jmgoyder

wings and things

The Mad Cake Lady!

Remember, several posts ago I put up a photo of a Harley Davidson that was actually a cake and my little guessing game resulted in lots of complimentary comments to the cake maker, my good friend, Julie (another Julie, not me)? Okay, so if you don’t remember, here is the picture of Julie’s husband, Barry’s 50th birthday cake, courtesy of Julie (both the picture and the cake itself).

Yes, I know it is difficult to believe that this is a cake (Ants and I were at the birthday party briefly and I even touched this bike, but still couldn’t believe it was a cake!) And even now it seems almost inconceivable that someone could do something this creative and fool an intelligent person like me -ha!~

Julie is not only the madcakelady,  she is also a person without guile (and I am yet to meet another one as guileless), a wife and mother, the definition of a smile and a very good friend. And her husband, Baz, is Anthony’s favourite friend. When Ants turned 75 and was still living here at home, over a year ago, I threw a massive party and guess who made the cake (actually she made a couple as well as those profiterolly things) – Julie did!

So, for you cakey types (I don’t like cake but Julie still loves me), she needs a vote so you have to follow her instructions below. Now, I don’t usually do this kind of thing on the blog but I have made a special concession for our very own Made Cake Lady! The following is a copy/paste of her facebook request:

Ok my wonderful friends – I have entered my Harley Davidson Cake into a cake competition and need your help

This is a big one going into a draw to share in $7000 worth of prizes but cant win without your help – could you please use the link to “like” my cake everyday.

You can vote more than once but only once a day PLEASE HELP ME…

PLEASE USE THE BELOW LINK TO VOTE OR IT DOESN’T COUNT.

Vote For My Cake!

www.cakerevolution.cweb.com.au

Simply ‘Like’ my cake and you could also win a $1,499 Kenwood Chef Mega Pack!

Okay, I have now done my bit of unusual blogging and I think you can see, from the photo below, why I love her!

Note: https://www.facebook.com/#!/julie.pelusey

21 Comments »

Yawning

Well so much for the red wine idea. When I went into the nursing lodge this afternoon I could see that it wasn’t going to work today. I walked in through the entrance doors to the unlocked side of the section where Anthony is, past the foyer and into the big room where various activities happen, and stopped short when I saw that there was, indeed, an activity going on.

I stepped back and apologized for my intrusion into what I found out later was an occupational therapy session of skittles (like bowls), but I was immediately welcomed in by a combination of residents, carers and staff. But I hesitated, as my eyes searched the small crowd of people sitting around the ‘bowling alley’, looking for Anthony and, as I stood at the doorway, and the woman in charge began to finish the session, I saw him in the far corner, sitting in one of the chairs on the opposite side of the room. He didn’t see me and, as I waited for the bowling session to evolve into afternoon tea, and those residents who could walk vacated their chairs to sit at a long table that had been set up, I watched him for a few moments before rushing up to kiss him and help him get to the table.

In those few moments I saw what other people see – a big man, slumped in a chair with a look of such blankness on his face that, if you didn’t know him, you would assume he had utterly lost the plot. You would walk past him assuming he was beyond communicating with. You might give him a glance of pity and keep walking, not noticing that he turned his head just a fraction to see if you were someone he knew. I read in his expressionless face such a look of undisguised sorrow that I wanted to run at and through him like a ghost-angel and turn around and find him back to the way he was. I also wanted to run away, to sob, to smash the room up.

Instead, I joined him for afternoon tea with a group of other residents, many of whom are from the dementia section. Ants is in the high care section but the dementia section is next door. I shared some chitchat and chocolate with the residents, carers and volunteers as I sat close to Anthony, who gripped my hand in his and who couldn’t stop looking at me. Then I helped him back to his room and settled him in (with the help of a walker contraption which he is now supposed to use instead of the walking stick).

We then had our usual discussion about coming home – him saying how he wanted to come home for the day/night, and me saying he had become too heavy for me, and him saying he could try harder etc. Then, just as I was about to begin yet another explanation as to the why of our predicament, Anthony began to yawn and yawn and yawn. Every time I reached a point of extreme eloquence he would yawn again. Finally, I said, “Am I boring you?” And he said, “You are a bit.”

