My search for grace and meaning after a former care partnering life with a wife who suffered from Parkinson's disease and dementia giving her a confused and disorienting world.
“Grief is love with no place to go.” says Armand to a young killer. Amazon Videos has made shows out of several of the stories written by some of my favorite authors.
Watching one of these videos the other night while waiting for my croissants to fluff up for the oven, this quote jumped out at me.
I think I am feeling that these days. Baking can be therapeutic. It is a hobby I have perused for many years. When My sister came to visit a couple weeks ago I made her pot roast one evening. It was great and I used the leftover mashed potatoes in a recipe I have for potato bread. That turned out great. Something I have not tried to do but I now have the time for is croissants and other pastry.
Yesterday I made some croissants. (Why is there two sses in croissant?) Here is a image of my first effort. I took them to Cheryl this morning but she was sleeping.
I also need more practice with the croissants. The other half of the croissant dough is resting in the freezer waiting for me to become inspired to try it again. I think maybe a hotter oven and proof the yeast a bit when I start the dough. The recipe I was following used wet (cake) yeast which I do not have. Perhaps further experimentation with technique. These two out of ten turned out okay – not bad for a first effort.
Holy cow they are rich. There is a whole pound of butter in this recipe.
My brother-in-law’s wife recently had some surgery to her neck and over the past couple weeks we have exchanged text messages and visits. I ask how he is doing and how my sister-in-law is doing. Often I send him my latest picture of Cheryl at Bridgeway Pointe. Yesterday we had the following exchange.
Thanks for sharing. Tari still has lots of pain !!! I am tired and frustrated !!! How are You ?? — 2:36 PM
Not tired and frustrated. With little to do for Cheryl, I think lonely and broken hearted. Is Tari home or in rehab? How did that turn out? — 3 pm
Rehab did not go well. Tari is home now. Waiting to see about Home Health Care. — 4:29 pm
In home physical therapy sessions? — 4:30 pm
I guess. Not sure. –4:31 pm
I wrote lonely and brokenhearted to him. It was the first time I admitted that to anyone.
I get up in the morning and realize again that I have no particular schedule. Nothing that I have or want to accomplish this day. Three weeks ago my day was centered around Cheryl. I made very few specific plans for me that did not include her somehow. I focused on getting her going, up and out, onward and into the sunshine. In the Autumn months when it is still warm, just four weeks ago, I conjured little trips to the places where we used to walk. I did carryout from a little chicken place nearby sometimes and we had a picnic. Her in her rollie chair and me waving the bugs away. In September I had my picnic supplies in the trunk of the car so that we could do that spontaneously (Carpe Diem). My main goal for each day was simply to get her out into the sunshine somewhere.
A new attitude is my goal today and the rest of my days. I need to be less broken hearted. Lonesomeness I think I can deal with. That feeling will come and go. Cheryl is safe and well cared for at Bridgeway Pointe.
Carpe Diem. Cheryl is safe and well cared for at Bridgeway Pointe. (Repeat)
This morning when I came to visit she was sleeping. I kissed her on the forehead my usual ploy when she was still home with me. It did not work this morning. I left her to sleep. I went home and invented an early lunch.
It was a Thai dish from Hello Fresh. It was quick and easy to make. Pretty good to eat and I have leftovers since I renewed the smallest amount which is two meals for two people.
I am back at Bridgeway Pointe it is almost 2 PM and she is still sleeping or she awakened and was not interested in eating lunch so she is sleeping again. As I was walking out the nurse told me that she had not awakened and had not taken her meds at all so far that day. She is off her schedule and very tired.
Yesterday afternoon she had lots of visitors. That kind of activity would often make her remain awake late into the night. Sometimes she did not sleep well at home. She would be very tired the next day.
Zonked out
This is that day. The night shift nurse was able to get her to take her 6 PM dose. I went to visit at 6:30 PM. She was still very tired but she had eaten about 25% of dinner by the nurse’s estimation. She is drinking very little liquid.
For the past couple weeks I have been sorting through and pitching out much of Cheryl’s punding piles that she had squandered away all over her office area. Many of these are simply random collections of old and very old birthday and Christmas cards.
Today I discovered a small envelop with a picture that had been taken of us at a formal dance in 1969. A treasure it is to be sure. But the letter makes reference to me as though I know the writer. She sent it to Cheryl at her address in St. Bernard.
I have no memory of this event. I have no memory of Ginny. Ginny did not pass along her last name. She only passed along her address on the envelope. Who is Ginny? To be continued…
This picture so old that I did not have a mustache or old wrinkled skin or gray hair. I was eighteen and so is Cheryl.
