hey bar, it's neil

There is loss and grief when you have a parent living with dementia. I wrote this in a writing group recently, in response to a prompt. Writing is a beautiful way to process grief. A vulnerable share. Perhaps you will do the same. X. B. 

Hey Bar, it’s Neil. 

I don’t call my father Neil. He is Dad, Daddy or Grampsy mostly, as affectionately known by the grandkids for years and all who know that throughout the town. Until his driving was revoked and the car sold, he would spin around town with plates emblazoned with his trusty moniker. They now sit proudly on his fireplace mantel. Even he was delighted in the law breaking idea of never returning them to the DMV.

It’s Neil. This is his dementia talking.

He rarely leaves the confines of his one-bedroom condo, or the surrounding block. His habitual memory is so deeply grooved in a decade’s old routine, we dare not remove this melodic record from its sleeve. 

He wakes, he swings open the familiar back fence of the enclave and walks to Lange’s Deli. This is his Cheers. They know his name. That his beloved rescue Max has died. (Though he often reminds them). That he will want both The Post and The Daily News. He used to get a toasted bagel too. He has grown accustomed to a newly developed sweet tooth. The donuts with the most sprinkles seem to call to him. They must think all the grandkids are coming for breakfast. His caretaker tells them to stop indulging them in multiples. There is a childlike spirit and joy to what is left of the man I know. I hang on to that fiercely. Tight like his best hugs. And advice. That is the new outside, simple and pared down. But I guess that is familiar too, when you take the rest down to his Ohio roots.

He tells me how quickly they remove the snow on the sidewalks. Goes on about the weather. Unless it is jotted on a calendar we keep for him on the dining table, it is not in his purview. Not happening.

He calls his caretakers “The Patchers”, as they switch his daily medication from place to place on his back. A small 1x1 medicine doused square of hope to slow the hideous progression of the disease. He regales the Patchers with charm. On walks, he shows them the tallest pine tree, the house on the block with the wrap around porch that he admires most. At the library, he takes in the children’s story time. I have noticed, that there is something familiar to him that he sees in kids. He takes them in with rapt attention. Does he feel their equal? I am not sure of the connection, but it is stunning and simple all at once.

I am not certain where Neil is most days. Sometimes I dread calling. My brilliant advertising Mad Man of a Dad is no longer. His strong but quiet advice. A great ear and dazzling story teller. I can hear the ice cubes clinking in a cocktail back when he held the room. He is still funny as fuck. Thank God. The Patchers think so too.

I tell him stories about Neil. The one about taking a friend’s son to soccer games after she lost her husband on 9-11 and could not be at two games at the same time. How we dedicated a bench to Alan at his favorite diner, and how he used to place flowers there in memorial on that day. He would always send me a photo. “Boy, that sure sounds like something I would do, I wish I remembered.” Humbled by his own heart and actions. I take a mental note to keep on telling him these stories. This is my salve. How I keep him alive, though he is before me smiling and breathing and being.

When asked about hitting up a movie, or something that Neil used to really enjoy, he often declines. The inside gets bigger and more familiar as the outside eases in. I wish so much more for him. But, I am learning lessons in all of this. I too admire the way the fruit is so artfully stacked at Whole Foods now. He pointed it out on our visit there. You are so right Dad. We are in no rush to check things off the list. We are just inside.

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blessing for the brokenhearted | jan richardson

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let us agree
for now
that we will not say
the breaking
makes us stronger
or that it is better
to have this pain
than to have done
without this love.

let us promise
we will not
tell ourselves
time will heal
the wound,
when every day
our waking
opens it anew.

perhaps for now
it can be enough
to simply marvel
at the mystery
of how a heart
so broken
can go on beating,
as if it were made
for precisely this—

as if it knows
the only cure for love
is more of it,

as if it sees
the heart’s sole remedy
for breaking
is to love still,

as if it trusts
that its own
persistent pulse
is the rhythm
of a blessing
we cannot
begin to fathom
but will save us
nonetheless.

 

i remember | a joe brainard exercise

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I remember when the kids used to jump off of the bridge at Sandy Hook. The cheering from the crowd with each release, as we all waited for the Red Bank bus. Sunburns and beer buzz and beach bags in tow.

 I remember all of my phone numbers as a kid. It is obviously my super power. 842.3149 we had for the longest time at 52 Hubbard. 617-5787 was part of our DNA.  And the 5782 was the “emergency line”.  Oh, and answering machines. 

 I remember your purple Ralph Lauren sweater. You had this in every color, but this was the one that was left. I put my face in it to visit you. It was already faded, but it was a potent remnant and reminder. It smelled like you had just left the room.  

I remember when she came to the house with the bakery box from Brooklyn. You don’t know me she said, holding the string up in her nervous hand, voice trembling too, but your mom taught me how to wear red lipstick.

 I remember when you seemed too tired to keep going in the mall.  We always held hands. And that is the best part in my memory. I can’t think of anything we ever bought that stands out, except the boots from JC Penney that broke, and a few cool things from Spencer’s.  I think that was the day when I realized you were getting older. 

