I was going to say something else, but what was it?

Jerry and I lost a day last week.  That’s what happens when you get old and don’t have a job to do.  Here’s how we discovered the loss.  Jerry got an email from a friend in Arizona asking whether we had felt an earthquake that was said to have occurred in Seattle.  We hadn’t felt an earthquake, but we were curious, so he looked it up on the net.  It happened at 1:30 in the morning on January 30th.

 

“But that’s tomorrow”, he said.  I agreed.  We went to town on Tuesday, and this is 2 days later.  It must be Thursday.

 

I did think, on Tuesday (I thought) as I was doing the New York Times cross word puzzle while drinking a latte at Barnes and Noble, “This is too hard for a Tuesday puzzle.”  It didn’t occur to me to check the date, so sure was I that it was Tuesday.

 

Neither of us has any idea what we were doing on that lost day.

 

Today I said to Jerry, “We need a broom closet.”  He agreed.  I looked around the kitchen, where we have just put a wonderful pantry.  No more unused space. 

 

“We could put it in the new room at the back of the house,” I said.  “I could manage to walk in there to get a broom, even if I wanted to use it here.”

 

“Ah yes,” said Jerry, “But you’d have to remember why you went in there.” 

Posted in Day to day | 5 Comments

A rose by any other name

I don’t ask myself questions like “Who am I?” or “Why am I here?”  I am me.  I’m just here; a result of countless random events, from molecular to cosmic. I am – I was – a biologist, so the study of some of these kinds of events interests me.  But extremes of size at either end get into murky mixtures of fact and philosophy, and I get uneasy.  I avoid thinking about particle physics or cosmology.

 

On the other hand, “What’s my name?” is a question I can answer.  At length.

 

I started thinking about all the names I have had in my life because of an email I had from Ronni Bennet of TIME GOES BY.  She was confused that I said my name was Anne Gibert, but my email is annewadleigh.

 

Anne Wadleigh was the first name for myself that I knew.  Actually, the full name is Anne Juliet Wadleigh. Lots of people say they hate their names, but I like mine.  It is true that Wadleigh, despite its touch of the aristocratic in the spelling, gave me some trouble in grade school.  (Waddle duck, waddle pants, etc.)  And sometimes other kids would ask sarcastically, “Oh Juliet, where’s Romeo?”  There is no difficulty, however, with Anne, which is simple and pretty, as long as it has an e.  Ann without an e looks unfinished and loses its queenly quality. My mother, and a few others, often called me Annie.

 

When I was 20 I married a man whom I knew as Pete Gibert, and thus my name became Anne Juliet Gibert.  I dropped the Wadleigh because my father had got himself into some political trouble a couple of years before and for a while the name Wadleigh was all over the newspapers.  For me, anonymity was better than notoriety.  It was the McCarthy era.

 

Pete’s real name was Pierre, without a middle name, but pronounced pier, like the thing you tie a boat up to, and Gibert had an anglicized pronunciation, soft g and accent on the bert.  After we got married he told me that he wanted his name to be Stephen, because people addressed him in French, a language he didn’t understand.  So he wrote to the vital statistics office in South Carolina and told them that there was a mistake on his birth certificate and that his name was really Stephen Pierre Gibert.  They obligingly fixed their error.  Then for some reason he decided to Frenchify Gibert, so it became Ghi-bear.  Apparently that did not cause people to speak to him in French.  But it did cause people to address me as Mrs. Bear, or Angie.

 

I stayed Anne Gibert (pronounced Angie Bear) for 10 years, and all during that time struggled with the L problem.  When I gave my name at least half the time people would say, “Oh, you mean Gilbert.”  Every Gibert has L stories.  Once when my daughter was introduced at a party as Gilbert she protested that there was no L in her name.  The person she was introduced to believed from this that her name was Noel.     

 

Pete usually called me Gretchen.  I guess it had house-frau connotations.  During that marriage I had 3 babies and finished a bachelor’s and master’s degree.

 

Soon after my divorce I married again and became Anne Juliet Truitt.  My husband’s name was Willis.  During that marriage I acquired 2 more children and another degree, a Ph. D.  Willis usually called me Beulah (slave connotations – something to do with a Lenny Bruce routine, “Y’o free, Beulah!”) Sometime during my 30’s my eldest daughter took to calling me Old Woman.  She still does, and what may have been funny then is too true now.

 

I freed myself from Willis and was single for 6 years.  That would have been the time to go back to Wadleigh, but I didn’t.  Inertia kept me Truitt.  I worked in Germany for a while, and learned to answer to Frau Doctor Truitt, or just plain Frau Doctor. My 2 older children addressed me as Muth (short for Mother, but if you shorten the spelling it becomes Moth, which would be an odd thing to call your mother).  The next 2 usually call me Ma, and my youngest calls me Mom. 

 

The next scandalous thing I did was to marry Pete’s brother. Voila! Gibert again. This one, Hugh, didn’t Frenchify however.  Hugh objected to my remaining Truitt professionally, so I bothered to get things changed, transcripts, scientific papers, etc. Hugh usually called me sugar, which he, a southerner, pronounced sugah.

 

Sometimes it was just easier to pass as Gilbert.  Once when Hugh took some clothes to the cleaners, so that he wouldn’t have to spell it, he gave his name as Gilbert.

