I
made one of my two weekly calls to my folks today and realized,
belatedly, that my last meaningful, even understandable conversation
with my mother was sometime in the past.
Truth
be told, it probably was a couple years ago.
My
folks are in Assisted Living in Spokane, Washington. Mom has
Alzheimer's disease, a form that has rapidly deteriorated her ability
to reason, understand or even speak without referring to every noun
as "that place" or "that thing."
Half
the time, she has to think hard to remember who I am, her only son.
The other half of the time, she thinks I am her grandson, or her
brother, John.
She
has forgotten how to use the phone, and as her vocabulary has
evaporated along with her ability to think, the conversations have
disappeared.
Two
years ago, Mom could talk your ear off. If I called home, I knew I
needed to have emptied the bladder beforehand, because 45 minutes was
a short conversation.
She
was articulate, interested, sharp. This is the woman who got me
through math in high school, for crying out loud.
Now,
she doesn't know the difference between $100 bills and a quarter, she
has forgotten how to use a washer, or the TV remote; she gets lost in the hallways of their facility,
and floods their unit regularly when she tries to wash clothes in the
sink . . . and leaves the water running.
All
that is left for her are emotions, and a resolute stubbornness. That
stubbornness got her through a childhood that saw her going to work
at 15 to help support a Montana preacher's family of 14. . . and
raise her own family during times of hardship and too little joy.
And
now with Mom 85, my 62-year-old developmentally disabled big sister -- who has the
mental faculties of a 4-5 year old and lives in a group home -- has
more on the ball.
I
hate Alzheimer's. It has robbed me of my mother, while leaving behind
a poor, fading reflection of her.
In
all the ways that matter, my mother -- the vibrant, optimistic,
natively intelligent person she was -- has not-so-gradually passed
away. All that is left in a breathing, emaciated shell of a confused
woman, a shadow, a wraith that bears her name.
All
that is left is to love her, on an increasingly primal level. Even
her ability to return love is fading, as her world continues to
implode, retreating back to . . . what? A psychic womb? A spiritual
ovum?
Where
has she gone? How do I find her?
No
answers. Just faith that what is Katherine Powell Mims is being
safeguarded in the arms of the Eternal, to live again.
This is a beautifully written piece, Bob. Peder's mother passed away this morning, so mothers are very much in my mind today.
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