Sunday, December 10, 2017
Goodbye, Ilse.
It's Advent. I sat zazen at home early yesterday morning, but I haven't been to the zendo in a month, ever since the night I showed up at Seido's door the night of the crash. The night of my dad's admission to the hospital.
Mom had sent me on a number of ridiculous errands, which I usually refuse to do, but she was upset, so I was trying to pacify her.Turning left onto the main road home, a car ran the red and totaled the Saab.
Let me tell you. Saabs are good cars. The world is poorer for their absence. Jay, retrieving my things from poor crumpled Ilse (my Saab) a day later told me that if you looked only at the interior of the car, you would never have guessed a crash had happened.
On the side of the road, standing resolutely under a streetlight, hands in her pockets, was my old friend Sandy. Who had witnessed the crash. She was standing there with another woman.
I had been listening to Nightvale when I got hit, and it hadn't turned off, so Cecil was going on about Beautiful Carlos. I hit pause with my shaking fingers. My violin was in the front seat, together with a bottle of elderberry juice and some pre-bottled margaritas, for later, unbroken On the shoulder of the road, I opened my violin case. Dear reader...it was not only undamaged, but in-tune.
I heard Sandy's friend say "What is she doing?" and Sandy, whom I haven't seen in 35 years says, without skipping a beat, "Haley plays the violin--her grandfather made that one."
"Are you ok?" She asks.
"I think so." I say, "but I've got a lot of adrenaline going."
"So weird," she says. "I was just thinking about you this morning."
I, actually had thought of her that morning as well.
Let me give you some background. Sandy is the only person I ever got into trouble with in my youth. She's two years older than me, and when I was fourteen, I spent the night at her house and we got drunk on peppermint schnapps and broke into the house of a cute boy who went to our church. We were caught by his parents, who yelled at us, but never told anyone. That's how things were. Today, we'd both be in Juvie or institutionalized. Or, more likely, shot.
"I was thinking about you, too." I said. "Remember when we got drunk on peppermint schnapps and broke into Wayne's house?"
Her face closed. "I don't recall that at all. You're thinking of someone else."
"Well, " I said lamely. "Good to see you!"
I kept trying to call Jay, but kept getting voicemail.
The cop took her statement, didn't give me a ticket. Ticketed the other driver. He offered me a ride. I told him my address.
"I'm sorry, ma'am, but that's not in city limits. Do you know anyone closer?"
Seido and the zendo were close. I had him drop me off there.
The porch light was off. I banged on the door until he answered.
"Haley?" He seemed confused. I explained about the crash. I had to explain several times.
"Can I have a ride?" '
"No--I'm too sleepy." He said. "I just took a melatonin.
Whatever. What an old lady. No wonder his wife left him. Thinking back, he probably had something stronger on board and didn't want to fess up. I Ubered home. Seido was mystified by this. "You mean, you just press on your screen and a car shows up?"
"Yes. They're here. I have to go."
The Uber driver, Mohammed, tried to hold forth on the difference between men and women, on the ride home. He expressed dismay over the gravel roads.
"Crockett county has gravel roads," I told him, shortly. "Let's just listen to the radio, shall we?"
The house was dark and Jay was snoring when I got home.
Sometimes even short trips take you to very unexpected destinations.
And that's my half-hour
Saturday, November 11, 2017
Dad's back in the hospital again. Fredericka, his nurse, called me at work. "I think Mark has aspirated his oatmeal."
Fredericka is my age. She's from up North--around Macon. She looks like a gypsy. She has dark hair and big eyes. She used to be over 400 pounds, but had a gastric bypass, and now is about 180. She used to work in the clinic,but started taking care of my dad in January. She's not perfect. She lost her job over some petty bit of dishonesty, but she loves my dad. As all women love my dad. She's the only one of the nurses seeing to him 24/7 who will face down my mom.
, e
He's failed numerous swallow studies, but has repeatedly refused a feeding tube. There has been a lot of drama around food. He desperately needs calories, but my mom feels that feeding him is too intimate and something she should do, but she doesn't. She's like an anorexic by proxy. Endless ritual accompanies the preparation of food, and meals take hours and are hours late. Battling about it, as I have done, gets him so upset he can't eat at all. So he has slowly starved.
The question is--is that what he's intending to do? He's smart. Surely he knows he's killing himself.