 

“Is that one L or two?” asked the woman behind the counter.

 

This was the last straw.  “It isn’t one L or two,” Hugh growled between clenched teeth.  “That isn’t even my name.” 

 

“Well, what is your name, then?” she asked calmly.  

 

I began to collect grandchildren.  Most of them call me Granny, a few call me Grandma.

 

When Hugh and I retired to the west coast he decided to Frenchify, mostly because all his children and my three older ones had done so, and I had to go back to the “How do you do, Mrs. Bear?” problem. 

 

Hugh and I were married for 20 years, and I was again single for another 6 years after we divorced.  Then I married Jerry Hook.  Inertia gets really bad when you’re old, so most of the time I’m still Anne Gibert.  Except in Alaska, where nobody knew me before I married Jerry, and there I’m Anne Hook.

 

I was Anne Wadleigh for 20 years, Anne Truitt for 16 years, and Anne Gibert for a total of 36 years.  A lot of appellations can cause me to turn my head, Mommy, Mother, Ma, Mom, Granny, etc. 

 

But the real me is Anne Juliet Wadleigh. I’ve been living with aliases most of my life.

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments

Mother’s last years: How we treat the very old. Part II

Today, January 25, 2009, is the third anniversary of my mother’s death.  This post is about her last 6 months of life, and it ends with a question which I keep asking myself.  I don’t know the answer.

 

                         ******************************

 

My mother and my sister were meticulous about birthday and holiday greetings.  They sent each other cards for every possible occasion, including all family birthdays, wedding anniversaries, Mother’s and Father’s days, Christmas, Easter, Valentine’s Day, all graduation days, and probably others that I don’t even know about.  They wrote long laudatory and affectionate messages on the cards, and Mother saved every one.  I’m not sure why, but I found this practice slightly icky.  Occasionally, if I found a card that I thought was funny or pretty or particularly fitting, I would send it, signed, “Love, Anne”.  My cards were almost always late.

 

After Mother was incarcerated in the dementia care place, I made an effort to be regular about the card thing, and I made a big deal about birthdays and holidays.  I hoped it would give her a feeling that life was proceeding normally – or something like that.  Perhaps it just made me feel better.  

 

The day she reached 100 years was definitely appropriate for a celebration.  My sister came up from San Diego for the occasion with her husband and her son, my nephew, John. 

 

Let me digress briefly.  At that time I not only had a geriatric mother, but also a geriatric dog.  He was a 17 year old small white mutt, left with me 14 years previously by my son “temporarily,” while he went to medical school (followed by residency, fellowship, and finally private practice).  The dog’s name was Zute.  He could just barely get around.

 

On Mother’s birthday, June the 18th, I planned a big dinner.  I got up a 5 in the morning and made everything ready.  Potatoes were peeled and in the pot, ready to cook and mash, standing rib roast was seasoned, floured and laced with garlic, oven ready, broccoli was in the pot ready to turn on, salad was made and ready to dress.  The Cake was bought.  I don’t bake cakes.  The house was tidy, the table set, the presents wrapped.

 

I took Zute out to pee.  He fell down and couldn’t get up.  I picked him up to carry him into the house, and he was in such pain that he bit me.  His teeth were tightly clenched so that I had difficulty prying them out of my arm.  A wonderful vet here on the island makes house calls.  I called, and he came.  He said Zute had “thrown a clot” and so my pal of 14 years was put to sleep the day my mother was 100. 

 

My sister and her husband were staying at a bed and breakfast at another part of the island.  But my nephew, John, was with me and helped me bury Zute in the yard.  I cried as I shoveled on the soil until he was covered, and John finished up for me. I went inside in a kind of daze.  Lucky I had been up at 5.

 

The dinner went well.  Mother was a bit confused, but she adores my sister and was glad to be with her.  Although she loved Zute, there was so much going on that she didn’t notice his absence. 

 

Because Mother was a New Zealander,  she was proudly carrying Birthday greeting cards from “The Queen of New Zealand”  (that would be Elizabeth II – New Zealand still recognizes her as Queen, and dogs are not allowed on the beach on her birthday).

No Dogs

No Dogs

  

 

  She also had cards from the Governor General of New Zealand, the Prime Minister and a couple of other dignitaries.  It is one of the Brit’s quaint customs to send those who achieve a century greetings from the Queen.  

 

Of course, when lunch was over and presents unwrapped, she begged not to be taken back to the dementia care place. After she got back she apparently left the Queen’s greetings and other cards in one of the common rooms of the unit, and they were thrown out.  Most of her birthday presents had disappeared in about a week, because people with dementia tend to wander in and out of each other’s rooms, and they don’t remember which things are theirs.  Belongings get all mixed up, and the staff isn’t able to keep them sorted.

 

After Mother’s birthday we settled back into the routine of twice weekly lunches out.  We usually went to the same restaurant, Anthony’s, because she liked the view of the marina and she could cope with the menu.  But she hated going back to where she was living. 

 

Once every week her hair was done by Linda, who had done it when she lived in Bellingham before.  She was attached to Linda, who is wonderful with old people.  She loved getting her hair done.  