If Cheryl was home with me she would be on my case to get the tree up and drag in the decorations. I do not have the enthusiasm for that activity that she has (had?) every year. I wondered this morning if I really wanted to do that at all. I am gaining an understanding for why many who have lost people that they love deeply may not have as much enthusiasm for the holidays.
I will eventually put the tree up when I think I will be able to do that without tears coming to my eyes.
And that brings up a new/old theme I have not written much about. For the past year I have listened to a lot of instrumental jazz music. New age, Smooth jazz that has no ties or memories from my youth. It is soothing and calming. I suppose I have become a fan of elevator background music.
All the other music that Cheryl and I listened to, her tastes are much different than mine, I like rock, she likes big band standards. I like classical and opera and ballet. She does not. Nevertheless, much of that other music awakens memories and nostalgia. It is hard to see through the watery tears, so, I do not play it as much as I used to play it for myself.
So far, I have my Christmas tree on this blog. These are last years pictures of the tree but the Christmas cactus has opened its blooms for this year. I moved it away from the window that it was shining its beauty out of. And I have reread last December’s blog posts. (deep sigh here.) things have not improved.
Cheryl is safe in her room a Bridgeway Pointe and I am cleaning up and sorting through papers in her office. She has collected vast piles of birthday cards, Christmas cards, notes, emails and other writings. She has put these together in random collections of paper that, at the time in her thinking, belonged together. (Punding is the term used by the Swiss.) This collection of items is her version of it.
One of the thoughts that comes through to me is a background fear of losing her memory and remembrances of her life. Some of her notes to herself are frantic in her attempt to categorize and save memories.
In the following email she is very succinct in her experience. I uncovered it while sorting. At the time she was taking amantadine. It was prescribed to help deal with the dyskinesias (rapid uncontrolled movements). After a failed trip with lifelong friends Cheryl wrote this letter to explain. It was, I think, the first time she felt the need to explain things to others. Here is her email to Cathy:
Wed, Sep 5, 2018, 10:04β―PM to Catherine
Cathy and Paul,
I hope youβre having a good time on Mackinac Island. The tour in which Paul and I participated was very informative and fun. We learned a lot about the island, the people who live there all year round, the horses and how they are cared for, the history of the island, what happens during the winter when the horses are moved to Michiganβs Upper Peninsula, and much more. The Harbor View Inn is a very comfortable hotel, the food is always good and there is plenty of it. This is why we were so excited about sharing this trip with you.
I want to explain to you what happened to me last weekend. Every 3 months, I have an appointment with either my neurologist or with his nurse practitioner. Last Tuesday, August 28, my appointment was with the nurse practitioner. During the past 10 months or so I have been taking a new medication that was prescribed for me by the nurse and doctor. It is a drug that is supposed to keep me from swaying side-to-side. By summer I was taking this drug 3 times a day in addition to my prescriptions of Sinemet (Iβve been taking Sinemet for the past 8 years ever since I was diagnosed with Parkinsonβs Disease).
About a month ago, I began to experience hallucinations. They werenβt too bothersome. They usually manifested themselves as vivid, sometimes bad dreams. By the time I met with the nurse practitioner (Maureen) last week, these hallucinations were becoming a little more than dreams. I asked if I should begin to wean myself from this new drug. Maureen agreed that I should begin to do that, and we worked out a schedule β¦ and I began to work on eliminating that drug the next day. For a week, I was to stop taking the 7am dose of the drugβ¦ I didnβt notice any bad reactionsβ¦ I still had the hallucinations but they hadnβt become any worse. They were just an annoyance.
On Saturday, Paul and I had a nice drive from home to Lansing, Michigan. The weather was nice. We stopped for lunch in a nice restaurant in Van Wert, Ohio. Then we drove on to Lansing, checking into our hotel around 5pm. We found a nice Bravo restaurant near the hotel, and we had a delicious Italian dinner. We watched TV at the hotel for a while. As I was organizing my things and getting ready for bed, I began seeing things that werenβt really there. There were bed pillows piled on the bed the way they usually areβ¦ but I saw what looked like a little child peeking out from under the pillows. I knew this was an illusion, but it persisted. Paul and I talked about it, and Paul said that we should just go to bed and everything would be ok. Based on what had been happening in previous weeks, I thought he was probably right. So we went to bed. Then what I called the βhallucinations from hellβ began. The little child kept appearing in and around the bed with the pillows continuing to move. What appeared to be a man wearing a long piece of fabric (I would not call it a cape, but more like a blanket) was βflyingβ around the ceiling. We tried turning out the lightsβ¦ nothing changedβ¦ things were still moving around. Paul did not see any of this, but he believed me. Finally his solution was for me to close my eyes, since this was all apparently in my head. I tried that for a while, then became frustrated with the whole situation. I got up and walked out of the room in my pajamas. As soon as I heard the door to the room close behind me, I realized that I did not have the room key. Fortunately, Paul heard me and went right to the door and let me back in. But what I had just done frightened both of us. After that I closed my eyes and tried to sleep, repeatedly telling myself that none of this was real, but I wasnβt very convincing. Somehow we made it through that night, but with very little sleep.
