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Minding
Our Elders: Caregivers Share Their Personal Stories
Prologue
A
small breeze sifts through the screen, then sneaks around
a cracked open window, carrying the rich scent of fall harvest
from fields surrounding Fargo. Dad's horn-rimmed glasses sit
on the tip of his nose, well below his foggy hazel eyes. There's
a sore forming on his parchment cheek, evidence of a long
ago summer spent digging fossils under searing prairie sun.
His square jaw nearly pokes through his skin, while his gray-brown
hair fuzzes up in tufts like a pile of down.
He
smiles that deep, crinkly smile of my childhood, and gestures
toward the books squeezed against his TV: law, debate, chemistry,
physiology, philosophy. Toward the degrees and awards crowding
the wall; many of them computer generated, made-by-loving-hands-at-home
evidence of his delusional accomplishments. Toward the briefcases
stuffed with letters written, forged and delivered by his
personal representative of suspended reality – me.
"Thank
you for helping an old man's fantasy," he says.
For
a moment, my dad of old emerges from the confused layers of
his damaged brain. He looks into my eyes and he understands.
A couple of bricks fall from my shoulders, lightening my load.
"I'm
glad I can help," I say next to his ear.
I
put his razor in the drawer and set up his CD player with
The Best of Benny Goodman. His lower plate glued, I check
for feedback on his hearing aid. The batteries are okay.
"You
look good today," I say. "See you tomorrow at lunch. Vaya
con Dios." I pick up my coat and ratty, rose-strewn duffle,
then blow him a kiss.
"Vaya
con Dios," he says. Go with God. A remnant of his once fluent
Spanish, now faded to a few lonely words that sweeten his
disjointed speech.
I
wind my way down the hall, through wheelchairs, med cart and
walkers, nestled in a cocoon of creamy papered walls touched
with teal and pink, oak furniture, nostalgic pictures and
lace. The aroma of coffee sails above the vinegary odor of
morning meds. A toaster pops in the kitchenette. Plates of
bacon and scrambled eggs, dishes of oatmeal, and multiple
side dishes of prunes are set on the tables in front of residents
no longer interested in food.
As
I walk toward my mother's room, I see faces that are as familiar
to me as my friends'.
"Hello,
Jesse! You look so pretty in your pink dress!" I say. Little
Jesse, whose age and weight approximate one another, looks
at me.
"Are
you going down yet?" she asks. Jesse's afraid of taking the
elevator alone.
"Not
this time," I tell her, "but you can go with me when I do.
"Hi,
Selma," I say. Selma, now in her seventies, has been a child
all her life. She holds out her arms when she sees me go by.
"I
need a huugg," she says.
"I
need one too, Selma." I hug her and move on.
"Hi,
Sarita," I say as I walk by the nurse who is coaxing Lloyd
to eat some tasty medicinal mush. Sarita's smile charms him
and he gums down the brown goo. "Is Alice still at breakfast?"
I ask, knowing my mother-in-law usually eats in the dining
room at this time.
"She
went down quite awhile ago," she says, wiping Lloyd's chin.
"Morning,
Sandy," I say as I walk by an aide hurrying toward a call
light. "I see Dad needs his shampoo. I'll bring it tomorrow."
"Well,
it's about time!" Sandy answers. "You never do a thing around
here." She laughs her hearty, healing laugh, and shakes her
head in mock disgust.
I
reach my mother's room at the end of the hall. She looks fragile
and small in her scaled-down recliner. Her silver hair still
holds a bit of its natural curl – the curl I didn't get. Her
burgundy embroidered sweatshirt with its little pink collar
blends with the pinks and blues of the room. She has a good
start on the crossword puzzle in The Forum.
"I
couldn't believe how clear Dad was this morning," I tell her.
"Underneath it all he really does know we're playing a game."
Her eyes fill.
"I
think he does," she says.
"I
brought a bunch of stuff today." I pull out a huge blue jar
of skin cream, a tube of toothpaste, and three clean glasses
– she likes glass, not plastic, so I take home her dirty ones
and bring her clean ones each day.
"Oh,
I brought some popcorn, in case that sounds good. They'll
pop it in the microwave whenever you want it.
"I'll
get you some hot coffee while I'm down getting your ice,"
I tell her as I unpack her cheese and crackers. After throwing
some clothes in the laundry, I cross the hall to the stairway
door, push the alarm release, open the door, do a quick bend
and swoop from the waist, slip under the protective strap
and go down to the first floor nutrition center.
Rushing
ice cubes clatter and crash from the machine into my plastic
container. I pop a tiny sliver into my mouth, cover the bowl,
take a cup from the rack and pour some coffee, then carry
it all to the dining room to see if Alice is ready to go back
to third floor.
Alice,
my mother-in-law, sits at her table, clear white hair sparkly
in a sea of dull grays and yellow-whites, her cornflower blue
sweater buttoned high around her chin, yellow terrycloth bib
rumpled in her lap. She's holding her spoon in mid-air, staring
straight ahead at yesterday. As I walk up beside her, she
startles, then laughs.
"You
caught me," I say. "I was trying to sneak up on you! Are you
done eating? Did you have enough?"
"Oh,
I don't know." she says.
"It
looks like you had a good breakfast," I say. "Why don't you
come up with me? Your church Messenger came and I put it in
your room. You'll want to look it over." Alice nods, and I
help her up. She looks around as I aim her toward the elevator,
then begins pushing her walker ahead.
"Hey!
Hey, Bluey! Take me up with you!"
I
glance down at my denim shirt and know that I am being summoned.
