I indirectly learned that Andrea was pursuing a divorce I contemplated life as a divorcee, not seeing the girls every morning and evening, and…it was ok. Maybe that would be best for us all.

 

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The ever elusive apology

Thursday, Oct 13.

4:15   Andrea and the girls arrive home
4:30  Andrea leaves to see Marti at the HOA beach; she says she’ll be home in ~90 minutes
6:30  Andrea texts, says she’ll be home in 30 minutes
7:15   The girls are hungry; Andrea had asked me earlier in the day to take out some hamburger, but I’m not sure what her plan was. I throw together some pasta and fish sticks
7:45   Andrea arrives home; girls are having dinner. She tells a few details of her evening at the beach with Marti
8:30   The girls are in bed. I mention to Andrea that I wasn’t sure what her plans were for making dinner – thinking she might correct me, and note that I had mis-understood, that she wasn’t expecting to be home for dinner and so was expecting me to make dinner. No response. I say “I was caught off guard so just made some quick pasta and fish sticks”. “Hmmm”, she says. And goes downstairs.

 

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The innocent bystanders of a failed marriage

While in Salzburg I had an uncomfortable talk with Annika, which I appreciated none-the-less. She shared how time for her with Andrea and I together was never fun, and that it would be better if she had time with each of us individually. She suggested the same went for Niki & Britta, that the negative energy between Andrea and I was stressful to the girls. Heartbreaking. I should have known this, but was ignoring or avoiding it. Shame on me.

This, of course, concerns me and is something I really want to correct.

Given the deception on Andrea’s role as a Mom during this Salzburg trip, as well as instances of maternal deception going back at least 3 years, I’ve come to the conclusion that things have to change.

Back in 2002, when I realized our marriage was over/failed, I was committed to remaining in the marriage for the sake of Annika. Which is to say, I was committed to working with Andrea to be great parents, even in the absence of being husband and wife.

And I think we were great parents, at least up until Annika entered her teens. And I realize now that this was the easy time; when kids are young they don’t likely notice the intricacies of the husband-wife relationship, plus being a parent is mostly about loving them excessively and unconditionally as well as logistics (play dates, school, sports, and who is driving).

Once they are teenagers, however, they are likely to notice the intricacies of the husband-wife relationship, especially when it is subtlety nasty (don’t tell your Dad this; I don’t know why your Mom did/said that; etc).

This isn’t healthy. My primary conviction going back to 2002 is that Andrea and I could foster a positive environment for the girls to grow up in, even absent any love between the two of us. Now I wonder if that is sustainable/possible, especially as our kids become functioning, observant young adults.

My thought, which I will suggest to Andrea once they return from Salzburg (tonight): we go to a family counselor and, depending on how much they need to know about our failed marriage, we get advice and ideas on how to best maintain a positive environment for the girls while shielding them from the negativity that always seems to underly our failed marriage – if that is even possible.

If it’s not, then for the first time – despite being committed to our family despite this failed marriage for so many years – I’m wondering if divorce is the best option. It goes without saying that divorce is the best option for Andrea and I, as husband and wife. But now it may be the best option as mother and father, for the girls, too.

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Not being Forthcoming (versus being deceptive) and exclusionary

On March 1st (although the tickets were actually purchased Feb 10), just a few days before Niki & Britta were to leave for Junior Nationals, Andrea announced at the dinner table that she had bought airline tickets to Salzburg for her, Niki & Britta, leaving on March 22nd and returning April 14. Two weeks prior Andrea had asked me about traveling with Niki & Britta to Salzburg to see Annika, and while I encouraged her to go I suggested we wait until after Junior Nationals to decide if, when, and for how long Niki & Britta should go (my main concern being missed/remote school, and them being bored in Austria since Annika and all their friends would be in school). Thus her airline purchase – without coordinating with either me or Niki & Britta – felt impulsive, but that’s not uncommon.

Now that we are in Salzburg, I have a better idea as to Andrea’s impulse to travel at this time. It is about Andrea.

