Monthly Archives: July 2008

Sweet Sorrow, my ass.

Today was a rough one. Got out to the nursing home this morning to find Mimi in one of the group rooms, playing a game of ring toss with about ten other inmates residents. Some of them looked like they were sort of having fun, but for the rest, including Mimi, it was clearly just one more damn thing to get through in the day. She said she had felt feverish all morning, and she did feel hot, though when the nurse came and took her temp a couple of hours later it registered normal. I don’t know if it was a fever or just the knowledge that we were leaving today, but she was the weakest and most confused I’ve seen her. Couldn’t string a thought together, couldn’t remember names or places or times, didn’t understand what you were talking about when you tried to help her, wouldn’t eat a thing, bit your head off when you tried to get her to eat, and so on, and so on, and so on. It was tough, y’all. We took a break for lunch, and when we came back she was passed-out asleep on her bed. (Peculia was asleep, too, but she looked kind of like she’d just fallen sideways across her bed and decided, what the hell, I’ll just take a nap.) We hated to wake her, but knew she’d want to see us before we had to leave. She was even more disoriented in the afternoon than she had been in the morning, but we tried to chat, and I rubbed her legs and feet, which she loves. Just before we had to go, she told Dad to put his head down next to her so she could “scritch” it. Dad will do just about anything to get his head scritched (like scratching your back, only on the scalp), so he bent over and let her do it, and then afterwards she made him go get her comb so she could get his hair back in order. It’s an image that will stay with me for the rest of my life: this emaciated, sickly, confused old woman so tenderly caressing her son, taking a little care of him after he’d been taking such great care of her.

We told her we had to go, and she said she’d be brave and not let us see her cry. She told us to come back as soon as ever we could and we promised we would. Somehow we made it out of the place without completely breaking down, though I still feel like I could start bawling if someone looked at me cross-eyed. I sure am glad I’ll be home tonight.

Dispatches from Dixie

It’s kind of amazing how quickly two days can go by even when you don’t feel like you’re doing much. It’s equally amazing how tired you can get just sitting with someone, if that someone has dementia. Mimi is … well, my aunt calls her “confused” and I guess that’s as accurate a term as any. If she weren’t my grandmother, and if her current state weren’t such a marked difference from the way she ought to be, it would be kind of fascinating to watch how her brain is trying to work. Being with her is a little like being with Mrs. Dalloway, only Mimi’s stream of consciousness doesn’t tie together too well. She talks almost nonstop, but often it’s difficult to tell if she’s talking TO anyone, or just, you know … talking. She makes valiant attempts to maintain conversational niceties, telling you about her day or how she spent the evening or a story she got reminded of. The problem is, she doesn’t really remember about her day, and she thinks she spent the night in jail on false charges, and she can’t remember the names of anyone in her story. Yesterday she told us she’d been trapped in prison all night long and couldn’t find her witnesses to prove she wasn’t supposed to be there, so she called Aubie (my aunt’s dog, whom Mimi loves and who isn’t allowed in the home) and tied a message to him and told him to go find my aunt and get her out of there. Which … how fucking depressing is THAT? Aubie figures regularly in her stories; the other day she reached over to my dad and patted him on his hand, calling him her “sweet Aubie-poo Robinson Timothy.” She does that a lot, gets started on the wrong track and then kind of tries to veer back around to the right one.

She still has some of her sass and sense of humor. My aunt always used to say that living with Mimi was kind of like living with Lucille Ball, and she wasn’t the only one to make the comparison. If there’s one element that’s a constant on my dad’s side of the family, I guess it’s laughter – we all like to crack jokes and laugh at ourselves and each other. And as much as Mimi could drive you nuts sometimes, she was often the catalyst for the biggest laughs. We still see occasional glimmers of that: she was telling us about how her back doesn’t work anymore, and when she tries to sit up to get out of bed, nothing happens. “I just can’t understand it. I tell that back, ‘Get up!’ and it just will not move. I said to it, ‘What’d I ever do to you? Haven’t I always treated you right?’ Shoot. I’m gonna get up and pop it one of these days.” She was talking about how she’d always tried to be a truthful, good person, and my Dad said “Yeah, and look where THAT got you,” and she came right back with “Ain’t it a crying shame? Next time around I’m gonna be mean, and drink and CUSS.” Sometimes she’ll make fun of us for talking down to her. My aunt was asking her if she had to use the bathroom, and Mimi wasn’t responding so she asked the question louder and louder and finally Mimi looked at her and put on an exaggerated baby voice and said “No, mother, I don’t have to go potty right now.”