 

At least once a week Stephanie, her caregiver when I was away, came to see her, and that was a great pleasure for her.  She loved Stephanie, who had training in caring for people with “special needs” and really loved her work.  Stephanie had a genuine affection for my mother.

 

We almost always had a couple of doctor’s appointments every month.  Many of these were to remove small basal cell carcinomas, or an occasional more troublesome skin lesion.  The ophthalmologist discovered that the lens in her right eye had slipped out of place, which meant that she had no sight in that eye.  I said, “If it’s not a big deal I’d like to get it fixed.”  He said, “It is a big deal.”  So it wasn’t fixed. 

 

I ask myself now whether I should have pushed it further.  At least I could have found out just how big a deal it was.

 

Months passed and we came to the next big celebration time:  Christmas.  The previous Christmas I was at here at home, and all my children and grandchildren came.  One of my Granddaughters plays the violin, and she had played Christmas carols for the people in the dementia care unit.  My mother was delighted with that. And Mother was with us for Christmas day.

 

But her last Christmas I spent in England, with my daughter and her family.  Because I was going away we had an early Christmas celebration here especially for Mother, which included my sister and her husband from San Diego and my step-brother and his wife from Florida.  I think she knew it was not really Christmas, and though I explained the reason for the early celebration she didn’t completely understand and she was afraid of my leaving.  She did not to do well when I was away. Unfortunately Stephanie had moved away and could no longer visit her.

 

I was away for 3 weeks.  When I returned the staff at the dementia care unit said that she had fallen several times, they had called the doctor, and that Hospice had been ordered. 

 

She was not injured by the falls; she just seemed to be unable to walk anymore.  I asked the doctor what he thought was wrong with her and he didn’t really answer, but said she would not live much longer.

 

Since she couldn’t walk and Hospice had been ordered, I decided to bring her home.  There was no longer any danger of her wandering off, and I did not want her to die in that place.

 

It took about a week to organize everything for her to be here.  I had to get a hospital bed delivered, arrange the ambulance to bring her, get set up with Hospice, get medications ordered.  I visited her to tell her she was coming home.  As I was leaving the house that morning to catch the ferry I grabbed a silk scarf and tied it round my neck.  It belonged to Mother, but I thought, oh well, she won’t know the difference.

 

When I arrived she looked alert and was sitting in a wheel chair.  I sat down next to her and told her I was bringing her home.  She nodded, and then reached over to tweak the scarf. 

 

“That’s mine,” she said, “I just thought I’d mention it.”

 

I said, “You’re right, Ma, it is yours, and I hope you don’t mind my wearing it.”

 

She smiled, and said, “I’m honored.”

 

She was dying, but she sure she wasn’t dying of Alzheimer’s, which is what the death certificate said she died of.

 

By the time she came in the ambulance home to the island she was no longer saying much.  I had a hospital bed set up in my duplex apartment which was furnished with Mother’s furniture.  She ate very little and she was in bed all day.  A day or two after she arrived she could no longer feed herself and had to be fed the little she was eating.  My sister and nephew came.  The hospice nurse lived on the island and visited regularly.  Mother’s last few days were difficult.  The last word she spoke was my name when I came in the morning three days before she died.  By this time we had nurse’s aids round the clock. 

 

Even though my mother’s father was an Anglican clergyman, neither Mother nor I were believers, but my sister who is a devout Episcopalian, called for a priest to administer last rights.  I thought it scared Mother.  There was no way to tell whether she could understand what was said to her, but her expression did change and I thought she looked terrified as the priest told her that Jesus was preparing a place for her in heaven.  I sat on the sofa and cried throughout the ceremony.

 

On the morning of her last day I had been unable to get an aid from the agency, so my nephew and I came early to take care of her when the night nurse left.  Mother was still heavy enough that I needed help lifting her.  A neighbor who was an LPN came a little later.

 

Mother began to be restless, and I worried that she was in pain.  We had morphine, but it had to be administered by the hospice nurse, who, unfortunately, was in Bellingham at a meeting.  I called her and she said she would come as soon at she could.  I held Mother’s hand while my neighbor, the nurse, gave her a gentle massage.  My nephew talked softly to her, and between the three of us we got her to sleep. My sister was next door in my side of the duplex.

 

Mother was breathing quietly, her eyes closed, when the color suddenly seemed to drain from her face, starting at her forehead.  I said to my nephew, “You’d better get your mother.”

 

My mother, Marion Louise Roberts Daugherty, had finally, quietly, slipped away from us.

 

My sister came, the hospice nurse came, and the two nurses washed the body, telephone calls were made, the undertaker was called, and my sweet neighbor nurse made us all lunch. 

 

After the undertaker had left my sister and nephew and I went to my side of the duplex, a few close friends came and the neighbor nurse who had come to help sat with us, playing her guitar and singing.

 

                          *******************************

 

Here is the question I ask myself.  When is a life no longer worth trying to prolong? 

 

I know my mother did not want to die.  She was proud of being 100, even though previously she had hated having people know how old she was.  Until a couple of weeks before she died she was still able to converse part of the time, she recognized people and there were people she loved.  Life still held pleasures for her.  It was not she who decided the end had come.  It was the medical community, essentially, that made the judgment, probably from a cost-benefit basis, that this life had reached a stage when it should be allowed to end without intervention.