Just prior to leaving for Salzburg Andrea warned me that her parents wanted to take Niki & Britta for a ski trip; she didn’t provide details (when and how long, in particular) but I supported the idea for the same reason that I’ve always supported summer’s in Europe: Niki & Britta would value quality time with their grandparents, who they truly enjoy spending time with. It’s an investment, where I pay the cost and they reap the dividends – fair enough.

While speaking of skiing, I asked Andrea if I should bring ski’s; I wasn’t sure if or how often we might ski. Andrea guessed that we might ski only one day, and that I could rent ski’s versus bring them over for that one day of skiing.

Well…

We’ve been in Salzburg for 8 days, and I’ve now learned that Andrea intends to leave – alone – in two days to ski with friends for a week in Lech (Saturday through Saturday). Two points come to mind:

1. Whereas I assumed Inge and Rups had initiated the goal of a ski trip with Niki & Britta, it’s very (very) likely that Andrea initiated the idea since she wanted Inge and Rups to entertain Niki & Britta while she was away on her ski trip, and a separate ski trip for the girls with their grandparents sounded more fun than hanging out in Salzburg. However, now that we are here I know that Rups and Inge would rather not ski for a week [neither had yet to ski at all this season prior to our arrival], and in fact they had not made any reservations for any trip which is entirely unlike them. Inge has a significant bunion on her foot, so getting a ski boot on is nearly impossible. Rup’s is generally interested to ski, but he has no interest in driving to any resort (especially with the weather being bad the entire week) and admits that he would likely only ski for ~2 hours a day – possibly with days off – simply due to stamina, which is understandable.

2. I’m not included in either plan.  All the plans and intentions hide in the shadows, Andrea not being forthcoming. Although deception plays a role as well; after all, Andrea indicated we would likely only ski a single day during the entire trip to Salzburg.

This isn’t the first time during this trip that I’ve implicitly not been invited. The first concerned an afternoon Sekt with the upstairs-Andrea, the second was a backcountry ski with Christine Krone (Wild Cherry’s). In both cases I wasn’t offended, as I knew Andrea (as well as Andrea and Christine) would enjoy their time more without me being there.

When I finally learned the full details of her ski trip (2 days before she is to depart), I asked Andrea if I could come along (let’s be sure this much is clear: I had to explicitly ask my wife if I could go with her on a planned one week ski trip with friends that I only learned of last minute, or otherwise be stranded alone in Salzburg). Andrea explained that there’s no room for me to stay, but that I could stay at a Youth Hostel in Lech. It’s not accurate to say she needed to ameliorate her guilt, since Andrea is impervious to guilt, but lets say to “save face” Andrea asserted that the Youth Hostel was likely nicer and cheaper than staying in the house with her and her friends.

Since Niki & Britta’s plans were still in limbo, I opted to stay. In fact, hours after my decision to forgo a solo ski trip in a youth hostel, the ski plans with Niki, Britta, Inge and Rups were scuttled entirely. At dinner Niki asked what they would do all week while Andrea is gone – the girls haven’t been successful in arranging time with friends, due to their friends being in school – and Andrea didn’t have an answer. Impulsively Andrea suggested we go into town (which ended up not being really eventful for the girls), as if Niki’s question was reduced to “what are we going to do right now?”.

Niki’s question made me I realize that we are all excluded from Andrea’s plans, and that she wasn’t any more forthcoming to the girls as she was to me. It should have been obvious to Andrea before leaving Tahoe that Niki & Britta would have a lot of free time (with all their friends in school and busy with their normal routines); the entire family (to include Mimi & Opa) could have gone on a 5-7 day ski trip and had a great time. But earlier in the year, when she learned her Stuttgart friend had a single bed available for a week long ski trip to Lech/Arlberg, our fates were sealed.

What’s inexplicable of me is that this sort of behavior from Andrea – selfish, rude, disrespectful, lacking grace, etc – is very typical of Andrea yet it still leaves me speechless. One would think I would acclimate.

—–

Update. It gets a little worse.

To recap the original Salzburg travel plans:

The girls left for Salzburg on March 22nd, and were to return on April 13.

I left for Salzburg on March 23rd, and was to return on April 16.

Once Andrea knew of my later return plans (and while we were still in Tahoe) she looked at extending their return, but she said it was too expensive.