But these moments of levity are brief, and they don’t compensate for the prison stories, or the constant paranoia about people taking her things, or the anger about – well, about not being in control of anything, which is enough to make anyone angry. But the confusion is the worst. She often talks about how she feels so funny staying in “this woman’s” house, and she likes the decor but she doesn’t want to be a bother. Or she’ll start a story about something and stop mid-sentence because she’s lost a name or a word or the whole damn narrative, and the look on her face isn’t the kind of vague look you or I might get if we have a brain fart, it’s sheer terror that the world no longer holds together in a meaningful way, and she can’t figure out how to fix it. Her reality is fragmented and constantly shifting; her frames of reference don’t cohere, and she never feels like she knows what’s coming next. I can imagine what this is like just well enough to want to start stockpiling lethal doses of narcotics for myself right now, in case I’m ever in a similar state. It’s no way to live.

But, having said that, she is still living, and she’s still got enough of her mind left to enjoy visitors, even if she doesn’t remember that they came. I’ve been spending time with her doing her nails, or massaging her legs and feet with special lotions, and I know she treasures the time together. We sit and chat or look at photos, while Peculia sits over on her side of the room, taking her wig on and off, over and over again. I leave tomorrow evening, and my dad and stepmom are leaving too, and we’re all a little worried about how that will affect her. She’s already talking about how much she hates us to go, and it’s true that she perks up like a little flower in sun when people come to visit. I’m glad I came down to see her, glad I got to spend what will probably be the last time with her when she knows who I am. But I hope with all my heart that she can be released from this hellish existence soon, and meet the maker she’s believed in so devoutly for so long.

Is that I light I see at the end of this tunnel?

1. A woman at the Atlanta airport kindly patted me on the back, told me my tag was sticking out, and fixed it for me. I’m a sucker for random acts of kindness like that.

2. Unbeknownst to me, that blessed woman who checked me in to my THREE HOUR delayed flight this morning also put me in first class for the leg from Atlanta to Jacksonville. I had never flown first class before, and I was all aflutter.

3. As soon as we got in, we headed right to a down home seafood restaurant where I gorged myself on fried catfish, cheese grits, hushpuppies, slaw, and sweet tea. Can I get an amen?

4. Although I got in too late to visit Mimi today, I did find out something that’s really making me look forward to seeing her tomorrow. She’s in a two person room, and apparently her roommate’s name is … wait for it … Peculia Burg. PECULIA. Y’all, this is why it is so awesome to have a southern heritage. You are NEVER going to meet someone north of the Mason-Dixon line named Peculia.

So things may be looking up.

What a dickwad.

This day is already full of FAIL

It’s 8:21 am, and I’m sitting in the Delta terminal of the Minneapolis/St. Paul International airport, waiting to fly out to south Georgia to visit my grandmother, who is dying. This must be the summer of the dying grandmothers or something, because I have like 5 or 6 friends with terminal grannies. Mine, my Mimi, is suffering from (among other things) rapid-onset dementia. In the past three months, she’s gone from a little absent but basically competent to seriously confused and unable to be cared for at home. My dad and stepmom went down there for their annual visit about a month ago, and ended up changing their tickets to stay until she could be stabilized and moved to a nursing home. (My blessed aunt had been taking care of her, but it had gotten to be simply too much for one person to handle.) Mimi has always been something of a personality – a spitfire, sharp-witted (and sometimes sharp-tongued), deeply religious, deeply conservative, steel magnolia. She loves (loved?) to dance and sing and is (was?) hands-down the best storyteller I ever heard – especially when she was cracking herself up so much she could hardly speak for laughing. It is, frankly, going to suck major rocks to go and see her as a shadow of her former self. She’s hardly eating now, and sometimes barely speaks above a whisper. Her short-term memory is rapidly vanishing, to the point where you can visit her in the morning and she’ll more often than not forget that you were ever there by the afternoon. We don’t know how much longer she’ll last – though I honestly hope not much longer, because who wants to live like that? – so I thought I’d better get down and see her while the seeing is good. Also, I can say without undue immodesty that I’m good in hospital/nursing home situations. The atmosphere doesn’t freak me out the way it does some folks, and I can let people be as crazy or in pain as they need to be and just be there with them, or rub their feet and hands, or sing, or whatever. So I thought maybe I could help out with the exhausting schedule of twice-daily visits that my parents and aunt have been keeping for the last month.