Now he's decided he wants a feeding tube. But he's too debilitated to survive the surgery to get one. So he's in the hospital. And he has aspiration pneumonia.
My mom roots around his room like a mad little animal. She has a notebook and keeps a record of everyone who enters the room, and what they do and what they say. Lots of underlinings and exclamation points. She hides the book when you ask her about it. She frequently threatens to call a lawyer. Then she's appeasing and ingratiating. "I like you... you're a good nurse," she'll say. Classic splitting.
I find myself filled with this constant dry heat of anger now. It feels like a dry woodstove fire. It's never gone. I can hardly say a word to her, without hearing the tone in my voice--full of contempt and weariness, and I hate myself for it.
My husband, though, has proved himself a saint. He stays buoyant and kind, matter-of-fact, deals with this terrible situation. Deals with me. Has spent the night, wiping my father's ass.
"We're people who love." He told me last night. He never talks like this, my Catholic school juvenile delinquent. That's my half hour.
Sunday, June 18, 2017
Mr. Reality
My father has been diagnosed with something called Multi Systems Atrophy. I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy.
He started showing signs at Lilly's graduation. He was walking oddly, hips thrust forward, as if his body had become a stranger to itself. "What's going on?" I asked, thinking he was having a stroke.
"Don't make a scene."
The ancient WASP magic of ignoring the inevitable and unpleasant.
From that point it took 9 months to convince him to see a neurologist. Then another 5 for him to start taking the levodopa prescribed him. Then he stopped taking it on the sly, and fell. He was immobile for 6 weeks, incontinent, lying in my parents' hoarder den on the couch. Both my parents refusing to go to the doctor. Terrible.
Finally, we convinced them to move to my house in town (it's empty, and clean) and to hire a nurse. He got better and started walking with a walker. But then, one bright Sunday afternoon in March, while my mother was in the kitchen, he decided he could manage without the walker and fell, breaking his left hip.
Now he's bedridden. My mother resists every bit of care. Infantilizes him. We try to get him to eat on his own--she fights with us. We encourage him to use a bedpan, rather than going in his diaper--she tells him to go ahead and poop in his diaper. She's taken his phone. She goes through his texts. This is her heaven--complete control over my wayward, squirrelly, secretive father. What she's always wanted.
She emotionally tortures the nurses--one or the other is always calling me, crying, threatening to quit: "I just can't take this any longer." And the hoarding continues unabated. Every day she shows up at the house with carloads of things she has brought. I clear the hallways. I cart food out when she's not looking.
She calls me 5 or 7 times a day with small complaints--the cable, the nurse gave her 'attitude'. She fills up my voicemail.
She looks over at me, and her eyes are amber, pupils small. She looks like a snake. There's no love in her. I think about mental illness, and I know this is really the ugly deal. I sit zazen and it gives me about three inches of mental space--enough to keep functioning, to keep making choices that keep them safe.
How does it get to this? How does it get this bad and wrong?
Man, watch who you marry. Think about what the End Game will be like, because it will be all theirs to play.
It's Father's Day today. I'll go over this afternoon, relieve the nurses until the night nurse shows up.
I'm a good nurse. I'm efficient and nice and a little tough. I hate having to take care of him like this, though, having to engage the clinical self with the family. It's so very, very sad. One of my younger colleagues said, casually, "I'd change my dad's diapers--no problem." But does she understand what that means? Seeing a parent this debilitated and vulnerable is the most grinding, soul-wrecking thing you can imagine. And it never ends. And it never improves. It will just get worse and worse.
Despite the fact that he is very clearly dying, my parents refuse to talk about hospice, refuse to talk about end-of-life issues. I have to give them some props for this crazy optimism. At least they're committed to it. It's like the Christians refusing to renounce Christ and being eaten by lions for it. They're martyrs to their beliefs, but there's strength in their dedication to delusion. But then, of course, I am the one left holding the bag. I'm the one who gets to talk to Mr. Reality. As it always has been.
It's hard to be critical of someone with a terminal disease. You just don't know what you'd do. And it's a waste of effort, which, at this point needs to be focused on making his last days as decent as we can.
And there are big questions. Do I sue for guardianship? It's hard to prove someone incompetent, and, crazy as it seems, you have a right to make terrible choices. If I sue and fail, do I lose all influence and contact with my father? At least I have some ability to make a difference now.
It's a terrible situation.
That's my half-hour.
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