 

I can understand this point of view.  We must sensibly allocate scarce resources.   Then I think, how will I feel if the time comes that someone else decides that I have lived long enough?  To be honest, I think the answer might be different for me at 76 than it might have been, say, 40 years ago.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Memoir | 10 Comments

Flying to Atlanta

On Monday I came home from Atlanta where I had visited my son Ben and his family, and my daughter Clare and her fiancé.

 

My experience with air travel was somewhat worse than I had expected.  For reasons mysterious I was obliged to have a paper ticket, and unable to make prior seat selection.  The paper ticket was a bother at every step of the way.

 

 

I was selected for special security screening, and ordered to stand on a rubber mat. One agent said to another agent, “Make sure she doesn’t move until I get a female examiner.”

 

The female examiner came, and rubbed her hands over my entire body.  Then she and another agent unpacked my suitcase and separately X-rayed  each pair of shoes in my bag. A collection of old costume jewelry I was taking to my 5 year old granddaughter to play with was actually X-rayed twice.  The whole process took quite a while, and there was a lot of tooing and froing to the X-ray machine.  You have to wonder how many bad guys will be caught by frisking grannies. 

 

Finally I was allowed to pack my stuff back up, and I wandered off in search of a New York Times and a latte.  I had to drag everything with me because many airlines now charge for checking bags.  (The paper ticket had already cost an extra $30.)  When I got on the airplane and settled into my middle seat (which was broken and wouldn’t recline) I learned that to get a diet coke would cost me $3.  And so it went.

 

I find that at age 76, travel in general, and particularly air travel, is stressful.  I never seem to be able to organize efficiently and juggle all the items I carry.  It takes me longer than the younger passengers to find boarding passes, ID’s, get shoes and jackets off and on, get things placed in plastic trays for screening, and get situated in airplane seats with bags stowed overhead. 

 

Squeezing people into small spaces makes them grumpy, and I find that men, especially, have no time for old ladies. I can see that my fumbling is annoying to other passengers.

 

I had a lovely time in Atlanta with my children and grandchildren.

Grandchildren at Clare's

Grandchildren at Clare

 

 

 

Now I’m home, a couple of pounds heavier (my son is a chef and my daughter a foodie, so eating was irresistable), and I am sneezing with an airplane cold.  Glad I don’t have to do it again until next month when I visit my other son in Charleston, S. C.

 

 

 

 

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A New Day

Sunrise from my house on January 20, 1009

Sunrise from my house on January 20, 1009

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

The levee and other island trivia

Two days ago we were walking the poodles in the rain and Jud, who lives up the road from us, drove past.  He was coming home from work early because there are floods all over Bellingham.  It’s a long round about route to get from the freeway to the ferry.  Jud stopped to chat about the rain and water, and asked if we had been here the last time the levee broke.  I said I don’t even know where the levee is, and he explained that it blocks the water from the Nooksack River from flowing over the only road to the ferry; that if it breaks we are effectively cut off from the mainland.

 

The Pantry

The Pantry

Inside, Jerry is working hard on the new pantry.  It is already filled and it has changed my life.  Things no longer fall out of cabinets and pull outs when I open them. I know where everything is, and if I forget I can just glance at the pantry shelves and see the logical distribution of food and cooking items.  I gained a lot of near empty kitchen cabinets since filling the pantry.  I know they will eventually be full of stuff, but for now I love to look at all that available space.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yesterday I had my first outing of the new year.  My drawing group has been reconstituted in the upstairs of a fine big barn that a member of the group recently acquired with her new house.  The barn has a terrific view of the islands and Legoe Bay.  A while back I wrote a post, Doing what comes naturally, saying that making art is easy and writing is hard.  Now it seems the other way around.  I sit down to write, and having practiced a lot lately, it seems a natural activity.  Drawing yesterday was hard, hard, hard.  My new portable easel kept slipping, I didn’t have any drawing materials I liked.  All my drawings but one kept running off the page – that is, I’d lose the top of the head or the feet, or both. But it was a lot of fun anyhow.

 

Despite my diet I had a glass of sweet white wine with the other drawers afterwards.  We caught up on a lot of island news, and began the process of living normally after the holidays.  Our hostess left for a few minutes to take the model, her daughter who lives in Bellingham, to the ferry.  We all stayed on, drinking wine and chatting.  Shortly the hostess and her daughter came back.  No going to Bellingham.  The levee has broken.

Posted in Day to day, Island life | 6 Comments

Mother’s last years: How we treat the very old, part I

This post got way longer than I intended, so I am going to separate it into two parts.  It is about the last 2 years of my mother’s life, and the way she died.  I believe the story illustrates aspects of the treatment of the very old that trouble me. 

 

My mother was the kind of woman you notice.  Her hair was black and she had a deep widow’s peak.  She stood straight, she was slim. For her time she was tall.  She cared a lot about her appearance and she spent money on clothes when she would skimp on everything else.  She was intensely intellectual.  She had a brilliant mind, she spoke and wrote well.  She was a social animal and loved to be the center of attention.

 

She had a Ph.D. in economics and had written a couple of books and taught college.  She continued her intellectual life into her old age.  After she retired to La Jolla, CA she spent a lot of time at the Institute for Continued Learning at UCSD. 

