Tuesday, June 24, 2014
cryin’ and cybers and cares
I'm still finding my way through losing Mom. For all my complaining and whining about dealing with her issues and taking care of her, I find that I cannot cope as well as I thought I would. Bear with me please, I have many stories and many memories waiting to find words but it's coming in spurts now and I'm trying to find my way.
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Reeling, feeling, dealing, and hopefully someday even keeling.
My Mother passed away a week ago. Her last two days were quiet ones and she wasn't in that state of mental torment anymore. She hung on as long as she could. She is, was a tough old bird. But it was time and she had fought long enough. My brother and I spent most of her last week with her, talking, laughing, me singing songs I knew she loved and a few I knew she didn't just to see if there was any Shirley left in her. Thursday we thought we'd said our goodbyes but Shirley wasn't ready. Friday we cried with the weekday staff because we knew she'd be gone by the time they got back from the weekend. Saturday we were at peace with it and we told her we loved her and told her it was okay to let go, that her
mom and our Dad were waiting. At 10:30 pm on May 17th my Mother let go. It was her time, her turmoil was over. I froze when my phone rang at 10:55 pm that night, I knew who it was. I said "oh shit no" and answered it. It was her time, she was gone. I'm reeling still, a little lost. A little confused by the love I developed for her these past three years. I'm feeling it still, sadness, confusion, loss. I'm dealing with paperwork, cremation, phone calls, memorial plans, burial. And someday I will be back on my even keel. I hope. My Mother really wasn't much of a Mother to me but she was my Mom and recognizing who she was and what made her how she was gave me insight into myself and I love her. My Mom is dead now, I will miss her.
I am going to continue this blog. I will talk of my childhood, my life with and without Mom, and I will hopefully come to grips with this loss I feel right now. Shirley was a strong woman, a brave woman, a wounded woman, and a woman I am lucky to have loved.
mom and our Dad were waiting. At 10:30 pm on May 17th my Mother let go. It was her time, her turmoil was over. I froze when my phone rang at 10:55 pm that night, I knew who it was. I said "oh shit no" and answered it. It was her time, she was gone. I'm reeling still, a little lost. A little confused by the love I developed for her these past three years. I'm feeling it still, sadness, confusion, loss. I'm dealing with paperwork, cremation, phone calls, memorial plans, burial. And someday I will be back on my even keel. I hope. My Mother really wasn't much of a Mother to me but she was my Mom and recognizing who she was and what made her how she was gave me insight into myself and I love her. My Mom is dead now, I will miss her.
I am going to continue this blog. I will talk of my childhood, my life with and without Mom, and I will hopefully come to grips with this loss I feel right now. Shirley was a strong woman, a brave woman, a wounded woman, and a woman I am lucky to have loved.
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
last steps
My Mom is on hospice now. My brother and I made the decision last Friday. It is time. She has no real life quality left and she is in deep mental pain. We've begun to just treat pain. It's difficult to watch and difficult to live. I will post more in a day or two. My mind is hurting right now.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
let sleeping Shirleys lie
Growing up I always knew our home was different than the other homes in our average middle-class neighborhood. Sure, our lawn was trimmed and well maintained. Sure, we played the games all neighborhood children played, hot box, monkey in the middle, freeze tag and other fun games. We rode bikes, played t-ball, joined Boy and Girl scouts. We were clean, WelL dressed and from the outside all was well. But our house held secrets one of which was our mother's mental illness. Everyone in our neighborhood knew, they just never said anything out loud to us. When mom would have her bi-yearly breakdown they would look out for my brother and me, feed us, watch us, treat us just a little bit kinder. I think they figured we needed it but to us crazy was normal.
In the 80s mom got better. She really wasn't cured, it was medication related. I was a mom then and so busy that an almost normal mom was okay by me. And life marched on with mom having an occasional downward spiral. She'd go back in for treatment and we'd get her back, a little paler, a little calmer, a little more normal.
