Tag: alzheimers

While My Heart Gently Weeps

Prior to last month, the only time I’ve ever had to grapple with death was twenty-one long years ago.  Grandaddy was diagnosed with cancer and left my eleven-year-old-world in shambles two short weeks after when he passed.  I remember coming home from school and being hushed while he lay on the sofa in pajamas that stretched hard to cover his poor distended belly.

“Go play outside, Ash…Grandad needs to rest.”

I remember the walk Nanny took me on when she told me what was happening.  It was summertime, and forever etched in my mind remains how astoundingly thick the locusts were that year.  Their constant hum was so loud it made the air feel heavy; the humidity almost suffocating.  Still, she needed out of the house and I remember how I hop-scotched that entire walk trying to avoid stepping on the blue wings and red beady eyes that littered the sidewalk.  Her face was filled with sadness and I knew I needed to be strong for her.  And then he was just…gone.  There was no time to prepare or work through emotions that I had never felt to such an extent.

Fast forward what feels like a lifetime to Nanny’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis.  My Aunt Julie called to tell me. She was crying.  Again, caught off-guard, the emotions were back exactly as I remembered them.

Only, an Alzheimer’s death is not quick.  It’s called “The Long Goodbye” because each and every day the disease chips away at what was once a fully capable, beautiful mind.  Ultimately, few pass from the disease itself…instead from a weakened immune system, compromised by another, insignificant, common illness.  As was the case for my precious grandmother.

I can actually pinpoint the exact moment my heart broke into pieces one last time as this disease won the long-fought battle.  Four days before she passed I walked into Nanny’s room at the nursing home.  Hospice nurses were giving her a sponge bath.  She was so tiny, frail beyond any words I can use to describe it.  Her eyes were fixed half open, glossy and lifeless, cast on the ceiling above her bed.  Her chest heaved irregularly as she struggled for breath.  My mom was frantically sorting through clothes hangers in her closet, searching for a night-gown and caught my eyes, as I tried to maintain composure.  “It’s bad” she whispered, eyes brimmed with tears.  We stepped into the hallway where I broke into her and sobbed like I was a child again.

The rest of that day was spent bedside with her, holding the hand that guided me through life.  I studied the soft age spots that she so often called “ugly” and couldn’t imagine anything more beautiful or precious to me.  As the night came to a close, I had to come home.  I will forever carry a guilt in my heart for leaving her that night.

The days leading to this she had been sleeping constantly, not eating or drinking.  Hospitalization for labored breathing and suspected pneumonia followed and despite wanting nothing more than for her to get better, as there is no cure for this, the doctors explained that continuing to administer fluids was just prolonging her suffering.  She was sent back to Heritage Green with orders to keep her comfortable.

Somewhere along the way I had developed extreme misconceptions about death.  I had thought the process of dying would be peaceful and serene.  When my mom called to tell me she had passed the following Sunday, in the same breath choking back cries, I remember saying I was so thankful it was over for her.  Her final days were anything but peaceful  and those memories will haunt me for the rest of my life.  I pray my own children never have to experience it.

In the weeks that have followed, while trying to navigate the grief that washes over me in all-consuming waves, I’ve tried to cling to the promise that I will see her again one day.  And I know she’s still here with me…the signs are here and very, very real.

Jesus teaches us to love others as we love ourselves and that love is the reason we grieve when we lose someone close to us.  As a young Christian I thought of love as a feeling, an emotion.  It was fleeting at best but oh so deceptively strong.  As I’ve grown, I’ve learned that real love is actually long-suffering; it is dying to self and practicing patience, and kindness, while serving and forgiving others regardless of whether they deserve it or not.  And that is exactly how Nanny loved me… She cherished me, even when I least deserved it, all the days of my life.  I have the biggest shoes to fill.

 

How To Let Go

As I peered down into the disaster strewn across the floor and down the stairs, the books began to distort.  Tears came quickly making the mess before me warp and writhe.  It had finally happened.  That cheap, old bookshelf collapsed after an adolescence and adulthood of knowledge and memories had been piled to the brim of each sagging shelf.

I got it from her.  Nanny is a hoarder of sorts.  She’s always held onto things.

Shortly after my eighteenth birthday I found a tiny apartment and was ready to move out on own.  On a small tattered piece of piece of junk mail tossed carelessly on a desk in the loft of Nanny’s old townhome was my handwritten budget.

Rent: $425

Electricity: $25

Phone: $50

Grocery: $50

          Next to my ridiculously naïve expected living expenses she had beautifully penned a farewell note. “HAHA!  Good luck!”

The evening before I came home from jogging to a frantic, frustrated and worried Nan.  It was getting dark out and I hadn’t left a message or let her know where I was.  “Ashley, where have you been!?  I was worried sick.  You can’t just run off without telling me where you’re going.  What if something happened to you?”  In true self-centered teenage fashion I jabbed at her with “UGH, I can’t wait to move out of here.”  I watched those words inflict the pain I intended them to and then stormed off.

Whenever I was faced with something new and unfamiliar, before I ever found my footing, it was Nanny I looked to for guidance and security.  That first night alone in my new apartment she called me.  “Ash are you alright?  Do you need anything?  I just wanted to check on you….”  I was so grateful for that phone call, both for the forgiveness it implied and the comfort it offered.

As the years passed by, anytime I ever needed anything it was Nan I called.   I remember when my toaster broke and she said “Come on over, I’m sure I have an extra somewhere.”  Turns out she had three to choose from.  I began to notice how she held onto things almost just waiting to give either her grace or the perfect item to remedy a hardship.  It was how she let go.

A lifetime of memories flashed by as I began to sort through that pile of books, each one a reminder of an earlier time in life.  Some made me think of God’s mercy and my reckless college days, and some of home and Nanny and of comfort.  I’ll box a few of these books up and donate them.  And some of those really special ones; the ones etched into my soul that molded and changed me, I’ll hang onto for the perfect moment in time when I can help someone with them.

Today I’m learning to let go of her and that’s an entirely different kind of letting go.  Alzheimer’s is taking her from me one day at the time.  But I will always be grateful for the lessons she taught me.  Because of her I’ll look for ways to offer forgiveness even when it’s not deserved and I’ll hang onto everything just like she did, until letting it go blesses someone else, more than holding on ever could.