On Sunday April 3rd, while Andrea was away in Lech skiing with friends, I let Andrea know that I had changed my return to April 10th:

Before leaving Salzburg, saying goodbye to the girls, I mentioned (with Andrea present) “I will see you in 4 days!”. On Sunday April 10th, after arriving home, Andrea texts me.

Let’s review: Andrea made her flight arrangements (on Feb 10, but didn’t tell us until March 1), then (at some point) changed her return flight but didn’t tell me. Then, only once I’ve left Austria, she tells me with this odd mention that “My parents just told me they they think you did not know”. Andrea KNEW she hadn’t told me of the change, she KNEW I was assuming they were still returning on April 13, and yet she says this? She knows I didn’t know of the change, she doesn’t need her parents to inform her of that.

So the consistent withholding of information is problematic. But even more, the girls will now be missing 2 more days of school – something I would have rather avoided.

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Passive aggressive? Or just wildly irrational? I dunno…

When the family (Ruddy’s and Johnson’s) met in December 2021 to decide what to do with Dad’s belongings (furniture, etc) after he had passed away, the Ruddy’s (thankfully) took almost everything to Colorado in a large 15′ UHaul. However, we did take a very few things, to include one small table and a chest with family memorabilia:

The table is a nice piece and it doesn’t take a lot of space. So imagine my surprise when I returned home today to find the table – after being in the house for about 6 weeks – was gone. Andrea had put it up in the attic.

Now, putting aside whether the table did or didn’t fit there (or more generally in the house), let’s take a look at the rest of the house at this same, exact moment. The question that comes to my mind: Andrea had the entire day off of work…and this table was the one thing she had to act upon?

For example, rather than take the humidifier away (that hasn’t been used in months) from the window sill, or the robotic vacuum (white circular thing on the floor) that hasn’t been used in over a year, or the balance half ball covered with some of Andrea’s (really) old magazines that hasn’t been moved in years, or the foot massage (red thing on the hearth) that hasn’t been used in months…she moves the table?

Rather than finish doing the laundry, or putting the mop away, she moves the table?

Let’s not mention the kitchen appliances, which have been here for 1 year waiting for Andrea to finalize the arrangements with the guy remodeling the kitchen.

Rather than put away the shoes, the backpack, the random box filled with stuff from a junk drawer which has been at this exact spot for over a month, she moves the table?

Rather than clean up her table in our bedroom (which nearly always looks like this), she moves the table?

Rather than clean the spare bedroom (not really Niki’s room), she moves the table?

Rather than remove her bikes from Annika’s room (or the small other items that we took from my Dad’s house), she moves the table?

This act would seem to be passive aggressive if the table were important to me, but…it’s not. It’s a nice looking table and I thought it fit there, but I’m not vested in the piece and have never made a comment about it in the 6 weeks it’s been here. I’m OK that it’s gone, just scratching my head at the motivation.

Now, of course, this blog post might seem passive aggressive, but it isn’t since no one will read this (think diary). It’s really just documenting a question to myself: why would Andrea move the table?

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The…lack of consideration

I’ve talked of this before, but this is the first time Andrea has done this to the girls, which is…uncomfortable.

Saturday, November 27. Andrea is working, Niki & Britta have Alice over for a play date, and they have Devo practice in the afternoon. On the way home from Devo I thought it would be nice for Andrea to not have to worry about dinner, so as a surprise I bought some ribs to cook.

[The winter season is literally only a few days old, and the usual pattern has already emerged: we are never quite certain when Andrea will be home, and she’s not good about providing clues to that end. Also, we never have dinner conversations in the morning; Andrea doesn’t like to plan a few hours out, and usually doesn’t like it when I try to plan a little. So each evening is entirely…unknown.]