But now normal is a ghost, we think we see it and then it's gone leaving us to wonder if we just imagined it. Dementia + loopy = Shirley. She screams for Ray, there is no Ray. She talks to the corner of her room. She cries for her mother. She curses like a biker. She accuses me of stealing her pants, of killing the cat, of hiding her shoes. She thinks my brother is my dad, she says he took her food and won't let her eat. She tells random staff and visitors to shut the hell up. It hurts to see but a ranting and raving Shirley is better than a sleeping and out of it Shirley. Sounds good doesn't it? Truth is, a sleeping Shirley is a better Shirley.
Yesterday she looked up at me and said "I am dying. I am going to die." And then we both cried. Her because crying is her go to emotional outlet, me because I cry for who she was, the mother I had, and the mother I wish I'd had.
In the 80s mom got better. She really wasn't cured, it was medication related. I was a mom then and so busy that an almost normal mom was okay by me. And life marched on with mom having an occasional downward spiral. She'd go back in for treatment and we'd get her back, a little paler, a little calmer, a little more normal.
But now normal is a ghost, we think we see it and then it's gone leaving us to wonder if we just imagined it. Dementia + loopy = Shirley. She screams for Ray, there is no Ray. She talks to the corner of her room. She cries for her mother. She curses like a biker. She accuses me of stealing her pants, of killing the cat, of hiding her shoes. She thinks my brother is my dad, she says he took her food and won't let her eat. She tells random staff and visitors to shut the hell up. It hurts to see but a ranting and raving Shirley is better than a sleeping and out of it Shirley. Sounds good doesn't it? Truth is, a sleeping Shirley is a better Shirley.
Yesterday she looked up at me and said "I am dying. I am going to die." And then we both cried. Her because crying is her go to emotional outlet, me because I cry for who she was, the mother I had, and the mother I wish I'd had.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
My Mother's hands
My mother's hands once made a cake,
Once rode a bike,
Once ironed a shirt.
My Mother's hands could sew a dress,
Could steer a car,
Could pet a cat.
My Mother's hands would knead bread dough,
Would wash the dishes,
Would address an envelope.
My Mother's hands wrote a newspaper column,
Typed quite fast,
Sent Christmas letters.
My Mother's hands would shuffle cards,
Would turn sheet music,
Would play the piano.
But now my Mother's hands have no more words,
Have no more music,
Have no purpose.
My Mother's hands are quiet now.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
dine and dash
My mom is sick, sick as in go towards the light sick. It’s been a long emotional week full of ups and downs and downs and downs. Lots of downs. That tummy bug we all had turned into a uti for my mom. One that has her hovering on the edge of here and heaven. For the last eleven days I have been sitting here watching her fade and wondering what we should be praying for. Alive, she’s here, I can see her and sit with her. But it’s not really her, it’s a frantic small person who screams until she’s hoarse and repeats a word or phrase over and over again until she falls asleep, exhausted from her confusion. She doesn’t eat, she barely drinks, this isn’t life. And then I head home at the end of the day, exhausted myself from doing nothing g myself. Nothing but watching and cajoling. Nothing but crying and praying. Praying for nothing, praying for something, praying for everything. Before bed I call and check on her. I go to sleep but not to rest. And then in the morning I return, hoping for a miracle, expecting none. But she is better every morning. Little steps. Tiny changes and I smile with relief. Short lived relief. Maybe she turned the corner, maybe this is good. But my hopes are dashed, the progress is so small. One step forward, two steps back. And this is my new world, praying for something, hoping for everything, expecting nothing.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
flu, you, who?
After all of us surviving a terrible stomach virus (two for some of us), I return again to write.
