It’s been a (very, very, very) long time since I’ve sat down to write.
I used to take the wee hours of the morning for my writing time, rising before anyone else in the house was awake to get my thoughts down. Revisions can happen later, but inspiration and the time to get it down only seems to happen for me before the day takes off on it’s own. Now that I recognize how important defragging the ole motherboard (aka the brain) is, I prioritize sleep. And there is only so much time in a day. Plus maybe I have been having trouble making myself sit down to write alongside a dose of writer’s block and a springling of hopelessness for the world. Deep sigh.
BUT, I’ve updated the site’s Dementia and Caregiving Resources so I wanted to say check those out.
And, while I’m here, and because it’s Mother’s Day (in the U.S. anyway) and because I think about Alzheimer’s all the time when it comes to my mom, I’ll reflect a little on the love and loss that this day embodies for me (and, I presume, many of us in one way or another with mom’s gone too soon, mom’s lost to dementia, mom’s that were never the mom you hoped for…it’s complicated).

My mom was one of the greats. I am so lucky for that, surely even more than I realize. I continue to unearth the treasures of my past that she saved on my behalf. She was family first 100% and she showed up and cheered for her people reliably, consistently, always.
And also, it wasn’t perfect. She got on my nerves something fierce sometimes. We did not operate the same way – at all. There is no to do list that stands a chance against me. My mom would begrudgingly make a list and then lose it somewhere between home and the grocery store.
I think about all the ways I could have done better by her. I’d start by wiping the scowl off my face in her college graduation photos. I was in 11th grade and I couldn’t understand – not even close – what it took to finish college on the cusp of 50 with 3 kids and a household to run. I also think of her every time I unload the dishwasher. I wish I could tell her I am sorry for all the times I took a clean bowl out of the dishwasher and left the rest, as though I didn’t know who that chore would fall to. I could have done better. And also I was a kid and I own my selfishness and recognize that one of the blessings of a mom like mine is that she loved me even when I was at my worst. What I lost is the opportunity to tell her, “I got mine, mom. Ha ha! Karma is a bitch.” And then she’d smile and we’d laugh. Clearly from the birthday card pictured she only dwelled on the best in me – and we did have part of my adult life to enjoy each other’s company and make up for my teenage transgressions. We traveled around Europe together for two weeks when I was in my mid-20s and she told me she had to pinch herself that I wanted to spend so much time with “your dear old mom.” It was a gift, in both senses of the word. Sometimes I let myself dawdle at the precipice of imaginings about what the last 14 years could have been like for me and my kids, but that generally leads to a vice tightening sensation around my heart and lungs so I tamp it down. When did that kind of thinking ever lead anywhere good?
Oh, my mom is still here. But she’s so far gone. She deserves better than the indignities Alzheimer’s has thrown at her, slowly robbing her of her memories and her agency and everything that made her her.
I’ll be precise. Not exactly everything. She does still smile and sometimes she laughs, too. She still taps her toes to music and raises her arms in the air as though she is conducting an orchestra. She is still loving and wants to be loved. Those things are all authentically her. In fact, perhaps the most remarkable thing about my mom is that her Alzheimer’s journey has been the epitome of grace. Somehow, despite having aphasia and being on the severe side of the cognitive impairment scale when we moved her into memory care, she has managed to create connection and to build relationships. The caregivers and nurses at her facility truly love her. It’s remarkable that she has been able to affect people in this way, to somehow remain her outgoing, loving self and make a bond with others, despite everything.

And by everything, wew, let me tell you, it’s a lot. My mom is dying a slow death by a thousand cuts and indignities. As am I, emotionally. She’d be so pissed if she was of sound mind and she walked in to see herself now. I know this and there’s nothing I can do about it. I just keep showing up and showing her love no matter what, like she always did for me. I hold her hand, I clip her nails, I feed her pudding and chocolate chip cookies. And there’s real and unexpected joy in these little moments, seeing her take pleasure in those things (specifically the pudding and cookies). It’s very clear that she enjoys these treats – her eyes soften and glimmer, she chews with her mouth closed, slowly, savoring the moment. She is happy and able to experience joy. I try to find peace in this reality.
I have grieved aspects of my mom in multitude different ways over the last 14 years since concerns about her memory were first raised. It’s astonishing that you can grieve and plateau and then something new happens and you grieve again, but differently. And yet this grief has no closure. I’ve been told that there is more grief to come when she actually departs from this world. It’s a pretty stunning thing to grieve someone for 14 years and not even have started yet. Sure, I’ve adapted over time to wherever she is in each stage of this disease. I’ve learned to make conversation with myself and nod and smile to her nonsensical words since she has been nonverbal for so long. I try not to notice the crumbs scattered all over her shirt and lap, or that she’s not wearing her own clothes the majority of the time. Sometimes my inner narrator gets angry, as though her tenacious hold on life is some sort of punishment of me. But I know rationally that she would never want this for herself, let alone for me. Her body and a version of her spirit just keep going for some mysterious reason, and I keep trying to find new ways to sustain my reserves, to adapt, to love her, to live in the moment, to focus on the simple things, and to keep going, too. Just like my mom taught me, and teaches me still.

Beautifully written, Meg. ❤️ I’ve got to get the Kleenex.
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