 

At the age of 95 she agreed to give a lecture on economics at the Institute. She worked hard writing it all out.  Having to read it distressed her because when she was younger she wouldn’t have had to look at her manuscript.  Nevertheless, after the lecture she told me, “A very old man [remember, she herself was 95] hobbled up to the podium and said ‘that was the best lecture on economics I ever heard’”

 

Besides economics and politics she had a passion for music and theater.  When I visited her she would tire me out taking me to concerts, plays, and to lunch and tea with her many friends.   

 

Gradually I began to see that she was slipping.  Every few months I would travel down the west coast to La Jolla to check on her.  She became more and more difficult.  She wanted to discuss her problems every minute, and she became angry if I occupied myself with anything else, like reading a book or listening to the radio.  She was aware that she was deteriorating mentally, and she hated it.

 

In 2004, when she was 98, it became clear to me, and to my sister as well, that she could no longer function on her own.  Up to that time she had been living in a little apartment near the sea in La Jolla. 

 

She was forgetting appointments, forgetting to pay bills, and her gait became a sort of shuffle (a symptom of Alzheimer’s), her spelling deteriorated, and she frequently showed signs of confusion about daily activities.  We wanted to let her stay in La Jolla, a place she loved and considered home, and where she still had a few friends living.  However, there was no facility there that would take someone with even mild dementia.  The best we could find was a place about 40 miles away. 

 

I persuaded her to come back to Bellingham near me.  She had tried living here for a while after she sold her pretty house in La Jolla, and I packed everything up and moved her up here in 1997.  But she pined for the warmth and familiarity of her southern California jewel of a village, and so I packed her up and moved her back again.  That was in 2000.  Now, in 2004, we were preparing to make yet another move. 

 

At first I thought she could still function in the retirement place she had lived in when she was here before.  We had all the papers ready, and she was to move in the next day when her best friend in that retirement place suddenly died.  She declared that the shock was too much and she couldn’t live there. 

 

I have a duplex here on my island that I live in one side of, and I moved her into the other apartment.  It wasn’t ideal from the point of view of social life, and she didn’t like the isolation of the island, but for a while we muddled along. 

 

It was difficult, though.  She was demanding and wanted me to be with her and entertain her all the time.  She really couldn’t read much any more and my attempts to find her friends among the other older people on the island were not successful.  She needed help with bathing, and I am a small person, smaller than my mother, and I was already in my 70’s.  New things were no longer easily managed.  I found I had to watch her, because she would decide to take walks and get lost.  People would pick her up along the road and bring her home.

 

For reasons not relevant to this account I had to go away for several months, and I arranged for people to take care of Mother full time. 

 

When I came home at the end of the summer my sister and one of her daughters visited briefly.  The main person who was taking care of mother was a wonderful lady named Stephanie with whom my mother had definitely bonded.  Things seemed to be going reasonably well. After I returned Stephanie continued to come part time which gave me some respite.  Fortunately, Mother had enough income to pay for all this.

 

I got tickets to some Shakespeare plays in Vancouver because mother was very keen to see them.  Stephanie went with us and we stayed in a hotel.  There were 3 plays.  Mother was having difficulty getting around, so we got her a wheelchair and had hearing aids for the plays.  I felt that she wasn’t getting much out of the plays – she did a lot of dozing. 

 

She was not doing well in Vancouver.  She had difficulty with bowel incontinence, and it was a struggle for Stephanie and me together to get her in and out of the bathtub to clean her up.  I became quite worried and wanted to take her home to the doctor, but Stephanie persuaded me to let her see the last play.

 

We left Vancouver and I drove her directly to the hospital where she stayed for 4 days.  She seemed to have become practically immobile, and I thought perhaps she had had a stroke.  They never determined what was wrong with her, but after the requisite amount of time for Medicare they referred her to a rehab center.  There they put her on a regular ward at first, but soon moved her to the dementia unit which had a security lock. 

 

She was soon able to walk again and she had various sorts of therapists.  When she was first in rehab she was having serious delusions, like thinking her feet were musical instruments, but she improved quite quickly with therapy, and by the end of her stay was no longer having bizarre thoughts.  Her bowels came under control and she was walking better.  After 6 weeks the rehab administrators declared she would not improve with more treatment (that’s Medicare’s time limit) and that she would now have to pay $6,000 per month to stay there not including any therapy

 

Now there was the dilemma of where she should live.  The medical opinion was that she needed institutional care and could not be at home with me.  My sister was also opposed to her living on the island.  I did not want her to stay in the rehab place.  It had a dismal look about it and it smelled bad.  Some of the other patients were in much worse shape than Mother, and could be disturbing.  One poor lady went up and down the hall continually shouting, “I want to go home.”  Another, a good looking man in his 60’s, would come up to every visitor and say, politely, “Could you tell me how to get out of here?”

 

We found a reasonably pleasant place where the patients were segregated according to the severity of their dementia.  Because of Medicare rules I could not get any further therapy for her.  The medical opinion was that it would not improve her condition, and she couldn’t have therapy without doctor’s orders.  I continued to have Stephanie visit with her a couple of times a week. I took her out to lunch at least twice a week and to all her doctor’s appointments.  But she hated living there, and whenever I returned her to the facility she would beg me not to make her go back.  It was hard for both of us.

