Eight days without Star Trek, Words With Friends, Facebook, or email. I don't want to look at my credit card bill, not for at least a couple of months, anyway! I'll just start paying it down and look when I can screw up my courage.
For the first time in somewhere between 10 and 15 years, I went down to Louisiana to see my Father and Stepmother. They both have Alzheimer's, and my Stepsister asked me come down and see them while they both still remembered who I was.
It will take me a while to process through all my experiences, but the short version is, I am glad I went. It tore my heart to pieces to leave them again, and the sense of loss is profound, discouraging. In the face of so much needing to be done, I feel terribly helpless.
I can hardly believe what my Stepsister faces every day, caring for them. They don't realize, or they don't admit to it, that they are unable to care for themselves. They resent every meal - it's never what they want to eat. They don't want you to help them get around, do their laundry, bring them something to drink. They sit on the couch and stare out the window. If you try to talk to them, they bite your head off.
Daddy gets impatient with Mother. In his mind, she should ditch the walker and start cooking and walking again, get moving. He has convinced himself that everybody is making her into a cripple.
My Dad never had a good grip on reality to begin with. He's always been bull-headed and obstinate, and the Alzheimer's is exacerbating that. He insisted to Daughter and me that all he had to do, should he want to get on a plane, is put on his old Air Force uniform and sign in, that he wouldn't have to go through security. No amount of information or facts is going to ruin his illusion. We ended up just shaking our heads.
And that's what everybody spends a lot of time doing - shaking their heads. Daddy insisted that sometimes the garbage was picked up on Sunday, and sometimes it was picked up on Monday, and sometimes it wasn't picked up at all. I bit my tongue back from inquiring whether the days when it didn't get picked up happened to fall on Sundays...
My Stepsister asked me to try to speak to him about going to the dentist. His teeth are in terrible shape, and of course he doesn't have medical or dental coverage. Because he "doesn't believe" in doctors. He has no backup plan. If he gets sick, his children have to pay the medical bills, or let him die. That is the choice he has left us with. I did my best trying to convince him to go, but I may as well have saved my breath to cool my porridge.The people we all knew and loved are, for the most part, gone already.
All that remains are the two shells of people we once knew, who must be
cared for and tended as best we can.
Their previous caregiver, a granddaughter of Stepsister, had brought a cat into the house. My Stepmother hates cats. Daddy likes them, but Mother gets so riled up he has taken her side in complaining about it. "Simon Peter" is the cat's name, and he is absolutely precious. He's one of those cats people would love to have, that sits in your lap sleeping and purring as long as you want to sit there. He is delightful. We put an ad up on Craig's list.
Stepsister brought a dog she had rescued, and Mother isn't any better about that. Daddy enjoys the dog, but again, Momma complains and gets mad, so he feels duty bound to ignore it. "Missy" spends her days chained up in the yard. She never comes inside, she never gets walked. She doesn't know to play with toys or chew bones. A local male jumped the fence and she had a litter of puppies.
Well, I just couldn't let that stay that way. I took her to the vet. She's been spayed, her eye has been fixed, she's now been given all her shots, de-wormed, and has a 6 month supply of heartworm meds. Simon Peter has also been given a six month supply of flea protection. And we put an ad on Craig's list for Missy, who has the sweetest temperament in a dog I've ever seen. Hopefully, with all this done for her, she'll stand a chance of having a good home. Even if Stepsister keeps her, at least she won't have any more puppies and she'll be healthy.
It's not just lack of funds that has kept me away from Louisiana all these years, though that has been the primary problem. I don't like the way people treat animals there. I don't like the way they treat black people. I don't like the way they treat their children. I don't like the politics, I don't like the religion. And I don't like the climate.
About the only thing I do like is the people I've met, my Stepbrothers and Stepsisters and their families. But we have to agree to disagree on pretty much everything else. There is no conversation we can have that is not fraught with the danger of turning into an argument, unless I can keep my mouth shut and refrain from expressing any opinions. Some of the things people say make my blood boil, but I know I have to "keep shut" or I'd shock them so much they'd run me out of town, tarred and feathered. Of course, there are exceptions, but most of these people are so convinced they are right about everything, that they are morally superior to the rest of the world, that their religion is flawless... I just can't deal with the intolerance, and with what I perceive to be ignorance. Here are people who are too poor to buy health insurance, but they're determined to kill any health care reforms, in my opinion out of blind ignorance. They're so "free," they're free to die without health care. They're free to get shot in the head by yahoos out joyriding - as happened to my Stepbrother - but they'd die before they'd give up their guns. They have experienced all the problems stemming from their systems first-hand, but they blame anyone who is trying to improve their lives. I love my Stepsisters, but one of them tried to describe her beliefs to me and I just had to ask her to stop. They can sit there and tell you to your face that god created this earth four times, and the last time was Adam and Eve, six thousand years ago. And that there are exactly one hundred universes, and this is the only universe that has fallen into sin. And this is from the mouth of an intelligent, loving woman who gave up her job to come and care for her Mother and Stepfather. I love her. I cannot understand how she can swallow what I perceive to be B******t. But it brings her comfort, and she needs all the comfort she can get. My Stepbrother and his wife have visited South Africa a number of times. To go hunting. And to build a church. Yeah, because that's what Africans need, more churches. Anybody thought about schools, hospitals, doctors and nurses, teachers, wells?
I brought down a season of the Red Green show. My dad really enjoyed the couple of episodes he watched. Mother got insulted by the "man's prayer" - "I'm a man...but I can change...if I have to...I guess..." It's hilarious! Daddy smiled. Mom was mad.
And that's the feeling I come away with - disapproval. They disapprove of me, of my lifestyle, of my sense of humor, of my beliefs and my morals. And I disapprove of them. And that's pretty much all we have in common - our mutual disapproval. Oh, and that we love each other.
1 comment:
Amen to that.
Glad you went tho'...
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