I laughed all the way home!

So here is cheers; I have decided to have a glass of red wine.

52 Comments »

Red wine

I am a beer girl myself but Anthony prefers red wine. I remember when we’d go out to lunch or dinner, the waitress would always give him the beer and me the wine and a bit of laughter would be exchanged before we swapped drinks.

This afternoon, I decided to do something different and go see Ants at 5pm instead of earlier in the day. I rang him beforehand and he answered the phone (a miracle in itself!) and I said I was coming in to have a drink.

It was WONDERFUL! I now think this might be the best time to visit because the atmosphere is more mellow than the flurry of daytime. I took the bottle of wine into his room and poured him a glass and I opened my beer and we had a drink together, laughing and talking and then his dinner was brought in and I helped him with that a bit and then I had to go, and he was fine!

Thank you, red wine!

51 Comments »

The dreamchild

During the uncertain years before Anthony and I were engaged, I had a very strange certainty that twirled around in my mind, and whirled around in my stomach. So, one day, I sat down in my little bedsit and wrote about our son-to-be. I sent the poem to Anthony:

THE DREAMCHILD

He waits in a misted capsule

At the corner of my mind

And my thoughts scatter

Through him

Warming cooling him wrapped

A wisp

A fingerbreath of being peering through

Door ajar

A bloodlight outline here

Out of veiled velvet space

The colour of him blinked

Inked in jagged clear

An extension of you

Joined at this corner of misted mind

Seated crosslegged child

A particled preconception

Of something certain

And certain now he waits

For you

His strange cry smiles sunwashed

Into the beating

Beating silence marking time

Timeless

And silence like blue blue air

Sponged cool

His patience a single crimson flame

Poised

Dancing pivot

Of something certain

And certain he waits

Waiting now

We wait

For you

He waits at the corner for you

My child to be

And a few years late, the dreamchild turned into Ming!

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Sorrow is not as scary as it seems

Okay, in case it isn’t already obvious from recent posts on this blog, I am/we are experiencing sorrow due to my husband, Anthony’s physical and mental deterioration (courtesy of Parkinson’s disease). Ming, our son is also experiencing sorrow but from a sensible distance and that is fine and understandable.

So the bulk of this sorrow is mine alone – of course it is and I can’t, and don’t, expect anyone else to take it on because why should they? All of our friends and family have their own lives, their own joys and challenges and, sometimes, their own personal sorrows.

Even Anthony himself doesn’t feel the intensity of sorrow I feel and that is a good thing – a wonderful thing. And, as for me, this is my own deep sorrow that cannot be alleviated by invitations to dinner or movies or lunches or all of those suggestions from my beautiful friends, because this sorrow is not self-indulgent – it is a simple reality and it is inescapable. It doesn’t plunge me into a pit of despair; it just is and it somehow stills my soul.

This kind of sorrow doesn’t want or need cheering up; it doesn’t need distraction; it needs to be felt in its entirety, to be embraced and acknowledged and never avoided. It sits on my shoulder like a half tame bird who might fly off at any time – unpredictable.

Sorrow needs to be faced without fear and, strangely perhaps, it also needs to be embraced, accepted, absorbed and, for me, this is (despite the openness of this blog), deeply personal. I need to do this sorrow thing by myself. So for my beautiful neighbour-friends who care enough to want to rescue me from this sorrow, please let me be for awhile – let me figure it out by myself because I know that I can and will.

I am no longer afraid of sorrow.