Anyway, it’s 5:00pm, Niki & Britta are hungry, the ribs take about 50 mins so I start them (assuming Andrea will be home very soon) and give the girls an appetizer. By 6pm the ribs are ready and no sign of Andrea, so we eat. Ribs are delicious, but Niki & Britta are concerned that something has happened to Andrea. I try to ease their mind, explaining that she may have had a busy day and/or she was having a beer with her co-workers, and I suggest they text her which they do. Andrea mentioned on Friday that someone was hurt badly by a runaway snowboard, so I’m sure that was worrying Niki & Britta as well. The text strings are below – first mine, then the girls, but the general order is this:

4:49 Andrea texts me, saying she will be leaving in 30 mins. However, I don’t see this text until 6:40.
6:14 Girls text Andrea, asking if she’s OK and where she is
6:15 Andrea replies to the girls, saying she will be home in 30 mins. This is 86 minutes after telling me she will be home in 30 mins
6:40 I reply to Andrea’s text
6:40 Andrea replies to me, saying she will be home in 15
6:40 Andrea sends the girls a picture; she is at Tyler’s house
7:09 Girls ask if she is drunk, as the picture is fuzzy. Andrea doesn’t reply. It’s now 54 minutes since Andrea told the girls that she would be home in 30 mins
7:37 Andrea comes home, about 2 hours after she originally said she would be home, and 52 minutes after she told the girls she will be home

 

Here’s what is inconsiderate: At no time does Andrea say “I’ll be late, why don’t you (or have Papa) make some dinner”. She doesn’t have any idea – and never asks – if I am doing something for the girls for dinner. Rather she starts the text chain suggesting she’ll be home soon, which isn’t true. When she does arrive home and Niki & Britta explain how they were worried, she doesn’t take responsibility for causing their concern. She doesn’t apologize for being late, or for confusing our dinner plans. Nothing. She also doesn’t eat anything; did she actually have dinner somewhere else? Dunno.

Now, I’ve been on the receiving end of this behavior for years (literally, over 20 years). But as far as I recall, this is the first time she has exposed the girls to it. Just…unfortunate. And inconsiderate.

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Jerry Johnson, my Dad, 1941-2021

Dad passed away on Friday Nov 5th 2021, after meeting his cohorts for his usual morning coffee and then taking his dogs Poppy and Benji for their daily walk along the Benicia waterfront at the Marina. He collapsed while walking, and was pronounced dead at the scene when the paramedics (who likely responded within 5 minutes of his going down) were unable to revive him after 30-45 minutes.

The cause of death was respiratory distress.

Dad smoked for likely ~30 years, starting around the age of 17. I recall periods where he smoked a lot, and periods where he didn’t smoke as much. He quit cold turkey, and spent the next 35 years suffering the consequences. With Arlene’s guidance he had annual checkup’s to look at his lungs; still, as he aged his breathing became more labored such that at age 80 he had inhalers scattered all around the house and car. When he collapsed he didn’t have an inhaler on his person; it was in his car.

Dad’s life could be carved up into 4 chapters: childhood, marriage & family, Joanne, and his last 10 years.

Childhood. I can only speculate; Dad never complained about his childhood, but he didn’t shower it with compliments either. I think his Dad, my Papa, was well intentioned but maybe a little emotionally distant and always distracted by – due to his early years living through the dust bowl and depression – his obsession to work and his passion for creating with his hands. A classic example is Tahoe: around 1954 Papa purchased a 99 year lease on a Forest Service lot at South Lake Tahoe, proceeded to spend many weekends building a cabin, and once finished Papa promptly sold it. So Dad’s recollection of this would be: too many long drives to Tahoe, weekends away from home and friends, and a cabin that was never utilized for family vacations.

Dad’s Mom, my Nana, was very loving and attentive; her compassion was inherited by Dad.

Late in life my Papa questioned his decision to only have one child; the motivation for that decision was (again) the difficult times of the depression and the challenges Papa had growing up (losing a father at 15, a handicapped Mom, etc). He simply wanted his child to be comfortable and happy, and having a single child presented better odds for that.

I suppose it’s different on a case by case basis, but I wonder how much of Dad’s (later in life) comfort with isolation was a by-product of growing up as an only child.

Notes from Papa’s perspective during Dad’s childhood are here.

Marriage & family. My parents met around 1959 in Napa; Dad was 18 and worked for the Vallejo school district within the landscape department. They married in 1960, unknowingly already expecting a child (Arlene) who was born in May 1961, 5 days before Dad turned 20. Another child (me) 2 years later when Dad was a month shy of 22, and a third (Diana) in 1966 when Dad was 5 days shy of 25. By then he had become an electrician, an occupation that suited his skills and one he enjoyed throughout. After Diana’s birth we moved to Napa (3528 Idylwild) so that Mom was closer to her family.

