Morning Phone Calls
Adrianna suffered from alcoholism. That was not her only issue or challenge, but for the purpose of what I’m writing today that will be enough. Part of me doesn’t want to say that out loud for everyone to hear. Perhaps it’s too personal. Perhaps it’s nobody’s business.
All true, to a certain extent. But it is a physiological disease, just like cancer or diabetes or hypertension with a strong genetic component, variations which can affect of the metabolism of alcohol in the body and the behavior of neurotransmitters along with others which contribute to how addictive the alcohol can be. And while the pattern of inheritance for this disorder is not clear-cut, family history also plays a factor.
I have never had any issues in this regard, nor has her mother, but others in my family haven’t been so lucky.
No one is ashamed if someone is a diabetic or has celiac disease, after all, so why this? My daughter was my daughter, warts and all, and I really don’t see a reason to pretend otherwise. To me, that would not honor her.
She struggled with this, tried to conquer it. Sometimes she succeeded, often times she did not, and it affected everyone whose lives she touched. It was part of who she was, and if talking about it does anybody anywhere even one small iota of good, at least something positive would have come out of this.
Anyway, with that preamble out of the way, let me begin again.
Adri was an alcoholic, and when it was bad it seemed to be worse at night, after the sun went down. A couple of years ago it got bad, and almost every night while I was cooking dinner the phone would ring, and it would be Adri. I’d answer and she’d rant and rave about this or that in various degrees of coherence. At the beginning, of course, I took the calls and the drama of that evening’s thoughts and events seriously, as an emergency, as something real that she meant and needed immediate attention.
Cindy and I would drop what we were doing and go there, only for everything to be fine, or at least not an emergency. She’d often be mad we came, either not remembering what she said or mad that I didn’t realize she was just venting.
It would send me on a whirlwind of emotions and stress; it was awful. So the next time I’d try just letting her talk and vent, and I’d go over the next day but not that night. She’d still be bothered, but this is how I started taking her to AA meetings. I’d tell her she had to do something different than what she was doing, and that she needed someone who wasn’t her father that would be more impartial, though of course I was always willing to listen, but at some point it would become the boy who cried wolf.
Things would ebb and flow. The frequency of nighttime calls might diminish for a time, but then they’d start up again. It was tearing me apart. It’s not like I wanted to put my head in the sand and pretend nothing was wrong, but also, at some point, just hearing the bad and not being able to affect the good was just destroying me. I had no real control other than offering to take her to meetings and pay for counseling and trying to address any environmental factors that might also be exacerbating her drinking, but I couldn’t do it all.
Eventually, I told her I was going to have to silence calls from 7 pm until 9 the next morning if things didn’t change, that I’d still do other stuff but I could not sit in fear of my phone ringing and dreading that it was her calling again, because, again, during this time she didn’t call or text for good stuff, only for bad.
“So you’re not going to take me to AA anymore?” she asked me sadly and quietly, and my heart almost broke at her quiet desperation.
“No, Adri, I didn’t say that. Of course I’ll still take you as many times a week as you want. And we can talk in person when I come. But I cannot deal with the phone calls at night anymore.”
I felt like a creep, but I didn’t know what to do otherwise. I love her and she’s everything to me, but my psychological well being was being destroyed, and in that state I would be no good to her, anyway.
Then she’d try to circumvent my blocking of her and call from Bryce or Wesley’s phone, knowing I wouldn’t have silenced that. I told her please, please not do that or I’d have to silence them, too, at night. But she kept doing it anyway. So then I silenced everyone in her household from 7 pm until 9am the next morning. And it crushed me.
Each morning upon awakening, my routine would be to get up and shower and dress, etc., before finally sitting down and opening up my text and phone apps to see if Adri had called or texted. I dreaded this each morning. But when I’d check and there was nothing, or just a generic text about what she was doing that day, it would be like I got a reprieve. I’d have another 24 hours to not worry about it. She was alive, there had been no emergency, we could talk and text each other during the day, and then I’d be okay until the next morning at 9.
A 24-hour reset, and I hated living that way.
Which brings us to the morning that she died. I got up around 8:15 or so and started to get ready for my shower, but then I looked at my phone in a cursory manner and saw that I had over 20 missed calls.
All from Bryce, a couple from Stephen. None from Adri.
Only one partial voice message from one of Bryce’s calls, and I could see the transcription said “Grampa please answer the phone” and my heart seemed to stop instantly as I instantly saw a future ahead of me that is, as it turned out, my current present.
So I called Bryce immediately. He answered, but then Stephen took the phone and said some words to me:
“Hank, Adrianna passed this morning. I’m sorry. I’m so, so sorry.”
“What? Um, what are you saying? What’s going on?” I think I replied.
“She’s gone. I’m so, so sorry. If you want to see her you need to go quickly before they move her away, she’s at the ER where Wesley was born, where she was last February.”
Now, at least 20 times a day, multiple times an hour every single day of my life since, I hear Stephen’s words in my head, on repeat, slamming into my head unannounced and uninvited,
“Adrianna passed this morning. I’m sorry. I’m so, so sorry. She’s gone.”
Again and again and again. I need them to stop. I need this looped dialogue to be silent.
After Stephen told me this and Cindy was driving me to the hospital, I noticed that Adri had also texted me. She had texted me the night before, at 8:20. I read it as we neared the hospital, the last thing she said to me:
Wed. May 21 at 8:20 PM:
“How are you hope had good day
Tomorrow there last day !
They went to the pool tonight and scootered I didn’t go to the pool because my foot swollen again
So I did easy chores and took breaks I didn’t make hard dinner with many stops I didn’t want to my feet freaking me out”
…and that was it.
But I hadn’t seen it the night before, because I was silencing her.
And so I didn’t know her foot was swollen. I didn’t know she was freaking out. If I’d read this the night before I would have gotten some more info, and maybe I’d have taken her to the emergency room THAT NIGHT.
I’d at least have told her that I would come by tomorrow and that we were definitely going to the hospital or doctor. She had liver and heart issues, both of which swollen feet are not harbingers of good news.
I’d at least have known if it was getting better or getting worse. I’d have known something and she’d have known that she was going to be taken care of.
But I had silenced her instead, because I wasn’t able to suck it up and listen to her when she wasn’t sober.
And I know that it’s common to blame yourself or to have guilt, but I think mine is justified in this case. I blame myself, probably unnecessarily usually for many things, for not being able to save her over the years or make sure she got better, or for this or that or the other. But this is different. This is more specific.
Occasionally, even though I told her I silence her starting at 7 pm, I’d sneak a peak at my phone, anyway. Just in case. Because you never know. I didn’t tell her that, and it defeated the purpose of what I was attempting to do, but I did it anyway.
But I didn’t do so that night. And there’s nothing I can do to change that now.
When Adri texted “tomorrow is their last day!” she was referring to the fact that the next day (Thursday), would be the boys’ last day of school before their summer break started. Of course, by the time I read it, it took on a different meaning.
It was the boys’ last day with their mother.
Would things have turned out differently if I’d read that text the moment she sent it?