When Sunday morning finally arrived, we found a nice restaurant close by and had some breakfast. We talked about the trip and what had happened Saturday night, and we decided that we could not stay and go on the tour. We had never experienced anything like that before, but decided that we did not want to expose anyone else to our troubles. We felt it would be better for us to leave⦠that would ensure that you would have a good time.
We both think it was a good decision because I continued to have these horrible hallucinations for a couple more nights. Since it was a holiday weekend, I had a difficult time getting in touch with my neurologistβs office. I sent a couple of emails, asking for assistance. Of course, it was not an emergency. I was certain that it was my bodyβs reaction to withdrawing the medication. I had not thought I would have such a violent reaction. On the other hand, I did not want to increase the dosage again β that would just cause me more problems. So we toughed it out. Each day and night things went a little better. At home at night, the ceiling fan in our bedroom would appear to be falling toward me and the windows would appear to be moving toward our bedβ¦ mind you, they never came all the way to the bed, but it was still unnerving. There were people and children moving around in our bedroom and in the living room (this went on day and night). In our master bathroom, which is of course right off the bedroom, a couple of the hand towels were turned into a puppyβ¦ I was very surprised when I saw that!
Early yesterday the nurse practitioner contacted me, answering my email messages to her. I had asked if it would be a good idea for me to speed up my withdrawal from this drug, or if it would only cause me more problems. She answered that she did not think my reaction could be much worse. So I should stop taking it all together, and contact her with frequent updates about my condition.
This seems to be working. Iβm not out of the woods yet, but Iβm definitely feeling better. And the hallucinations are almost gone (Iβm almost afraid to say that). But I think they are no longer a problem.
Again, Iβm very sorry that Paul and I could not go on the tour with you, but I think now you understand why. We will go on another trip together again sometime soon.. maybe in the spring or summer.
I thank you for your prayers.
Take care.
Love,
Cheryl
This is the best and clearest description she has ever given me of her hallucinatory apparitions. She still sees people, things, children and bugs but less so and the visions are not terrifying to her as they were on this trip.
To me, it is a gift to understand what she has been going through in her mind. This is a love story that is not finished. I think that many of her visions are of people she knows or has known. Much like the theme of the TV show “Ghosts” she may be able to see beyond this world. (Why not?)
As we move down the road of Cheryl in a special place that can take care of her all day long every day, it gets easier for me to leave her. I am assured that she is getting the best care for her at this time.
The past few weeks when she was still home and it was all me, I started feeling anxious and upset with her lack of motivation to help with her own well being. I knew that her disease was getting in the way more. I was frustrated with her lack of cooperation with me with caring for her.
I was perhaps stepping on the last little bit of control that she had over events in our life. My whole waking day was consumed with her. I did not mind that but looking back, from her perspective, I was overwhelming, helicoptery and just plan annoying. There is a difference between accepting help from someone and having unwanted help thrust upon you. I was drifting into the thrusting arena.
This current situation is different. I can step back and let the aides do it – whatever it may be.
I am a husband again. Making sure has has all she needs to do for herself – whatever it may be.
What is a good way for me personally to think about, meditate, ponder my own feelings and emotions as Cheryl adjusts to her new environment? I have expressed to others that this change in our lives seems harder on me than her. It is merely a perception but she has adapted and accepts her new digs as hers.
I admitted to myself a few days ago that I felt guilt and doubt about getting Cheryl into Bridgeway Pointeβs Memory care unit. I now think it was the best decision we could make for ourselves. Many people including the nursing staff at Bridgeway have asked me how I am doing.
Dealing with feelings of emptinessβ¦
I feel empty. It is as though a death has occurred.
Every day, all day up until November 15, 2023 Cheryl occupied my waking thoughts. On November 14th she moved into Bridgeway Pointeβs Harbor section room 137. She did not leave my heart but she left. Things were still happening on the 14th but on the 15th when I woke up, I did not have to take care of anybody but me. My day was suddenly empty.
