What does a 91 year old mom dress up like for Halloween?
Well, here she is!
And, if my 91 year old mom knocks on your door, please don’t give her any more candy.
Send her home immediately.
She is out way past her bedtime!
My grandson Fisher, granddaughter Livi and Fisher’s friend Miller were riding in my daughter Tovi’s car earlier this week. This weekend, Tovi and her crew had decided to come to Richmond to visit Mom and us. However, because Fisher had a soccer game and a birthday party, he would stay back in Wilmington with my youngest daughter, Lissi.
Fisher said, “Mom, since I’m not going to Richmond with you can I send a letter to Helen?”
Tovi answered, “Sure, gram-ma loves when you guys write her. What would you like it to say in your letter?”
He said, “I’ll put in one of my class pictures and will say, Dear Helen, I am broke. Love, Fisher.”
After the laughter stopped, Tovi asked, “Why do you want to write that?’
Fisher said, “Helen always tells me I’m her favorite and if I ever need anything, that she owns everything, so just ask for it and it’s mine.”
Miller said, ‘’Cool, then ask for a million dollars!”
Tovi, “Do you want me to deliver your letter in person or mail it?”
Fisher, “Mail it, mom. Helen loves to get mail.”
The rest of the discussion in the backseat revolved around wishing that they had a Time Machine right now so they could jump forward to see if Fisher really got the million or not. And, if he did, what did he spend it on.
If I had been in the car I would have gone straight to the nearest FedEx, with the letter … overnight delivery guaranteed. Sure, it may cost a little more, but who cares with all the money Fisher will be getting.
Scene: Me holding on to mom’s arm and guiding her to her bathroom.
Mom: Where’s the light switch? I can’t find the light switch. It is way too dark in here. I am going to fall down.
Tom: Mom, I’ve got you. You are not going to fall down on my watch. Besides, you know exactly where that light switch is. You’ve been turning that thing on and off for over forty years.
Mom: I didn’t know I was that old.
Tom: Mom, you are even older than that. Did you know you are close to one hundred years old!
Mom: Well, that is really something, isn’t it? I thought I was twenty-two.
Tom: Hey mom, can you whistle?
Mom: Yes, I can whistle!
Tom: Well, Dad, Nel and I could, but I never, ever remember hearing you whistle.
Mom: Well I did too! I whistled all the time.
Tom: OK, let me hear you whistle.
Mom: Well I don’t do it anymore. I just have too many other things I have to do other than whistle.
In fact, I doubt if I will ever have time to whistle again.
And that’s all there is to it.
Scene: Driving into mom’s driveway with mom after picking her up at adult daycare.
Tom: Look at that big old house, mom! It’s called Cheswick, but I call it the “Helen House”!
Mom: The “Helen House”! Do I live there?
Tom: Yep.
Mom: Did I make it that charming?
Tom: Yep! You did it!
Mom: Well, in that case, I need to work on it some more, because it is charming!
Tom: Yes it is.
Mom: Who lives there, now?
Tom: We do, mom. You and me.
Mom: We do? That’s a mighty big house for just you and me. Who is in there, now?
Tom: Nobody, mom. We are out here.
Mom: Well, we need to get in there right now so it won’t be lonely.
Cheswick, the house mom lives in and has lived in since my dad and she bought, hauled 500 yards from its original location and restored in 1973, was built in 1796.
That’s means it was built only 20 years after we won our independence from the Brits!
Mom has lived in the Cheswick for 38 years.
The Franklin family, who my folks bought it from, lived in it for 90+ years. That only leaves eighty-some years unaccounted for, although I do know a Baptist minister ran a boarding school at Cheswick prior to the Civil War.
This is curious because my dad was a Baptist minister as well, and mom was a teacher before she married dad. What are the odds?!
My two daughters have always suspected this old house is haunted and with creaking floors and squeaky doors, it sure seems like the right place for ghosts to want to hang out. After all, Cheswick is 215 years old! You have to believe a gaggle of ghost would have found it to their liking by now. They just don’t make houses made for haunting like they used to.
