One of my favorite things: watching snow fall.
So here I am alone and quite honestly, enjoying the time. My companions are a glass of red wine, cheese and crackers, piano music and snow falling on the Adirondacks. I use to be afraid of being alone. After all, I grew up in a large family. I think I’ve actually only had a bedroom to myself my senior year in college. Doing activities and making decisions on my own has been a gradual awakening. Now, there are times I can spend hours writing at my computer and not notice I am alone.
Still, I realize that this is the eve of the anniversary of my mother’s rapid decline into her passing. It will be one year ago tomorrow that I got the call she was not doing well. Then, less than 48 hours later she was dead.
It is hard to say what I miss about my mother. Certainly not the last six years of her life when she slid into dementia. It is not a friendship, we never really had that. But, I think I miss knowing she was there. Comforted by the fact I could call for advice, laugh with her when we watched David Letterman together. I miss her presence in my life.
It is in this grieving moment that I sit in my beloved Adirondacks in a house I rented with the gift of a small inheritance I received from parents who somehow managed to put money aside and still raise seven children. I sit here watching the snow fall and thank Mom and Dad for this small gift that means so much to me.
grief
Remembering February
For close to a year the month of February has been looming just outside of my conscious. February 21, 2013 will be the one year anniversary of my mother’s death and the 12 year anniversary of my father’s death. I have prepared myself to be sad. But, what I haven’t prepared myself for are the down times leading up to that day.
On January first of 2012 I was celebrating the start of the New Year with friends. We were at a bar having chicken wings and beer. That was when I received the first call about my mother not doing well. With the help of my sister Roxann, who flew in from Georgia, we spent nearly two weeks watching my mother slowly succumb to pneumonia. Then, miraculously she pulled herself back from the brink of death. Bewildered from what we had prepared ourselves for, Mom’s death, and reality, Roxann wearily went home. As January faded into February Mom improved to the point where some days she didn’t need the oxygen.
One weekend in February, I visited Mom on a Friday. I even took her picture to send to my sisters because Mom looked so good after her close call with death. Unbelievably, that following Monday I was called by the nursing staff because Mom was once again ill. The change in Mom over the weekend was startling. I saw the look of panic in her eyes as she struggled to breathe. With the help of the nurse practitioner, who prescribed, and then the nurse, who administered the morphine, we were able to ease Mom’s discomfort and fear. I sat with her most of the day until she fell asleep. I left knowing I would need to get many tasks accomplished before I began, once again, waiting with Mom for death to finally relieve her of her painful existence here on earth.
The next morning, as I prepared myself and my home for the long hours of sitting with Mom the nurse called. Mom was worse. Since Mom’s illness the month before, her children had resolved not to continue the brutal cycle of stopping the pneumonia, with antibiotics, only to have the illness return very shortly afterward. We were committed to shortening Mom’s downward spiral towards death for her sake, instead of prolonging her dementia bound life for us. But, I won’t lie it was difficult to see my mother laboring to breathe and the fear in her face. I gave the nod and morphine was administered so that she could rest easily. That afternoon the nurse practitioner told me this was it; Mom would not recover this time. I called Roxann. She made plans to return to Upstate New York.
As suddenly as Mom had become ill, she died. She died before Roxann could arrive. She died within 48 hours of my initial phone call. No one on the staff, not even the nurses, thought she would die that quickly. Yet, I had a feeling all of that day, because I sensed my dad in her room with me. I understood that he had come to take her to their afterlife.
I remember many aspects of those long days in January and the few days in February that led to our extended family standing in a grave yard, once again sheltering against the biting cold winds of an Indiana winter. It is with those days ingrained in my subconscious that I sometimes find myself crying for no apparent reason. Why certain songs can turn a bright day into one of melancholy. My conscious mind continues to check items of my list of tasks to accomplish. I go to work. I make dinner. I admire the beauty of the winter blue sky. I enjoy the company of friends, the stimulation of a good workout. Still, I never know when or why the tears will come. They just do.