I went to get a haircut and get the oil changed in the car. Two things that I had put off because I either did not remember to do it until it was too late in the day or I could not focus on the day to day activities that one has to do to keep it all moving forward. As I drove off to do those chores I said to myself out loud in the car that I could do whatever today and one of those whatevers could be visit Cheryl.
I suddenly felt empty again. I really hate eating alone.
Connections to othersβ¦
For some time now I have focused all my energy on Cheryl and her needs. It is time to reconnect with other friends and acquaintances and lament the lack of a life long friendship with anyone other than my wife.
Perhaps it is time to make new friendships. Have lunch. Drink a beer or two and watch a football game.
Turned inward toward Cheryl for so longβ¦
I was and am still so focused on Cheryl and assuring myself that she is happy and we cared for I was unable to accept the fact that others may be able to do better for her than I could.
I have visited with her each day since she moved in. There is actually nothing for me to do but visit. That is fine but she is off in her own thoughts and delusions most of the day. Once she told me that I needed to take care of myself. (She has little periods of lucidity.)
I cannot always distinguish between watery eyes and simple ego. Both make it hard to see. Ego takes a lot of side stepping to see around. It really blocks the view. Watery eyes distort the view much like looking through a piece of skrim.
What is next?
For now I will devote more time to my part time activity at Mason. There are many things that I want to make sure work correctly for the red level control activities.
I want to write about our experiences more. I may back away from my blog for a bit. Writing about Cheryl and her affect on my heart is still too much. It gives me watery eyes.
I want to set up a work area in my little office space. I have always been interested in electronic things and gadgets. I need to set up a space to do those things β whatever they are.
Today I made bread. Baking is a hobby. I will have to be careful since I am the only one to eat anything I bake. Perhaps I can find others to give my baking to and make a new connection.
A dismasted ship in the old days was uncontrollable. It floundered in the wind. My week has been like that. Floundering in the wind.
My worst time is in the afternoon. There is no one to cook for, care for, talk to, argue with, pick up after. She is in another place even when I visit her in that place.
You wrote in your WordPress pages once that you used to let Carlton sleep. My Cheryl has lately started sleeping more. It worries me because she is also eating less. Did you try to get him up? Much while he was sleeping away the day? Cheryl has a great deal of cognitive issues also and I am currently in the process of housing her in a memory care facility nearby. (Expensive!) I worry that she may not be with me much longer.
Paul
Dear Paul,
Even though we have never met, I feel like I know you because we have shared so much about our spouses. Thank you for reaching out to me about this. Sleeping more and eating less are signs of your Cheryl’s body shutting down. I’m not saying she will pass away this week or even this month, but these are signs. I did not try to wake him when he slept away the day. Maybe one part of the reason was that I could get so much more done while he slept, but by this time we had Hospice care at home, and the nurse advised me to just let him sleep. She said his body must need it.
For the last few months, he ate less and less. He was eating pureed foods mostly because of swallowing issues, but one day I realized he was eating only half of his normal amount. When I mentioned it to the nurse, she said that was normal for his decline. Most of our marriage he weighed about 200 pounds. When he passed away he weighed 110.
Here are some questions about the memory problems – do you worry she will wander away? Is it becoming too difficult to reason with her about things? Have the doctors mentioned considering Hospice care either at home or in a facility? Please forgive me if I’m being nosy, and don’t feel you have to answer.
Again, thanks for reaching out. I do understand.
Cheryl
Cheryl,
Thanks for getting back so quickly. So as I read the first part of your email I wept out loud. You merely confirmed what I think has been happening for some time now. A few months ago Cheryl told me that she did not think she would be around for her hairdresser appointment in late August. – I wrote about it.
Last week she stayed at a memory care place for a week of respite care while I visited my sister in Portland Oregon for a week. It was less than acceptable to me but that is a different story. There is an assisted living/more assisted living/memory care facility which we are familiar with about 1 1/2 miles from here. It is a part of University of Cincinnati Health System which is where most of her doctors are associated. Both of our mothers stayed at Bridgeway Pointe near the end of their lives. It is a place that cuts through all Cheryl’s mental fog. The kids and I discussed it on Wednesday night with her. In her small periods of lucidity she has indicated that she is okay with staying there.
It saddens me of course but I think she needs a higher level of constant care than I can give her. To answer your questions —
Here are some questions about the memory problems – do you worry she will wander away? — no not anymore. She does not move well enough to wander off. She did once about a year ago when she was more ambulatory.
Is it becoming too difficult to reason with her about things? – yes. She requires constant instruction about what’s next. She is able to physically put on her clothes but she does better if someone is telling her what to do next. I am worried that she may have a UTI from the respite care week because they never got her out of her transfer chair to walk or any other little bit of exercise.