Victoria has been sitting guard by the lobby door, short,
straight gray hair and scowling face set above her favorite
red sweater. She's in her very personal spot with the side
table pulled up the exact number of inches. Now she's decided
it's time to go back to third floor and tell them what a horrible
job they are doing in this place.
"Sure,
Victoria, I'll take you up," I say. After putting the ice
and coffee in a corner of the elevator, I unlock the brakes
on Victoria's wheelchair and push her in. "Watch out for my
feet!" she screams. "That big oaf, don't let him near me!
Hey! Don't let him on!" She flails her arms indicating Frank
with his cart and oxygen tank. "Don't touch my feet! My feet!
Take me up and put me by the drinking fountain!"
I
settle Victoria in the elevator and help Alice scoot herself
on, placing her as far from Victoria as possible, just in
case the queen starts swinging. Frank wisely decides to wait
for the next round.
"Victoria,
where are Sissy's pennies?" I ask. She looks at the doll in
her lap and probes the little pockets of the checkered apron.
"Somebody
stole ‘em!" she growls. "I'm gonna sue!"
"Oh,
I'll bet the pennies just fell out," I say.
"No,
they didn't!"
"Here.
I've got some pennies." I take two pennies out of my jeans
pocket and slip one in each of Sissy's pockets. Victoria grabs
my head and kisses me. I kiss her back. The elevator stops.
"We're
here, Alice. Do you want your chair by the elevator or do
you want to go down to your room?"
"About
half way, I think," Alice says. I try to read her and decide
that maybe her room would be best since she has some mail
she can look at.
"Let's
go down to your room," I say. "You get started and I'll catch
up after I get Victoria off."
"Put
me by the water fountain! No! Move me over more. A little
farther! There, that's better." I leave Victoria in her spot,
the exact distance from the water fountain she requires.
I
retrieve the ice and coffee and catch up with Alice, who is
standing in the middle of the hall gazing. "They stretch the
hall longer every day, don't they?" I say. She laughs and
starts walking once more. We inch our way down the hall until
we get to her room. The last one on the left. Across the hall
from Mom. Down the hall from Dad.
"Here,
I'll turn on your light so you can read a bit," I say. I arrange
her night stand, water her mum and coax her to sit down and
rest her legs. She thinks awhile and finally sits. She smiles
and looks toward her newsletter.
"Bye,"
I say. "I'll be here for lunch tomorrow. You've got chapel
this afternoon. Someone will remind you." I wave, then pick
up the ice and coffee. Across the hall at Mom's, I leave the
coffee on her table, deposit the ice in her cooler, and pick
up my jacket and tote.
"See
you tomorrow," I say.
"What's
a three letter word that means "way cool"? she asks.
"Huh?"
I say. "I'll call you if I think of it. You call me if you
decide to cheat or figure it out. See you at noon tomorrow."
Once
more I move toward the stairs. I push the alarm release and
try the knob. The alarm shrieks. My face burns as I punch
in the code. Scrambled. In answer to the flashing lights and
air-raid squall, three pair of feet thunder toward me. I punch
the star button and re-enter the code. Silence.
"Soorrry,"
I call. I open the door, bend and swoop my way under the strap
and down the steps, dodge residents as I make my way through
the hall, and out the door. The sun is still high enough to
share some warmth, and I let my jacket fly. Tomorrow, I'll
visit at noon.
***
"Am
I doing this right?" Steve asks when I talk with him about
how caring for his mother is affecting his life.
"I
do it because it's the right thing to do," Ann says when she
tells me her story. "He simply can't deal with it," Susan
says of her brother.
"I
had to think who needs help the worst? – my parents or my
kids," Julie says.
Baby
boomers have questions. They want to talk. They want to talk
about how to do this life. One in four of us is taking some
responsibility for the care of the older generation, and that
number is growing as better medical care helps people live
longer, often in poor mental or physical health. Unlike past
generations, many boomers had their children at a later age,
more women have outside jobs, families are separated by physical
distance and multiple marriages. So sometimes we get frustrated.
Or sad. Or just plain tired. Often we simply need an empathetic
ear.
Minding
Our Elders is our way of lending an ear to one another. It's
been percolating for all the years that I've been caring for
our family's older generation. During ten of those years I
spread my time between my family members still in their own
homes and those in Rosewood. I became well acquainted with
firefighters, the emergency room, monitoring devices, home
health services and clinic staff members. Evenings, I'd live
in fear of the ring of the phone. The fear that the call was
another emergency. It often was.
Then
my mother, the last elderly member of my family at home, went
into Rosewood. My time spent at Rosewood on Broadway was substantial
enough that most of the residents and an occasional staff
member thought I worked there. To find a bra that needed mending,
half a hearing aid, or an upper dental plate with a chipped
tooth in my pocket was simply normal. My daily tote to the
home would include soda, wine, cheese, candy, magazines, mail,
computer-generated awards and degrees, favorite toiletries.
As
I've traveled this road, I've met other boomers doing the
same. We've visited on the snail-paced elevator at the nursing
home. We've shared our stories while ducking the wind by the
vestibule door. We've cried leaning against our cars in the
parking lot. When we greet each other in the grocery store,
we say, "How's it going?" We all know what it is. We've been
torn between love and exhaustion, dedication and guilt. Most
of all, we've wanted to do the right thing.
Listening
to my friends' stories helped pump me up. I'm told my stories
help them as well. So we're offering our naked, sometimes
painful, stories to you, with the hope that you, too, may
benefit. A few people have requested that I drape their stories
in a towel of anonymity, and I've complied by changing some
names and identifying characteristics. We think you'll understand.
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