Tag Archives: My 91 Year Old Mom

The unfolding story of mom & me at a particular age and stage in both of our lives.

Good Parts, Bad Parts, Happy Parts, Sad Parts

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As stories go, there are good parts, there are bad parts, happy parts and sad, but I wouldn’t miss being a part of mom’s life now for anything in this world.

Even as a kid, I made sure our family got to the movie theater and in our seats before the feature started rolling. I would pass on popcorn if I thought we might miss even the tiniest bit of the film. And, if we did, I would beg my folks to stay and see the part we didn’t see.

By that, I meant to literally wait until the movie started to see the part we missed, even though we had already seen most of the beginning, the middle and the end.

This would mean mom, dad, my sister and I had to sit through the coming attractions, cartoons and everything else, just to see what would have been only minutes of the beginning of the movie, again. It didn’t make me the most popular member of the family, but it was like an obsession with me. I had to see the part I didn’t see.

To this day, I am the same way with not only movies, but everything. Life to me is like a movie. I will leave every place I go or thing I do, not only cataloging what I did see and do, but what I didn’t.

I also make a concentrated effort to plan when and how I will see the part or parts I missed .

So, here I am back in Richmond, Virginia, after a 17 year stint in Tallahassee, Florida. And, like in a movie, I am playing the leading roll as primary caregiver for my 92 year old mom, as well as a supporting roll in making a living, while living life to the fullest, with my spouse, family and friends.

And, as stories go, there are good parts, bad parts, happy parts and sad, and I not only want to be a part of all of those, because they are real, but I also want to be a part of the parts I didn’t see.

You think that sounds crazy to you? Well it sounds crazy to everybody around me … including me!

Here’s a sneak preview of what I mean … just a trailer, a teaser, so you’ll hopefully stick around for the entire main feature.

Good Parts.

Every night, when I take mom to bed, she’ll say, “This is my room!”

And, I’ll say, “Yep, this is your room, mom. It’s been your room for over forty years. Can you believe it?!”

“Forty years?! It has not been that long.”

“Yep, forty years.”

Then she’ll look around the room and say, “That’s my bed.”

“Yep, that’s your bed alright. I call it your ‘Fred  Bed’, because your husband, and my dad, Fred, made that bed for the two of you sixty-four years ago, mom.”

“I know Fred Laughon. He made this bed for me. He is a good man.”

Her description is right, but the tense is wrong. Dad passed away in 2002.

Mom refers to her parents, brothers, sister, aunts, uncles and cousins all in the present tense, although most, if not all of them, passed away long ago.

She still attends college at University of Richmond, sings her Alma Mater and runs on the track team. When you ask her who is the smartest in the family, you know the answer. Same with who is the fastest on the track team, best singer in the choir, smartest, etc. Lack of self esteem or confidence has never been mom’s challenge.

I tuck her into her mahogany, four poster, ‘Fred Bed’, kiss her, listen to her tell me how much she loves me, softly rub her forehead,  pull her hair back and covers up, whisper, I love you, and wish her a good night.

She’ll say, “Always is. I never have a bad night. I just close my eyes and go to sleep, that’s it.”

As I tiptoe out of her room and close the door behind me, a flood of memories start to bounce around my brain. It is a nice way to tie a bow on the day and it happens everyday.

More Good Parts.

In the mornings, I go to mom’s room around eight and she is laying in her bed, wide awake, just waiting for me to appear. She always starts with, “Who is that boy? I love that boy. You are the bestest boy in the whole wide world.”

And, the mantra begins. “It’s your boy, mom, Mr. Wonderful, and your boy says good morning to you, beautiful lady!”

She’ll say, “You are perfect, I am perfect, we are both perfect.”

We tell each other how much we love each other. We look out the window and talk about how much traffic there is on the street in front of mom’s home; what color the cars and trucks are and whether they are coming or going. Then we talk about the weather … wet, dry, hot, cold, cloudy, sunny … no matter what kind of weather, we agree it’s a beautiful day and for me a beautiful time of the beautiful day with a beautiful lady.

