Day: June 16, 2014

Rummaging!

Monday, June 16, 2014 

Had to face my reformatting job today. Twenty-five pages was the goal and I made it, but not before I got really tired from the heat. We put the A/C on. Mom would be perfectly happy without it, sitting there with her winter nightgown, down comforter, and fuzzy slippers.

 Took a break and had lunch with Barb. Nice to get out. Important, too. We even stopped for ice cream, one of Barb’s favorite desserts! A nice afternoon. 

Back home, mom was rattling things in her room. I have a table in there with three drawers. She was going through them and asking me to get rid of stuff. Twice I had to remind her that the table was mine. The things in the table were mine also. She unearthed a copper bracelet, some brass light switch plates, and some paint samples. Having nothing better to do, she decided to clean house! 

She’s calling me now to take her lunch plate. She won’t wait too long and will keep calling me until I get there. Hold on… 

OHMIGOODNESS! Mom had unearthed some light switch plates with matching screws. I kept them in the drawer in a baggie so I would not lose the screws. So she put her uneaten potato salad in the baggie and told me to throw it away. In her room, nothing is sacred!

A Day in the Sun

Sunday, June 15, 2014 

It’s 55 degrees and oh so delightful. I awoke this morning to find Valentino prone on his lovely Chippendale dog bed, aka, the couch. Took a photo and crept upstairs trying not to awaken him. Mom was asleep. Lucy and Rob were asleep. It was a wonderful morning. All is well with the world. We are together and the flowers are blooming—well, will eventually bloom. Everything is a little late this year because of the cool temps. I thank God for my blessings. I would have said “wealth,” but that’s debatable in the non-abstract sense. On Monday, I bring Greta Carbo (my Swedish car) in for some major work to the tune of $2500.00. Oh well, beats buying a new car, which I cannot do. And the hailstorm left me in need of a new roof and new gutters. The insurance company won’t cover the skylight, which must then be replaced, and I am sure they won’t cover the entire cost (minus the $500 deductible anyhow). But this, too, is a blessing. I only called the insurance company as a lark to see if there was any roof damage. Oh my! Back to the cup and pencil to raise some money. Fortunately, too, there is hope of a new job coming in this summer.

Speaking of which, I am still finishing that monster reformatting job. I have set a limit of 25 pages per day, but by the time I get in the middle of it, I can’t keep my eyes opened. I have been chalking it up to the high winds and allergies and the tedious read. During my work, mom will invariably call me and then not recall why she called. She’s lonely. I understand, but when I am interrupted mid-sentence, it’s hard for me to respond sweetly. I often wait until I have finished a section or a sentence and then see to her. She will look up confused and fumble mentally. Oh yeah, can you call my Johnny Boy. I never talk to him. Her Johnny Boy is her fallback. If all else fails, she knows where she is looking: to her Johnny Boy.

But then, when I wake up each morning, I give thanks for having had my dad as my dad—the good, the bad, and the ugly. He was a good man, and I miss him terribly. My sister-in-law once said that she was sorry my dad did not outlive my mother. Dad was more fun, always at the ready with a loaf of Italian bread and a laugh. Mom would have preferred being with her sisters than with her grandchildren—so far as we could tell. Her sisters were everything to her. I suppose growing up in a family of 10 (7 girls to 3 boys), the attachments were inevitable. Every weekend, they shopped together. I would love to tally the amount of money they must have spent over a lifetime! But then again, they bought bargains when they could. And buying bargains meant buying simply because they were bargains—whether you needed them or not.

But there is no more Cara Carsons or Minnie Kreps or David’s Chez Boutique (he apparently didn’t study French) or Mademoiselle. These were the prime stores in Bayonne and Jersey City way back when. Of course, we did most of our shopping in the city, aka, Manhattan. I miss it. Not the Manhattan of today, but the Manhattan of yesteryear. Most of the shops I loved are still there: Aquascutum, Berberry, Saks, Lord & Taylor, Bergdorff, and possibly even Worldly Things on Madison. But I practically lived at ??? and Paul ??? when I worked in New York. The former is gone and the latter is a mere shadow of its former self. L&T is not quite up to snuff anymore. Too big a mall image.

And here I am in PA, with mom and Rob and Lucy and Val, shopping online. Mom has no clue what a computer can do or does. Her stores are gone forever. So are her sisters, with the exception of Rose, whom she will probably never see again. I must show mom the flowers today. Must get her outside for a breath of fresh air now that the wind has died down a bit and the threat of rain is gone.