Dad would live here for 21 years until separating from my Mom and moving out in 1987.

Dad was an exceptional father, and I think he enjoyed this time immensely. He and my Mom had what I would consider to be a happy marriage; they were certainly different people, but they rarely fought, often held hands and kissed and said they love each other. Dad fathered by example: he was meticulous, organized, and decent to everyone. I was aware of this decency and wanted to please Dad by emulating his decency. He never yelled or cursed, or lost his temper, there was no drinking, and we were never grounded or punished in the usual ways. We fished, we camped, we vacationed, we went to Disneyland once (by airplane!), entertained the neighborhood with our fireworks shows, all while Dad slowly moved up the blue collar middle class spectrum. Christmas’s were huge affairs (tons of gifts under the tree), and while we did see Nana & Papa semi-regularly most holidays were spent with my much larger Mom’s family.

In April 1984, while I was in Arizona in my 2nd year of college and Arlene was living at home and getting her degree in Nursing, Diana was killed in a single car accident, running off the road asleep at the wheel after staying late at her boyfriend’s house in Santa Rosa. She was 6 weeks shy of turning 18, 2 months shy of graduating from High School at Vintage.

Things were never the same. Both my parents suffered from the loss, but they couldn’t reconcile their different grieving processes. Later my Mom speculated that Dad felt guilty about letting Diana drive to Santa Rosa that Friday night, but I never sensed that from Dad. He was stoic, ready to tolerate what life threw his way and move on the best he could. In 1987 I had graduated from College and was living in an apartment in Tucson when my Mom called, in tears, saying that Dad had left her. It didn’t surprise me, as my Mom – who likely saw herself more in Diana than in Arlene or I – was grief struck and really having a difficult time moving on, even 2+ years after the accident. I can’t judge her – it’s inconceivable how a parent can survive the loss of a child – but how my parents dealt this that loss was not in sync.

Dad, who had spent most of his working life in Martinez at Alhambra Electric, moved to an apartment in Martinez. Mom and Dad separated in February 1987.

Joanne. Dad quickly met Joanne, likely a few months after his separation, in a hotel bar (keep in mind that Dad is a young 46 years old at this point). Joanne had some medical issue that night, and was taken from the bar by ambulance but left her purse at the bar; Dad, ever the gentleman, brought it to her at the hospital.

Their first few years were rocky, and this unfortunately colored my opinion of Joanne for the worse. She was mildly involved with at least one other man, and Dad viewed this as a “challenge” which seemed inconsistent with his personality of quality over quantity. Plus, Joanne was an alcoholic; the first time I met her, at Dad’s apartment pool, she was already drunk (her tattoos didn’t help my opinion of her, either).

Following the lead of other friends, Dad and Joanne opened a franchise Mail Boxes Etc store in Benicia in the summer of 1989. For the next 20 years Dad would work off and on as an electrician, enough to maintain his SS and medical benefits, and then work at the store the rest of the time. Dad was an extrovert; he loved the social nature of the store, establishing friendships with the repeat customer’s. While he and Joanne never married, they tried briefly to live together but pretty quickly decided that neither of them wanted that, either. They were a very tight partnership, but with room for themselves.

I lived with Dad, briefly, in Martinez from December 1992-March 1993. I had returned from Europe via Australia, had no job, no money, and no clue. 3 months later I was hired at Cisco, and moved to Mountain View. My 3 months with Dad was routine: he left each morning to work with Joanne at Mail Boxes Etc; he’d come home and we would have dinner together and watch some TV. This was my first opportunity to see Dad from an adult perspective. He seemed out of character renting a house; he didn’t spend any time or money on the yard or organizing the garage. He loved Mustang’s – owned 3 1965’s, one a super clean convertible. He owned dozen’s of beer sign’s, which seemed odd to me as well. I don’t recall seeing much of Joanne; it was as if their time spent working together satisfied all their desires.