If there are ghosts in Cheswick, they could be coming from any of the handful of families that have occupied it, but one thing is certain, after last night, I know one of them is coming direct from my family tree.
Although it was a quick encounter, I know who this ghost is. And, by all rights, I should know, After all, I was kin to her when she was living.
The ghost I am referring to was my younger sister, Nel!
Last night was not only a quick encounter, but my first with my sister the ghost, or any ghost for that matter.
Here’s what happened.
My mom sleeps in a four-poster bed my dad made for them about the time I entered the family as the first born.
I don’t think I was conceived on that bed, because I don’t believe my mom and dad ever did what it traditionally takes to make babies. I think my sister and I were “lowercase immaculate conceptions”.
I just can’t picture my mom and my dad, you know, doing what it takes to make babies. Period.
But, hey, that’s not what this story is about. That’s what therapy is made for.
Anyway, when my mom crawls into that four-poster around 7 to 8 pm, she gets lost somewhere close to the center of its great big mattress, tucked away under a sheet, a blanket or two and a hefty bedspread. It could be the middle of summer or winter and it’s always the same.
She is one tiny bug in a big rug, that’s for sure.
Every night, she keeps the two table lamps located on either side of the bed on all night, but dimmed down real low.
She doesn’t really need the lights, because once she has settled in, she has settled in and most times sleeps all night without even once getting up to go to the bathroom.
Her bathroom ritual occurs just before she crawls into her bed and just after she wakes up around 8am the next morning. It’s like clockwork. I am with her all the way to make sure she doesn’t fall. I call her my little Weeble Wobble!
Four nights a week I sleep one room over from her so I can stay close in case she needs me or to calm her after an occasional bad dream.
Even though the two rooms have a door between them, I keep it open.
I also keep the receiving end of a baby monitor close at hand with the transmitting end right next to mom’s bed on the bedside table
The room I’m in was my sister, Nel’s. She slept in it, right next to mom and dad from the day they moved in until her death just this past March after a long, hard fought battle with Alzheimer’s.
Last night, the ghost, that I will call Nel until proven otherwise, brightened and dimmed, brightened and dimmed, brightened and dimmed the table lamps in mom’s room that I had dimmed after helping mom get to bed earlier last evening.
I counted three sequences before Nel turned them completely off, only to turn them on and then off again, you guessed it, three times.
All of this happened around 6 am. I couldn’t help but witness it while lying, eyes wide open, in Nel’s bed in what was her room. For some reason, I suddenly felt like an intruder … an uninvited guest.
I crept into mom’s room to make sure it wasn’t her playing games with the lights, which it wasn’t, because the fact was she was oblivious to what was happening. She was sound asleep and I suspect preoccupied playing the leading lady in an adventure filled dream of days gone by.
There was no one hiding under the bed or in the closets. Plus all the big old doors to the outside were locked tight. Believe me, I checked.
And, there was no sound of anyone walking in or near mom’s room. As I mentioned, this old house creaks even with the lightest of footsteps, so being stealthy, at least as a human, is impossible.
It was getting downright spooky and my sister, though I never saw her, was, almost instantly, my number one suspect.
One, she was a joyful prankster.
Two, mom had screamed out Nel’s name three times in a restless sleep earlier that night.
Three, Nel knew those lights and the rheostats on them like the back of her hand.
Four, there didn’t seem to be any malice associated with this brief encounter. And, my sister never had a malicious bone in her body.
It just seemed like a friendly ghost with way too much time on its hands.
Or, and this is my theory, one that wanted a little attention from her mom.
But, the real giveaway was the baby monitor. I heard the constant static sound from the receiver in Nel’s room suddenly stop hissing, but the LED light was still burning red, so it was on, indicating the electricity had to be on, too.