A Tiny Rosebush
I was in the grocery checkout line picking up some last-minute items for dinner. It was Sunday and our first weekend of skiing and trying out our new seasonal rental was coming to a close. I was tired, but feeling good with all of the fresh air and renewed friendship that had transpired over the past two days. As I was piling my items onto the belt something to my right caught my eye. I turned and there in front of me were miniature rosebushes, the kind you see this time of year in the stores. In that instant my mood fell and I began to cry. Not big sobs but my eyes welled with tears.
A tiny rosebush, similar to this one, was the last gift my sister Roxann and I gave to our mother before she passed away last February. A small token meant to provide comfort and perhaps help guide her way to heaven. At least that was a tale we had heard.
When my mother died, I was more than ready for her to leave this earth. She had been struggling with dementia for years and had spent the last six of them either living with me or near me. During those years I was the one who watched, almost daily, as she slid into dementia. Consequently, I knew she was ready and most of her children agreed, that her struggle with this life should end. After she passed and the initial exhilaration of having more free time ran out, I found myself grieving for the mother I once knew. I grieved for the mother who taught me to cook as I stood in a chair in the kitchen stirring tomato soup. I grieved for the mother who found her calling working with students as a teacher and counselor. I grieved for the mother I had hoped I would connect more with me as an adult, but we never quite got there.
Grief is a funny thing. You can be enjoying yourself and the next moment, because of a song, or a scent or a rosebush, your mood changes and you find yourself sad and crying. Causing those around you to worry and question what has just happened. These moments also make me, at least, realize I am not doing as well as I thought; that my recovery over the loss of my mother will continue to take time. Memories remain with us for our lifetime, both the good and the bad. But, I hope, with time, my sadness will wane and my memories will become more of gladness as I remember the special moments my mother shared with me.
Bad Day
Minor issues that would not normally upset me, or would cause a small amount of frustration before I moved on, have lingered with me all day. At a celebration for the three ski team girls who graduated this spring, I didn’t take any pictures. Never mind that we all had such a great time pictures weren’t really thought of until too late. An appointment this morning went all wrong. I realized that I should have sent a greeting card for an event, but the thought never crossed my mind until it was too late. All minor issues that have grabbed my emotions and tangled them into a knot of regret. It seems I am having a bad day that I can’t shake.
I am in a low place, and maybe this is the reason, why. I find myself reflecting on my relationship with my mother. I worry, that I hurt her feelings without knowing it. My mind rambles back through my teen and young adult days. Did I do and say things that were callous? Was I so wrapped up in myself I forgot that Mom was a person with feelings, too? I know I did. I wonder how many times she forgave me and I was totally oblivious to her grace. Today, even though it is silly, I’m struggling with these regrets that weigh heavy on my heart.
With each step of my life I have realized, as many woman do: my mother did the best she could. When I only had two young toddlers, I could not even imagine how my mother handled three, along with three older children. When my girls and I struggled through the teen years, I often reflected on my feelings about how mistreated I felt by my mother. With age comes the vision of hindsight and with that, the realization Mom was probably struggling to know how to handle my teenage anxiety, just as I struggled with my girls. I did come to one conclusion: Mom could have been more forth-coming with hugs. Perhaps, some acknowledgement of accomplishments would have been nice. I hated being told there were so many kids at the high school far worse off than me, when all I really wanted from Mom right then, was a hug and the words, “I love you.” I carried that resentment with me for many years. I believe that same resentment helped me to be a different and, hopefully, more loving mother to my girls.
We often learn from our mistakes. But, as my mother used to tell me, “I hope you are watching and learning from your older sisters mistakes.” I did watch and learn; not only my sisters’ but my mothers’. Because, as Mom believed, each generation should learn from the old and carry that knowledge into the next. Thanks, Mom. I love you.