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The Fog of Alzheimers as
Character
"Linda, Linda, LEENDA," Mother would scream out to small groups
of strangers strolling by while we sipped tea together on the
patio of a local coffee house. This was to be a happy weekly
outing-a short walking distance from the assisted living
facility that was now her home, yet she'd spend most of it
calling out my name to others. I tried to shush her, insisting
that I, that Linda, was right there in front of her, but she'd
just turn and look back at me and say, "Huh . . . oh," and
stare.
Then after a bit of silence the outburst would begin all over
again.
At first, Mother had enjoyed these little excursions because
we'd stop to window shop among the assortment of boutiques
along the way. Mother would walk with my help and that of her
walker while smiling at various families with small children in
hand. She never tired of admiring the little ones and often
reached out to caress a chubby baby cheek or sweet little downy
head, exclaiming, "Hay, que preciosa." But as the weeks and the
months progressed her degenerating memory removed her ability
to know me any longer and I, in turn, felt as if my past, my
childhood, and part of my life had been erased.
I was her only daughter, one she had named after the Spanish
word for pretty because, she'd said, I was so pretty and
perfect at birth. Of course, I often had to remind her that
being delivered via C-section just maybe was the reason for the
perfect part. No molded head from a trip down the birth canal.
I was scooped out of her belly by Dr. Hilton, a relation of the
eponymous hotel chain owners. But that's another story and it's
one she had long forgotten.
Often, prior to moving Mother out of her home, and into
assisted living, she would call me twice or three times a day
chastising me in a mix of Spanish and English for being a bad
daughter. I was trying to put her in jail, she proclaimed.
Funny, that was also how she referred to her lovely home with a
large backyard pool in a clean and quiet suburb of Los Angeles.
This labeling of her house as a place of incarceration began
shortly after she lost her driver's license and I sold her car.
Macular degeneration had already robbed her of her passion for
spending uninterrupted hours reading her beloved books. The
addition of a paid companion didn't help as Mother referred to
the poor beleaguered caretaker as her a jailer. Mother's only
connection with the rest of the world was via the loud booming
audio from CNN, Animal Planet or anything on Telemundo from her
TV, which ran all day and into the night.
Like the mother character in my epistolary novel Letters
Between Us, Mother also suffered from Alzheimer's. And like the
protagonist, Laura, in the novel, I too couldn't take the
intensity of the incessant phone calls filled with harangue,
harassment and name-calling. While I worked on revising
Letters, Mom was still very much alive at 95 years of age.
However, she was growing more paranoid, angrier, and more
intractable every day. I was growing sadder, more frustrated,
and more desperate every day. What do I do to keep her safe?
How do I not rob her of her freedom to come and go? These
questions of creating limits in her life at the expense of her
individual rights plagued me. I knew that soon her live-in
attendant would not be able to control Mother's outbursts and
odd behavior. She would walk out to her backyard and wander
around the pool at 2 a.m. and refuse to come back inside. She
rebuffed attempts to get her dressed or to bathe. One
afternoon, after a particularly difficult call from her, I
wrote the following exchange:
"You just want to send me to hell."
"No, Mom, you're doing that all by yourself." My hand starts to
strangle the receiver.
"What have I done to you that you hate me so much?"
Truth is the dialogue is almost verbatim. The circumstances I
describe in my novel are fiction. But these kinds of
conversations went on and on for the better part of a couple of
years and I thought rather than try to ignore this most
difficult period in my writing life, I chose to incorporate the
pain and agony of coping with an elderly parent ridden with
Alzheimer's by making that part of her a character in my
novel.
Giving myself permission to do so freed me to write passages
about Mother that worked well in the narrative. The narrator of
Letters is trying hard to balance complex issues in her life
and having a parent force herself into the mix fueled by the
fog that Alzheimer's creates in the brain cells gives Laura,
yet, one more issue to contend with while showing her as a
compassionate person. We can all relate to our daily balancing
acts while juggling many balls in the air. That is how life is
and it's not going to slow down anytime soon.
