Day: November 12, 2015

No Information Works!

November 12, 2015 

Every day, we go through the litany of questions. The same ones over and over and over again. Mom will often ask where I work, if I have to work, when I have to go to work, whether Rob works, where he works, and on and on and on. So I have decided that little information will work as well as complete information.

Sandy, where do you work?

I work over there, mom.

Oh, that’s good.

When do you have to go in?

Later, mom.

Oh, good. Be careful. 

Mom wouldn’t remember what I told her no matter how often I told her. But I have found that any answer suffices. Specifics are no longer necessary. So “over there,” “here,” “later,” “today,” or “tomorrow” are as good as any answer. I think all mom wants are answers, tangential or otherwise, which suffice as an interaction or an acknowledgement.

Mom never listened for answers even when she was relatively cognitively intact. When I was in high school, I recall a woman asking why my mother asks questions yet never waits for the answer; she would instead ask yet another question. This woman’s observation served as a revelation for me. I had been so used to my mother’s ways. For the first time, I realized my mother never discussed anything with anyone. Asking questions was her way of participating in a conversation that would never become a discussion. She worked with a set of questions then that serve her even now. I later determined that she has been nearly deaf since childhood. Listening was too much of an effort then. Today, she doesn’t even bother, being locked in her own ever-shrinking world.

Where does your brother work, Rob?

No, he’s retired.

He’s a leader, isn’t he?

No, he’s 78 years…

How old are you, Rob?

I am…

Do you have the TV on, Rob?

So since mom cannot remember anything I say, I say less, but I do answer. To do otherwise would be cruel. I acknowledge her question, her presence by my words, any words. The answer never mattered anyhow. And it matters far less now.