jmgoyder

wings and things

The three of us

One of the things the three of us used to love doing was to go for little trips and stay at cabins or hotel rooms or holiday houses. The last time we did this was about a year ago and I remember thinking it would probably be the last time all three of us would have a holiday together because Husband’s health was fading fast and Son was 17 so he would lose interest. And, in just the last few weeks, it has become apparent that even going to a restaurant will be fraught with difficulties. So, as tomorrow is Anzac Day, a day that Husband, Son and I have enormous respect for, I have ordered meals for all three of us in his nursing lodge room, where we can watch the parade on television. It will be a bit like being in a hotel, and it will be a perfect occasion to pay homage to the ties with our various ancestors and each other.

Here are three ridiculous pictures of our last holiday away together. I love it when the two ‘boys’ rough and tumble – ha!

Don’t worry – Husband is only pretending to be scared in this one!

I’ve just realized how similar the layout of this hotel room is to Husband’s private room in the nursing lodge!

It will be the three of us inside Anzac Day one way or another!

26 Comments »

Silent versus noisy grief

In Western culture we don’t seem to have rituals of grief like other cultures. Yes, I realize that this is an overgeneralization, and debateable, however I have noticed at the various funerals I’ve been to over the years that it is appropriate to cry softly, to squeeze your heaving throat, and block your mouth’s sobs with a tissue but often, if anyone weeps loudly, they are avoided because it is so scary.

In many other cultures (we lived in Papua New Guinnea when I was a teenager), loud weeping is not only acceptable around death and illness, it is expected. I remember being shocked the first time I heard this wailing of grief. Here though, in Australia, the expression of grief is somehow inhibited, controlled. Even at my own father’s funeral over 30 years ago I remember, as a 19-year-old firstly being unable to cry from the shock (he died suddenly) but then being unable to stop crying and having to force myself to stop for the sake of dignity or control or something – I don’t know.

The other night – one of the nights Husband was supposed to have come home and Son was out – I woke up to the dark, creaky house, thinking I had heard Husband’s knock (he knocks on the wall of the bedroom if he needs me). It took me a moment to realize that he wasn’t even home, let alone knocking, so I tried to go back to sleep in the adjacent bed to his empty one. And then it hit me like a tidal wave of such intensity – that he was never going to come back except as a visitor to his own home – and I wailed and wept and scream-sobbed my way into dawn with our whole life together playing like a movie in my mind compared to the wretchedness of now. And I know there are so many other people who are gradually losing someone they love to illness but are unable to wail like I did because of the proximity of neighbours.

Husband and I have lost each other the way we were, and Husband and Son have lost each other the way they were too, and this is of such gut-grinding grief that it stops my breath.

 

38 Comments »

Going with the flow 2…..

Don’t panic – this ‘going with the flow’ stuff is not going to become a series, but I would like to emphasize one of Husband’s most beautiful attributes – the ability to laugh at himself. Yesterday, for instance, when he was home for the day, he was utterly unable to walk at all for most of the time, so I reminded him of our marathon the other day and, as I was re-telling the story, he and I both started to laugh at the ridiculousness of it.

Some people can laugh at themselves and some people can’t but I think everyone should be able to because it sure as hell beats crying or being embarrassed. It’s a really honest, transparent kind of laughing and I learned how to do it from Husband so I now laugh at myself a lot. I find this a lot more refreshing than all that self-analysis stuff that Son likes to do which is probably part of teenagerdom – dunno.

A while ago, when Husband was home for the weekend, we got out the abs machine I stopped using because Wantok the red-tailed black cockatoo destroyed bits of it (see long-ago posts). We got it out to take it to the dump. At the time, Julie-who-is-terrified-of-birds was visiting and she said she’d take it. All of a sudden, Husband, who had been sitting in a chair incapacitated, leapt up and onto (well not quite that fast) the abs machine and did about ten abswings. Son and I watched hysterically because none of us had been able to get to five, let alone ten. I was terrified Husband would have a heart attack or something but he did the ten swings after which all three of us had to help him up and then we all collapsed into laughter with Husband laughing the most!

Husband doesn’t laugh like he used to; it’s as if he’s forgotten how. He used to have this huge, loud laugh where his face all crinkled up but now the Parkinson’s has rendered his face impassive for the most part.  Son, pictured on the right here, has the same laugh thank goodness!

31 Comments »

Going with the flow….

Well, having Husband home for the weekend, and even going out to lunch and various other plans, went awry over the last few days so I am learning not to anticipate anything with too much excitement anymore – and to always have a contingency plan!

