My tentative plan for today was to pick Ants up and take him out for lunch or for a drive. It was to be a bit of an experiment to see if I could do it and it filled me with dread because he is often so immobile that am scared that he will fall and I won’t be able to pick him up, as happened numerous times when he was still here at home.
I rang him to confirm and, as usual, I had to let the phone ring out twice before he managed to answer it. “Jules,” he said, “Jules, Jules, Jules, Jules….” Then there was silence even though he was still on the phone. I yelled into my own phone, “Ants! What’s wrong?” but he said nothing. Nothing. This terrified me. Was he upset?
So I hung up and dialled the nurses and told the one who answered the phone that something was wrong with Anthony. She said she would go and check. A few seconds later, I rang him again and this time he spoke a bit more and told me he had had a fall. He was a bit incoherent and confused except he did remember our lunch date. “I don’t think it’s a good idea now, Ants,” I said, and he agreed. He sounded quite shaken. I could hear the nurse in the background which was comforting.
Ants is falling more and more often because when he is mobile, he races and forgets his walker and, bang, down he goes. Last year, pre-nursing lodge, this kept happening and one of his worst falls happened when I went up to the local shop for something and begged him not to move from his chair. I was only gone 10 minutes but when I got back I discovered him lying prone and twisted in our little vegetable patch. He looked dead and I got a terrible fright. It took me nearly half an hour to get him up onto his feet and, though grazed and bleeding from his face and knees, he was otherwise uninjured. It then took another half an hour to get him back into the house because his legs weren’t working.
Mobility for people with Parkinson’s Disease is a strange and unpredictable thing. The typical leaning over posture doesn’t help with gravity. When Anthony is mobile, he almost runs; when he is immobile (which is most of the time now) he can hardly even move one foot after the other without assistance.
I think our days of going out to lunch are well and truly over, and were over long ago, but Anthony keeps hoping and I keep wishing.
And he keeps falling.