 

There were some lighter moments.  The residents at the facility often strayed into each other’s rooms, and one day when we were having lunch at Anthony’s she complained to me repeatedly that there had been a man in her room the night before.  I told her not to worry about it and made a mental note to mention it to the caregivers.  After lunch, when I took her back, a new sign had been placed directly in front of the outside door that said “Dementia Care Unit”.  She read it and exclaimed, “Dementia Care! No wonder there was a man in my room!”

 

Some days her memory was pretty good, and there were other times when nothing would trigger remembrance of past events.  One day I mentioned Kitty, her step-daughter-in-law, but I couldn’t evoke a recollection of who Kitty was.  The next time I saw Mother I tried Kitty again.  “Oh, that poor woman, she works so hard and she has so little.  I wish I could do something for her,” said Mother.  She remembered Kitty perfectly.

 

Once as we were driving through Bellingham she looked around and said, “I used to live here, you know.  I had all my wits about me then.”

 

She never had a visitor she didn’t recognize.  A friend from New Zealand came once, the son of Mother’s best friend at college in New Zealand.  It had been about 10 years since she had seen him, and I warned him that she might not know him.  But she did, she was delighted to see him, and they had a good time together that day.

 

I have told enough of this story to make my first point about the last, difficult part of life for many of those who live to be very old. 

 

I believe it could be a lot better.  The facility my mother was in cost more than $5,000 per month, and it was basically custodial care only. There’s an attitude that says, “They’re old; they can’t be ‘improved’. Put them away, play them some Lawrence Welk now and then and forget them.”

 

I believe we shouldn’t just give up on people with Alzheimer’s, or dementia.  I saw that therapy was helping my mother and they cut it off because of Medicare regulations.  Perhaps it isn’t so much the therapy, but the intelligent attention.  It isn’t good enough for a well meaning young person with no education to say, “How are you today, Marion.”  What’s needed is a person, or persons, with some expertise, interest and intelligence to work with these folks.  I could have had my mother with me with that sort of help.  And I needed help for things like bathing.  I know in some cases bathing help is available, but it wasn’t for us because of the island location.

 

My mother could afford not only the care she got but also many extras like having Stephanie visit, going out to lunch frequently, and shopping for clothes, which she loved.  But many of the people in the same facility were just spending down until Medicaid took over when their money ran out.

 

It is inevitable that some old folks will end up without family to care for them, but there are others like my mother, who have loved ones to keep them at home if adequate help were available.  There are programs to help people with disabilities live as normal a life as possible.  Something like that is needed for the very old.  

 

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Food and Life, part 3

The year has turned.  I’m on a diet.  Like Ronni Bennett’s aunt Edith, I want to be thin one more time before I die.  So possibly this is not the best time to be thinking and writing about food.  But I promised myself I would finish this brief food related autobiography.

 

When I came back from Burma to Washington, D. C. I got a job as a lab technician, working for a mad gastroenterologist.  He studied, among other things, stomach ulcers.  He claimed to have one himself, and he insisted that if he had an attack it could only be made bearable with injections of Demerol and a diet of caviar and champagne.

 

My stay in Washington was brief, however, and I soon returned to Andover, a place of comfort and safety that I regarded as home.  I bought a house and got a job in Boston, a commute of 25 miles. 

 

My aunt Clare was still having Sunday lunches, attended by teachers, artists, kids and dogs.  Leg of lamb was still the main dish.  On weekdays Clare often had afternoon tea parties, which sometimes blended into cocktail hour. 

 

The favorite item for tea was parsley paste sandwiches made with thin sliced Pepperidge Farm bread.  Parsley paste is a mixture of finely chopped parsley and cottage cheese (naturally, whole milk cottage cheese tastes better than low fat), possibly with a little mayonnaise mixed in.  After a couple of years I had more time for afternoon tea and parsley paste because I got a job teaching biology at a local community college. 

 

I used to take the kids to nearby Lawrence to shop the Italian delis for fragrant cheese and salami.  On the way home we sometimes stopped in North Andover at a seafood shop that sold lobster.  Usually lobster was a rare treat, but once, for a brief time, there was a glut and the price plummeted to sixty-nine cents per pound.  Happy days.

 

I married again, Willis, and with him came another child, Deborah, aged 3.  The marriage didn’t last, but the child did, and I am permanently her mother.  Once, a few years ago, she got mad at me for doing something she disapproved of (What’s Mother doing now?).  I said to her, “I’m the only functional parent you ever had, so you’ll just have to put up with me.”  She agreed and we made up.

 

Willis finished his Ph. D. (philosophy) at Boston University and got a job teaching at the University of South Florida.  We packed up the 4 kids, now aged 14, 13, 10 and 7, and the cats (I would be ashamed to say how many), and moved to Tampa.  I got a teaching job at Florida Southern College in Lakeland, another 25 mile commute.

 

Willis and I shared a deep interest in food.  Tampa was a culinary adventure and we got to know Cuban food. I often made black beans and yellow rice.  It was a good dish to serve at our many parties.  In those days academic life was more relaxed than it is now, and there was plenty of time for parties, flirting, talking on many subjects, some high-brow, some not, and the occasional skinny dip.   

 

We found sources of fresh fish, and tried new kinds that we had never tasted.  We particularly liked sheepshead.  It has a lot of bones, but a delicate flavor. When we felt poor we ate mullet.  Pompano was a luxury.