After a very painful phone call with Mom shrieking at me about
why I was an uncaring and nasty daughter and then a follow up
phone call where Mom wanted to know how I was as if she'd never
made the previous call, I wrote the following paragraph and
just saved it in my computer, forgetting about it:
Her remembering depends upon where she is in the caverns of
her
mind on a particular day at a particular hour, moment, or
second. It's as
if she is walking on a street, lost, but then an alley pops up,
and she has
a vague recollection from twenty years before of a painted red
doorway
halfway down that alley she spies, and she thinks she might
have even
walked through that door, but then again, maybe she just passed
by it,
or perhaps someone she knew walked out of it and embraced her,
and
they might have even stood in front of that red door and talked
for a
time, but about what she is not sure, but again maybe they
didn't, and
she has confused that red door from the one on the street with
another
just around the corner and maybe she just needs to take a quick
run
over there and see if that red doorway is really there, but
then she
forgets where she is, and why she is there suddenly, and on and
on.
Later, I was struggling as to how elaborate on the mother
character's confusion about situations in Laura's life and
found this passage again and thought wow, why not use it, and
so I rewrote it again with a very slight modification and
inserted it into a chapter of the novel. And it works. Perhaps
I shouldn't admit this, but I wonder why not? The advice I have
heard given to many aspiring writers is write what you know and
in this instance I did. I don't know if I will again, but I
could not ignore the big white elephant in the room, in my
brain. Alzheimer's, on second thought, isn't a white elephant
at all, it's a dark, big, black cloud that storms leaving many
drenched with an aftermath of despair.
The thing too about Alzheimer's is that it takes time,
sometimes years, to confirm as a diagnosis. Meanwhile, if one
has an elderly parent who suffers from a memory lapse now and
then, we, in society, accept such acts as typical. We say: Oh,
you know Mom is getting a bit forgetful. We accept this because
it is an easy way to excuse strange, different, or eccentric
behavior in an older person. Even as younger persons, we'll
often excuse our own forgetfulness and say: Oh, I can't
remember what I had for breakfast this morning so if Mom, at
95, can't, so be it. It's okay.
Well, actually it's not. It's not okay to have to spend
thousands of dollars a month in care for such a person (and
believe me to hire any type of care does cost that much), or if
thousands aren't available then the need to move a parent into
his/her child's home and be a burden to them that can be
overwhelming is even more not okay, (I write this as I just
finish reading an article in the newspaper about a daughter
arrested for elder abuse for leaving her 85 year-old mother
covered in her own feces and urine who died later for extended
periods of time). Skilled nursing homes are not always okay,
but sometimes are a necessity, and cross your fingers on
finding a good one.
My experience was that Mother's affliction and my anguish in
dealing with it created a platform for me to write about it by
venting, which then enabled me to use those characteristics in
my novel. Maybe that too is not okay. Mother was not the person
who died at 96 from Alzheimer's robbing her of her memory, her
speech, her life and leaving an empty shadow of a woman. She
was a woman who adored her grandchildren, adored me, adored
meeting me for coffee or tea and hanging on my every word and
who never faltered in insisting that her advice on child
rearing was better than mine. If she called my name it was in
love and kindness not in anger. Alzheimer's destroyed that part
of her and part of me is still destroyed by it. And that is
just not okay.
by Linda Rader Overman - 28th October 2008
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Linda Rader Overman is a Professor of English at California
State University, Northridge. Her work encompasses fiction, and
nonfiction consisting of multifaceted elements including
photographs, narrative portraits, images, texts, personal and
social history, poetry, letters, and diaries. Her epistolary
novel Letters Between Us is published by Plain View Press. To
learn more about her, and to receive her newsletter,
visit http://lindaraderoverman.com.
Article Source:
http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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