Have the doctors mentioned considering Hospice care either at home or in a facility? – She began seeing a new doctor in addition to her MDS at UC Health – referred to by him – Her new doc has a palliative care clinic. Her main thrust so far is to get her constipation under control. And they have been adjusting her “mood meds” – Cheryl takes quetiapine and sertraline (Seraquel and Zoloft)
Sad and scary stuff watching her not do things that would help because she is not mentally capable anymore. At last weigh in she was 117. She used to be more fluffier 165-170. Writing that just made me cry again…. sorry.
Paul
It is sad. You’re right. No one can say anything to change that. You will be sad without her because she has been part of your life for a very long time. You have history together!
The best part of this story is your faith in God. You both believe that God is with you, and I pray that He will comfort you right now and in the days to come.
You’re doing the best thing for Cheryl and for yourself and for your family. I’m so glad you have kept them in the decision-making process. That is the best way to go.
Call whenever you need to vent or ask a question or just talk about something totally different. I’m praying for you all!
Cheryl
999-999-9999
Cheryl,
I am glad you think I have faith in God. Some days I am not so sure about that. Some days I am certain that His plan sucks and hope He forgives me for disagreeing with His design. π But right now regardless of any belief structure I am certain that my purpose was and is to take care of my Cheryl.
We met on a blue moon in August of 1966 and we have been together since. It has been a remarkably wonderful journey except maybe for the last couple years.
When we were kids the nuns talked about going to purgatory if you were not quite pure enough for heaven. Somewhere in my adult life I decided this is purgatory and depending on how you do with the various tests of life determines which part of heaven is yours forever. I am hoping for the full service sitting area where Cheryl and I can have a conversation and maybe a glass of wine with some great bruschetta.
We both have a wonderful memory of a long walk around Niagara Falls many years ago on a late summer trip to NY. Coming back to the hotel we walked by this little cafe and we stopped in for a snack and glass of wine at about 4 in the afternoon. I ordered bruschetta to snack on. We were probably both hungry but it was the best bruschetta ever. None since has measured up. π
She is awake now at 2:30 in the afternoon. I may call you sometime in the future to talk. Put my number in your contacts so you will know it is not “Scam Likely” calling.
Paul
888-888-8888
On the days when you are not so sure, I would say, “Welcome to the club, my friend.” I don’t believe God is bothered, upset, or discouraged by our doubts. Instead, I believe He welcomes our honesty.
Prayers and hugs from Georgia!
Cheryl
Cheryl,
Many things are tested but my spirituality, such as it is, is solid. My love for Cheryl is also. (The plan sucks. π ) I thought you were a Michigan-er. Although I do not know why I think that.
Yesterday when I was down a bit and you were helping me with emails, I eventually crushed Cheryl’s morning pills and put them in some vanilla pudding. At 1 pm I got her to sit up for a bit and I was able to give her the first dose of meds for the day. I got her to lay down again and about an hour later she was trying to get up on her own when I went to check on her at 2:30 or so. I was certain that she would not sleep at her usual time of 10:00 PM but I had to do some maneuvering to get her to stay up that late. She slept the night through – getting up once as a part of a dream that she thought someone was knocking on the door. (I opened the door and closed it announcing, “There’s no one there.” She went back to sleep. π
This morning I crushed her meds again but got her to sit up in her usual 9:30-10 AM wake up slot and fed her the vanilla pudding meds. She was up at 11 AM today and now she is in bed again. In between we went to visit my daughter to celebrate our granddaughter’s 18th birthday. Audrey wants to go to the Air Force Academy in Colorado. She knows how to fly a plane already. She wants to drive them for the Air Force.
I am anxious to see if this trick works again tomorrow. It is getting harder to get her to wake up in the morning. I am going to just keep plugging away and see where this all goes.
Carpe Diem,
Paul
On Tue, Nov 14, 2023, 7:00 AM Cheryl Hughes wrote:
Good morning Paul,
Today I am praying for you often, trusting that God is with you, as He has been and is still with me.
A former student of mine is a pastor, and he sends a daily devotion to my email each morning. Here is the part that applies to you today:
Good Morning!
The situation you are facing didnβt surprise God. The problem that you didnβt see coming did not knock God off of His Throne. Your Heavenly Father loves you and He will take care of you. I love how the AMPC translates Psalm 37:23. It says, βThe steps of a [good] man are directed and established by the Lord when He delights in his way [and He busies Himself with his every step].β
God is ordering, directing, establishing, and arranging your steps. When life throws you a curveball, know that God already has a plan for your victory. When Satan launches a sneak attack, know that God has already planned your deliverance. When you know Godβs character and you have seen Him help you before, you can live at rest no matter the circumstances around you. You are able to do this because you have seen God come through for you before and you know if He did it once, He can do it again.
