jmgoyder

wings and things

Breaking nursing home rules!

For the last couple of days, I have brought Anthony home for the day. On Sunday, friends came over to see him/us so that was fantastic but yesterday he opted for a quiet day with just Ming and me. Today, I just went in late (4pmish) and grabbed him to come with me to do a few errands: groceries, returning dvds, pizza for Ming etc.

So, as I was trying to get him to walk to the door and outside to the car, I asked the couple of nurses who were helping us if they liked pizza. Their eyes lit up (as mine do when I hear ‘pizza’) so I said I was going to get pizza for Ming and I would love to bring them some too. Then, a very interesting conversation ensued:

Nurse 1: We’re not allowed to accept gifts.
Me: It’s not a gift – it’s pizza!
Nurse 2: I like pepperoni.
Me: What is the problem? I hate these stupid rules.
Nurse 1: Well, if you give us anything, and we accept it, it could be misinterpreted as bribery.
Me: What?
Nurse 1: No, no (laughing) we know you but the rule is that if we accept any gifts from relatives we might be in trouble because it might seem like the relative is doing it to get better care for their loved one.
Me: OMG but I bring chocolates and pistachios and olives in all the time and share it around. Does everyone think I’m a briberist?
Nurse 2: Of course not! We know you but we just have to be quite careful about this sort of thing, because of the rules.
Nurse 1: I like Hawaiian.
Me: Okay, so when I come back with Ants, I’ll just put the pizzas at the desk anonymously?

Both of the nurses nodded and we all had a chuckle but as Ants and I drove around town doing my errands and then ordering the pizzas, I asked him what he thought about the bribery nonsense and he said, “That’s what it’s like at the school, Jules.” (He always calls the nursing home ‘the school’).

Anyway, I wasn’t taking any of this seriously until we got back to the nursing home. The first thing I did was to place three large pizzas on the nursing desk (nobody was there so my secret was safe). Then I went back to help Ants into his room and chair. I turned his light and television on and then we shared a bit of his own pizza, then I left.

On my way out, I heard one of the kitchen staff quizzing Nurse 2: Where did those pizzas come from?
Nurse 2: I have no idea – they just appeared! But I am really grateful.

As I leapt to the exit door for a quick getaway, Nurse 2 called out, “Have a great evening, Julie.” I just hope that when they eat those pizzas, they also eat the boxes because my fingerprints are on them!

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Is it a bird, is it a plane or is it a mouse?

I guess it’s that time of year again – mouse season! I had intended to write a very serious post about very serious things until a very serious noise in the corner of my little home office alerted me to the fact that a very serious nibbling thing is chewing all of my grocery receipts (and I was going to return the inedible bananas – argh!)

Every time I creep just a few whispered steps towards the chewing noise, it all stops and there is total silence in that corner. But, as soon as I sit down on my chair in front of my laptop, the chewing noise happens again in that same corner. I keep carefully getting up from my chair to look into the corner with my torch and I have now put my Ugg boots on just in case … it’s a rat.

Okay, if this noisy, invisible, paper-munching, thing emerges in the next few minutes I will slap its face. No, actually I am a little scared of whatever it is so I think I’ll go to bed and hope IT doesn’t follow me.

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Not sure….

Tomorrow, Ming and I will go up for our final appointment with the spinal surgeon before corrective surgery is scheduled for the titanium fracture Ming caused by lifting something too heavy for his ‘new’ back. (He had surgery last February to correct a 75% scoliosis).

I am in two minds about further surgery. Okay the titanium fracture was a shock (mainly because I/we didn’t think titanium was breakable), but also because Ming has been in pain ever since – not agonizing pain, more crampy, achy pain if he has to twist, turn, lift etc.

Ming wants the corrective surgery, to hopefully solve the pain problem, but he also wants to be straight again. After the scoliosis surgery, his spine/scar/back looked almost straight and he was delighted in a double-whammy way; he was tall again and his asthma abated. He was amazingly accepting of the fact that he could never play football again, or go trail-biking on his motorbike. In fact, he has been told not to run, cycle, or even play volleyball or badminton because of the jolting effects these activities might have on his wonky back.

Now he is crooked again and he doesn’t want to be crooked.

