In my mind I rehearsed many times what I would need to do after Dad’s death. He wanted to return to Ohio, to be buried next to Mom in a cemetery on the outskirts of the tiny town of Metamora. Metamora is in the far north of Ohio, on the Michigan border.
But the mortuary Dad had chosen to handle the arrangements is in Waverly, in southern Ohio near the border with Kentucky. Waverly is the small town where Dad and Mom established their home in 1953 — perhaps the only place Dad could work as a nuclear engineer at a gaseous diffusion plant and own a small farm.
I had to get Dad’s body to Columbus by air, and then arrange transportation to Waverly, and finally from Waverly to Metamora.
Characteristically, Dad had set up a savings account to use for these expenses, with me as a cosigner. I contacted a mortuary near my home in California, and gave them the name of the mortuary in Ohio. Mortuaries, by the way, are very good at customer service. Within less than a day, the plans were made. One funeral home would get him to the Columbus airport, and the other would take over from there.
Waverly is a small town. My siblings and I grew up there, in a ranch-style home my dad built on a hilltop two miles outside of town. Fifty-two years ago my folks bought that hilltop from Mike Fleser, the farmer who owned the surrounding acreage. When Mom died three years ago, Dad sold the house and land back to Mike’s son Carl and daughter-in-law Peg.
Dad’s body was taken to Boyer’s Funeral Home, which is run by Dave Boyer, the man who once drove the ambulance that bore Mom to the hospital after her accident. Dave also drove the hearse that more recently took Mom back to Metamora. We were about to follow that road once last time, for Dad.
But first we had to take a few last looks. For one last time, my brother, sister, and I gathered with our spouses and children for dinner at the Lake White Club, where my family had had fancy Sunday dinners and observed special occasions for as far back as I can remember. That night we all checked in, one last time, to the only hotel in Waverly (which, it happens, is owned by an old classmate of mine).
The next morning we had a service at Boyer’s, and then formed a caravan to head for Metamora.
We headed out of town by way of the house Dad built back in 1953. We wanted to take Dad past his house once last time. Wayne and I reached the top of the hill in our rental car, and slowed down. I gazed at the house for a moment.
All times are one time.
In my mind’s eye I could see Dad and Mike Fleser standing on that hill looking over the land and agreeing on a price. I could see Dad showing Mom where the house would be.
I could see the house looking brand new: new bright yellow kitchen counters, new hardwood floors, new plumbing.
I could see us piling into the station wagon to go to my grandmother’s house, returning to be greeted by our wildly enthusiastic beagles.
I could see my brother walking and then carrying me across the backyard the evening he told me, “Mom’s been in an accident.” And those terrible days after she came home, frighteningly transformed, from her long hospital stay.
I could see my own children years later, playing in that yard with their cousins, riding the tractor around for hours.
And I could see us dismantling the place just three years ago, packing up fifty years’ worth of stuff, and moving my Dad to California.
Now he’s home again.
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“What I have learned from my life, through travel and vegetables, through love and heartache, through books and people, can be summed up in two words from the philosopher Heraclitis: all flows.

Nothing lasts, nothing is permanent. Your joy is transient, your anguish is transient, your home is transient, your dreams, your ecstasy, your happiness transient — Everything is flowing through your hands at the moment you are aware of it.”
Terence McKenna