For the remainder of the 1990’s and 2000’s Dad’s routine was fairly simple. Since both of them ran the store, their time off was minimal but that seemed to suit them just fine. They might take one night trips to Reno for fun, but otherwise their social needs were satisfied just being at the store. Dad formally retired as an electrician on 12/24/04, at the age of 63.

In June 2004 Dad took a train trip to Colorado, bringing his parents to live in a facility closer to Arlene, who would be able to take better care of them. On December 4th 2004, after a fall and some time in the hospital, Nana passed away with her husband and son at her side. She was 86 years old.

Papa moved into an Assisted Living Community in Evergreen, Colorado, near Arlene, in January of 2005. With Nana gone, although he was living in the State of his youth, Papa longed to return to Vallejo. On August 1 2005 Papa moved into Merrill Gardens Retirement Home, just down the street from the house he had built on North Camino Alto, in Vallejo.

In June of 2006, Papa suffered a mild heart attack. After a week in the hospital, he returned to Merrill Gardens weak and exhausted. 2 weeks after returning to Merrill Gardens, just as his strength (and humor) were returning, Papa passed away peacefully. On the morning of July 2, 2006, nearing the age of 92, Robert Lee Johnson Jr took his last breath while enjoying breakfast in bed.

A few years prior I had taken over responsibility for Nana and Papa’s finances; none of us had a clue of their fiscal situation, but it turns out Papa – who had retired in 1976 at the young age of 62, with his final salary of $6.39 per hour resulting in a pension of about $500 per month from the Vallejo School District – never had to spend his monthly pension money, and so kept tucking it away. He lived off the cash he would earn in the neighborhood and around town, doing odd carpentry jobs (replacing windows seems to have been a common task). Thus when Papa passed away 30 years later Dad inherited not only the house but about $800,000. Stunning.

Dad had moved from Martinez (renting a house) to Vallejo in 2004; when Nana and Papa moved out of their house, the decision was for Dad to move in versus for us to sell the house. Unlike the rental, he entirely re-designed the backyard and enjoyed taking care of it. In 2011 Dad, intending to ease up on his old knees, sold his childhood home and moved to a nice single level house in Benicia where he would remain until his death 10 years later.

In March 2012, after too many years as an alcoholic, Joanne passed away from liver failure. This was difficult for Dad; he and Joanne had sold The Mail Place (after some legal battles they had dis-franchised from Mail Boxes Etc) a few years earlier, but were still spending every day together. While I didn’t see them that often, every indication is that they were extremely happy and content together right up to the end. And in the end I came to like Joanne. She was rough and tumble which didn’t suit me, but she was well intentioned and was taking good care of Dad.

His last years. Getting old is tough. At 71 Dad lost his love Joanne, the second significant relationship in his life. He was retired, with a desire to see and do things but no one to do them with. Soon after his divorce with Mom he had done the inexplicable: fell in love with dogs, miniature dachshunds in particular (with one short exception we never had dogs growing up). First was Princess (11/17/89-8/19/05), then Buddy (dates unknown), then Buster (who overlapped with Buddy, dates unknown), then Benji (who overlapped with Buster, DOB 2/15/12 and adopted by Dad on 5/31/13), then Poppy (dates unknown). Dad was walking Benji and Poppy on his last day. The paramedics confirmed that despite all the commotion they never left his side, faithful to the end.

Dad was lonely. Beginning in 2014 he fostered a dysfunctional mostly financial exploitative relationship with a much younger (and married) Thai woman who went by the name Mam; he desperately wanted her companionship and thought (incorrectly) that was something he could purchase. It was this relationship that caused Dad and I to be estranged from each other by mid-2015; I could empathize entirely with his loneliness and need for a companion, but not for his dishonesty or enabling a gambler.

Sometime after Joanne’s death he met some men who were having coffee in downtown Benicia; he would end up forming relationships – some close, some simply friendly – with around 10 men, and they would meet almost religiously each morning, every day of the year, for coffee. These were the same men he would see on his last day.