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When life holds its breath

When life holds its breath

And the rubbish bin hasn’t been emptied yet

And the dishes haven’t been done again

And you hope for the unthinkable

That you will only be able to breathe again when he can’t

When your friends either overwhelm or discard you

When your family pities you and can do nothing to help, no matter how hard they try

You can always smash the lung balloon of life and make it breathe again

Or not

You can remember every single moment of your life with the person who is dying

Loud, boisterous parties in the kitchen with the stereo blasting

Discovering little bits of each others’ stories like drops of sweat or dew

A single perfect camellia

A cheeky half moon

A baby, now grown as upright as a karri tree

A child who doesn’t remember, but knows his father was not always as ill as now

A teenager who doesn’t remember our holidays, our joy, our frivolity

When life holds its breath

All you can do is wait for the inevitability of death

And hope the slow motion can be fast forwarded in order to skip the bad and boring bits

So that your own breath will come back

So that things will not be endlessly paused

A story with a definite resolution

A bird dead or alive but not dying, not dying

When life holds its breath

You have to tap it on the shoulder

Make it see what you see

Give it mouth-to-mouth

Kiss death, kiss life

Brandish humour like a sword

Overcome fear with love

Embrace the influx of crows

Stop wondering why

Stop crying and crying and crying

Take the white peacock feather from the ground and put it behind your ear

Wrestle the dreams of falling by becoming a giant

When life holds its breath

You have to make sure you can breathe for yourself

You have to hold the hand of your dying husband

You have to candle yourself into a glowing smile

You have to flap your wings like an angry gander with no tomorrow in mind

You have to remember and love all of the people you once knew who were dying and you did nothing

And understand the why of the fear of impending death

The loneliness of now and the absence of then

When life holds its breath

67 Comments »

A letter of thanks

I have decided to write a letter of thanks to the wonderful staff at Wattle Hill Lodge so that they know how much they are appreciated. This is a first draft!

A letter of thanks to all staff looking after Anthony

Thank you for being so kind and considerate, way beyond the call of duty.

Thank you for being so gentle with Anthony, for liking him, for talking to him and listening to him.

Thank you for tolerating my uncertainty and ignorance of various rules, like signing in and out, coming in when there was a gastric outbreak, forgetting to fill out the satisfaction survey.

Thank you for your friendly smiles and greetings when you are rushed off your feet.

Thank you for putting up with my phonecalls to you when I can’t get through on Anthony’s phone.

Thank you for not minding our son Ming’s loud cheekiness.

Thank you for telling me that some of Anthony’s clothes were a bit shabby, to bring him socks that had treads on them, to bring him long pants (which he has always hated, but is now okay with).

Thank you for not minding when I accidentally interrupted your lunch breaks, or handover, or couldn’t remember the code to get out of the door.

Thank you for accepting that I can’t sew so all of Anthony’s clothes are labelled with a texta.

Thank you for not telling me to get lost when I wanted to help you help him with the toilet.

Thank you for so quickly realising I was not his daughter.

Thank you for telling me how disappointed Anthony was when I altered arrangements to bring him home.

Thank you for adjusting his phone, ringing me on his phone, recharging his phone when it was flat.

Thank you for making him feel safe, secure and fine at night now.

Thank you for tolerating the various doctors’ alterations of medications.

Thank you for the fact that Anthony thinks/knows you are all wonderful.

Thank you for being so kind to me too.

Thank you for not noticing that underneath my smile, my heart is ripped apart and the floor of my life is covered in the blood of loss.

Thank you for telling me I shouldn’t be lifting Anthony on my own.

Thank you for telling me that you had also noticed he was becoming more confused.

Thank you for talking to me, chatting to me, making me feel normal – making us feel normal – in a comfortable, cup-of -tea way.

There are so many more thankyous to you guys. I used to be an enrolled nurse and I mostly worked in nursing homes or with multi-handicapped people, so I know what you are all having to do to help Ants as he deteriorates, and I salute you.

So, thank you from my heart – all of you. I haven’t mentioned names here because I don’t know everybody’s names yet but I will work on that.

51 Comments »

My hero

I have to break it to Ants that I can’t bring him home for the day any more because I can’t physically lift him. He is now requiring two nurses to assist him in every way. I will tell him tomorrrow; it is a hard thing to say and I am nearly beside myself with grief because he is my hero in so many ways  – hence my resorting to sentimental music like the following….

