Memories in Mother’s Bed
by Pat LaPointe
It’s nearly midnight. You are exhausted and hopeful sleep will come soon. You
crawl into your mother’s bed where you have slept for several weeks. The sound
of your father’s rhythmic snoring in the next room reminds you of your
childhood. It evokes a peaceful feeling, knowing he’s OK.
As you begin to rest your head
on the pillow, memories of the events of the past weeks flood your mind. Sleep
will not come easily.
The phone call that changed
your life nearly a month ago:
“Mom’s hurt. She’s in the
hospital.”
The diagnosis: A fall, her head
slamming into a dresser, caused bleeding on the brain. No telling how long it
will take for the bleeding to stop.
Someone will have to stay with
your Dad. His dementia is too severe to have him live alone. The siblings can’t/won’t
stay with him. It was left up to you to take over.
Your days were filled with
caring for him and as well as being at your mother’s side in the hospital.
You gave him his insulin. Made
breakfast. Called a neighbor to stay with him. Raced to the hospital. Asked how
Mom was doing. Very little progress each day.
Your mother could not eat. She
had a feeding tube. She could not breathe on her own. A machine breathed for
her. She could not/would not speak.
Then a surgery to ease the
bleeding. Was only successful for a few days.
Then you glanced at your Mother
as one side of her body began shaking hard enough to loosen some of the tubes
and wires which kept her alive. You screamed for the nurses. Your Mother had a
stroke.
A week passed. Another surgery.
They removed part of her skull. You saw an indentation in the bandages wrapped
around her head.
The bleeding lessened for the
first time in several weeks. There was talk about what she would need when she left
the hospital, maybe in a month or so.
You hoped Mom could hear when
you told her the good news.
For the first time you felt so
relaxed that you began to nod off in the chair next to your mother’s bed.
Almost immediately, loud, repetitive
sounds were coming from the monitors. When her heart rate increased, her blood
pressure dangerously decreased. Nurses came and demanded: “Go to the family
room. The doctor will meet you there.”
You waited and waited.
You began to curse the damn
clock with its loud ticking. It reminded you of every minute you were away from
your mother’s side.
The doctor arrived. “We’ve done all we can. We have tried for at least 30 minutes to get her
to breathe on her own. It is likely she will have some brain damage and be on a
ventilator for the rest of her life. It is up to you, you must decide. We can
work on her a while longer until we get her set up with a respirator OR....It’s
up to you.”
“Please keep working on her
just until I get back to her room.” And for a few seconds you asked yourself “Am I killing
my Mother?”
You reached your mother’s room
and the doctors and nurses quickly left. The lines on the heart monitor read
out were flattening. You told your mother you love her just as the monitor quit
spiking and the lines went flat.
Now, three days later you again
try to sleep, but remember that the funeral home needs some of mom’s IDs. You
reach for your mom’s purse and begin to riffle through it. You laugh as a
notebook and miniature dictionary fall out followed by no less than three rain
bonnets all of which were essentials in your mom’s purse. Your mother had been
overprotective of her weekly hair styling, often wearing two bonnets when it
began to drizzle.
Suddenly you become very
sleepy, return the items to the purse and drop it on the floor, a few feet from
the bed.
You are just nestling down
under the covers when you hear a crinkling noise. You turn on the light and see
one of the bonnets lying alone on the floor, just inches from the bed.
You begin to laugh loudly. “OK,
Mom, I got your message. But even if it rains, I’m not using those bonnets.” You
place the single bonnet under your pillow.
The next morning all the
visitors at the funeral home have one last chance to say goodbye to your mom
before they leave for church. You are last in line and take the other two bonnets
from your purse and place them in the casket.
“You never know, Mom, it might
rain.”
* * * * *
Pat LaPointe, editor of Changes
in Life, a monthly online women’s newsletter, is contributing editor of the
anthology, The Woman I’ve Become: 37 Women Share Their Journeys from Toxic
Relationships to Self-Empowerment. In addition, she conducts writing
workshops for women — both online and onsite. Pat’s essays and short stories
have been published widely. Currently, Pat is completing her first novel,
forthcoming late 2021.
Awful, tender, sweet, loving. . .tears.
ReplyDeleteSuch a moving and beautifully written essay!
ReplyDeleteSuch a moving and beautifully written essay!
ReplyDelete