Around the same time he became enamored with drones, and slowly got into the sport which ended in 2021 with him owning 2 high end ($2,000) drones. He would drive all over the western states (into the high dessert, up the coast), flying his drone, taking video, and then editing the video (with music!) and putting it on his own YouTube page. His last drone journey in October 2021 was as entertaining as any other: in Utah, on a dirt road miles from anywhere, he crashed his drone and in the process of retrieving it he lost his car keys. With no cell coverage he waited until a few friendly men who happened by brought him back into town. A few days later, after having his car towed into town and his spare key’s over night expressed to him, he was back in Benicia where he…found his lost keys, stuck in the side of seat.

While his coffee friends were retired with lots of time on their hands (some were still married, some were widows), most preferred to live vicariously through Dad rather than join him on an adventure. Dad would do day trips with Billy to try out new wines, or 1-2 day trips with Ken, but otherwise he was on his own with his dogs for 10-14 days, wandering mother nature and filming her exploits.

In late 2017 a woman, walking past the coffee group, caught Dad’s attention. He asked Debi out to lunch, and 6 weeks later (January 2018) they were married. However, and so very unfortunately, there were too many external factors (most of which I’m not truly aware of) going against them. Soon after marrying, Debi’s Mom moved in with them, then her wayward daughter. This was more than Dad had bargained for, and by the end of 2018 Dad was solo again. He and Debi tried once more in 2020, but it wasn’t going to succeed. While still remaining close and having deep feelings for each other, they formally divorced in July 2021.

After he passed, Arlene and I got a sense of who he was both by meeting friends he made down at the Benicia Marina, as well as by looking at his text strings (however inappropriate that might sound). He was generous with his time and money; he was supportive of everyone; he was good about initiating and keeping contact; and he was best at entertaining, either with drone footage or stories or pictures of his travels, as well as his GIF jokes.

His last year, 2021, was likely tough. He was a man with compromised lungs living through an air borne viral pandemic. His breathing issues were exacerbated after a trip to Arizona in April 2021. He was dealing with his loneliness, his desire for a companion, and his acceptance of not having worked out his relationship with Debi. As an only child he was comfortable with solitude, but it wasn’t his ideal choice.

Post mortum.  For what I would say are two uncomplicated guys, my relationship with Dad was diametrically opposed. At first, as a boy growing up, I loved and worshiped and was extremely proud of Dad. He was engaging and present and hands on. Our second stage seemed to begin when I left for college. Dad became a bit remote, not really motivated to participate in my life. We always got along, but it seemed…superficial. For example:

– I was in Arizona for 7 years, 4 in college and 3 after. With the exception of dropping me off with Mom when I started college, he never visited me in Arizona.
– I was in Europe for 3 years; Dad never visited, or even had a desire to see Europe
– Upon my return to California (and after having lived with Dad for 3 months), I lived in Mountain View (1 year), San Francisco (18 months), and Los Gatos (2 years). He never visited me once.
– When told of Andrea’s and my pending marriage in Germany, he indicated he wouldn’t be able to make it (Joanna, to her credit, made sure they did make it).
– During the 24 years we lived in Tahoe before his passing, he visited only 5 times: twice were due to me asking him for assistance around the house (he never hesitated if you asked for help working with his hands); once was at Christmas when he had no other plans; once was with Arlene when Andrea and I were away riding bikes in Oregon; and the last time was just for a day at Annika’s High School graduation.

Over the years when I mentioned we would be in the Bay Area, he aways expressed interest in seeing us – but it was still slightly indifferent. As if, “great” if you make it and “I understand” if you don’t. When Annika was very young I appreciated his flexibility and lack of pressure, but after a while I wondered how badly he wanted to see any of us. This feeling was exacerbated when I learned, years later, how often he and Joanne would cruise up to Reno for a night. He never – not once – called and suggested meeting in Truckee, or in Reno, for a meal or to see his grand daughters.

I’ve wondered over the years if this was partially due to our being two very different people. I went to college, and while Dad didn’t he was smart enough to have gone but he took more pride in (and generally respected more) working with his hands (and mind), versus just working with his mind. Whereas I traveled extensively for work and lived in Europe for 3 years; Dad loved to travel, but by car only. I don’t see these as issues at all, I just wonder if it caused him problems comprehending me and my desires and reality.