 

For a couple of months when we were between houses we lived in a trailer  in a wild spot on a dirt road which passed through fields of scattered palms and pink and purple wild flowers.  In late summer thunderstorms rolled in every afternoon.  Dark clouds piled up in the west and we watched the storms sweep towards us across the fields of flowers and palmetto. 

 

Along the road to the trailer we discovered a quail and pheasant farm where we could buy frozen birds.  Julia Child was my source for ways to cook them.  At some point during that period I became pregnant with my last child.  My oldest, Steve, was 19, Julie was 18, Clare was 15 and Debbie was 11. 

 

We moved from the trailer and bought a house on a lake, but still got pheasant and quail from time to time.  When I was so huge with child you could almost balance a tray on my tum, I decided to alleviate the boredom of waiting to deliver by cooking a fancy pheasant dinner.  Willis and I went shopping with a list of all the ingredients and while we were in the grocery store I said, “I seem to be leaking, I’ll wait in the car.” 

 

Willis finished the shopping.  At home I assembled the elegant dish and put the bird in the oven to roast.  While we waited for dinner I found it necessary to sit on a towel.  Debbie, who had read every book she could find on pregnancy and birth, hovered, saying, “You should call the doctor,” or, “I wouldn’t eat that, Mother, you aren’t supposed to when you’re in labor.”

 

I said “I cooked it, and I’m going to eat it.”  Lucky I did, since I got nothing to eat until about 3 o’clock the next day after Benjamin was born.  Then I was allowed some Jello.

 

The house on the lake had a number of orange and tangelo trees around it, but the best was the lemon tree.  I learned to depend on lemons for all sorts of cooking projects.  All I had to do was run to the back yard and pick a delicious, juicy lemon as big as a big orange.

 

Willis had a sabbatical when Ben was less than a year old. We sailed to Europe on the Michaelangelo, a beautiful ship, but we traveled third class, and the food was nothing special.  We landed in Cannes where we met Julie who had been traveling with a friend in Europe. Then Julie, Debbie, Ben, Willis and I toured Europe for 6 months.

 

We traveled by car north from Cannes through France, Holland, Denmark, and Sweden where Willis gave a lecture at the University of Uppsala. Then we came south through East Germany, to Berlin, West Germany, Austria, Italy, Yugoslavia, detour to southern Italy, Corfu, Greece, Bulgaria, where Willis gave another lecture, and from there direct to England where we stopped for a month so I could study for my Ph.D. general exams.

 

In bad or cold weather we stayed in hostels, and in good weather we camped.  Most of the time we ate food that Julie and I cooked, either in the hostel kitchen or over a Coleman stove by the tent.  We did a lot of shopping in local stores.

 

We were on a tight budget, and most of what we ate was less than memorable.  But there are a few times I won’t forget. 

 

We drove down the Dalmatian Coast to Split, in what was then Yugoslavia, now Croatia.  Willis was terrified by the heights.  The 2 lane road winds along the sheer sides of barren treeless mountains.  The deep blue Adriatic is a thousand feet down, and frequent car wrecks can be seen on the cliffs or shore-line rocks below. 

 

We stopped at a camp ground in Split and he wouldn’t budge for a month.  It was June, and the weather for the most part was fine.  I shopped for groceries in the city, and Julie and I would share a kilo bag of cherries on the way to the camp.  They’d all be eaten by the time we got back.

 

Within walking distance of the camp we discovered a small restaurant.  It was outdoors, a few tables and chairs on a stone patio.  The inside was for cooking.  The waiters spoke a bit of German, as did Willis.  The menu was simple. “ Fisch oder Fleisch?” the waiter would ask.  If the answer was fish, he would bring out a tray full of whole fish, examples of the day’s catch.  You pointed at the one you fancied and they cooked it.  If the answer was Fleish (meat) you got grilled goat.  I think I have never eaten such delectable food.  Believe me, goat is good.  And the fish was minutes from the water.

 

I have to admit, Greece was a disappointment.  I mean with respect to food.  We saw some wonderful antiquities, but Julie had an upset stomach the whole time we were there.  I think the heavy olive oil that almost everything was drenched in did not agree with her.  And I found the seaside cafes with a décor of dead octopuses and squid hung around to be disconcerting. 

 

In Athens a friend took us out for an evening of authentic Greek food and entertainment in the sort of place where one might find Zorba the Greek.  There was a huge open fire with a whole sheep on a spit slowly roasting.  I didn’t find the smell appetizing, and when I was given a plate of unidentifiable parts of the sheep to eat I began to feel quite ill.  It took a couple of days to fully recover.

 

Sofia, Bulgaria, was our next stop.  At that time, of course, it was a communist country.  Each shop had multiples of a single item.  For example, the toy store had one kind of toy, a sort of duck-like doll. There seemed to be only one dish on offer in all the eateries: mixed grill.  This consisted of a small piece of meat, (probably goat) a sausage, a piece of liver and a bit of kidney, all grilled on an open fire.  It wasn’t terrible, but you could get tired of it. 

