The snap, crackle and popularity of fireworks going off a night
early here in the suburbs on the 3rd (and very little activity on
the actual holiday which is strange) put me off my game and cereal when I awoke
on Independence Day.
So, it would seem only fitting that I should walk into the
living room and find that mom had already worked herself up about the “state of
dependence” she (thinks) she’s found herself in (once again).
We’ve come to that place (once again) where Miss Cathy is in
a state of denial, or should I say she’s remembering
that she’s in denial about having Alzheimer’s since the last time when she must
have forgotten that she’d reconciled herself to accepting her condition.
I spent the better part of my morning explaining to her
(once again) what her diagnosis means and what the definition of dementia is.
What fun….all this while my head throbbed from all those
damn fireworks blasting into my dreams the night before.
(Question: why does all
the drama seem to greet me in the a.m.?...Possible answer: maybe it’s because
Miss Cathy sleeps (on average) fourteen (or more) hours a day so she’s razor
sharp in the post dawn and ready to rumble, as long as it’s before lunch when
she’s about to tumble back into bed for the day)
So I stood behind a wingback chair (why I didn’t just sit
down I don’t know, maybe I thought by standing the conversation would feel as if it wasn’t going to drag on
for hours, or maybe I needed some barrier between me and her denial).
No matter, here’s a sample from her “Greatest Hits of Denial”:
1) She
still doesn’t think she has Alzheimer's:
Her new neurologist mentioned “no
one with dementia could have passed the test he performed in his office”
(I tried to explain that she’s
just one of those people that gave ‘good test’ but it’s her day to day life
that she’s trying to put her tee-shirt on as pants and the doctors aren’t testing
her for that, and it’s not like she offers up relevant information like that
when they doctors ask her “what brought you in today?” her response is to talk
about here knee usually, so its up to me to fill them in on herstory)
2) She
can’t accept that because she has Alzheimer’s that she’s a danger to herself
and others:
She’s bemoaning the fact that she
can’t drive anymore which she immediately equates to her ‘loss of freedom”
(I reminded her, in no uncertain
terms, that if she can’t see clearly or have the cognitive skills to put the
silverware back in the drawer correctly then how the hell does she think she
should ever be in the driver’s seat of a car…ever again)
3) She
can’t accept that since she’s a danger to herself that she cannot live alone:
She says she feels like a prisoner
(I told her that it seems to me
that she’s in a prison of her own design;
that there are plenty of people in the world, her age and older that take the
bus, hail a cab, or call a friend to get them anywhere they want to go. Besides,
she has me as a personal chauffeur to drive here around. So, if she wants to
sit on her ass in her condo that’s her choice
and her’s alone)
And on and on it went, listening to her tilt at imaginary obstacles
to happiness Miss Cathy reminded me of Don Quixote, but instead of chasing
after windmills she’s searching for a prognosis that she’s been misdiagnosed
and she can get back to the life she led before.
So, long before night would fall and the rest of America
would rise to set off fireworks in celebration of the nation’s birthday I could
already see the bombs bursting in air (in my mind’s eye actually) as I settled
in for a conversation about (in)dependence.
Happy fucking Fourth of July to me!
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