And I returned to a very confused Mother. Cantankerous is one of my favorite words and in this case it sums her up nicely. My Mother is a cranky two year old whose responses to everything are petulant and snappish. I try not to laugh when she announces that no one let her have breakfast and that should be illegal.. I smile instead as I pick the chunks of scrambled eggs off her shirt and wipe the oatmeal from her face. I tell her calmly that if she is in her wheelchair then, yes someone did get her out of bed today. I giggle inside my head when she informs the wonderful man from therapy that he reminds her of someone she hates. I remind myself to not get angry when she accuses me of hiding her things.
But I cry in the hallway after she tells me I am not Tia but am instead a member of the staff pretending to be me to get her to do what she doesn't want to do. If it is hard on me to deal with her, imagine the inside of her head. I have a feeling she's got a UTI again and it's playing footsie with her already fragile brain cells.
I have an older brother, we were raised in the same home but by what seemed like different parents. He is the golden child, he can do no wrong. Me.. I am the opposite and I'm okay with that. So when she gets so upset we can't calm her, I dial my brother for her and he tells her everything I've already said three times and slowly she calms down. And things are good again for a few minutes. It's hard to be my Mother's child. Harder now at fifty than it was when I was twenty. Harder yesterday then it was a month ago. It's difficult to separate old emotions from compassion and not react with pent up anger. Hard to give kindness where none was ever found. Hard to have a conversation that makes no sense and never will and hard to find the right thing to say to reassure and appease her troubled mind. Hard to find the answer to a conversation that goes like this:
Mom: I lost my shoes
Me: you're wearing them see ..taps on her shoes
Mom: they aren't mine you put them there
Me: they are your's, they have you special laces
Mom: fine! If that's what you want to think then you won't listen to me.
Me: <nothing to say to that>
Mom: no one gives me food
Me: it's lunchtime in five minutes, you must be hungry
Mom: I ate three cars
Me: I wonder what's for lunch
Mom: who are you?
Me: it's Tia Mom
Me: I'm your daughter
Mom: I have a daughter???
Yes Mom, you have a daughter.
And I returned to a very confused Mother. Cantankerous is one of my favorite words and in this case it sums her up nicely. My Mother is a cranky two year old whose responses to everything are petulant and snappish. I try not to laugh when she announces that no one let her have breakfast and that should be illegal.. I smile instead as I pick the chunks of scrambled eggs off her shirt and wipe the oatmeal from her face. I tell her calmly that if she is in her wheelchair then, yes someone did get her out of bed today. I giggle inside my head when she informs the wonderful man from therapy that he reminds her of someone she hates. I remind myself to not get angry when she accuses me of hiding her things.
But I cry in the hallway after she tells me I am not Tia but am instead a member of the staff pretending to be me to get her to do what she doesn't want to do. If it is hard on me to deal with her, imagine the inside of her head. I have a feeling she's got a UTI again and it's playing footsie with her already fragile brain cells.
I have an older brother, we were raised in the same home but by what seemed like different parents. He is the golden child, he can do no wrong. Me.. I am the opposite and I'm okay with that. So when she gets so upset we can't calm her, I dial my brother for her and he tells her everything I've already said three times and slowly she calms down. And things are good again for a few minutes. It's hard to be my Mother's child. Harder now at fifty than it was when I was twenty. Harder yesterday then it was a month ago. It's difficult to separate old emotions from compassion and not react with pent up anger. Hard to give kindness where none was ever found. Hard to have a conversation that makes no sense and never will and hard to find the right thing to say to reassure and appease her troubled mind. Hard to find the answer to a conversation that goes like this:
Mom: I lost my shoes
Me: you're wearing them see ..taps on her shoes
Mom: they aren't mine you put them there
Me: they are your's, they have you special laces
Mom: fine! If that's what you want to think then you won't listen to me.
Me: <nothing to say to that>
Mom: no one gives me food
Me: it's lunchtime in five minutes, you must be hungry
Mom: I ate three cars
Me: I wonder what's for lunch
Mom: who are you?
Me: it's Tia Mom
Me: I'm your daughter
Mom: I have a daughter???
Yes Mom, you have a daughter.
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