It is a predictable, soft, wonderful way to kick start the day, everyday.

Bad Parts.

Then, as I walk mom to the bathroom, we pass my sister, Nel’s, room and mom will say, “That girl (person, lady, man) is gone.” She never mentions Nel’s name, except when she shouts, Nel, Nel … Neville, in an occasional early morning dream.

When we are beside the open door to Nel’s room, I ask when and where that person went, and mom will say she doesn’t know, she just went.

My sister passed away just over a year ago after a long, losing battle with early onset Alzheimer’s. Mom has never realized or recognized this. No grief, no memories, no anything.

I leave Nel’s bedroom door open every night so I can peek in and check on mom. As we pass by the door, mom grabs the knob and pushes the door shut with a bang.  As the door slams shut, mom will say, “I am not going in that room, that room is where you get sick. That room is where that person who lost everything lived.”

Her voice sounds like it is warning herself and me, that whatever is in there is highly contagious. I honestly believe she would fight you before going in that room.

It shakes me everytime, even though I know exactly what mom is going to say and do. I  usually just continue walking past Nel’s room to the bathroom without saying word.

Every now and then I will ask mom who she is talking about or why did that person go? Her answer is always, “I don’t know, but that person is gone because she just couldn’t handle all of the things that were happening to her.”

It is delivered in a matter of fact way, that sounds like part gospel and part exasperation or annoyance. There is no point in questioning her or talking to her about Nel. As mom would say, “and that’s it.”

Sad Parts.

The incredible thing is, they were joined at the hip their entire lives. They were so close, we would combine mom’s name with Nel’s and refer to the two of them as one … Nelen!

I have said it a million times, theirs was an amazing, one-of-a-kind, symbiotic relationship.

The concern among all who knew them was how could or would either of them exist without the other. No one could have predicted or written this script.

Alzheimer’s prevented my sister from ever knowing or understanding mom’s dementia and mom’s dementia never allowed her to know or understand Nel’s Alzheimer’s or her death for that matter.

To me, this is not only an irony, but a blessing and a curse.

The love, caring, understanding and support they had for each other throughout their life was completely missing during the time they needed each other the most. They had lost all connections with themselves, and as a result, with each other. They never had a chance, or were even capable of, saying their goodbyes to each other.

I think to myself, it is a blessing that mom doesn’t remember any more than she does about dad or Nel, and yet it’s a curse, too, because I don’t have anyone to swap memories of my family with like I could have with my mom. So many questions I have for her will never be answered, the celebrations and gratitude I have for her will never be fully appreciated, and the untold stories we would both share will go untold.

These are the parts I didn’t and never will see.

So, in just the few steps and moments it takes to get from mom’s bed, past Nel’s room, to the bathroom, the beautiful brightness of  each and every day turns a dark shade of melancholy.

Happy Parts.

This morning, on the way to adult daycare, for whatever reason, I turned down the volume on a country music song mom was clapping her hands to and asked her if she knew a man named Fred?

She quickly replied, “Fred Laughon. He is a nice man. He only knows nice. That’s why he is so good.”

I found a place to pull the car over. Mom was right, dad was a nice man. She was right, he only knew nice. And she was right, again, that’s why he was so good.”

What a great thing to have engraved on one’s headstone or in mom’s head for that matter. It is a tall order tribute, and one dad truly deserved.

Sad Parts.

But, I wanted more, needed more, longed for more. I wanted that to be the start of  never ending conversations between mom and me about our family, our memories and our lives together.

I wanted to let my mom know the influence that dad, Nel and she had on me and my take on life.  I wanted to share my journey with her, every step of the way.  And in return, I wanted her to share hers … over and over again.

I wanted to credit her for teaching me leadership, nurturing my creativity and inspiring me to never stop learning, searching and giving. I wanted to thank her for giving me the courage to always reach for the sky and then some.

In the distance, I thought I heard mom asking if we were lost.

I was staring out the window of the car at nothing for no telling how long. The engine was idling, it was raining, and mom was right, I had been totally lost in my thoughts that were now being washed away by the rain accompanied by the rhythm of raindrops.