Three different times, I went into mom’s room to find her sleeping and the red transmitter light off on her monitor. And, yes I checked the electricity there, too, and the power was on. Yet, when I would go back to Nel’s room, the static sound would be back on … indicating that somehow, mom’s monitor was again up and running.
Three times this happened and my sister loved to do things in threes. She had to know I was staying in her room and that the main connection between mom and me was the baby monitor. Smart sister! She was connecting with both mom and me at once. Real smart for a new ghost, but Nel was always a fast learner.
For a split second, I thought the ghost could have been my dad who passed away in 2002, but then I didn’t think so because even though he was a prankster and funny in his own right, I believed he had too much respect for mom to wake her up or startle her while she was sleeping.
I also didn’t think it was dad and Nel because they would have used an old ghost trick and teamed up to make lots of unexplainable things happen at once. You know, spinning clock hands, whirling chairs suspended in mid-air, shoes walking across the floor seemingly on their own … that sort of stuff.
No, the more I thought about it, this was a one ghost job and a ghost that had been one big part of our family.
I also think the motive was pretty clear, if ghosts still have to have a motive like we mortals do.
I think Nel was playing gentle pranks on mom because, as I mentioned in an earlier blog post, The Three Things in Life We Cry About, mom doesn’t remember Nel (except in her dreams, when she calls or screams out Nel’s name), hasn’t grieved for her and refers to her only as “that girl”.
These two were inseparable in life, so much so that we called them both Nelen! So, I think it has to make Nel a little sad, no, very sad. Although, being Nel as well as being an angel moonlighting as a ghost, she must have a heavenly gift of understanding everything and must realize that it’s mom’s dementia that keeps mom from remembering her daughter and “bestest” friend.
Besides, Nel never had it in her to be anything but loving with mom, or anybody for that matter, so I can see how just a little playing around, in order to connect, might seem quite appropriate to her.
Maybe she just wanted to get mom’s attention in a gentle way and to whisper, “It’s Nel, mom. I am still here with you and for you, mom. Between dad and me up here, there and everywhere, Tom right there next to you, and Tovi’s and Lissi’s families just down the road, we’ve got you covered. It’s all going to be alright. We promise, mom.”
Maybe that’s what it was all about … a promise.
After all, I am a believer … as I always have been when it comes to my family.
The last thing I did before going back to bed was dim the table lamps in mom’s room, pull the covers up under her chin, kiss her forehead and whisper, “We love you, mom.”
You are my sunshine, my only sunshine
You make me happy when skies are grey
You’ll never know, dear, how much I love you
Please don’t take my sunshine away
A dark amber cloud covered the sun as mom and I walked arm and arm to the car for our drive to her adult daycare.
The sun looked like it had developed a cataract overnight and seemed old, dull and dim.
It looked as though it was having trouble getting enough light for itself, much less for our planet.
I asked mom what she thought of the sun and she said, “It’s just upside down. That’s what happens when it’s upside down.”
“Upside down?” I asked. “How did it get upside down?”
“God did it,” she answered.
“How did God do it?” I asked.
“Only God knows,” she said.
Then she added in a whisper, “God told me the the secret.”
“Pray tell, what’s the secret, mom?” I asked.
“Well, God told me … but I didn’t know what he said, because it was all in Spanish.”
I swear, at that exact moment, the cloud cover above us narrowed and the sun winked at me!
Here’s the scene. Last night while tucking my mom into her fourposter bed and kissing her good night, my love for her inspired the following dialogue.
It is one of the shortest one act plays ever written, but thanks to the leading lady, I guarantee, it is one hard act to follow.
Sit back, relax and enjoy. And, don’t blink or you’ll miss it.
(CURTAIN RISES)
Tom: “Good night, good night!
Parting is such sweet sorrow,
That I shall say good night till it be morrow.”
Mom: Who said that?
Tom: Shakespeare.
Mom: I love old Shakey … he was full of it.
Tom: Good night!!!
