jmgoyder

wings and things

To the unsung mothers….

All day, I have been haunted by a compulsion to write a post for all of those mothers (and fathers) whose children have been lost to death, illness, or disappearance, because Mother’s Day would have been hellish for them. I don’t have the right words to write such a post because, every time I try, it just seems trite.

And what about those who are watching, waiting, hoping and praying that little K will be okay – this fantastic 5-year-old battling cancer and all the treatments – always with a big smile. K, her brother, her mother, her father, her uncle, her grandmother, and all of us, watch, wait, hope and pray.

I guess this is a humble salute to the unsung mothers for whom a Mother’s Day breakfast-in-bed would be as far-fetched as snow on roses.

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An apple crumbly day

Son and I went in for lunch with Husband at the nursing lodge today and it was lovely. Well, the food was lovely, Husband was feeling okay, Son arrived a little late from his last night’s party, and I was quite boppy but then, as Husband ate his dessert, my dessert and Son’s dessert, hardly looking at us, I felt my boppyness subside into a more low-key tone.

“Are you starving?” I asked Husband, laughing at his appetite.

“Well, you never make me sweets,” he said, polishing off the third apple crumble and custard.

Son and I got the giggles briefly and Husband glared at both of us, between mouthfuls, then winked and said, “Glad I provide you guys with so much amusement.” His mastership of irony has always caught me off guard and, as I didn’t have an appropriate response, I just said, “You are such a glutton!” and he replied, “And you are such a glutton for punishment,” and reached out and squeezed my knee.

Not long after this, when the three of us were back in Husband’s room, he started to have one of his ‘turns’, getting very drowsy and weird. We alerted the nurse, then eventually we left Husband almost asleep in his chair and came home. Needless to say, all my boppyness had dissipated. We had only been there for two hours but it had felt like ten hours – oh, the guilt of admitting this!

But worse was to come when Son said, “Mum, I don’t want to do this anymore.”

It seems so strange that only a few days ago, I was worried about Husband’s apparent heartbreak at not coming home to the farm overnight anymore; then, when we encountered such difficulties bringing him home just for the day (and his lack of mobility shocked me), I realized that all three of us have to somehow accept that the nursing lodge is home for him now.

So already, the routine we decided to stick to (several posts ago) has become impossible because getting Husband home has now become a big ordeal due to his deterioration with Parkinson’s, which I think is in its final assault mode. I hate this disease more than I have ever hated anything because it is so slow and cruel and humiliating and scary. Many of Husband’s best friends are nervous to visit him and I don’t blame them at all.

I think the most heart-breaking thing today though was when Son reiterated to me on the way home, “I don’t want to see Dad like this any more, Mum.”

And this puts me in a dilemma. Do I force Son to come with me to visit Husband or not? My opinion is not – and to let Son choose when and if. He has been through this huge scoliosis surgery which more or less coincided with Husband going to the nursing lodge and, now that Son is nearly out of his spinal brace, I think Husband and I need to let him go, let him do what he thinks is best.

Below is a photo of a photo of Husband and Son, when Son was just born. I love this photo!

Oh yeah, and I’ve never particularly liked apple crumble anyway.

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Mother’s Day

One child

an ‘only child’ who briefly wanted siblings,

until ten of his cousins came over one day and he asked me to tell everyone he had a headache and retired to his room like an old man; he was four …

a child who, at two years of age, would rather change his own nappy than go to the toilet,

who had a dummy until he was three and would hide it if G’ma came over (he and I had a place to put it out of sight – especially the pink one!)

A child who was only an infant when his father first got sick, but who thought, when the moon was full, that “Daddy fixeded it!”

a child whose depth of feeling, of wisdom, of kindness, shines almost too brightly for me,

a child who has tested me with his worries and wonderings.

Today we came back from my best friend’s party in Perth,

and my child and I sang along with his favourite music booming through the car,

this child/man telling me when I was off key (what crap, I am never off key!)

ringing Husband in between riffs,

suddenly realizing we would be home in time for him to go to another party, and me saying yes, and his elation.

One child,

now 18 and showing wildchild signs, but all good.

He is a loud, laughing, boisterous replica of his father the way Husband used to be –

he is the life of the party,

he swears too much but only in a hip-happy way and he has forgotten our rule that swearing was only for inside the car,

but I don’t care because I love his joy.

One child,

who has seen more than enough sadness,

who has been my worst foe and my best friend,

my heart,

my mother’s day present every second,

my breath,

the best thing Husband and I ever did….

so this clumsy collection of words is for him, this wonderful person who carries the burden of my love for him on very strong shoulders,

one child….

Son.

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‘Cross my heart and hope to die’

The idiom that heads this post apparently means the same as ‘I am telling you the truth.’

The other day, I said to Son, “If I get sick, or old, or if anything happens to me that makes it impossible for me to take care of myself, then please place me in care – in a nursing home. And, when that is done, I do not want you to feel like you have to visit me, or ring me, because I will be absolutely fine in the knowledge that you are fine.”

I suddenly remembered that childhood saying and, before thinking too much, I said to Son, “Cross my heart and hope to die.”

Son looked at me as if I were an alien and said, “What the hell are you talking about?”

And then he threw his arms around me and gave me a huge hug.

Tomorrow, when we go and see Husband, I am going to give him a huge hug and ask him what he is giving me for Mother’s Day.

Cross my heart!

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