 I remember going to Grand Central and seeing the big book.  People were winding their way around the velvet ropes, waiting on line there, in silence. It was a book of remembrance for Jackie Kennedy, someone whispered. It was not too long after you had passed away. That she did. I wrote a note to her children, hoping that they knew that no matter how famous she was, that it was still just their mom. I always say that losing a mom at any age, and no matter her world-class status, it is always so hard. And I was sorry. I also hoped like hell that my mom was with Jackie that day.  

heeding the call

today i took part in a motherless daughters group call. yes, after 26 years of motherless mother’s days, i found myself called to the call. hosted by authors hope edelman and claire bidwell smith , i joined a group of over four hundred women worldwide, to share insight, feelings (and a few survival techniques!) around mother’s day. without a mother. this culturally sanctioned way and day to celebrate can often arrive as a mixed bag of, please-remove-all-the-mother’s-day-cards-from-the-aisle-and-ban-the-commercials-and-clever-gift-ideas- from-my-purview-please, with a side order of sad, topped with a generous heap of insensitivity, thus resulting in a malaise of fervently pissed off.

i have followed hope since she released her book “motherless daughters”, 25 years ago this year. the salvation found in every woman’s story of loss, and her own, created a virtual community of understanding, of knowing, of sameness, permission and allowance—right there in my very own missing-my-mom, new york city living room. the same as it did today. only now, i am the mother of two, living in chicago. i am much older, but equally sideswiped by the encroaching festivities. as the hosts spoke, the women dashed off messages to one another on the side. nods of agreement. alternative ideas. encouragement and i’m sorrys.

the lifelong process of healing and dealing, has been less than linear. some days easier than others. some years so heavy, you plot how you will Houdini your way out of your own self-imposed armor to make it to brunch. each milestone and tidbit of news that spurs the itch to ring, write or send a carrier pigeon into the universe of missing your momness, hits when you least expect it. so into the wild wilderness of the great unmothered, unknown we go.

today on the call, hope and claire suggested carrying on a two-tired relationship with your mother, ways to live with her absence. the one of loss and the one of an inner relationship. accepting and leaning into an imaginal life with her. i was recently prompted by claire, in her new book, to write to my mother. as a writer for much of my work life, i had never thought to write into the ether. what kind of stamp would that require? in times of confusion, unaccountable heartache, or longing-simply take to the pen. and i did. and it felt like a delicious salve. dear mom, if you could see my girls, it began.

in a recent tedx talk, a psychologist shared that when we write, the pre-frontal cortex actually responds in healing. writing to her, or imagining her writing to you, can actually craft healing in the brain and in turn the heart. calming the parasympathetic nervous system straight out of fight or flight into perceived equanimity. in essence, a mothering of yourself.

all of 26 years later, i am still finding ways to find my mom in my day to day. to feel less unmothered. this year, my youngest daughter surprised me with a trip to share the day with my you-wish-you-had-one-like-mine, sister. what a gift on so very many fronts. new traditions awakening in all of the many years that have passed. while we have been together on this day before, that my fifteen year old daughter thought it the perfect surprise, left me heart warmed. stories written and unfurled. a means to awaken our innermost relationship. the one that resides and lives on inside. i am heading the call. this is my mother’s day.

three

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no words. just shorthand. like spies we could walk the mall and nobody knew our mission. veins pulsing. decorating her delicate skin. i can feel them with my eyes. decoding her hands in my memory. viscerally feeling her touch. i know hers. small and warm. soft. tanned. so very tiny. so large in their calm. yours in hers. sometimes a firm squeeze . like our own language. mother morse code. angry. proud. dots and dashes in the palm. happy like a skip. pulling in a hurried rush. three tight squeezes. pulsed right into your core. i. love. you.

ellen

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i lost my mom ellen, in 1993. suddenly. she was just 50 years old. she went to the beach, and never came home. she suffered a brain aneurism. right there in her beach chair. just went to sleep for the very last time. healthy. happy. whip smart. a woman who changed the lives of all she met.

she had talked to each of us that day. went to sandy hook to enjoy a day off from her exceptional career as a realtor. her beach bag was filled with a receipt for her favorite santa rosa plums (pounds of them) and a trashy super market novel. the beach was probably her favorite place and salve. we alway say while it was far too soon, she may have written this ending.

she was pure magic. left an indelible mark wherever she walked. but there were few things she left behind for us to remember her by. she was far more doer than collector or keeper. she was so busy soaking up life, we usually had little to almost no gas in the car. “lean forward girls, we’re running on luck”, she’d say. last at the mall finding the perfect dress. closing down carvel for a cone with sprinkles.

finding memories like a rare wedding photo, while recently spending time with my dad, is like little unearthing love letters from her. we have always called her grandma ellen, though she never lived to know that her daughters had four wonderful kids between us. she would be so damn proud. fucking proud. the cashier at any store would have had an ear bent with stories of their stunning accomplishments. she knew the minutiae of our every days, and she would have surely known theirs. what a kick it would have been for her to be a grandmother. we have taught all of the kids at least one or two of her famous camp wicosuta songs (we went there too), i adore a good bad word or few as she did (proud sailor mouth), and my sister is her spitting image. we buy discount in her honor. we catch ourselves in mom moments and say, “ok, ellen”.

we continue to tell her story, and live her lessons every damn day. because that is how you go on. with a little bit of her in your soul. and a ladybug sighting, or day at the beach. just when you need it most.

the thing is | by ellen bass

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to love life, to love it even

when you have no stomach for it

and everything you’ve held dear

crumbles like burnt paper in your hands,

your throat filled with the silt of it.

when grief sits with you, its tropical heat

thickening the air, heavy as water

more fit for gills than lungs:

when grief weights you like your own flesh

only more of it, an obesity of grief,

you think, how can a body withstand this?

then you hold life like a face,

between your palms, a plain face,

no charming smile, no violet yes, and you say, yes, i will take you

i will love you again.