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Monday, November 2, 2009

‘Bye Mom

for Betty Lou Kibbe, nee Kidwell, 20 July, 1929 to 16 October, 2009

As I flew west towards Omaha with my wife on 15 October, my brother and I still had a mother. Only a little over a day later, we wouldn’t; in fact, within 5 hours of landing we’d lose all of her but the waning rhythm of breath and pulse as she slipped into a coma that evening, lingering for about 21 hours before her improbably able heart finally failed. It is perhaps too melodramatic to say it was broken after the death of her husband of almost 50 years just over 4 months ago; but perhaps not.

There was little left of the woman who’d raised us when I walked into her room and kissed her forehead hello at the rehab center where she’d been on and off since falling 6 weeks before. But she was alert and fully there, and we shared an afternoon of voluble companionship before our role shifted to sitting vigil and talking in unnecessarily hushed tones as she ebbed. In the days that followed her death, two brothers who see rather less of each other than many would reminisce and go through pictures and work on rebuilding our image of our mother. Like putting flesh back on her by-then sub-80-pound frame, we set about redefining the twinkle in her eye and putting a spring back in her imagined step.

More in images and less in prose than for my father, here are snippets of her expansive life.

Born in Saint Louis in the Great Depression, upper-middle of six siblings (4 still living), she posed for this picture at age 2 before the family headed for some possibilities in California, ultimately resettling for good back in Saint Louis.

A slight but natural beauty, she had a career at Purina as a nationally-noted feed microscopist, which is an optically-armed industrial spy of sorts, divining the makeup of competitors’ feeds, mostly from gross examination by microscope (in those days before mass spectrometers and gas chromatographs).

While taking one of her sisters to visit that sister’s boyfriend in a mining operation in Colorado in 1957, she was fixed up by said boyfriend with his friend, the temporarily wayward engineer-to-be Jack Kibbe, and they were married the day after Christmas in 1959, seen dancing here at their reception in the house of her sister Peggy and husband John.

Family legend has my father off on a compulsory engineering-school graduation fishing trip when I was born — my mother caught a cab to the hospital when her waters broke, and I narrowly missed being born in the back seat. Jack had taken a job in the iron ore industry in Venezuela, went on ahead after I was born, and Betty traveled unaccompanied to Venezuela with 5-month-old me to join him there. She later bore a second son, Douglas, and raised her two boys in an expatriate community of Americans given to the living-large lifestyle of the 60’s; easily recognizable to their stateside counterparts but with the exotic tinge of the latin locale, forging a new city in a fledgling country of boundless natural beauty.

While in Venezuela Betty traveled extensively about the country with us, including on Jeep expeditions into the mostly-uncharted Gran Sabana jungles. She learned to golf, and even learned to fly, piloting a single engine, low-wing Piper Cherokee my parents co-owned with another couple. Here she’s on the Auyan Tepuy above Angel Falls with her mother, and more or less cheerfully enduring the ritual ablution in used engine oil after soloing in the Cessna behind her.


After leaving Venezuela (the second time and for good), they settled in Albuquerque, where their second house was nestled in the scenic foothills of the Sandia mountains.


From there they traveled to many places, including here for Tricia’s & my wedding

and Fiji, amongst many other fascinating and remote places (she and my dad are to the far right).

This last was taken shortly after my dad died as we were cleaning out their house for sale. We’d gotten her the roses, which here, I guess, served as a sort of stand-in for my dad in this family photo (that’s Suzanne with Charlie and Doug with Sam). She bravely left that house and the life they’d known and went to live in Omaha with Doug & Suzanne, but her roots were done growing and she never settled in. Near the end she told us to make sure to enjoy life.

We are who she raised us to be. We dearly love and miss you – ‘bye, Mom …

posted by michael at 10:32 am  

10 Comments »

  1. Adam – you were very blessed to have two such interesting parents who lived their lives to the fullest. They were both very handsome people, and I feel you look like your dad. i am so sorry about your mom’s passing. Condolences on the loss of both your parents.
    I miss you all. Hope to see you soon.
    “JanMa”

    Comment by Jan — November 2, 2009 @ 5:34 pm

  2. Bautifully illustrated chronology of your mom’s adventurous life, Adam. Seems she picked fearlessly what she wanted, including the time of her death. Glad you were there for the last few hours.

    Comment by Smiling Dan — November 2, 2009 @ 9:13 pm

  3. Thank you, Adam, for sharing your mom’s story. What a rich life! I am so sorry for your loss…particularly coming so soon after your dad passed away. Thinking of you with love and sympathy, Karen

    Comment by Birdbrain — November 3, 2009 @ 12:53 pm

  4. Adam, there is no greater gift to give your mother than to praise her and her accomplishments. What an amazing woman! And so beautiful, even in her advanced years. May you carry on her wishes and live well and enjoy life.

    Lots of love,

    Jen

    Comment by Jen — November 3, 2009 @ 8:51 pm

  5. A wonderful tribute to a life well lived. Thank you for sharing your Mom’s life with us.

    Comment by rakkity — November 4, 2009 @ 12:18 am

  6. Adam, I’ve known you too long. I’ve heard stories about your parents since the early eighties, and now they are both gone? Hardly. What is this bewildered human response that hides such finality around a bend in my gray matter? I am sorry for your loss, Adam, both losses, and though those words are over used, are there any better ones?

    Comment by michael — November 8, 2009 @ 5:05 pm

  7. How long is too long … ?

    You would know the need to hide, Mike — it’s been a hard rain, indeed, and you, alas, most personify a lick from Dylan’s lyrics, “I’ve been ten thousand miles in the mouth of a graveyard.” And it’s still raining — now Polly has left us and we move from this sorrow to the freshly minted pain of Dan & Linda; but it’s the circle of support that attends each of these passings that IS what matters. These are celebrations, as well, and this is one fine flock o’ friends ’round here … ! I thank you all. May we all live some sweet stories, and may they be told with feeling after our passing by such as you all.

    Comment by adam — November 9, 2009 @ 11:37 am

  8. After Polly’s husband, Ted, died she and I talked for hours about death and dying : where do they go, where can one find comfort, what fills that void – all manageability stuff. Looking at my world then, four years ago, and twenty years into the future I asked her, “Does it get easier? All this loss?” She said, “No.” She was right.

    How long is too long? Hard to say but the impact is no fleck of paint off the space shuttle.

    Comment by michael — November 9, 2009 @ 12:56 pm

  9. So sorry to hear of your loss. I came across your blog while casting a net looking for others who also grew up in Venezuela. If you have any interest there is a rather large group of ‘us’ who have put our names and info together. http://web.comsouth.net/~georgepb/popiar.html I am sure they would love to hear from you.

    Comment by Yvonne — September 27, 2011 @ 8:52 pm

  10. Kind of you to say, thank you. I’ve emailed you separately, plus the two persons mentioned on the site. I look forward to adding out info there soon.

    Comment by Prodigal Puerto Ordazian — September 30, 2011 @ 3:12 pm

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