For example, on the day I had planned for us to go to our favourite restaurant for lunch, Son didn’t want to and Husband didn’t either, so I left Son home, went into the nursing lodge and Husband was extremely mobile and eager to go for a walk, something I haven’t done with him before – well except on the farm – because usually he is too immobile. I was amazed as he led me rather speedily down the hallway from his room to the nurse’s station and to the locked doors which the nurses opened for us to go out into the sunshine.

“Well, your new meds. are working well,” I said, bemused as Husband pulled me along in the slipstream of his unexpected energy. We walked down the nursing home driveway then followed a sandy trail that backed onto houses on the same street and proceeded up a bit of a hill. At the top of the hill, I turned around and exclaimed over the ocean view which you can’t see from the nursing lodge. We had been walking for ten minutes so I assumed we would go back to the nursing lodge but Husband wanted to keep going down the other side of the hill which was very sandy and steep, so on we went! By then we were around half a kilometre away from the nursing lodge and Husband was beginning to falter and I was beginning to panic.

“It’s just around the corner,” he said.

“What is?”

“Bythorne,” he said (Bythorne is the name of our farm).

It was then that I realized that the same drugs that are making Husband more mobile might also be increasing confusion and hallucinations (I know this because it’s happened before).

He then said that he could see Bythorne and I had to gently remind him that home was 15 kms away, but he just said, “So? I can make it. What’s wrong with you?” Thinking quickly, I said I was exhausted and didn’t want to go any further, that I wanted to go back the nursing lodge, and he got a bit annoyed.

Just then an elderly woman approached us from the corner that Husband wanted to turn. She had a bunch of flowers in her hand and greeted us with great enthusiasm. I asked if she were going to the nursing lodge and she said yes and that she was visiting her old school friend who was 89 but whose name she couldn’t remember. Long story short, she and I eventually persuaded Husband to turn around and go back but then, of course, we had to climb this awful, sandy hill.

Well, with the 89-year-old woman holding Husband’s left elbow, me holding his right hand and him using his walking stick with his left hand we made the very, VERY slow journey back.  While we did so, the elderly woman introduced herself as Pauline and she asked us our names which, for some strange reason, gave her a fit of the giggles. A couple of minutes later, she repeated her question and asked me what was wrong with my father and I had to clarify that he was my husband. This didn’t make her giggle, but gave her pause and she then began talking rather incoherently about her friend who was 89 but whose name she couldn’t remember and, for the third time, we introduced ourselves to each other.

All of a sudden, Pauline, who was very agile, sort of sprinted ahead to the crest of the hill and said goodbye. Husband panting by now, muttered, “I don’t know why we couldn’t have gone to Bythorne, Jules, it’s not that far.”I apologized and continued trying to pull him along, little step by little step.

“What did you think of that lovely old lady?” I asked as we FINALLY reached the parking lot of the nursing lodge.

“A definite case of Alzheimer’s Disease,” he said, “poor old thing.”

34 Comments »

Tomorrow

Well the ‘yeeha!’ anticipation of yesterday’s post was crushed today when I found out that I am not supposed to bring Husband home so soon after his hospital adventure, so that was a fizzog. The disappointment in Husband’s voice on the phone has crept into today’s nothingness and splashed everything with gray.

So, no champagne or crayfish after all and Son is at his friend’s place so I’m alone and, although I usually love being alone, tonight, having just said ‘goodnight’ to Husband on the phone, I feel more bereft than usual.

It’s okay because my plan for tomorrow is that Husband, Son and I go to the restaurant where we celebrated my birthday earlier this year.

31 Comments »

Yeeha!

Husband’s new medical regime seems to be working and he is much better so I just rang him to say I’d pick him up for the weekend and he and I are overjoyed and Son is going to stay at his friend’s place anyway so we won’t have that conflict issue and I better sweep the verandas and get some crayfish and champagne and invite lots of people and dust the house and find my lipstick and find the Blackbooks dvds Husband loves so much and pick some flowers and maybe get a pork roast or a lamb roast and heaps of salad and to hear him sounding so good after the last two weeks of weirdness and stuff is great so I am experimenting with long semi-unpunctuated sentences that end with the words yeeha yahoo hurray but mostly yeeha because that is my favourite word tonight!

45 Comments »

Dead or alive?

This picture was taken at Husband’s 75th birthday party 14 months ago. A lot has changed since then, to say the least….

……………………………………………………….

I hesitate to write this post because I realize it might provoke the ire of some, but, when Husband said yesterday that it would be better for everyone if he died, I caught myself thinking yes and no in the same moment.