So anyway, it’s not going to be a fun or relaxing trip, but that’s actually not what’s pissing me off right now. What’s pissing me off is that it’s now 8:38 am and my flight was supposed to leave at 7:45. Due to yesterday’s, um, activities, I neglected to check the flight stats before I left (though I did sign up for mobile phone alerts THAT NEVER CAME) so I got to the airport at an ungodly hour of the morning only to find out that my 7:45 am flight will not be leaving until 11:06 am. The reason? CREW REST. For real. Now, I get that crews need to rest and all, and I don’t want a tired pilot flying my plane, but is this not something they could have worked out in such a way that I don’t have a THREE HOUR DELAY? Seriously? Of course, this also means I miss my connecting flight out of Atlanta, so instead of getting into Jacksonville at 1:46 pm I will now be getting in sometime after 5. There goes my whole “get an early flight and have some visiting time today” strategy. Also, this means that I made my BFF and her kid get up at a crazy hour to drive me to the airport FOR NO REASON. Grrrr.

Seriously, I don’t know what I did in a former life to merit this run of bad karma, but whatever it was, I’m SORRY already! Can we just call it even? Please?

Look, I am just RIGHT OVER the invasion of personal space, OK?

Today the Hatchling and I got home from a picnic thingy at my new place of employment to find that our house had been broken into while we were gone. It’s weird how long it can take your brain to wrap around the reality of a burglary. It’s like your mind wants to keep rewriting the narrative of your existence so everything is still nice and safe, even when all the evidence points elsewhere. My first clue was that the back door, which I had locked before we left the house, was unlocked. Now, I specifically remembered locking that door, but my brain was all, “must’ve just thought I locked it!”

Then I saw that the recliner in the living room was knocked over on its back. “Hmm …” said my cheery little brain, “maybe the cats knocked it over!”

But the cats aren’t really big enough … “IT COULD HAPPEN.”

I notice that the Playstation 3 and Wii are missing; my brain tries to convince me that Mr. Squab might have come home and taken them somewhere. I ACTUALLY HAD THAT THOUGHT. It wasn’t until I went upstairs (having noticed that the baby gate, always closed, was hanging open) and saw the mirror on our dresser all askew and the top of the dresser looking clearly rifled through that it really started to sink in: Oh my god, we’ve been robbed.

It’s not a good feeling, lemme tell ya. I started crying when I called Mr. Squab to tell him about it, but I pulled it together after that so I could call the police. They came out right away and couldn’t have been nicer, took some partial prints and some photos and we gave them the serial numbers of the stuff that was stolen.

It could have been so much worse. The game systems and our iPods were really all that was taken – they didn’t touch my computer – THANK GOD – and we still have our cameras, our massive TV, our artwork, jewellery, etc. We’ll have to replace the back door, and there were muddy footprints all over the floor and several chairs where they climbed up to look at the electronics on the mantel. But these are just things, things that can be cleaned or replaced, albeit at the cost of higher insurance payments in the future, I imagine. And, you know, we weren’t here when it happened, and it looks like it was just some kids looking for the fastest, easiest stuff they could find. But it still feels totally icky that people came into our house with malicious intent, trashed the place (or at least parts of it) and took our stuff. Anyone have any ideas for how to reclaim our lost juju?

iPhones are squabby

Even more confirmation that I, as a squab, should be an iPhone owner: this NYT article reviewing some of the many new apps available for iPhones as of this Friday, includes the following one:

Urbanspoon, [which] is “a cross between a magic eight ball and a slot machine:” you shake the phone, and it randomly displays the name of a good restaurant nearby, using the iPhone’s G.P.S. and motion sensor.