The surgeon has already said that corrective surgery may not work so tomorrow I will be ready with some specific questions. Maybe we will opt out of further surgery – I don’t know. It has to Ming’s decision now that he is 19 – not mine.

I’m not sure….

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A strange incident at the nursing home

The week before last there was a Melbourne cup luncheon at the nursing home (the Melbourne cup is Australia’s annual horse race – ‘the race that stops the nation’). I have mixed feelings about this race but that is beside the point of this post.

Anyway, when Anthony still lived at home, he organized sweeps with family, friends and farm workers and he loved doing this and was very good at it. Horses were picked, money was collected and lists were made; it was great fun. Obviously he can’t do this now so I did a small sweep with just Ming, Ants and me, but it felt kind of false and feeble compared to the efforts Anthony made over the years. Oh well.

On the phone that morning, he said he had reserved me a seat at the nursing home luncheon so I hurried in to be there in time for the televised race at noon. On entering the very crowded ‘events’ room, one of the staff pointed to where Anthony was sitting. There was no chair for me beside him and I noticed there were no other family members which surprised me a bit, so I squeezed in next to him and sat on his walker. Around sixty residents were sitting around three long tables but there were only a few from Anthony’s ‘high care’ section. Each resident had either a glass of wine or beer and plates of nibbles were placed here and there so people could help themselves. I filled Anthony’s plate and helped another man too and then the race began on the television. Staff lined the walls just as excited as residents and once the race was over, the woman in charge of handing out the winnings did so with humour and I broke it to Anthony that we hadn’t won anything which he took in his stride.

At that moment, Anthony said, “Here, Jules, have some of this – I can’t eat it all.” So I spotted a spare spoon and scooped up a bit of potato salad which was delicious. “Have some more,” he said, delighted, but as I went to do so, someone tapped me on the shoulder. I looked up and saw that it was the nursing home manager.

“Julie, can I have a word with you?” she said, beckoning me to follow her into an adjacent room.
“Am I in trouble?” I said, jokingly, following her.
She turned around and frowned. “I cannot have you eating the food. I have already turned away two families because we can’t cater for family members on this kind of occasion.”
I felt shocked and humiliated and apologized profusely, so she said, “You can stay but don’t eat the food.”
“Anthony said I was invited,” I said.
“No,” she said.

I wanted to cry, I wanted to rant, I wanted to know who she’d turned away but I knew, as soon as I re-entered the events room because I immediately noticed the misery on Natalie’s face (Natalie is a resident in high care and is usually robust and full of laughter; her daughter and son visit every day so we have become friends. Their absence and Nat’s uncharacteristically long face told me what must have happened. I patted her on the shoulder but she hardly responded).

I then resumed my seat on Anthony’s walker, my face flushed with a mixture of embarrassment and rage. Once again, Anthony offered me some food from his plate but I whispered, “I’m not allowed to – have just been reprimanded.” He shook his head, disgusted, as I nervously helped him manage to feed himself. Suddenly plates of dessert came out and one of the staff serving said, “Hey, Jules, do you want some cheesecake?” I shook my head and said, “I’m not allowed.”

Later that week I bumped into Nat’s daughter who was looking glum. Like her mother, she is usually full of smiles. When I asked her what was wrong she told me she had been kicked out of the Melbourne cup luncheon and her mother had been miserable ever since. We had a brief, whispered conversation in which we both decided that it wouldn’t be tactical to complain.

I understand – of course I do – that having to cater for every resident’s family members for a big lunch would pose logistical problems but the fact is that in the nearly two years since Anthony has been a resident at this nursing home, I have only ever met a handful of family members who visit their loved ones, so it’s not like there would have been a crowd.

After the lunch was over that day, I went to the nursing manager’s office to once again apologize and tell her that I hadn’t known the rules. I guess she could see I was nearly in tears so she suddenly turned her usually unsmiling face into a half-smile and said, “It’s okay, Julie, you didn’t know.”

For the first time in ages, I cried all the way home.

Note: I have stopped calling it a nursing lodge and am calling it what it is – a nursing home.

The photos are of times gone by.

