Last evening as we drove to our granddaughter’s high school graduation it became apparent to me that although Cheryl knew who I was she did not really know who I am. She started talking about events in the past that we had done or children and grandchildren, sometimes mixing those together. Her discussion might start out as Paul and I did this or Paul and I did that or Paul told me etc. It makes one wonder about the complexity of the human mind.
In one of these conversations, an incredibly lucid one, she said to me that she thought her Parkinson disease was getting worse. (AHA) She went on to say that her memory was very bad at times. I just took a deep breath and let her continue. She explained that she was having a harder and harder time remembering names and relationships (she said “who they belong to”) and that thought bothered her. Throughout the rest of the evening at the graduation ceremony, pictures in the courtyard outside the high school and on the way home, this failure to remember names and relationships was forefront on her mind.
This information is very important to Cheryl. Embarrassment or shyness keeps her from merely asking, “who are you?” I told her that she can always ask me who the other people are and I would tell if I knew. I am not shy. I merely say, I’m sorry I’ve lost your name in my head.
Most times these drive along conversations fall into the category of prattle and I can respond with, ugh-huh or yes that is probably true or I don’t know about that but, yesterday evening it was more serious than that. Last night it affected her sleep as she began to worry about how everyone fits together. She could not find those relationships in her head to her satisfaction. She spent the three hours from eleven PM to two AM speaking to herself in a low voice and fidgeting with her hands. Fidgeting often accompanies her discussions with herself as well as others.
There was a lot of hugging and reassurance that I would always help. She on the other hand is aware of her memories dissipating into the ether and it scares her.
Indeed, her disease is getting worse.
Living in the present is all that is left when one cannot plan ahead nor remember past experiences. Disappointment was rampant in our drive along yesterday. Regan’s graduation ceremony, however, was well orchestrated. She is on to the next thing. (Smartphones take really crappy long photos but here is some from the ceremony.)







Carpe Diem
My mom is also aware of her memory loss and becomes frustrated by this, too. Yes, she loses focus on what is present before her as she occupies her mind with lists of things to remember, writes down names, worries about what will be forgotten next. I cannot imagine her heartache, nor Cheryl’s. Take care, Wizard.
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This is Cheryl’s greatest fear… she will forget something. I tell her often that I will not let her forget or miss anything that is important. Occasionally it keeps her up at night and I have helped her to write a note at 2 AM so that she doesn’t forget in the morning. 🙂 I love her but have not convinced her – or maybe I have – about forgetting stuff. She was very matter-of-fact when she said what she said to me. … I hope all is well with you and your family.
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Thank you. My mom has been living in an assisted living facility, but we will be moving her to memory care in a few weeks. I appreciate your posts and insights along the way.
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