OMGponiesnrainbowz!!!1!! That, my friends, is a squabby app. Which I will be using frequently, even if I can’t go out to dinner very often.

In case you’re interested, I’d nominate the Razr for squinny mobile phone, and the Blackberry for squotund. But I’m open to correction/suggestion.

Random Tidbits

1. My normally awesome-sleeping daughter is currently up in her darkened, white-noised room yelling “I can’ SEEEP, Mama!” and “Jump! Jump-a-me!” and “Oh, sooooo nice” at random intervals, and has been doing so for the last, oh, twenty minutes or so. She’s not crying, just fussing, so I haven’t gotten her up … because holy CRAP will she be crab-tastic if she doesn’t have a nap. But I hope she gives in and goes to sleep soon.

2. I finally succumbed and joined Twitter.

3. This looks pretty damn yummy and awesome, though I admit the chest hair freaks me out a little.

4. WHY won’t Apple let you pre-order the iPhone? Why??!?!

5. Now she’s yelling “OPEY DOY! [open door] YAY! YAY! YAY! OPEY DOY, MAMA!” Is it possible that Target’s vanilla yogurt has caffeine in it? Or meth? Grrrrrrr.

6. I don’t understand how we can pay a premium for the extra-geeky-fast DSL, and it STILL hates me at certain times of day. I have *no* signal right now. WHAT UP, QWEST?

Is voicemail really dead?

Some people are saying that voicemail is dead, and we should all be emailing or texting instead. Not sure how I feel about this. I have family members who are ONLY accessible via text, and sometimes this is a pain in the ass, frankly. I have an ollllllllld cell phone (counting down to my new iPhone!!) and I HATE texting. I’m an old-school grammarian, y’all, and I just cannot make myself send messages to people without proper spelling and punctuation. On the other hand, texting is sometimes the most convenient option, and it certainly can be a pain in the ass to retrieve and listen to voicemail. And I know I’m much faster in responding to emails, myself.

On the third hand, sometimes tone and expression are important. Text and emails are notoriously difficult to contextualize – we’ve all had the experience where someone tries to crack a joke and it just comes across as hostile, for example. So I feel like voicemail should at least be an option, no? Am I hopelessly out of touch?

What do you think?

This, they didn’t cover in the parenting books.

So, today being Monday, my lovely friend J watches the Hatchling in the morning so I can get some writing done. Friends like these = awesome. I brought lunch back for us when I went to pick the Hatchling up, and we sat in the backyard while the kids ran around in their swim diapers and nothing else, making little stops at the wading pool, the slide, the sandbox, the water table – generally being the adorable wee kidlets that they are. We finished lunch and I took the Hatchling inside to get her dressed before going home. I went to peel off her swim diaper, not bothering to check it first because there were no external signs – smell, look, feel – that I needed to. WHY AM I SO STUPID, INTERNETS? We’re standing on J’s nice wool rug, I’m peeling down the diaper, and WHAMMO, my hand is suddenly full of poop. MY BARE HAND. FUUUUULLLLLL of it. OMG SO GROSS.

“Ack! Poop!” is all I can manage to sputter out, trying to hold the Hatchling still with my non poopful hand. J, valiantly trying to suppress her gag reflex, comes running with wipes and paper towels, and tries to get the Hatchling down onto a changing pad without spreading fecal matter over the entire living room. I am frantically wrapping my handful in 270 layers of paper towel and scrubbing my hands as if in preparation for surgery. I am suddenly struck by the thought that I should not throw my paper-wrapped poo in her kitchen garbage. I run around her kitchen like a headless chicken looking for somewhere more appropriate to stow it. “I don’t know where to put the poop!” I yell. “Just stick it in the garbage – I’ll take it out right away” J yells back. I pitch the poo and run back into the living room where J, helpless with laughter, is trying to wrestle the damn swim diaper off the Hatchling’s legs, which are covered with poo. Finally, god knows how, we get the diaper off and I clean the Hatchling’s poopy limbs with the aid of approximately twelvety billion wipes. Fortunately, she was not in one of her squirmy moods, or I’d still be at J’s house hosing the area down with Lysol. This is, without a doubt, the grossest parenting moment I have had to date.

Moral of the story: ALWAYS CHECK FOR POOP. Christ.