But at the same time, he acted similarly with Arlene. She lived in Florida for a few years, but Dad never visited. She lived in Chicago, and Dad visited after sufficient pressure from Arlene to visit his first grandchild (Jake). Arlene lived in Napa for 3 years, and didn’t see him all that often. Arlene lived on Kodiak island for 3 years, and Dad never visited. She moved to Colorado where she remains to this day, and he did visit more than he did in Tahoe but still not all that often – and I wonder if many of his visits were due to Arlene insisting he come, whereas I (and certainly Andrea) never did this.

On a scale of 1 to 10, I’d give him a 9+ for parenting, but a 5 (or less) for grand parenting. It just didn’t seem to be a need or priority for him.

Posted in Papa Comments Off on Jerry Johnson, my Dad, 1941-2021

Anatomy of a lie

On Friday, May 14 Kino completely and inexplicably suddenly lost control of his rear legs. Since Burton Creek vet in Tahoe City was closed Andrea and Annika took Kino to the Donner-Truckee Vet Hospital in Truckee.

After I dropped Niki & Britta off at school, I met Andrea at the Truckee vet.

After taking a look the vet suspected that Kino had suffered a spinal stroke, but they didn’t have the equipment (CT, etc) to treat him further so they recommended we go to Reno at the Sierra Vet Specialists & Emergency Center.

We decided that Andrea would take Kino to Reno (we didn’t know how long that would take), and I’d take Annika back home as she had things to do. Also, I needed to pick up Niki & Britta after school for their first COVID-19 shot.

Around noon Andrea texts me to say they are putting Kino out to take some tests, and they recommended that Andrea go home. I recommended she stay until she knows what they might find; at this point we aren’t thinking that he will be spending the night in Reno. Eventually, they confirm a spinal stroke but ask to keep him overnight; Andrea comes home.

The weekend was going to be busy; Niki & Britta have a weekend soccer tournament in Carson City (we have hotel reservations to stay overnight on Saturday), and Andrea has work catering on Saturday, also in Carson City. Thus we take two cars to Carson City, expecting/hoping that one of us will eventually pick up Kino while the other stay with Niki & Britta and their soccer tournament. At 4:34 Andrea asks me to call the Vet; I do, and the nurse agrees that it’s OK for us to pick up Kino so the plan is that we will pick him up around 7 (Reno is about 30 minutes north of Carson City). I call Andrea instead of texting her, to explain all this; Andrea is worried about Kino and so volunteers to get out of catering early, and to pick him up that night. So Andrea finishes with catering, comes by the soccer field to briefly see Niki & Britta, and quickly leaves for Reno as she would like to pick him up. Niki & Britta and I check in to our hotel, and I text Andrea the address. Andrea makes it back with Kino to Carson City around 9PM; she has driven the bus, and since Kino still can’t walk she wants to sleep in the bus with him.

On Sunday Niki & Britta finish their soccer tournament. We all return home, and Kino is improving a lot and starting to walk more on his own. On Monday we all together bring Kino to see Buckton, the vet in Tahoe City. (This is when his anal gland tumor is found). On Tuesday he is swimming in the lake again. On Thursday Andrea takes him back to Reno, while Niki, Britta and I are at their track meet in Carson City.

On Friday (5/21), a week after this started, I write a check to reimburse Andrea for the total cost of the Reno bill for the previous weekend.

In June I will spend another $4,498 on the surgery to remove a tumor from his anal gland; and in October/November, another $5,494 to remove his cancerous lymph nodes.

But that’s irrelevant to this story.

I assume the impression one might get after reading the above text and screenshots is that Andrea and I were balancing the juggling act of family commitments (school, shots, extra curricular activities) along with a pet emergency – working in unison to work it all out.

However, in November I stumble upon (owing to my Dad’s passing) this text Andrea sent to my Dad on Saturday May 15th at 6:57 – the night that I am in Carson City with Niki & Britta at their soccer tournament, while Andrea is (per her preference) picking up Kino from the Reno vet.

It’s equally sad and depressing: the complete fabrication of Andrea’s story, and my Dad going along with it.

Posted in Mama, Papa Comments Off on Anatomy of a lie