Mom was louder now, “Are you OK? I want you to be OK. I love you so much! You are the bestest boy in the United States of America which includes the whole wide world. ”

“I’m OK, mom.  I’m OK,” I heard myself say as I put the car in gear and eased back on the road.

Mom says, “You always know where you are going. How do you do it?”

“I don’t know, I just do it.”

“You do it. You are always helping me see and learn what’s going on in this world.”

As I drove, I knew just around the bend there would be good parts, bad parts, happy parts and sad in no particular order … as well as the missing parts … the parts I didn’t see and never will.

No matter where our journey takes us, I know we are in for one heck of a ride.

And, I wouldn’t miss being a part of mom’s life now for anything in this world..

So Many Children!

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There was an old woman who lived in a shoe.
She had so many children, she didn’t know what to do.

Conversation in the car, on the way to Mom’s adult day care.

Mom: Is that lady in the backseat (Referring to her caregiver on weekends)?

Me: Nope, she’s at home. She won’t be here until Friday.

Mom: What does she do when she’s at home?

Me: She takes care of her babies (First thing that popped into my head … she has no babies).

Mom: How many babies does she have?

Me: Forty-two (First thing that popped into my head).

Mom: Forty-two! Forty-two?

Me: Yep! Forty-two! What do you say to that?

Mom: I am not saying anything. If I did it would not be ladylike.

Me: Well, if you were going to say something, what would you say?

Mom: Horrors!

(Hold this blog post up to your ear and you will hear me laughing uncontrollably! I just can’t help myself.)

One-of-a Kind Livi’s One-of-a-Kind Letter

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Mom’s Great Granddaughter, Livi Heffron

My one-of-a-kind granddaughter and her one-of-a-kind letter need no introduction or explanation.

One postage stamp and 268 miles later, here’s the result of Livi’s one-of-a-kind letter. Mom just keeps reading and rereading it over and over again. It is a joy to watch.

I hope Livi sticks with her promise to “wright” every week.

That will guarantee I’ll have at least one blog post weekly!

Anything for a Dollar

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Debora, mom’s superstar caregiver on weekends, took mom to Family Dollar on Saturday for a special late afternoon outing.

Mom likes to ride in the car and there’s never an argument when she gets a chance to get out of the house and go see the world. She is ready to rock and roll!

And, when I say see the world, I mean see the world. Just a few blocks from home she will ask what state or country she is in, and if you don’t tell her, she will tell you, so seeing the world is truly what it’s all about.

Family Dollar was in Canada and mom would have to navigate through Egypt, China and New Jersey to get there.

After giving the store a good going over, Debora focused on gathering her purchases. Then she and mom rolled their shopping cart filled with bargains to the checkout counter.

Just before cashing out, Debora remembered one more thing she needed (there is always one more thing), so she told mom to stand right there, with both hands on the cart and she would be back in no time.

Mom said, “Don’t you worry, I won’t move from here no matter what. Even if you don’t come back forever, I will be right here.”

When Debora came back, she tapped mom on the back and said, “We can go now, Helen.”

Mom didn’t see Debora come up behind her and growled, “That lady told me to stay right here. And, that’s what I am going to do! I am not going anywhere with anybody. And that’s that.”

It literally took another shopper to join forces with Debora to explain to mom that it was OK to go now.

Finally, mom gave in and headed for the door, arm in arm with Debora. After all, they had quite a journey ahead of them in order to retrace their trip through Canada, New Jersey, China and Egypt in order to get back to Richmond before dinner.

Anything for a dollar.

May 10th, Another Would-Be-Age Day

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It is May 10th.

It is my sister, Nel’s, birthday, the second one since her death, March 28, 2011.

She would be 65.

Birthdays followed by would-be-ages are bitter sweet.

My dad’s birthday was in April, and it was a heck of a day to get through for me, even though he passed away in 2002.

Today, I searched my blog posts for the following video. It was taken on Thanksgiving Day, 2008.

My sister was showing signs of what would later be diagnosed as early onset Alzheimer’s, but you sure can’t tell it here.  As you can see, her joy was still as contagious as her voice was strong.