Mom’s cane thumps! She pokes her head into my office.
Hello! I’m going to the bathroom.
So what else is new!

This part of the morning/day is my least favorite. I don the surgical gloves, grab a wipe (and then two, or three, or four, or five) and get to work. Later I will put her in the shower. Mom is now brushing her teeth—a 5-minute process. She will end by brushing her lips, something I never observed her doing when she had all her faculties.

My mother pokes her head into my office.
Sandy, I’m going into the bed again? (The question is always there.)
Goodnight!

Mom is never quite sure anymore what she is supposed to do or where she is supposed to go. She asks where her room is, where the TV is and is always surprised to find it in her room each time. Oh there it is! Today for sure, I will coax her out onto the porch. She has forgotten that she sat out there last summer and admired the flowers. Perhaps she will admire them again this summer. Perhaps today.

Rob is in the kitchen at the laptop, trying to listen to something or other, but mom, who is doing word search puzzles, keeps interrupting. Where did Sandy go? Rob, can you find this word. Is it cold out? I keep telling him to take the laptop out onto the porch, but no. Men can be as difficult as aging mothers.

Later—

Well, we finally led mom out into the yard for a dose of sunshine. She was terrified at first. Strange to imagine that someone would not want to go outside. But she did enjoy the flowers and the view while she was out there. We raised the umbrella on the table. As she sat, I weeded. She was delighted that I finally put some socks on. I did this only to prevent my feet from getting dirty in the garden as I waded through plants.

I walked her nearly to the fence, but she resisted. Mom was upset about Valentino fleeing the yard. I tried to explain that there was a fence around the entire yard. It did not compute.

We had lunch later: I grilled organic hot dogs (a first in many, many years), homemade sauerkraut, homemade potato salad (thanks to Leora Lynn), and organic argula salad. Mom is out there now having ice cream. A nice day, peppered with Where’s Rob? Where’s the white dog? The white dog is always sleeping. Watch the black dog; he’s going to run away. Where’s Rob? I like it out here. Where’s the white dog? Is this Pennsylvania? And a resurrected oldie: How long have you lived here? She asked several times about the neighbors and said she speaks to the woman next door all the time. Of course, she doesn’t. The woman next door is rarely home. I maintain that it’s a safe house. No one is ever home. Occasionally, I see the husband—a very nice man—mowing the lawn. Although, I have seen a younger man riding his mower there, too. Lawn man? Friend? Relative? But mom swears she knows them and talks to them all the time. Actually, mom never spoke with neighbors. Not in NJ and certainly not here, but for my friends who come to visit.

All in all, a glorious day! Delicious picnic lunch! Lovely sky! Warm sun! The porch was perfect. I am grateful and happy. And it’s wonderful to have mom here. Mom, Rob, Lucia, Valentino, and Betty and Barb… All the people and creatures in the world who matter.

Image

 

Rainy Day

Wednesday, June 11, 2014 

Poured this morning. Glad I took the photo of the roses before the onslaught. Didn’t manage to get mom to stand in front of them yet. But they should perk up some when/if the sun comes out. 

Mom is in the kitchen now, beating the bejeezus out of the Cheerios. Sounds like construction work out there. I am in my office, eating my own breakfast, away from the hammering spoon, even thought I know mom would love to have company. I feel some guilt about this, but the noise is intolerable. Add to that her slurping. I know. I know. I should be more tolerant. But I remove myself from some forms of stress when I see no other recourse. 

I have already showered mom and dressed her. We are ready for our foray to the podiatrist. Am hoping to stop off at a garden center and persuade her to join me. Most of the time, she prefers to sit in the car. And today, because it’s so overcast, she might prefer not to venture out. Mom has become very skittish about going out altogether. We shall see what our venture will bring today. Last time, we stopped for pizza at Fiori’s. That was fun, but a bit too early. I think I need to make the appointments later in the day so we can enjoy a nice lunch out. Wind is picking up again. Looking gray out there. Not boding well. 

Rob just joined mom in the kitchen. It’s 0930, and mom who is usually up much later teases Rob when she can: Good afternoon, Rob. Vestiges of the old mom remain. Rob and mom spar for a bit. She enjoys it.