Obviously, my no response was the one I went with in order to comfort Husband and, when I saw him later in the day (he had been ambulanced back from the local hospital to the nursing lodge, but I didn’t know this at the time), I reiterated this no.

On the other hand, now that Husband, Son and I have managed to crack the shell of the boiled egg of death, that yes is a tempting thought if only to relieve Husband’s suffering in relation to his recent downhill ‘slide’ into this new phase of Parkinson’s disease.

Euthanasia is a terrifying topic; it is also utterly out of the question for us, but Husband is no longer in the throes of life but in the throes of death. This latter point is not an emotional statement; it is a statement of fact.

The other evening, as I was tucking Husband into bed here at home, I said, “Sometimes, when I can’t wake you up, I think you’re dead.” In reply, he said, drowsily, “That would be a good outcome,” and he actually chuckled. You see, I told you he is a hero!

I am not sure what Husband, Son and I are supposed to wish for anymore….

80 Comments »

Waiting

There may, or may not, be some subliminal, symbolic significance to this crooked photo of Tapper sneaking away from her eggs to have a quick dip, but I probably just had the camera the wrong way around. In fact, as this photo took itself some time ago (because I’m sure I didn’t do this intentionally) and I just found it on my desktop, I thought I’d put it in this post just for the hell of it!

I am waiting for the hospital to ring me to confirm that Husband is now okay enough to go back to the nursing lodge. I have tried ringing him twice but no answer so I’m not sure what is going on exactly and I’m not very good at waiting.

If you aren’t already familiar with Samuel Beckett’s famous play, Waiting for Godot, it’s worth a google. If you are familiar with it then you will know why I feel like I am inside that play, not in a horrible, negative way, just in a waiting-for-nothingish way!

Like Tapper’s eggs – are they ever going to hatch?

I had a lot of birds waiting this morning outside the back veranda but eventually they gave up on me! It’s okay, I will get them some cabbage a bit later in the day….

Ah, the hospital just rang but it wasn’t what I expected; it was the physiotherapist saying she couldn’t continue to treat Husband unless I paid the bill from last year. I was so embarrassed and admitted I hadn’t opened the mail lately, then I paid it immediately on the phone with my mastercard and apologized for keeping them waiting! Argh.

I wonder if there is a philosophy out there that helps people to wait in a way that is fruitful rather than frustrating….

Still waiting but unsure of what exactly I am waiting for – hehe!

31 Comments »

My bad

‘My bad’ is, I think, a rather weird expression that has been bandied about over the last year or so, and I am never sure if is supposed to be a question, as in, “Am I bad?” or a statement, “This is me being bad and good on me!”

‘My bad’ has probably already been replaced with another popular saying but I hope not because I rather like its ambiguity; on the other hand, maybe I just don’t really get it!

‘My bad’ is today, for me, a combination of question and statement because, in a couple of hours, I have to go back to the hospital to see Husband and I don’t want to … yes, I seem to be getting mybadder by the moment!

I’ve dropped my bundle of empathy somewhere and I’ve forgotten where. I’m not sure how this could have happened and I don’t seem to have the energy or enthusiasm to go and look for it. I would much rather have a nap which is exactly what Husband will be doing right now in the hospital because that’s how the noon drugs affect him.

My bad? This photo is of the ‘good old days’ four years ago now!

And this is Jack, the Irish Terrier I bought for Husband several months ago before the ‘bad’ of Husband’s Parkinson’s got ‘badder’ so now Jack is here and Husband is there and this is definitely not good!

It is hard to believe now that 18 months ago, Husband, Son and I were able to go to a hotel in Perth and have a good time.

My sad….

61 Comments »

Music to the ears

I am grinning from ear to ear because in the very next room Son is singing at the top of his lungs, practising a song. He has his earphone things in and is thumping the table and has no idea how DREADFUL the noise is because he obviously can’t hear himself! Usually he can hold a tune (well hopefully, as he is now doing a Certificate 4 in Music, learning bass guitar, singing and band), but tonight he seems to have reverted back to some sort of primal-ness.

Oh, he’s stopped – joy and bliss and peace. I want to kiss his feet … oh no, he’s started singing again at the top of his lungs and it’s AWFUL! He sounds like a broken chainsaw or a tractor falling into a ditch.

Nevertheless, it is a very happy sound – not particularly soothing but full of loud joy so I have just stuffed some tissues into my ears so that my heart can absorb these new vibrations … because this is the first time for over a month (since his spinal surgery and Husband going into the nursing lodge) that I have heard him HAPPY! YEEHA!!!

29 Comments »