I have clicked on this video again and again, today.

I sing along. I laugh. I cry. I whisper how much I love her and how much I miss her.

The words and the simple melody of the song give me the strength and courage to continue down this crooked path of life.

Our harmonies are as familiar as they are comforting.

There we are, Nel, mom and me and somehow it seems like only yesterday, although I am fully aware that it is today.

Nel is dedicating the song to my daughters, Tovi and Lissi. My sister adored “her girls”. And, “her girls” adored their Nel.

It is May 10th.

I love you, Nel.

Click to learn more about my extraordinary sister on the Alzheimer’s Association’s website.

Mom’s “Coming Soon” Question

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Everybody keeps saying, ‘Jesus is coming soon, Jesus is coming soon, Jesus is coming soon.’

All I want to know is how is he going to do it?

He doesn’t even know how to drive a car!”

– My 91 Year Old Mom (Who is really 92)

God Bless America & Mom – Video

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My mom bleeds red, white and blue. She always has.

She was born and raised in historic Richmond, Virginia, and her family tree has First Families of Virginia (FFV) names carved in its branches.

Mom’s aunts (her mom’s sisters), who lived in Charlottesville, were not only FFV, but members of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and as such, early volunteers in helping to restore Monticello … yep, Thomas Jefferson’s little 5000 acre estate. This would have been in the 1920s.

As a kid, mom spent many a summer day running free on the grounds, picnicking under the shade of Jefferson’s “pet trees”, including his famous mulberry’s, and climbing up and down the steep and very narrow flight of stairs that led to the dome room. There she would play with the other children, while their relatives helped breathe new life in the old plantation.

My sister, Nel, and I were both born in Richmond and history was as much a part of our growing up as catching lightning bugs or playing hide-and-seek. Mom was our teacher, guide and head cheerleader for the good old USA!

We didn’t learn history from history books as much as we absorbed it. We five sensed it. We could see, smell, taste, hear and touch it at every turn and it was organic and wonderful.

When we moved from Virginia to South Carolina and then Florida, mom made sure Nel and I didn’t lose our connection with the state we were born in, our heritage or our history.

Dad would pack up our bikes  in the back of our Chevy nine-seater station wagon and head for Williamsburg where we spent many a summer vacation. And, those vacations would last a month or more and yet it never seemed like nearly enough.

Nel and I felt like we were colonist and residents of the town. We wore our tricorn hats, bought rock candy at the Apothecary Shop with our own money, drank apple cider from salt glazed mugs at Chowning’s Tavern, took turns locking each other in the pillory and stocks and rode our bikes, unrestricted, all over the town, from the College of William and Mary, to the Governors Palace, to the Capitol and everywhere in between.

Nel and I would ride our bikes to the Williamsburg Visitors Center and watch the free orientation film, “The Story of a Patriot,” two or three times a day almost every day of our stay. One of my favorite scenes in the movie took place at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Richmond where the famous orator, Patrick Henry, gave his famous “Give me liberty or give me death” speech.

That was the line every school kid was familiar with, but there was a fragment of a sentence in Patrick Henry’s speech that I found even more meaningful and useful (once I found out what it meant).

When the fiery, Mr. Henry challenged his fellow countrymen, who were still resistant battle the British and fight for their independence, he minced no words.  The sentence fragment was, “Are we so meek and pusillanimous … ? ”

I honestly never tried to learn or remember the rest of the sentence … I had all  I needed.

When I asked, Dad told me pusillanimous meant lacking courage and resolution. I translated and condensed that into my own language which was “Chicken”!

So, anytime my sister wouldn’t do what I wanted her to do, I would repeat the question, “Are you so meek and pusillanimous?” with such passion and conviction that it was guaranteed to make Nel run to mom and dad, with tears in her eyes, to tell them I used those bad words again. I just smiled and repeated to myself, “Chicken”!

When I was called on the carpet for this, which was often, I would have to remind mom and dad, that it was exactly what Patrick Henry said and that Nel was just way too sensitive. I was just trying to practice a little history I had learned from a great Virginian!

