Flowers would be good, I thought, selecting an appealing
bouquet from a nearby small, upscale market’s display. Maybe one of her once-favorite fish fillet
sandwiches and a soda from the golden-arched fast food purveyor would bring a
smile to her face. It couldn’t be like
it used to be, with beribboned boxes holding pretty nightgowns or dinner at a
nice restaurant with family gathered around.
I wasn’t sure what “family” meant anymore, with children scattered
geographically and both my father and brother gone forever. I shook my head to rid it of the ridiculous snippet
of music that played there so often these days…”and the cheese stands alone,
the cheese stands alone…”
Would she even know who I was today – her only daughter – or
would she gaze blankly at me because I no longer had the flowing blonde hair
and unlined face of my youth? As I
walked into the Long Term Care facility, the floors were crowded with other families
making the same journey: adult children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
with small gifts and balloons in tow. I
entered her shared room. There were no
private rooms here, just curtains that could be pulled across to mimic that
illusion. Her roommate moaned, “Lady,
lady…somebody help me, help me, please” over and over. It seemed callous to ignore her, but she repeated
those words most of the day, every day, unless she was sleeping. It would have outraged me to have my mother
in that room with the constant, droning distress calls if not for the fact that
she is deaf. Mom was the perfect
roommate for her.
Would she be awake? I
usually had to time my visits to fall either just before or just after a meal. With so few visitors and deprived of the
sensory stimulation of conversation, she slept 18-20 hours each day, preferring
to retreat to her memories for comfort. As
I moved her empty wheelchair to sit in her bedside chair, she smiled hesitantly
when she saw me, googling her brain in search of recognition. My current face wasn’t on file, so she waited
for me to provide the clues.
“Hi, mom. It’s
Kathy. Happy Mother’s Day. How are you?”
“Kathy?” She would
often be unsure at first, so I picked up the lined school notebook and pen to “talk”
to her, the only way she would be able to “hear” me. I wrote, explaining who I was, and pointed to
the picture she kept of me in my graduation gown.
She nodded, “Oh, that’s my daughter,” smiling sweetly. I pointed to the picture and then to
myself. Her brain clicked suddenly and
she laughed – at herself, I hoped, rather than the differences in how I looked
between the picture and today’s reality.
“How’s Johnny?” she asked, hoping that my brother would be
visiting today too. “He hasn’t been
feeling too well, mom, but maybe he’ll be able to stop by later,” I reassured
her. My brother died over a year ago,
but we decided to spare her that painful news.
“Daddy was here yesterday.”
I blinked and then raised my eyebrows at the news. My father has been dead for 12 years. “He tried to convince me that we should have
another child, and I told him that two were enough. We can’t afford to have three!” I used to try to bring her back to the
present by telling her how long he has been gone, but no longer. I’ve come to realize that the comfort of
memories are the only real comforts she has left.
I showed her the floral offering that I’d brought and put
them in a vase with water. She inhaled
their fragrance and smiled appreciatively.
The decades-old picture of her tending her azaleas and candy tuft
flashed in my head. Her sturdy German
hands worked the soil as she grunted in sweaty exertion in the warm spring
sun. Dad stood nearby, trimming the
hedges in his khakis and undershirt, as Mom fussed at him not to stand too
closely to the laundry drying on the line nearby.
Now I was doing it, too.
I’d been there for five minutes, and her eyes were beginning
to droop in anticipation of her three hour afternoon nap. She began a brief conversation that was
garbled by fatigue. I smiled and nodded,
having no idea what she just said. Then
I kissed her and waited until she fell asleep.
Happy mother’s day, mom.
8 comments:
Oh Kate. How I wish things were different for us, but it is what it is. It is a circle, and we always come back to where we began, even if it is in our own mind. God Bless you and your mother, and God Bless your children! And God Bless your happy memories!
As someone who watched her mother in the very same position, you said Happy Mother's Day perfectly. Best wishes to you and to her.
Thanks, Connie and Ali! Yes, life is what it is, a bouquet of all different sorts of temporary blooms.
Kate, my grandmother is in almost the same state. It's so hard to watch, especially when moments of lucidity still happen.
Happy mother's day to her and to you too!
Thanks for sharing Kate. When I speak to my mom on the phone (she lives 2 1/2 hrs. away)I find it so hard to not correct her 'time' mistakes and sit and let her ramble. Most of the time I can't get a word in for 15 or more minutes, but I keep thinking, at least I hear her voice. Its hard to see them age away. Thanks again for sharing.
Nice to read your post, Ey. Thank you!
You touched my heart! Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Sandra. I appreciate your taking the time to comment!
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