Today, rest in the fact knowing that your steps are ordered by the Lord. Know that God hasnβt brought you this far to leave you. Always remember that God loves you, He cares for you, and He will never leave you nor forsake you. As Psalm 37:23 shares, God is involved in every single step. Trust Him and follow His leading today. Youβll be glad that you did!
My prayer for you and Cheryl is for God’s peace to envelope you both today.
Hugs and prayers,
Cheryl H
Cheryl,
Thanks for your note this morning. It meant a great deal to me. I suppose I did not think that getting Cheryl into a place that can care for her full time would make me so weak in the knees when I got to the point of taking her there and letting go. I feel lost and rudderless tonight.
I wish I had your trust in a higher power. The last part of Max Ehrmann’s prose poem – Desiderata speaks to me like your pastor’s essay. — And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. Therefore be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be. And whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life, keep peace in your soul. With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.
I do strive to be happy but I really miss her. She has been mostly gone for some time. But once in a while – early this morning was one – she will say something that helps me to know she is still in there and our love is still strong. This morning she told me she loved me. Not as a response to me saying that to her. She said I should take care of myself too.
Thanks for your prayers. It sometimes seems lonely. Your words meant a lot to me this morning.
Paul
Thanks for your note this morning.
I am looking forward to seeing how Cheryl is doing today.
Paul
On Wed, Nov 15, 2023, 7:06 AM Cheryl Hughes wrote:
Good morning Paul,
You made it through your first night. Today you will begin a new normalcy, visiting Cheryl and then coming home again. I can only imagine the wide range of emotions you will experience, and again I will pray for peace for you both. Even if it takes time, I pray that soon you will both settle into the new routine.
I understand loneliness. Carlton and I were a team. We sang together in churches and played piano and organ duets together for many years, but then Parkinson’s arrived and for the last 23 years all of that dissolved. I still mourn that loss. We are allowed to mourn the loss of those partnerships, even while they are still on this earth. We feel deeply. We have regrets, but we must push those aside and focus on the beautiful experiences we have had with our spouses.
Thanks for sharing the Ehrmann poem. It is all natural, but it feels odd to us because we have not been in this situation before.
So, I think we should accept however all of this makes us feel, happy or sad, and not apologize for it. Tears are flowing as I write this. The truth is that I also pray for personal peace as well.
May God direct our steps and thoughts and emotions and decisions today, and give us peace.
Hugs across the miles,
Cheryl
Thanks for your note this morning.
I am looking forward to seeing how Cheryl is doing today.
Paul
Cheryl,
It is a really hard transition.
Here is my question to you. Were you able to keep Carlton at home until he passed from this existence? If you detect a little self doubt, you are right in thinking that.
I know it has been too soon to tell how Cheryl will do at Bridgeway Pointe. I went to visit for a few hours this morning at BP. Her sister Nancy came to visit and stayed for about an hour and a half. She and her gentleman friend were going to lunch. I still have my little part time teaching gig at a local community college so I went there in the afternoon. A friend of Cheryl’s, Mary Jo, visited her in the afternoon and got there when they were finishing up lunch. I think Mary Jo was surprised at how much Cheryl had deteriorated in the four weeks since she had seen her last. Among other things Cheryl has a very soft voice as many parkies do. BP’s memory care section can become noisy as everyone wakes up and moves around. So, Mary Jo had a hard time hearing what Cheryl had to say.
After talking to Mary Jo on the phone afterward, I am torn between going to visit this evening and staying away until morning.
She has to have time to acclimate to the new environment. I have to have time to acclimate to mine.
I really wish we had to do neither.
Thanks for reading.
Paul
Thanks for the note Paul. I wondered how today had gone. Iβm kind of surprised that BP doesnβt ask you to stay away for a couple days until she gets acclimated, but she may need that reassurance of knowing that you will be coming back. There is no right or wrong answer about how often or how much to visit. I think you have to figure it out for yourself. I did keep Carlton at home until he passed. It didnβt seem too hard, except for during the nights when he would wake me up three or four times. So yes, it was hard. But it was some thing I promised him I would do if I could, and I figured I could. We all have to figure it out for our own family and I think as you give this a try for a month a few weeks I donβt know how long. You will know if you made the right decision.
Sent from my iPhone (Cheryl)
Cheryl,
You have become my reporting entity whether you intended to be or not. It helps that I have someone to write to and think about the day. I hope you do not mind.
Today Cheryl was pretty good.