As you might imagine, my logic didn’t hold water with mom and dad … but, it was worth it. That sentence fragment, that I turned into a stand alone sentence, started a revolution with my sister and me each and every time I used it, just like it had done for Patrick Henry.

Jamestown and Yorktown were  just down the road from Williamsburg, and when you put them together, what more did you need to get a grip on American history. They don’t call it the Historic Triangle for nothing! Who needed Virginia Beach, theme parks or anywhere else on this planet for that matter. We were history in the making and, thanks to mom and dad, we made it over and over and over!

After Nel and I were able to understand the birth of our nation, our family ventured out to see what that baby had grown to be. With dad or mom behind the wheel, that same nine-seater station wagon took our family to every state in the US except for Alaska and Hawaii (for obvious reasons) before my sister and I graduated from high school.

And our family journey didn’t stop there. Mom’s big audacious goal was for us to not only see the USA in our Chevrolet, but to see what was out there beyond our shoreline, and before we had graduated from college. And … she made it happen. No matter what country, city or town we visited, she made sure we were not only learning and broadening our perspective, but honoring our country by not being what she called “Ugly Americans.”

” When in Rome, do as the Romans do,” was our family mantra. Added to this were other Mom-isms. “Never be disrespectful. Never put yourself on a pedestal. Appreciate and honor diversity. Don’t ask for a McDonald’s. Stand tall, be proud, and always represent your country well.”

I’ll tell you how embarrassingly literal that last commandment was as interpreted by mom.

There is a old photograph, that I hope will stay hidden forever, that was taken not far from Cairo, Egypt. It is of the four of us on the backs of camels in front of the Sphinx. Mom and Nel are wearing dress skirts and blouses. Dad and I are wearing blue blazers, button down collar long sleeved shirts, gray slacks and (expletive deleted here) club ties.

This was the desert, for heaven’s sake! People out here were wearing robes. Even our camels looked at us and snickered.

We were Americans alright, and whenever I look at that creepy photo now, I would say we definitely fit the picture of what I would call, not just Ugly Americans, but Damn Ugly Americans. But, to mom, this was a once in a lifetime special occasion, and we were honoring that special occasion  by dressing … you’ve got it … special.

Looking back on it now, I wish we had all worn faded blue jeans, and red t-shirts with white letters proclaiming “Made in America”. I believe mom would have approved. After all, she looks really good in red, white and blue.

When mom sings God Bless America, she still shows the colors even though some of the words escape her. But, since she’s never been at a loss for words, she just  throws in a few of her own and keeps on going without ever missing a beat.

She has been a dyed in the wool American for 92 years. That’s almost 40% of our nation’s entire 236 years of independence which was gained 236 years ago in 1776 … in where else but Virginia!

Mom bleeds red, white and  blue … always has … and always will.

In my eyes, she is a genuine, one-of-a-kind, national treasure.

I Just Want You To Know …

In a way, mom and I live in two separate worlds.

Hers is one of the happiest worlds you could ever imagine. And, when I visit it, it makes me happy, too.

She rarely visits mine, or at least I am unaware of it if/when she does, but last night, out of the blue, she did and it caught me totally off guard.

I had tucked her in bed, kissed and hugged her and was dimming her lamp on the bedside table when she spoke in a voice that was strong, sure, and calm … a voice I have not heard from my mom for too many years now.

“I just want you to know, if you ever have to leave me, always know you have been the nicest person to be with me and help me.

You have given me the most wonderful times of my life.

No matter what happens, I will always love you for it.”

I stood by her bedside, watched her as she closed her eyes, watched the steady rhythm of her breathing … and then, without making a sound, I cried.

My tears were a warm, salty mix of sadness and joy.

The tears of sadness were for the challenges and choices that lie ahead.

The tears of  joy were for the feelings you experience when someone you have loved your whole life, and yet haven’t seen in what seems like forever, returns home.

The miracle is that you are so caught up in the moment, it doesn’t even occur to you to ask, “So, how long are you here for?”

America Counts on Mom

Mom on Mom:

I have always been this smart.

