Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Memory Loss Milestones



 

Having a mom with dementia has been a journey of slow grief, but also with pockets of unexpected richness and joy.  There are landmarks, like when she stopped driving, stopped cooking, and a sad one – stopped reading.  The dementia milestone I’ve long feared is the day when my mom wouldn’t recognize me anymore.  Thinking about that probability has always brought tears and a panicky feeling in my chest.  What will I do when my mom doesn’t know me anymore?

 

I’ve experienced a version of this event before.  My paternal grandmother had Alzheimer’s.  I remember my mom making photo flashcards for Grandma Elaine and laminating them with the person’s name below each photo.  The idea was that any visitor or caregiver at the nursing home could either quiz her or just spark up conversation about loved ones.  Understandably, she didn’t like to be quizzed on people or events, so the cards became just friendly faces near her bedside.  When she didn’t know me anymore, Grandma Elaine called me “that doll”.  I accepted the new nickname as a term of endearment and didn’t push her to remember that I was related.  One time, my dad also visited while I was at Grandma’s nursing home.  He stood in the doorway and said hello.  In an exaggerated whisper, Grandma Elaine said with suspicion in her voice, “That man comes around here an awful lot!”  My dad and I laughed.  I said, “Well, I think it’s because he’s your son!  You gave birth to him!”  She broke into giggles, “Oh!  Okay!”

 

This past weekend, for Memorial Day, my husband, kids, and I drove five hours to my parents’ cabin on the beach.  We had a great time with extended family.  My mom needed a reminder of my son’s name, but otherwise seemed pretty clear-minded.  The tide was way out, so I dragged some chairs and beach toys down the hill so my mom and I could sit while the kids played in the sand.  My sons and husband explored the rocks, finding little live crabs to hold and show us.  I brought my book, thinking I would read for a while.  I started to read quietly on my own, then thought of what a voracious reader my mom used to be.  Sometimes, she would read a book in one day.  Dementia has made reading difficult and it’s been a long time since she’s successfully enjoyed a book.  So, I decided to be her audio book.  I told her it was an author’s story of making bread and how God taught her things in the process. Then I read the pages out loud so she could join in.  It was a really sweet moment, being outside, watching the waves, having the kids shriek with crabs tickling their little hands, and enjoying a book with my mom.  She commented on parts that connected with her experience, like growing up Catholic and the process of receiving Eucharist.  We usually don’t know what to talk about because she remembers so little of her present life.

 

I always thought the moment of my mom not knowing me would be this solid turning point.  Like, she’d have no idea who I was and it would be very traumatizing.  That’s not what happened.  We were reading on the beach and she pointed to my two year old daughter, out in front of us, squatting on the tide flats, collecting creatures in a bucket. 

 

“Who does she belong to?,” my mom asked, “Who’s raising that little girl?”

 

“I am,” I said, “That’s my daughter.”

 

My mom smiled at me and said, “Well, that’s nice.  You must be doing a good job.”

 

“Well, I grew up with a good mother, so that helps,” I said.

 

“Oh?  You did?  That’s good.  That little girl says such clever things.  My kids never said all those clever things.”

I laughed and gently smacked her arm, “Hey!  I’m one of your kids!”

 

She laughed too, “Oh!  Well, I certainly don’t remember it being as clever as what she says!”

 

We continued having a nice time on the beach.  Later, my mom knew me as her daughter and recalled some stories.  It wasn’t a sharp turning point.  It was a moment, and the moment was lighthearted, not a stab of grief.  I wasn’t expecting it to be gentle like that.

 

I recognize that there’s more to come; probably harder transitions, including stopping knowing me altogether and other events that may be much, much more challenging.  I don’t want to pre-grieve anymore though.  I was wrong about how this one turned out, and I feel like I wasted grief in imagining the event well before it occurred.  My mom is not the same, but she is with me.  I’ll keep praying for God’s help and healing, I’ll keep reaching out for relationship with my parents, I’ll keep trying to adjust and receive her as she is now.  Whether she knows me or not, I plan to come around an awful lot.

 

 

photo credit

Thursday, March 7, 2024

I've Missed You

 



I had a dream the other night

We were sitting in a car and you were in the driver’s seat

You buckled up and started to drive

It was strange because I can’t remember the last time you drove

It’s been many years

Then I realized you were back

The real you, my Mom

The haze of dementia was mercifully lifted for the span of a dream

You laughed and joked with me.

 

“I’ve really missed you,” I said,

“You’ve been gone a long time.”

 

The dream was so palpable that it stayed with me through the waking day

I replayed it in my mind to feel close to you again.

 

I wish I could find where you are

And make you feel safe and loved again

I wish I could dig deep into your consciousness to a place

Where you could absorb my words

I’d tell you that my care for you is modeled

After a lifetime of watching you selflessly care for others

I’d tell you that Dad is daily laying down his life for you

The things that anger you are actually the ways he’s being loving to you in this season

I want you to remember God’s nearness

That not one day He allows is wasted

Not one.