I looked at myself in the mirror this morning and said out loud – Boy you really could use a haircut. You look a little scraggly. π So I had some breakfast – Ham and pineapple and cheese omelet – I know but it seemed like a good idea at the time and it was not bad I just may not do it again. I made the bed. I decided that no matter what I was going to make the bed every morning. I found clothes and went in search of my car. I did not put it in the garage last night. — Something that I ALWAYS do. My head was elsewhere last night.
Getting into the car I glanced at the oil change sticker and thought – better get the oil changed while you are out and about. Haircut and then oil change! Off I went thinking out loud that Cheryl was fine until I got there – do some chores first then… It occurred to me that I could do whatever I want on any day so get used to it. And then I thought Cheryl could be one of those things and I cried for a bit while driving along to the barber shop. I know the barber pretty well and Dennis knew what I was doing with Cheryl. He did not ask and I did not tell him what was going on. – Men do not cry in the barber shop. It is a rule. π
When I finally got to Bridgeway Pointe it was about an hour before lunch. Cheryl was sitting out in the common area with a few others watching “In the Heat of the Night” on MeTV. The love seat next to her lounge chair was empty so I sat on her left and asked how she was feeling. Good, she replied. So we sat together and watched the show. She tips over to her right side and somewhere along while watching I tipped her up a little bit and put my arm there so she could lean on me to hold herself up. It was a very special moment for me. She put her other hand on my wrist and we sat comforting each other for a long time.
I took a selfie – attached.
I left when they set up for lunch so that I could get some food and to go look for parts to fix her wheelchair. Her WC arms are adjustable and she has managed to disassemble the little buttons that allow the height to change. When I came back a couple of her friends from church were there visiting. I sat with Cheryl and them for a bit while Cheryl talked and then lost her conversational way and started thinking about what to do with my sweatshirt that I had taken off while futzing with her wheelchair. They both wrestled with their uncomfortableness for about an hour and then left.
I got Cheryl interested in walking around with her walker with me holding onto a gait belt and we did a little exercise with me saying left, right, left, right, left, right, watch out for that wheelchair that belongs to Deloris, left, right, etc. Three loops or so around the common area. I got her back into her transfer (wheel) chair and we rode around the building outside of the memory care wing. She was pooped.
It was a good day. I think I was calmer seeing how the staff helps/deals with patient issues. They are caring people. (or they were on their toes because I was there. – That’s not fair. Other family members are there too.)
Thanks for reading,
Paul
Cheryl,
I went over to Bridgeway Pointe about 10:30 or so today. My plan was to repair the arms on her wheelchair. She is constantly taking them apart by fidgeting with the adjusting mechanism that lets one slide the arm forward and raise and lower the arm. — It does not seem to matter how much you pay for a quality wheelchair, there is always some deficiency some where. π
However Cheryl was asleep at eleven o’clock in the morning. She was sitting up in a recliner in the common area wearing her pajamas. She may have not slept well. That is the usual reason she sleeps late. And I may have messed up her sleep pattern by getting her to walk yesterday. I got her to walk a little today but she didn’t go nearly as far walking. She seemed to prefer sitting in her chair and moving it with her feet.
My son came over for a while after lunch and with his help we installed her TV on the wall mount that I got the maintenance folks at BP to install for me. That is working fine with the local cable provider (Spectrum) and even though she doesn’t watch TV much she often has it on for background. It was a good day once Cheryl was awake and the aides had dressed her. She ate nothing for lunch and the aides were very concerned about that as am I. I think I mentioned this to you once before but she eats very little and does not seem to be interested in it. She does not seem hungry. It is as though some of those circuits in her are broken.
Sense of smell, hunger pangs, bladder is full, all of those sorts of internal cues are not working so well anymore. They were not working so well when she was still home with me. I had hoped that she might eat some of the food they have there. It always smells and looks good to me. (But I have a sense of smell).
I am usually coming and going near mealtimes and the place smells like good food to me. I am sure it will get better. I pray to god it will get better.
On a lighter note I bought another TV for home since I took ours to mount on her wall. Now I can watch anything I want without fear of upsetting her. With Cheryl sitting in the living room in the evening I would look for something light or funny. You can only watch so many Hallmark movies…
One funny thing, just as David and I got there about 1:30, someone in the assisted living section had set off the fire alarm which sent everyone running around to see if it was an actually fire or if someone had merely dusted the sensor upstairs in #229. π
Life today – thanks for reading,
Paul
Good morning Paul,
You are already feeling a new sense of rhythm in life. That is a good thing!
