My mother hasn't asked me in several weeks whether or not I think
she's going to live to be "a hunnert" but today that was all she was
worried about. That and the "old plants" that Niece decided to dump on her
because she (Niecie) didn't want them and figured she could just give them to Aunt Chubby.
The story of THAT, now, is that the plants died the night after Niecie brought them
to her. Can't remember how many times I heard that story today.
But it was definitely overshadowed by the "hunnert"
discussion. (She has finally decided that living to hunnert would be kind of nice.)
I'm always trying to find things that might interest her that I can
tell her, because there is nothing interesting that I am doing most days and nothing
interesting that she is doing any day, so this morning I had watched an episode
of "Extraordinary Women," the story of Audrey Hepburn, who was truly an
amazing lady.
I figured my mother would remember who she was, and she did, so I
gave her a capsule summary of Hepburn's life, growing up in Holland under Nazi domination,
unable to become a ballerina, her dream, because starvation had changed her body and she
no longer had the body of a dancer, to getting cast in Roman Holiday, her first
picture for which she won an Oscar, to her quitting show business to concentrate on
helping the starving children in countries like Bangladesh, Somalia and other countries,
and the sadness of her getting cancer and dying within a year after her diagnosis.
I finished my story, she looked at me and said "do you think I'm
going to live to be a hunnert?" (which is always followed by "why am I still
alive?" and "why did all my siblings go off and leave me?" I can't
relate to the last question, since my sister hasn't been around for nearly 45 years, so it
never occurs to me to wonder why I'm alone.)
Today I chose a different tool to help myself respond to her
endlessly repeating questions. I remembered her mother's last days.
I've described her before as the gentlest, sweetest woman who never said so much as
"damn" in her life, but she was kicked out of a nursing home for cursing like a
sailor (apologizes to sailors), and tripping people walking down the hallways with their
canes.
So they had to move her to the mental hospital at Napa and my mother
has talked many, many times about how frustrating it was to visit her because she suffered
from aphasia (a term my mother doesn't know but only says she would try to talk with her
mother and all her mother could say was blah-blah-blah-blah). My mother would stay
with her as long as she could and eventually her mother would ask to go back into the
building and my mother would return home so frustrated that she couldn't get through to
her.
Every time she asked me if she was going to live to hunnert today, I
told myself how grateful I am that she could ask me that question and that I
could understand her. I also remembered her sister, my Aunt Barb who, before she
died, could not recognize any of her children. The last person she recognized was my
mother and the day she lost that recognition was the last time my mother visited her.
So I'm lucky. She knows me. She can speak and be
understood. And if she doesn't realize she has asked the same question a dozen times
already, that's better than my having to leave without the two of us sharing anything at
all.
2 comments:
Only one question from a gerontologist?! I don't know how many sessions I sat through with my husband, who generally passed, even though he thought the questions were dumb.
One question. He said, and I quote, "When you get up in the morning, you know what day of the week and what date it is, don't you?" She said "Oh sure" and then he told her that it was normal to be a little forgetful as we get older and that was the ENTIRE dementia test!!!!!!!
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