Thursday, July 31, 2014
Roofing day was interesting and a horror all wrapped up into one. Val was beside himself, mainly because while the roofers were making so much noise, the boy across the street decided to skateboard in front of the house. Of course the gates were opened, and naturally, Val got out, ran across the street, and ran around like a maniac. I tried grabbing his tail and one point and fell onto the grass. An easy fall, but still. The kid with the skateboard just shrugged his shoulders. If he ever gets out of his marijuana and liquor stupor, I wonder what he’ll decide to do with his life. I wonder if he’ll be able to do anything at all with that’s left of his brain. Wonder if he’ll ever get a job.
Mom worked for 75 years before dad made her quit. The first bombing at the WTC was the final straw. Dad said, no more. He panicked that day and tried to drive into NYC, but no one was going in or coming out easily. Mom wondered what she would do with her life if she couldn’t work. I know the feeling. I want to be as productive as possible to the end.
Between the time the roof was put up and now, I have been washing windows and windowsills, vacuuming, dusting, washing floors and furniture, trimming damaged plants and shrubs, and feeding them. Been exhausting, but I feel as though the house is as clean as it can be. Still, there is no perfection on earth. The roof “dust” keeps falling. And today, the new gutters were installed. Looks great. I even went over to the lighting store to choose news lights for the front entrance. I insisted on something NOT made in China, and was directed to the Hanover display, where I chose a lovely piece. Will take 6 weeks, but the wait is always worth it. Each piece is cast to order. You can choose from a variety of finishes and glass. I had originally set my sights on something larger and more expensive, but I thought better of it—mostly because I thought it would be too large for the site. I wound up saving more than $400.00! Great decision. And the one I chose is quite lovely. I wish mom could appreciate it.
On the way back from the lighting store, I began to cry. I prayed for kindness to run through my bones as I work with and clean mom. I prayed for patience. Then I realized that I have been mostly motivated by anger—anger at my mother no longer being my mother. This woman who cannot replace the cap on the toothpaste or even open a tube of toothpaste is not the woman who raised me. This woman who insists that her diapers are clean when they are soiled is definitely not my mother. This woman who cannot replace the toothbrush cover and who does not understand that the stick part of the toothbrush goes through the little hole on the cover is not the woman I knew and grew up with.
What is happening is that I have small glimpses of my mother—painful teasers—throughout the day, but then she is stolen anew from me. Stolen away—by a thief called Dementia. A hateful bastard of a disorder, who took away remembrances of all things bright and beautiful in my mother’s life. Mom is living in a void with a daughter who is in perpetual mourning for her, but who is lured back in tiny bits when slivers of mom’s memory arise like the Phoenix, only to confirm that the Phoenix is a myth. Dementia is as hateful a disorder as it is a heartbreaking one.
My mommy is gone. I am left with a shell of a woman who resembles my mother in small ways, but for whom real joy is gone and has been replaced with fear. Even stepping out into the garden grips her with horror—fear of falling, fear of being brought to someplace unknown, fear of being left there, anywhere, alone.