 

The beauty of that dream is that I will be with the real you again someday

Just perhaps not on earth

I believe I’ll see you in heaven, restored, renewed

Not only free of dementia, but sin, sadness, and pain

I’ll see you, recognize your joy, and run to you

And I’ll tell you,

“I’ve really missed you.”

 

 

photo credit

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

There Is Beauty in Every Season

 
      

My life is an instant,

a fleeting hour.

My life is a moment,

which swiftly escapes me.

O my God, you know that

on earth I have only today

to love you.

 

-Saint Therese of Lisieux

 


 

Part One

About eleven years ago, I was training teachers in rural Uganda.  I was single, in my 30’s, and I loved the work, but my heart also yearned to have my own family.  One night, I looked up at the stars (which are especially breathtaking in a place with no electricity), and voiced that longing: “God, I just want to be a wife and a mother someplace quiet and beautiful.”

 

And, it happened.  There are obviously a lot more details to the story, but here I am.  I’m a wife and a mother someplace quiet and beautiful.  What I didn’t expect was how difficult it was going to be.  Being a mother is the hardest thing I’ve ever done.  On a regular basis, I struggle to get up in the morning because I’m not sure I have what it takes to give my kids what they need for another full day. 

 

“It goes so fast.  Cherish every moment.  They’ll be gone before you know it.”

 

I hear that at least once a week.  I’m one hundred percent sure it’s true and the person telling me knows what they’re talking about.  I’m also one hundred percent sure they’ve forgotten how challenging this season can be. 

 

Since I hear that phrase so often, I’ve been trying to come to peace with it.  There’s got to be a way to absorb the heart behind the message and ditch the rest.  What I’ve settled on is this: 

 

There is beauty in every season. 

 

I’ve heard it called a glimmer; something that sparks joy.  I’ve heard it called being present, or noting gratitude.  For me, it’s the daily acknowledgement that every season has things that are special and things that are tough.  Sometimes, any given situation could hold both the good and the hard.  It looks like changing my daughter’s diaper, making eye contact, and repeating a silly rhyme that involves motions to do with her.  So, on the one hand, there’s a poopy diaper.  But on the other hand, there’s a beautiful daily connection point that will not always be there.  It looks like taking pictures of my kids playing in a box and posting it on Facebook.  It looks like holding my almost-too-big son on my lap at church, memorizing the lines of his profile, taking in his smell. 

 

Little by little, moment by moment, paying attention to the bits of beauty that are unique to this specific time of life is saving me.  It’s allowing me to access joy.  I’m savoring this time not because someone in the grocery store made me feel guilty for wishing I could have a break from my kids, but because the beauty has always been here.  I’m just choosing to be a part of it more fully.

 

 

Part Two

As I have struggled to find my footing in motherhood, I have been slowly losing my own mother to dementia.  Over the years, she has lost much of her independence and even her personality is different in many ways.  I’ve had good support in processing the grief that comes with adapting to these changes.    When I visit, I try to help my dad with caregiving.  There are some uncomfortable tasks that I’m not used to, but I’m growing in helping with new things.  And guess what?

 

There is beauty in every season.

 

Even in this.  Life doesn’t have to be sweet or easy to be beautiful.  One time I was helping with a particularly challenging clean-up job after my parents had a rough night.  I had a realization that it wasn’t bothering me.  It was as if God was with me, giving me some supernatural peace and ease to do what needed to be done.  When I help my mom, I feel the same way.  I grieve that she can’t do things for herself, but I also feel closer to her through the intimacy of things like washing and brushing her hair like she used to do for me.  I believe God has a purpose for each day of her life, whether or not I understand what that is through the lens of dementia.  Even if she’s not the same, we still have laughs, we still have beauty.

 

Part Three

Ecclesiastes 3:11 says, “He has made everything beautiful in its time.”

 

It goes on, “He has also set eternity in the human heart…”

 

While I’m learning to see the beauty in each breath of time I’m allowed here on earth, there’s so much more.  My heart holds the expectation of eternity.  God somehow put eternity into my heart.  Maybe that’s why I crave the roses amongst the thorns of life.  How beautiful must heaven be?  How beautiful must my Savior be?  How good, and how kind? 

 

I can read a book under a big blanket, all cozy with my kids, and savor this time that I have with little ones.  What is the eternity part of that moment though?  I’m wondering even as I type this.  When my mom and I are chatting on a walk, and I hear a much-repeated anecdote but focus on the love behind it rather than getting annoyed, what is heaven’s perspective then? 

 

I find peace in knowing that God is the author of all life and He has it all in His capable hands.  In the beauty of each season, I also acknowledge that this life here is not all there is.  There is eternal life ahead with God, for all who trust Him - with beauty far beyond what I’ve seen so far, but exactly what my heart has been looking for.