My dad would have been 101 years old today, had he not succumbed to various maladies of old age back in October 2010.
This morning I tracked back to the last birthday that we were able to celebrate with him. It was December 7, 2009. At that point, he had been a resident of the Oahu Care nursing home on Beretania Street for just a few days shy of a full year. It was one of those bittersweet days.
You can click on this photo to see a few more pictures from that day.
A lot of people we know are still coping with aging parents. My advice: Enjoy them while you can, and make the most of the good days. You have so much to learn. In any case, John Lind at 96.

Here’s what I wrote back in 2009.
Pictures can be deceiving.
In this series of photos taken yesterday on my dad’s 96th birthday, he appears to be smiling and enjoying the occasion, complete with birthday cake, several cards and messages, and family.
Actually, he was mentally confused and didn’t feel well.
When I arrived, he was sitting at a table in the common 4th floor dining room, staring at a large photo of his high school graduating class which I had made from an old photo found among his papers.
He told me he didn’t know who these people were, and when I said it was his high school class, he said quickly, “not my class!”
So I pointed out where he was standing in the back row. He looked. Then he identified Phyllis, standing in the front row, who married his older brother. “She’s passed away now,” he said matter-of-factly.
Then he told me that there was a big job waiting in the afternoon moving a shipment. I think, in that dreamworld that becomes a dementia patient’s reality, he was dealing with what had been a typical business problem. Get a customer’s order from the dock back to the store, then delivered to their business.
“There’s some big stuff that has to be moved,” he told me, voice serious.
Then he looked down at the class photo and the thoughts merged.
“It’s going to be hard moving 65 people,” he said, looking at the group.
I decided not to try following down that mental path.
When I told him it was his birthday, he wanted to know what year it was.
“Nineteen…nineteen…” He paused, looking at me to fill in the blank, tell him what year it is. I had to say that it’s 2009.
“So how old am I? Eighty?”
96, I answered.
He looked bemused. 96 is something that happens to someone else, to old people.
Then lunch arrived. He had scoop of what looked like a creamed turkey, rice, mixed vegetables. He pushed at the vegetables with his fork, but did not try them.
“What do you think that is?”
I told him that it looks like peas, corn, and beans, just sort of mixed up.
He turned the plate around so that they were on the far side, away from him.
He poked the fork into the turkey, then moved it to his mouth, sampling the taste. Then he put his fork back down without eating any more.
“It’s turkey.” I say the obvious because sometimes it makes a difference. Sometimes he ignores his food but, with a little encouragement, eats through the whole plate.
This wasn’t one of those times.
He seemed to have trouble with the food, although he drank a small can of Ensure, a protein drink. Even with that, he looked somewhat pained as he drank, as if it was in danger of unpleasantly returning.
I tried to get him to eat a little more. He refused, first saying that he didn’t like the food. Then that he wasn’t hungry. But I could see that food wasn’t going down well. After we sat for a while, he said that when he tried to eat, his breathing got faster. I don’t know what this could mean, so I reported it to the nurse on duty. She said it would be reported to the doctor. All that will come later.
My sister, Bonnie, and my mother then arrived and went down the hall to his room, so I hailed a nursing assistant to help us make the trip back to his bed, a trip that’s becoming increasingly difficult.
We made it, with some difficulty along the way, but finally he was back in bed, settled, alarm clipped onto his shirt, comfortable. Bonnie had a birthday cake set alongside the bed, but he didn’t notice until she pointed it out. There were several birthday cards, including one from his sister in California (his only surviving sibling), and another from the members of the Waikiki Surf Club, which he served as a founding member and first president more than 60 years ago.
I passed on a telephone message from one of his friends with a boat near his at the Ala Wai Harbor.
He went through the motions of reading the cards, but I don’t think he can actually see much without his glasses. Even after he put his glasses on, I couldn’t tell if he was able to process the contents, despite the time he spent on the task.
Then we got to the cake. He perked up. Despite skipping lunch, he managed to work his way through a nice piece of cake. I still don’t know if he understood that it was birthday cake served for his birthday. But perhaps that doesn’t matter. Looking at the photos, he was happy, in that moment, birthday or not.
One sad note. Although he often asks about my mom and frequently worries about her, he didn’t have much to say to her during yesterday’s visit. Perhaps he just felt comfortable and simply accepted her presence without comment. I don’t know. I hope that he understood that she was there to share the birthday with him and all of us.
Then he was ready to take a nap. We packed up the paper plates, the plastic implements. The cake went into a box. My mom tacked his birthday cards onto the bulletin board above his bed. Bonnie lowered the head of the bed, which had been up in sitting position. We wished him a happy birthday and a pleasant nap, Bonnie said she would be back today with another piece of cake, and we all made our exit.
96 and counting.
If I had my druthers, I would choose to remember different images of my dad. Here are two. Top, on Waikiki Beach on Christmas Day, 1948. Below, at the wedding of two friends. He’s on the right in the white suit, looking like a movie star. I don’t remember ever seeing him all dressed up like this, but it’s a great image.


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Your dad was a handsome man right up to the end of his long life, wasn’t he? My dad would have been 100 this year, but he died of heart failure at 76. He came from a long line of strong Pennsylvania Dutch/English and I always thought he would live to at least his 80s. I know what you mean about preferring to remember their younger, stronger days.
Thanks Ian. The flash back to your dad’s 96th birthday, and the feelings you shared I’m sure touched those who have gone through the same experience – me included. We both have lost our parents. As we live out the remainder of our lives we are filled with memories of them, and continue to cherish the gift they gave to us – life, and life values.