 

Willis gave a lecture at the University, and after the talk his faculty sponsors took us out to dinner.  They were kind and amusing people, and cheerfully told a lot of communist jokes.  I was looking forward to a variation of diet, but when I asked our hosts for a recommendation they said, “Oh, we really recommend the mixed grill.”

 

By the time we got home to Tampa and our lake my second marriage was failing.  I finished my Ph.D. and when Ben was 2 Julie and I packed up and set out for California. I had a post doctoral position at the University of Southern California.  Julie, who was at Harvard, was taking a year off and going to live in Delano California.  Steve and Clare were both at the University of South Florida and stayed in Tampa, and Debbie was in high school and stayed with her father to finish.

 

Further food adventures in another post.   

 

 

 

 

Posted in Memoir | 4 Comments

Hello, 2009

Happy New Year, everyone!

 

In my small world a lot has happened in 2008.  This year we have accomplished a lot of construction.  Jerry built an addition to the house that I sit in now. A new pantry is almost finished, and renovations to the house in Manley Hot Springs, AK were mostly done this summer.  I started a blog.  Fluffy, my daughter’s poodle, came to live with us (temporarily) and keeps Daisy, the other poodle, happy.  Gwen, a good island friend, moved to Alaska.  I started painting again.  I learned to play Mah Jongg.    

 

The coming year will bring some fascinating changes in the wider world.  Gone will be Bush and his henchmen.  Gone, I hope, their philosophy of greed, paranoia and superstition.

 

Will things change a lot with Obama?  Oh, I hope so.  Will this country be able to turn away from the frenzied consumerism that has increasingly pervaded it, and look more to its people and communities? I hope so.  That’s my wish for 2009.

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Holding a lamb

The weather outside is frightful – well, it’s beautiful but cold as ______ (you fill in the blank).  There’s a heap of snow.  It coats the tree branches, making the woods look like Narnia.  The birds are hungry, and they keep flying into the window.  Why? Perhaps it’s the glare. I have sprinkled birdseed all over the front walk. I’m cozy in my yellow study/library playing with my computer, reading blogs and commenting. It is 2 days to Christmas.  I am unprepared, and I am about to write up an incident of 30 years ago.  Well, the snow’s too deep to go Christmas shopping.

 

A blog I like to read, Red Nose, today posted a list of 100 things she had or had not done in her life (she has lots of time, being a kid in her 50’s).  A thing she has not done is hold a lamb.  I suppose that has some relevance to Christmas – Lamb of God, lambs around the manger, shepherds keeping their sheep and all.

 

Well, I have held a lamb, in fact more than one.  Here’s the story.

 

Once upon a time I worked at the Department of Agriculture in Maryland.  I was an electron microscopist and I studied mostly pigs, but another researcher was doing an experiment in which he wanted to use lactating ewes.  That necessitated the production of lambs, which became superfluous as soon as they were born. 

 

The law says that government property cannot be given away, so theoretically the lambs had to be destroyed.  There were quite a lot of them, perhaps 20.  Nobody wanted to kill 20 baby lambs, so we had a departmental meeting and the boss said, “I don’t care what happens to those lambs, I just don’t want to know about it.”  As quick as you can say “Jack Robinson,” those lambs vanished from the premises.

 

I had a friend, Penny, who lived on a farm in southern Virginia, and she kept sheep.  I spirited away 5 lambs, intending to take them to her in the coming weekend.  That meant I had to keep 5 newborn lambs in my suburban Bethesda basement for a week before I could make the 8 hour drive, with the 5 babies and my 7 year old son, to Penny’s farm.

 

Of course, they had to be fed.  Often.  Very often.  They were ravenous.  With advice from the Agriculture veterinarian I got some human baby formula and five bottles.  My house was full of baas, and I didn’t get much sleep.  A lamb can empty an 8 ounce baby bottle in about 5 seconds. It’s sort of like pouring it down the drain.

 

One day, during that week, my nice next door neighbor, with whom I was friendly because he was Burmese and I had lived briefly in Burma, said to me, “You know, Anne, it’s really strange, but I could swear I heard sheep in the neighborhood.”

 

It was a long week, but on Saturday morning I loaded the lambs and a lot of baby formula into the back of my little station wagon. Ben, my 7 year old, and I set out for southern Virginia.  Every couple of hours the Baa-ing would get loud enough to necessitate a pit stop.  I would go into a filling station bathroom, get some warm water from the wash basin, fill the five bottles with formula, and Ben and I would open the back to the station wagon and feed the lambs.  We invariably gathered a crowd of onlookers.  Kids would want to pet the lambs.  I would have to tell the story.

 

One of the lambs got an upset stomach and had diarrhea.  I worried about that, and out of desperation I bought some Pepto Bismal at a convenience store.  It wasn’t easy to give a lamb Pepto Bismal, and although some got in him, a lot got on him, and he began to look bright pink.

 

As we got near Penny’s place it was getting dark.  I stopped at an outdoor pay phone to tell her we were close and to verify some turns.  I didn’t want to get lost at that point.  As I was phoning, a man began to bang on the phone booth door.  I opened it and he said, “Want to sell those lambs?”

 

We all arrived safely.  Penny immediately solved the problem of feeding five lambs separately.  She made a rack that held the five bottles.  They all survived.  The pink one was named Pepto, and he lived to a ripe old age

 

Posted in Day to day, Memoir | 4 Comments