(CURTAIN CLOSES)
Don’t panic, mom’s not missing. You won’t find her on milk cartons or posted on utility poles.
What I am trying to say is that I have been missing mom. And, I have been missing from the home front as well.
So it’s me that has been missing!
I have had back-to-back consulting and speaking assignments over the last couple of weeks that have taken me here, there and yonder. Yonder meaning as far west as Denver and that means I haven’t been home with my mom nearly enough … and that’s where the missing comes in … a heaping helping of missing mom!
I missed her energy, her enthusiasm, her happiness, her outlook on life, and her loving me! Yep, call me selfish, but I just can’t get enough of my mom holding me tightly in her arms, telling me what a great boy I am and letting me and others know just how much she loves me … at least a zillion times a day!
But it’s her insights, humor ( she never thought she was as funny as my dad, sister and me, but we always thought she was a hoot) and just out of the blue comments that keep me thinking, captivated, laughing and waiting for more.
Going from hanging onto her every word and action to not being able to communicate at all has been really, really hard. Mom doesn’t really understand a telephone anymore and anything more high-tech than a letter never been a part of her world.
When I woke mom up this morning to tell her I was back, there were lots of hugs and “I love yous”, but no “I missed yous”, because mom was not aware of when or for how long I had been gone. She only lives in the moment, not the immediate past or the future for that matter. And when I say the future, I mean the next minute, not further out than that.
But what I get in the moment, moment by moment, is priceless.
I was fixing mom her favorite breakfast, a big bowl of Raisin Brand (not meant to be an ad and I am not getting paid for product mentions), when I asked her if she knew where milk came from.
“Chickens”, she fired back.
“I don’t know just how they do it, but they get with their mamas and do it. That’s just how it works. Alwyas has.”
She was singing “You Are My Sunshine” the whole way to adult daycare and when I was leaving, I overheard her holding court with a couple of her buddies.
Mom proclaimed, “This world is full of chaos. You need a person who helps you out to know the glory of the world. That person is my boy, Tom Laughon. You are not going to steal that guy from me. He makes you laugh. He doesn’t make you feel you are crazy. He just knows how to make people feel good … he always has.” Then she added, “He’s gone now, but he will be back for me, that’s one thing I know.”
I stopped and looked back at her. Maybe mom does miss me when I am gone. Who really knows?
But, one thing I do know is that I was already missing her … again!
Last night, my wife, Melissa, and I took mom to a little Mexican restaurant called Su Casa.
Aren’t they all called Su Casa?
Mom loves her salsa and chips, can eat two beef burritos and still have room for the beans, rice, more salsa, chips and … this is unbelievable, but true … top it all off with a generous serving of fried ice cream.
Oh, and I forgot to mention the three tall glasses of Sprite on the rocks.
Sprite was the hit of the night! Mom kept saying it was the best drink she had ever had and wanted the recipe “from the owner” so she could make it at home in big batches.
As we were leaving, the hostess, a good looking hostess I might add, that is if I had been looking which I wasn’t (remember, Melissa was with us). What the heck, I still couldn’t help but noticing.
Before I knew what was happening, mom looked at the hostess and said, “Hi, sugar girl, you are beautiful! Look at your eyes … and that big smile of yours is just gorgeous!”
Just as I was trying to process what was going on: the words mom chose, her uninhibited, endearing way of connecting with a stranger as if they had been friends for life my mom grabbed the girls arm with her right hand and announced for everyone in Su Casa to hear, “You are soooo hot!”
I heard myself say, “Tell the nice lady goodnight.” But, before I could get another word out, I felt mom grab my hand and say, “Hold her arm, Tom! Feel that. Isn’t she hot? She has the warmest arm I have ever felt!”
The hostess was smiling ear to ear!
I am holding on to her arm, right along with mom, and agreeing that she sure was hot. I was blushing and watching to make sure Melissa was out of earshot because I honestly didn’t know how I would explain the unexplainable.