My daddy says, sugar, you are the smartest person I have ever known. And, that is true.

I can listen, I can speak, I can sing and I can find things.

So when the president of the United States of America needs something done or needs something found, I am one he comes to see.

And, when he says to me, Helen Douglas Martin, I need you to go fix what needs to be fixed or find what needs to be found, I get up from this table and go do it, because that is what I do … always have.

That’s why presidents love me.

I know them all.

I am strong. I am an American.

I love the United States of America.

I am smart. Everything I have ever done, I have done it in half the time of anybody I have ever known.

Every president of the United States of America has said to me, Helen Douglas Martin, you do the best things that have ever been done in the history of America.

Me on Mom:

The truth is, mom and my sister, Nel, were commissioned by the Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery to do the silhouettes of Nixon, Ford, Bush Sr. and his wife, Barbara. I believe they also did other presidents, but I can’t recall who, so I will have to do a little research before sharing more with you.

Mom and Nel have a portfolio of many notable leaders of our country,  as well as visiting dignitaries and celebrities.

I can recall offhand, silhouettes of Andy Warhol, Martha Stewart, Sandra Day O’Connor and all of the Supreme Court Justices that served with her, and Strom Thurman, and his daughter, Essie Mae Washington-Williams.

All of the above, including the presidents, were done in person. Mom always has said she and Nel had about and hour with each dignitary and that they were able to have real conversations with them all.

I know for a fact that Sandra Day O’Conner and Gerald Ford stayed in touch with both my mom and sister long after having had their profiles done.

So, mom really did know presidents. And, for all I know, she might have worked for the CIA.

After all, she can listen, speak, sing and find things. And, she is one of  the smartest people I have ever known.

What else do you need … to be a spy?

Secret Agent Mom, Secret Agent Mom,

They’ve given you a number and taken away your name.

I will keep you posted.

In the meantime, Mom’s the word.

Bringing in the Sheaves – Mom’s Version

Bringing in the Sheaves – Lyrics

Sowing in the morning, sowing seeds of kindness,

Sowing in the noontide and the dewy eve;

Waiting for the harvest, and the time of reaping,

We shall come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves.

Refrain

Bringing in the sheaves, bringing in the sheaves,

We shall come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves,

Bringing in the sheaves, bringing in the sheaves,

We shall come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves.

–  Knowles Shaw, 1874

“Bringing in the Sheaves” is a popular American hymn that I have sung my entire life. It’s just one of those songs on the required singing list for Baptist preachers’ kids (as well as their parents’ congregations).

And, the fact is, I love this song.

My mom, dad, sister and I would sing it a cappella in four part harmony and it was beautiful. We sang lots of songs together and singing was one of the ties that bonded our family together for life.

Mom sang in the church choir for a long as I can remember. She sang soprano and always strategically sat right behind dad’s pulpit. If his sermon went even one second past noon, those of us in the know could hear the faint tap, tap, tap of mom’s right shoe reminding dad to speed it up so the Baptist could beat the Presbyterians to the cafeteria for lunch.

Mom still sings something or another each and every day … anytime and anywhere.

It could be with me, with her adult day care cronies or by her lonesome. Jesus Loves the Little Children, This Little Light of Mine, Old Susanna, Coming Round the Mountain and America the Beautiful are a few of her current favorites. And, she can belt them out like nobody’s business, her hands and feet never missing a beat.

I can even get her to sing a little rock and roll with me, but that’s another story for another time.

Another song on mom’s current play list is Bringing in the Sheaves.

One of mom’s challenges with most of her songs is that she can’t remember all of the words. She never forgets the tune, and she lets not remembering stop her. She just makes up words that rhyme and keeps on going. Her lyrics are often better than the original and always more entertaining.

Here is mom’s latest version of the refrain of Bringing in the Sheaves:

Bringing in the sheets, bringing in the sheets,

We are washing dolphins, bringing in the sheets.

I believe, if we only knew the hidden meaning of her words, we could unlock the secret of life.

In the meantime, it is truly the secret to making any human on this planet smile from ear to ear.

Tell me it isn’t so!