Angels Unaware

It’s a Sunday night and I’m in the bath. Her bathtub, in her room – in the house she lived in for only a year. Still, it has her essence – her clothes I can see in the closet, her bathrobe hanging from the hook by the tub, her shampoos and conditioner to turn frizzy hair straight. I use the last of the bottle of bubble bath – her favorite scents, vanilla and patchouli fill the room. I breathe in. I try to relax, I try to calm my troubled heart and head. After I get out of the bath I go in her closet and try to imagine her there, choosing her own clothes, her own shoes. I try to remember when she’d be in the bathroom with her coffee putting her makeup on and getting dressed, in the old house. When the doors were shut and she didn’t want anyone to interrupt her, much less help her.

Don’t think about the fact that she started to wear the same clothes day in and day out. That she stopped wearing pajamas. That she would put three or four shirts on one on top of the other. Don’t agonize over when you had to pack up some of her clothes and had to throw away so many of her pants and underwear due to stains. She was so proud. She would not want you to remember that. She would be mortified if she knew you had noticed. Don’t dwell on how you looked at the bras in the drawer and dismissed them. She wouldn’t wear them anyway. You considered the socks and decided against – just another slip and fall waiting to happen. Bare feet or shoes are best. She was never a fan of socks anyway.

I look at all the things in her bedroom and bathroom. These were her things. The stuff she picked out for her own and enjoyed. The ornamental birds, the tiny doll bench at the end of her bed, the yellow rose antiques she inherited from her mother. I can’t stand thinking that she will never see these things again. And if I took them to the place she’s at – I can’t call it her home – would she remember them? Would she look at them vaguely and say oh how nice! Or would she say oh! Yes, I remember this. I loved this.

When they call me through video conferencing, she is so happy to see me. But even so she can hardly figure out how to hold the phone so that I can see her face. A lot of times she puts her thumb over the picture, as if she is stroking it. As if she would stroke my hand if I were with her.

Because of COVID-19, I haven’t seen my mom in person in over two months. I haven’t held her hand or hugged her. She seems happy enough most of the time. A week or so ago she fell in her room and had to be sent out to the ER because she had split her lip and hit her head. I knew she would be terrified. The lovely ER nurse that answered the phone when I called told me “I know how hard this is for you. My story is different, but I have a story, too.” The ENT’s had made her aware that my mom has Alzheimer’s. I didn’t need to panic. She let me talk to my mom on the phone – twice. She got her a coke to drink when I told her it was her favorite thing. She thanked me for telling her. She kept my mom close to her and I am SO GRATEFUL. It seems so rare to come across such kindness, but I believe that one thing COVID-19 has done is to make us ALL more grateful to and for the nurses and doctors taking care of our loved ones. They may not have the same story, but they know your story is so personal and important to you. This nurse didn’t try to dismiss my feelings, she helped me process them. How many nurses do you know that have ever done that for you, in such a heartfelt, caring way? Her name was Gerri. I am exceedingly grateful that she was the one that was there, in that place, at that time.

Mom’s cut is healing, she no longer has a vivid red mark across her upper lip. She has a friend, John, that she was sitting with today and having a “wonderful time.” Those were her words. She could not tell me what she was actually doing, but the fact that she was enjoying herself was balm on my troubled soul. I miss her. They were having holiday cookies and just talking I was told by the Activities Director. The best caregiver I’ve known there, Seema, immediately took over taking care of my mom’s precious cat when I was no longer allowed in. I didn’t have to ask or worry about it. People step up, you know. People go above and beyond their call of duty. God has sent angels to watch over my mom while I can’t be there. Today was a dark day for me, for more reasons than my mom’s situation. But at my lowest point, when my heart was weeping, that call came through and I was able to see my mom’s smiling face. I can no longer tell her that I am upset, that I miss her, that I need her to comfort me. I don’t want to cause her anxiety so I don’t tell her about my colt that died, I don’t tell her that I often feel impotent as a parent. I don’t spill my rage and hurt onto her shoulders anymore. I don’t tell her that I never thought I’d have to raise my child alone, without her, and that it sucks.

Nobody listens like your mom listens. So I think I will tell her. I’ll go down past the pond and choose a paddock, choose a pony, and I’ll vent and weep and rage. And I’ll listen. I’ll listen to what she would have said, when she was able. I’ll feel her close by and I’ll be comforted by her touch that whispers like pony whiskers on my arm. And in the horse’s soft nicker and gentle nuzzle I’ll know who is listening.

I’m pretty sure she’ll be there.

 

I am the Storm

I’ve been crying for three days. Crying, ranting, raging – unable to handle one more thing. Losing it with Baby Girl, losing it in general. Tears come unbidden, at any random time. I curl up in my bed and let it go for a little while. I write bitter, venting words that I share with my husband and a few friends. I cry so hard I can’t breathe. I scream at the Devil and he laughs.

And then. There’s a little sliver of light. From nowhere it comes and I welcome it. I grab it with both hands and I hang on. It came while I slept. It came somehow, without me doing anything to ask for it. It came and I saw it.

Life right now is so uncertain, so unbearable and shitty. But bear it we must. There is no other choice. And I must be the one to be strong. For Baby Girl, for my Dad, for my Mom, for me. You’ve heard it before but I’m telling you right now that when the Devil told me I couldn’t withstand the storm I almost believed him. I wanted to shake my fist at him and rage “you Mother EFFER – give me back my mom! Give me back my life and my sanity and my confidence!” And then I realized. He’s not the one.

I have never in my life given up on anything. Not when things were as bad as I thought they could possibly get, not when I lost the first baby, not when I was told I would lose Baby Girl. I had FAITH I would get through it, I bore my parents’ pain, especially my Dad’s when he cried for Baby Girl. I told him it was going to be OK – instead of him telling me. I laid my head in his lap and I told him it was going to be OK. And it was. God saved Baby Girl – and he saved all of us, too.

And so when I feel like I am not the best mom in the world, when I am downright sure I am the worst – I tell myself God gave me this one for a reason. She was meant to be mine and as hard as it is someday that reason will be clear. Everyday I fight depression so hard it threatens to swallow me and Baby Girl up with it. I fight, I struggle and I lose a lot. Depression is no joke when you’re right in the middle of it. The meme’s and “words of wisdom” that implore you to “choose happiness” – that shit doesn’t fly when you have severe depression. If I was in any way capable,  I would certainly choose happiness. Wouldn’t we all?

I see happiness in that sliver of light. I can’t quite grasp it but I’m going to try. There will be more days when I can’t handle a single thing, when I yell at Baby Girl for no reason – there will be days when I am tested so hard I want to crumble. And maybe I will. For a little while.

But then, I’ll see that sliver of light – that hope and happiness and goodness – and I’ll stand up from my knees and I’ll say with strength from God “I AM THE STORM.” And the Devil better be listening cuz I’m only going to say it once. I’ll shake off his doubt and despair and I’ll cloak myself in faith. I’ll be strong again. I’ll be ME again.