Thinking about Cheryl’s disinterest in eating, here are a few thoughts. In time she may eat a little more at BP when she settles in. Sometimes a particular staff member who connects with her might be able to coax her to eat.
However, if that doesn’t happen, it is a normal part of the shutting down of the systems of the body, and it is sometimes a natural part of leaving this earth. We don’t need to sugarcoat things because we both see the signs of the effects of the disease, right? Carlton ate less and less until one day I realized he was barely eating a tablespoon of mashed potatoes and saying he was full. He choked often, so I was pureeing all his food for the last 6-8 months.
I love how you are visiting her randomly and doing normal things while there. Keep up the good work. And I look forward to reading your “journal” each night.
Thursday morning I had tea with JoLynn, a dear friend whose husband has Parkinson’s, and we prayed for you and Cheryl. She reads my blog and knew of you there as Adjunct Wizard.
Have a great Saturday, my friend, and I am so thankful Cheryl has you!
Cheryl
Cheryl,
Cheryl ate two servings of fruit, half a pancake and a couple bites of sausage for breakfast. π
That was the news when I showed up today. I brought some of the refrigerator pictures from home to stick on her fridge. I sat with her for a bit and then they served lunch so I headed home to feed myself. I could have stayed with her but I am saving that for next week and the weeks after. She seems adjusted to the place and interested in the other residents and their conversations.
Her next door neighbor is a retired lawyer Stan Chesley. You can Google him. I think he is dealing with Altzheimer’s. Cheryl worked for him long ago when she was working as a computer data analyst. She worked with her friend Maxine whose husband Sam went to high school with Stan. (Small world) Made smaller because in the afternoon – our daughter Anna and her kids and husband showed up for a visit. While we were there – Sam walked through the door to visit Stan. π
This is where one writes – a good time was had by all. It was a good day. The evenings are less lonely if I have something to do. I am close to my goal of having the room ready for my sister Joyce when she appears on Monday.
Your book describes our situation — as you say it is the same but different.
Carpe Diem,
Paul
Cheryl,
Yesterday turned out to be way busier than expected. Sundays are supposed to be relaxing. I went to bed without writing.
On Friday when I visited in the afternoon I had asked Cheryl if she wanted a Coke. She said yes so I went to get it in her cup that she got from her brother with his “Torbeck’s Auto Service” logo on the side. It has a screw-on lid and a straw. Perfect for parkies. π Later when they started serving dinner I put it at her place at the table. I left for the evening and worked on turning her old office back into the second bedroom it was intended to be.
On Saturday when I looked for her cup it had disappeared into the dishwashing system – maybe never to come back. π¦
On Saturday night I texted her brother Dan and told him the story. He responded with I’ll bring her a new one. (yea!) We met up on Sunday morning and he brought two and some towels he gave away as advertising for his business. All was well. We talked for a bit. His wife Tari is in another hospital post-surgery to fix a problem with her spine. He did not stay long and went to sit with her. I sat with Cheryl until lunch, left to eat, came back later in the afternoon after having made most of my adjustments to the second bedroom. Cheryl seemed to be “out of it” in the afternoon but was content in the common area watching a series of “Men in Black” movies on the TV. I told her I was leaving to visit with Dan at the hospital and I would come back after dinner with ice cream.
I did that and when I came home I decided to fry some sausage for dinner and go back to Bridgeway Pointe. I was heating the skillet with Crisco in it and thought to go view my handy work with the second bedroom. The Crisco started smoking because I ignored it for too long. The condo fire alarms went off, then the building alarm went off. I ran around swearing to myself about ignoring the skillet. A few minutes later the fire department showed up. (A few years ago we had the building alarms replaced with ones that called the fire department.) We live in a small condo community.
After clearing out the smoke from everywhere and getting the fire alarms to be quiet, I went back to visit Cheryl. I stopped along the way to get Cherry Cordial ice cream. She was still eating when I got back. She had sweet potato pie for dessert. She ate little of her fried chicken but she did eat some, one broccoli flower, some potatoes. She ate all the dessert pie. π I put my ice cream in her little freezer for later. I left her in her bathroom sometime later after I helped her to got to the toilet and she argued with me about telling her what to do. (Sigh.) Jim – the nurse – called me later to say she had fallen in her bathroom (more likely she rolled out of her wheelchair reaching for something she saw on the floor and was trying to pick up.)
My condo smells like burnt vegetable oil today. I will pick up my sister at 5 pm this afternoon from the airport. We will probably have a glass or two of wine and laugh about it.
Carpe Diem,
Paul
Someone to talk to about what is going on is a good and helpful thing. Joyce is here now and we can talk about it. Cheryl Hughes is an email away.