A Goyders Dardanup

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Nightmares

I had a dream last night that someone I knew (it wasn’t clear in the dream who exactly he was), took me to a holiday house somewhere near the sea. It was a really shabby old house and I felt a bit reluctant to go in but I did anyway because I didn’t want to hurt his feelings. Then, once I was inside, the door shut with a clang, and I knew immediately that I was doomed because a hanging rope was already in place for me and the someone-I-knew became a cackling stranger who was going to hurt me before killing me. The terror I felt within that dream woke me up, and I entered the day in a daze of perspiring relief that it was just a nightmare.

Have I read too many books, seen too many movies, thought too many thoughts, felt too many emotions? Yes, probably, but this was the most frightening nightmare I have ever had. Of course this nightmare is not hard to interpret at all I guess – a bunch of mixed emotions following trauma; ongoing anxiety for all those affected by trauma; shame, guilt and embarrassment over the stupid things I’ve said and done since the trauma; and a momentary wish that I would die.

The nightmare has made me see much better what it must be like for Anthony when he experiences the night terrors and and hallucinations of his PDD. If I can experience such a vivid nightmare whilst being physically healthy, and wake up with my face covered in the sweat of terror, then what is he going through?

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From heart to heart: The Dr. Says

I have made many friends in the blogosphere, one of whom is Sandra Callahan. She is wise and funny and positive and she and I share some very similar experiences. We have supported each other through many ups and downs and yesterday she made a comment on my post that compelled me to rethink yesterday’s doctor’s appointment with Anthony during which he described his dreadful terror the night before as ‘a bit of fun’. Sandra said, ‘He must have been embarrassed by his behavior. I cannot imagine how scary it must be when he doesn’t recognize people and they are trying to force him to do things he doesn’t understand.’

Sandra’s comment made me realize that Anthony’s bravado with the doctor was to cover his embarrassment and, even though I was aware of this at the time, it didn’t really hit me until I read Sandra’s wise words. Of course he was embarrassed – to be confused, to have been terrified of nurses, to have possibly made a fool of himself, and to have worried me so much. Anthony’s ‘bit of fun’ was his way of covering up his embarrassment and I understand that much better today than I did yesterday thanks to Sandra. She has once again helped to sharpen my sense of perception with her amazing empathy.

Our hearts have a lot in common except for one fundamental thing: mine is still beating loud and clear and Sandra’s is failing. She has congestive heart failure and is dying. But she is also living to the utmost, encouraging people like me and talking honestly about dying. Her book is now available and here is the link.

From my heart to your heart, Sandra.

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Embarrassing moments 2

A few weeks ago I had to get help from a computer technician, a surveyor, and a telecommunications antenna installer for various jobs. All three of them had the name Chris, a name I really like, but a name that I will, from now on, always associate with confusion.

Once Antenna Chris had attached my no-longer-mobile phone to a dock to an antenna placed on our roof, I was relieved to once more have a working telephone (since the land-line had worn out, literally). So when Surveyor Chris (who I hadn’t yet met) rang me not long after Antenna Chris had gone home, I raved on about how wonderful he was and thanked him profusely until I realized I was talking into a strange silence. Thinking I had another phone problem, I said, “Chris? Are you there?” and Surveyor Chris said, rather hesitantly, “Yes, but I think you think I am someone else?”

An hour or so later the phone rang and it was Computer Chris to see if he could come over the next day to finish up. Once again, I thought it was Antenna Chris who had left the antenna cord dangling until I tested it out and he had planned to tidy this up by attaching the cord to the wall with a bit of plaster. So I said that would be great and raved on about how wonderful he was and thanked him profusely until he interrupted me by saying, “I don’t know anything about the antenna – I want to finish up work on your laptop.”

Just for the record, I do not have a crush on Antenna Chris; it’s just that I think he is every other Chris.

Surveyor Chris is yet to ring me back.

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Peacock poop

Peacock poop is a bit unsightly when it is found on the top of your newly washed car, your outside veranda, or underneath your innocent shoe(s), but, once it dries, it is easy to sweep away with the leaves. Gutsy9 can ruin the immaculate neatness of this farm and house (ha!) by coming into the kitchen, flying up onto the table and eating whatever is on the table while I hang up the washing outside. Yesterday, she came into the veranda and purred (yes purred!) to Anthony until he stroked her little head. And then she pooped.

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Embarrassing moments 1

When you bump into someone whose name you’ve forgotten and, in order to cover this up, you say, “How do you pronounce your name again?” and they say “Bob”, or “Sue”.

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