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0IA3ZvCkRkQ

54 Comments »

A wonderful realization

Well, it took a wordpress glitch to shake some sense into me. The notifications of blogs I’d subscribed to (even though I did that whole unsubscribe thing awhile back) weren’t coming through to my email account, so I got a bit worried and, yes, felt a little lonely not to get those emails.

Various comments suggested that other bloggers were experiencing glitches like this and several said they simply use the Reader to check up on their blogfriends. To cut a long story short, I went in and unsubscribed from every single blog in order to resubscribe when my particular glitch was solved.

But halfway through the unsubscribing process, I realized that blogging has become my way of avoiding things, avoiding some of my responsibilities, avoiding Anthony and the pain of what he is going through in this final phase of Parkinson’s disease.

So, from now on, and I’m sure none of you will be hurt by this because I have totally unsubscribed from everyone – I am simply going to write a daily blog, respond to comments and that’s it. I have to do this for awhile so that I can focus on Anthony and Ming, so for those bloggers who I am close to, with whom I have exchanged support, humour etc., please forgive me. I will catch up with your blogs as soon as I can and I am available by email anyway.

I have decided to stop using blogging as an avoidance strategy.

Hopefully this makes sense!

61 Comments »

Funny incidents

FUNNY INCIDENT 1

Anthony and I just had a nostalgic talk on the phone about the Captain Stirling hotel (where he thought he was last night). He remembers vividly his delusional episode which I find rather remarkable. I remind him of our stay there when I was heavily pregnant.

Me: You took me to the cheapest hotel in Perth, with a room that didn’t even have a bathroom so I had get up and go to a communal bathroom a million times during the night because of being pregnant and needing to use the loo. Your were such a tightarse!

Anthony: I thought it was quite romantic.

Me: You really ARE deluded!

Anthony: Remember bumping into Ed in the bar? [distant relation around Anthony’s age]

Me: How could I forget that! Remember how we didn’t understand why the bar was so crowded with middle-aged women?

Anthony: And Ed told us is was ‘Grab a granny night’!

Me: It was appalling! So why did you think you were there last night?

Anthony: Because it looked exactly like the Captain Stirling.

Me: So you’re okay today?

Anthony: Yes, I’m not there today.

Me: Where – at the Captain Stirling?

Anthony: Yes, I’m back here.

Me: Okay, I’ll be in later – I love you.

Anthony: [mumbles incoherently – this is happening a lot now]

Me: I can’t hear you – what did you say?

Anthony: I love you.

Me: Well it’s about time you said that!

Anthony: I couldn’t remember the words.

You gotta laugh!

FUNNY INCIDENT 2:

Ming and I have the usual mother and son conflicts and after a particularly horrible argument, which Ming later insisted on analysing every nuance of until we were reconciled (rather exhausting), we had this conversation-

Ming: Mum, I don’t want to see any of my friends for awhile.

Me: Why? What’s wrong?

Ming: Nothing. It’s just that I want to work on repairing our relationship.

Me: You really are unique, kid!

Ming: I try.

We both laugh!

FUNNY INCIDENT 3

Adolescent peacock 1 [we have too many for me to name them!]: Is Julie watching?

Adolescent peacock 2: She’s trying to take pictures you idiot! Turn around.

White adolescent peacock: I think I’ll leave you guys to it.

Angelina: Those two peacocks are getting very cocky aren’t they, Malay.

Malay: Hey, watch your language!

Tina Turner: Don’t worry, New Kid, around here this is considered normal behaviour.

New Kid: How do they do that feather thing?

Tina Turner: I don’t know and I don’t care!

Phoenix 1: Their need to flaunt themselves deeply saddens me. It’s a sign of the times. I prefer to let my beauty speak for itself.

Adolescent peacock 2: I told you to turn around. Do you think Julie wants a picture of your bum?

Adolescent peacock 1: I can’t turn around because you’re in the way. I’ll try again tomorrow – I’m exhausted.

New Kid: I’m having a bit of trouble adjusting to this place, Malay.

Malay: Don’t worry, New Kid, I was born here and I’ll look after you.

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