I’ll Die When I’m Done: Until Then I Live!

Around Father’s Day each year, I take some time to reflect deeply. It was in the early morning hours of Father’s Day thirteen years ago that I stood by as my father took his last breath and passed away. And while it still makes me have a quiet cry when I think deeply about it, it is not a cry of sadness. It is the cry of deep gratitude. I tell many “dad stories” these days, not because he was a model father or the perfect daddy. I tell them because of a gift he gave me, a gift so overflowing that I can share it deeply and freely with all. Let me paint some perspective for you.

In the spring of 2007 I visited my home town to celebrate the marriage of my oldest child. I was honored to perform the wedding ceremony, but the excitement of the joyful occasion was dotted with worry about my father’s health. By the morning after my cross-country return home, my father was hospitalized and it was serious. It was so serious that I returned to the other side of the country the same week to hear that the diagnosis was stage 4 inoperable cancer. With the best estimates and the maximum treatment available, the doctors speculated that it would prolong his life for one year. They also estimated that without treatment, he was facing the last three months of his life. And then they asked, “What would you like to do?” I know — sounds like a sad story looming — but stick with me to the end of this dad story.

Stunned but strong, I told my father that I would not be the one to make the decision about his life and death. Only he had the right to choose how he would live in the days to come. I remember the conversation that followed a few short hours later. Little did I know that I was going to get a crash course in Learning How To Live Life Fully Each Day. This would be the final course that he had to offer me in his role as my father. As I sat beside his hospital bed, he said, “Cancer won’t be what kills me. It will affect my life, but I die when I’m done! Until then, I choose to live.” For those who don’t already know, my dad and I share the same corny sense of humor, so he followed this seriously profound announcement with “‘Cause I like those retirement checks and I’d like to get a few more.”

He went on to teach me that whereas there are situations in life that may affect our bodies or our health, we get to choose how we live every day. I didn’t fully understand that day when he said, “Listen — you will never be able to live fully until you lose your fear of dying.”

But today, thirteen years later, I realized that what he showed me in the three months that followed that conversation was how to live every day I am gifted to have. I realized, today, that my father showed me how to live by firmly planting his feet into every day. He saw death coming and never flinched. I saw him know, each day that he woke up, that he was supposed to be here, even knowing all the while that there would be a day that he wouldn’t, and he anticipated that the day was coming soon. It was.

He reminded me daily that he would die when he was done, when he had fulfilled his assignment here on this earth in his role as a man, a black man, a father, a grandfather. He would die when the universe, God to him, said he had finished. I remember the day my father said “I’m done.” But more importantly, I remember every single day, while I walked next to him during the last mile of his life’s walk, that he woke up choosing to live.

I realized today that I want to live my life so that when I die, it will be because I’m done. Until then, I will live. I will love. I will live and love as fully as I can, and my mission in life is to remove anything that stops me from doing those two things. I’ll die when I’m done. Until then, let’s live!

Memorial tribute to my father, Charles Hughes, 3/7/1937 – 6/17/2007

Picture of LaRahna Hughes

LaRahna Hughes

LaRahna Hughes is a champion for social change as it relates to living our values. Her work is seeking out solutions for meeting the spiritual, emotional and physical needs of the diverse, interfaith community in which she lives. Her work allows her to plant seeds daily in the lives of others. Her life work is to “plant good seeds as often as possible and to water good seeds that others have planted, because seeds try their best to grow!”
Picture of LaRahna Hughes

LaRahna Hughes

LaRahna Hughes is a champion for social change as it relates to living our values. Her work is seeking out solutions for meeting the spiritual, emotional and physical needs of the diverse, interfaith community in which she lives. Her work allows her to plant seeds daily in the lives of others. Her life work is to “plant good seeds as often as possible and to water good seeds that others have planted, because seeds try their best to grow!”

In the know

Related Stories

The Case for Chocolate | Palmetto Bella

The Case for Chocolate

How is it mothers always know what’s going on behind their backs, especially when it’s something naughty? I loved sugar as a small child. When no one was looking, I’d get into the sugar bowl. There usually wasn’t much activity or supervision in the dining room, and the sugar bowl tempted me. I would use the spoon in the bowl to scoop up the sugar and put it in my mouth, and then wait in bliss while it slowly dissolved on my tongue. Evidently this was very naughty, and my mother always knew. It took me a long time to find out how. The spoon was sterling silver, a souvenir

Read More »
Taking Action | Palmetto Bella

Taking Action

“Opportunities are like sunrises. If you wait too long,you miss them.” ~ William Arthur Ward This year has me wondering — is there more? More to life perhaps? More I can do? More I want to do? Many of us have had more downtime in the past year that we’ve ever had before. Lots of thinking time, lots of planning time. We all know that time is not finite, but when life comes to a jarring halt as it did in 2020, maybe it’s time to reassess what we want the rest of our lives to be. Most will probably want more travel, more family, more normal. This time of

Read More »
Dogs Riding in Cars | Palmetto Bella

Dogs Riding in Cars

I suspect it may be the reason most dogs keep us around. We can drive cars … and trucks and motorhomes and motorcycles. And, as a result, we can seemingly create the very wind itself. To the senses of dogs riding in cars, I suspect it seems we can also somehow make all the best smells float on the air at once, with a cacophony of new and familiar sounds intertwined and changing every few seconds. We magically bring farms with fields of horses into view before they dash past us with glorious speed. We find new people to watch walking and riding bikes, and other dogs to call out

Read More »
Why I Love Daffodils | Palmetto Bella

Why I Love Daffodils

There is something magical about daffodils. The mere shape of the flower seems to trumpet the arrival of spring, announcing something new and exciting. Imagine March in the Lowcountry with a sea of yellow daffodils covering a yard that stretches all the way down to the banks of Abbapoola Creek. My grandmother Lou would sit on the green porch swing and watch her grandchildren de-daffodil her yard. I can still hear the rhythmic creaking of the chains from the old swing — it almost sounded like a familiar song. She loved watching us pick every flower but there was always another prized daffodil hidden in her yard. The goal was

Read More »