All I can say is my mom is a Natural Connector.
Flashback!
I remember, way back in the day, how singles on the prowl would use their pets, dogs mostly, as conversation starters for pick-up purposes.
“Oh what a cute (fill in the blank type dog)! He/she is really well trained. Who’s your trainer?”
“Sorry my little (blank) is scrappy for his/her size. He/she thinks he’s/she’s a big, big doggy, don’t you (blank)?
But nobody had a pet or a technique that was as fool proof at making connections as mine … a Natural Connector.
I had a beagle back in my single days named Deacon.
Deacon was extremely, well, no other way to say it than horny.
He would grab any leg available and do what came natural to him, though, as you would imagine, it seemed quite unnatural to the owner of the leg.
I would apologize profusely for my dog’s behavior, beg forgiveness, kneel down, say for all to hear, “Bad dog, Deacon! Bad, dog!”
While all this was going on I would sneak Deacon a little candy treat, then stand up, grab the hands of the leg’s owner and ask if I could buy her a drink … the least I could do in this horribly upsetting situation.
It worked almost every time! You might say I had a leg up on the competition.
The only downside, Deacon was so good at what he did, that the number of candy treats he earned made him become a really round beagle hound.
Flash Forward!
So, I am thinking there are going to be more and more 91 year old moms on this planet as folks continue to live longer and longer and, if you are single at the time, the grabbing-an-arm-you’re-sooo-hot bit could just be the ticket for a chance to buy (blank) a drink or two and who knows what might happen next!
All you would have to do to make sure your very own Natural Connector would stick with you is to reward your mom with a Sprite or three.
Win – win – win!
The American Way!
The only warning is don’t give your mom too many Sprites.
Remember what happened to Deacon.
On our drive to adult day care (a.k.a. mom’s workplace, where she lends a helping heart and hand to those in need), mom and I sing songs.
And I mean when we sing songs, we sing with the volume turned up to TEN!
I think, even with the windows rolled up, folks in other cars can see ours rocking and rolling and hear us loud enough to clap and sing along.
This is nothing new. As a family, we sang together like this our entire lives. I sang baritone, dad was the tenor, my sister, Nel, was the soprano and mom the alto.
Together, we made a joyful noise.
It made for good times and shorter trips.
With mom and me the only two in the family choir left standing, we have to make up for the missing harmonies with volume, and with that said, we don’t miss a beat!
One of mom’s favorite songs is Dixie. She sings it like she is standing at full attention and saluting.
However, when she gets to the “live and die in Dixie” part she stops us both from singing, looks at me with a worried look on her face and says, “I just don’t like that part!”
That’s my prompt to say, “Mom, what don’t you like about it?”
She says, “I don’t like the … you know … the die part.”
“Well, how about we sing, “live and live in Dixie?” I suggest.
She smiles with one of her patented light-up-the-world smiles and shouts, “You’ve got it! You are so good, so smart. You are my bestest friend in the whole world. You know everything. I love you so much.”
She repeats, “To live and live in Dixie!”
Then we sing it again with that one BIG change. And, you know what? It gives a whole new meaning to an old, old song.
At the end of the song mom raises both arms skyward and says, “I love that song. I love the south. I wouldn’t live anywhere else. I love living in the south … it’s called Dixie! To live and live in Dixie.”
It’s comforting to know the South will rise again tomorrow, same time, same place … driving mom to work.
My Side Note:
Mom was born in 1919 and raised in Richmond, Virginia, lived in Front Royal and Norfolk, Virginia before moving to Orangeburg, South Carolina and then Gainesville, Florida before coming full circle back to Richmond in 1970.
So, mom, and all of our family for that matter, have only lived in our beloved South.
There is something about the South that gets in your blood and does wonders for your heart and soul.
Thanks for being with mom and me on our journey. Please share your comments, insights and thoughts.
Oh, and please share mom’s and my blog with a friend.
The more on board, the merrier.