I'll warn you ahead of time, this article has nothing to do with business - but for me, business, life, and spare time all mesh. I think a lot of my followers have been touched by Alzheimer's and wonder what it’s like. I asked my Mom this very question two years ago and here's what she said:
"There's something I want to say, it's on the tip of
my tongue, but my tongue just won't work."
My mother told me that four months before entering her
new living space designed specifically for Alzheimer's patients, some would
call it a nursing home. I refuse to call my Mother's apartment a nursing home
because when I was a kid we used to joke about her going to one. She would
jokingly tell me, "When I'm old and drooling just make sure I still look
good." To me, if I admit she's in a nursing home I'm also fulfilling a
prophecy.
Truth be told, I don't think I can tell you what having
Alzheimer's is like. I don't have it - not that I know of, at least. What I can
tell you is that four months before Elizabeth Pride, my Mom, then 68, moved
into her new apartment we talked about it.
We shared about what the disease felt like as I was
driving her down a wavy road in Windham, known as William Knight Road. It's one
of those wavy roads that your parents tell you not to speed on - but it's the
first road you see how fast your car can go with the help of the massive hills.
Mom and I had just done some "garage sailing"
and my Mom, always thinking of other people, bought my Dad a book. I remember
that I had to count the cash for her because I could sense she was very nervous
about having to figure out how many bills to handover to the woman who was
probably 15 years older than her. In fact, I can remember thinking, "This
is stupid, my Mom is so much younger than this old lady - yet this lady seems
perfectly healthy and my Mom isn't. It's just not fair."
I was right. It's not fair.
When we pulled away from the location where the sale was
happening my Mother told me that the disease is, "Sad and unfair - the one
thing in this whole world she prayed she would never get." Right after
confessing this to me my Mother looked out the passenger window and spotted
some beautiful yellow flowers. She quipped, "I love those." Without
thinking I responded, "You want them?" She said that she did and I
pulled over.
The one challenge of these budding flowers was that they
lie in the flower bed of a home that was located on the side of the road. These
flowers were not wildflowers - in fact, they were planted there on purpose by
some faithful gardener. That didn't stop me.
I got back in the car and handed my Mother the yellow
flowers and she held them close to her face and breathed in. We laughed that I
had stolen them from the yard and just like that she said, "I'm sorry, who
are you again? Where are we going?"
I reminded my Mom that I was her youngest son and we had
just spent the day garage sailing, picking flowers and laughing. I told her it
was a great day. She replied, "Of course we did. I remember you. Sometimes
I just get confused."
So, what is Alzheimer's like? It's a like a gargantuan
mirror to life reminding us that something could be lurking in our future that
would make us really regret not stopping the car, stealing the flowers, and
laughing all the way back home. It's not fair, it's not prejudice. It is
angering, heartbreaking and final.
Most of all, Alzheimer's is a reminder that perhaps what
we're doing today doesn't matter that much. Maybe this weekend we shouldn't
pace the yard behind the lawnmower, or catch up on past-due proposals, perhaps
we should simply covet our time together creating memories that if someday are
stolen from us, someone else can recant.
No comments:
Post a Comment