All through the fall, my son poured time and effort into learning a piano piece for his winter recital. He was ready to share his music, but a schedule conflict meant he couldn’t perform. He’d worked so hard on his piece, it was a shame he wouldn’t be able to share it.
“I bet you could play at Grammy’s place if you wanted to perform with an audience,” I suggested.
To my surprise, he was willing to try it. It took a couple of months to facilitate making it happen – volunteer paperwork, CORI forms, scheduling, etc. – but then he was added to the entertainment roster to play on the memory care floor for about a half an hour every-other-Sunday.
As I’ve shared before, my mom, who has Alzheimer’s, has lived on the memory unit of her care home since she started needing 24/7 care seven years ago. Our/her trajectory appears to be an anomaly. She has incredible staying power and a bright spirit that’s impossible to extinguish. But this journey can be emotionally exhausting at times. It can be a struggle to connect with her in any sort of meaningful way. We have lost the back and forth quality of a traditional relationship where each person contributes a part of themselves. Though the metaphysical cords that connect my mom’s heart with mine will never break, as the years with Alzheimer’s have gone by the way we engage with each other on this Earth has an increasingly gossamer-like quality – wispy, ethereal, and easily split and broken.
I often think there’s nothing new to be seen or done with my mom. We’re just here, in a moment, one part biding our time, one part just surviving, and one part seeking the sweet in everything that we still have because we still have something (and what else can we do?). I keep showing up because I promised her I would and she deserves all the love I can give her – plus you never know when the last time will be. Surely when she passes away it will still feel like the time I devoted to her wasn’t enough and I’ll want to go back and be part of every minute I missed. Even knowing that day will come I still cycle through the full spectrum of feelings – many negative – about our situation. Visiting her can be very lonely, that’s just all there is to it.
With that as context, my son and I arrived one Sunday morning in March for his piano performance. He was still wiping the sleep out of his eyes and I was nervous because I am a people-pleaser and I was hoping this wasn’t a bad idea. I know it’s hard to visit my mom and the memory care floor in particular. I know there are unfamiliar – and sometimes unpleasant – smells and that there are people who do and say unexpected things or make strange sounds. There are lots of wheelchairs and walkers and hoyer lifts. I also know that this is not the Grammy who baked cookies with him and watched him play soccer and read bedtime stories to him about a tickle monster and then tickled and tickled him until he couldn’t breathe. I had decided a long time ago not to force my kids to visit their Grammy. They were really happy to be with her in the earlier days of Alzheimer’s and then they weren’t anymore and I understand that. It’s not easy for me, either.



The staff had gathered a small group of residents around the piano with my mom’s wheelchair right next to it. We said hello to Grammy, who was awake to my surprise and happiness, and then stood there awkwardly trying to gauge what to do next. After a couple minutes my son sat down at the piano, I muted the TV, and told him to go ahead. He dove in with the first piece that came to mind from memory – Let It Snow. The staff who were passing by in the hallway and I looked at each other in silent agreement, “Please no more snow.” But the residents? They loved it! Most don’t leave the floor and are not oriented to day or time so, for them, Let It Snow is simply an upbeat song that triggers fond memories buried deep in the mind. No winter fatigue for them. They clapped. They sang. They shimmied in their chairs. They smiled.
He played a few more pieces – from Viva La Vida by Coldplay to Axel F from Beverly Hills Cop. And then he froze. He turned to me and whispered, “I can’t remember how this one I’ve been working on most recently starts.”
“Just start where you can remember, even right in the middle, like when you practice at home. They just like to hear the music. “
And so he started where he could remember. And they were thrilled.
“Wonderful!” “Bravo!” they exclaimed.

My mom? She tapped her toes and her leg up and down to the beat. She raised her hands in the air like a teen at a rock concert. She smiled. She was alert and engaged. She tried to sing or talk. My son’s music manifested a clear response in her. It felt like we three were directly connected, almost in conversation, in a way I hadn’t experienced with my mom in a really long time. I know she has always loved music, but this was a completely unexpected, direct relational back and forth with her. And she was so happy.
As for my son, he discovered that he really likes playing for his Grammy and her neighbors. He goes on a weekly basis now. They are thrilled all over again every single time he comes. Let It Snow begins the recital every week, even in the middle of August. And next week, we will do it all over again in exactly the same way and the reception will be just as warm, engaged, and happy.
And me? Being with my mom as we walk this journey remains the most beautiful, burdensome blessing. I am so grateful for having a chance to discover a new way to connect with her and to feel joy together that I hadn’t yet experienced. Not only did this moment touch me deeply in my soul and fill me with emotions that are difficult to put into words, but the whole recital was an awesome example of people showing up for each other as their best selves – open and joyful, without judgment, making and enjoying music together to the best of their abilities. Every single person in that room contributes to joy and meaningful – even if momentary – connection. This recital time has presented a newness to how I engage with and relate to my mom, a balm for my caregiver fatigue and loneliness, and the kindling of a small, hopeful flame in my heart that has fused part of the fraying threads to my mom back together.

