Showing posts with label Aging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aging. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Blessed Messengers



 
     Last Winter Solstice a Reiki student gifted me with “The Soul Trees”. These are classified as Oracle cards. Some part of me believes in the idea that all the statements on these eighty cards with accompanying drawings of eighty different trees are general enough to apply to any situation. Another little voice calls me to pay attention and look at what they might be telling me.

     Are they truly connections to a universal presence who will guide me? Or will I place my special internal value on whatever comes up and interpret the words to mean what some inner knowing wants me to know?

     I have no answers, only observations. And what I am observing is the direct hits I get every time I ask a question.

     Sometimes a card repeats exactly what issue I’ve been working on. I needed to speak my truth in a situation that was going to be tricky for anyone to hear. That exact phrase, SPEAK YOUR TRUTH, was on the card that flew out of the pack while I was shuffling. Another time I was asking myself what would happen if I stepped out of a certain responsibility that I was carrying for an organization of people. POSSIBILITIES dropped to the floor.

     Today I was struggling with the question of how to gracefully age. After shuffling for about five minutes, JUST BE emerged as an answer.

     Can’t be any clearer than that.

Friday, October 19, 2018

Changing the Image


It never occurred to me in the now eight years since my late husband died that I wouldn’t find a comparable kind of companionship with another man.
I admit, in the beginning, when I was 65 and still had a bit of a figure, a whole lot of energy (whenever I wasn’t sobbing in bed), and less wrinkles, that my mind was set on replicating my marriage. I think I wanted someone to come out of the woods, maybe even on a white charging horse and take up the space that was so gapingly open in my life and heart.
Was it because after 33 years, I had become comfortable with the routine? Was it that we had worked through so many levels of misunderstandings and miscommunications that I thought The Universe owed me a little more time in the zone of compatibility with another human being?
Losing Yuwach in 2010 was also when I felt I was in the prime of my sexuality. Physical contact had become a soothing pattern of touches; kisses were shared as he went out the door to get the mail and when he returned. I took the time to seek him out before I went to the store to tell him where I was going and catch a smooch. He met me at the door when I came back with my arms full.
I didn’t think. I knew I had lost him, but I didn’t think I might have lost the possibility of never being able to recreate that pattern.
There has been a short-term relationship in the meantime. I look back and realize, I didn’t accept this new man as just that. I attempted to mold him into the form with which I was comfortable. He protested but I was blind, and my attitude blindsided me. Eventually, we had to break apart. Only then did I realize what I had done. Fortunately, we have been able to talk and laugh at the experience and be grateful for what we learned. We have worked at our friendship, but we admit we don’t want to step again into partnership.
For all these years alone, it has been as if I had a hologram attached to my being that was designed to retain a mandated shape of a partner which could be filled by the vapors of any other man’s energy. This kind of expectation isn’t fair, and now I know it.
I’ve had to look at myself as one unit and one unit alone. I’ve had to drop all my assumptions of what another partner might look like, be like, and do.
But first, I’ve had to be with myself.
When the substitute relationship ended, I now know I suffered an even more painful period of grief. I was profoundly placed in the cauldron of fire to finally rearrange my atoms into being a single individual. No props. No pretending. No fantasies of rescue. Ridiculously plain and simple self-acceptance and self-love.
Now I look out my window into life as a 73-year-old and realize, “This just might be it.” Living on my own might be what is here and on the horizon.
Do I mind? You bet I do.
However, I am beginning to believe I can be authentically me and draw friendships, events, and activities of all kinds to me which will help me experience not just fulfillment but a full-feeling too.

Friday, September 28, 2018

My Mother, My Child


In 2011, when my mom moved from assisted living to skilled nursing care, I continued visiting her as a daughter, depending on her attention and our relationship of comradeship to lighten the focus of my life as I learned to live as a widow. She was the anchor I clung to as we shared those memories that only someone who had known me for forever could share. She held my childhood in her heart. I needed those memories because the middle years of my life had gone dim and were being dispersed into thin air by the loss of too many people and the death of my husband.
I paid a small price for this as I pretended to be the person she wanted me to be. I consciously dressed in a way that she approved, which was far more formal than what I wore in Laytonville. I kept my hair short and sculpted, staying vivacious and flirty, yet deeply empathetic with all her friends, so she could bask in the praise she received from them as to how wonderful her daughter was. I performed for her, and for myself, so I could have an identity despite the confusion I was feeling from too many changes in my life.
When she fell again, I realized she was getting confused. I continued our charade to give her stability. What had been a mild form of dementia requiring me to take over her finances began to thicken, like a fog solidifying around her intellect and memory.
At one time, I enjoyed her forgetting all the reasons she had been displeased with me. She seemed to have forgiven me for marrying two different men of whom she and my dad had disapproved. We had a grand time, and I didn’t mind that she asked me, “And how are you doing?” every half hour. I would answer again and again, just grateful that someone was asking.
But the forgetting continued to creep, like cement pouring through the cracks and crevices of her brain, making walls between the synapses of her perceptions. She became demanding and very negative. She insulted the nurses’ aides who were trying to help her, called them foreigners. I heard her accusing my grandmother, her mother, of gallivanting around Europe with a younger man. I would try to point out that her mother would have been 130, if alive. She didn’t like to be corrected. Whenever anyone came close to her toes, she screamed. She shouted and cussed when someone wakened her from her sleep, which she did most of the day. Calling out every 15 minutes for someone to take her to the bathroom during the night was also a common occurrence.
I searched for a way to survive this change in her and took the caregiver class in Ukiah. I learned that most everything that a dementia patient speaks is in the language of metaphor. I began trying to decipher her stories.
Late one afternoon, while trimming her fingernails, I handed her a nail file. I watched as she tried to remember how to do something that had been, for her, a daily activity. I had seen my mom do this from the time I could observe and remember. This day, however, she couldn’t figure how to file her nails. She tried and tried while sitting in her special rocker. In that moment, I saw my mom as a woman struggling to keep her life together, of trying to survive with some dignity the best way she could. She was just a little girl again, about five, trying to learn a new skill.
I realized I had to truly change my perspective. I had to release us from our pretend game of my being her daughter and she being my mother. Because I had depended on her for so long to be my mom, I had perceived hurt from her scattered words, believing she uttered them intentionally. I had told myself that she no longer cared, that I was doing things wrong, and that I was no good.  None of her actions or reactions had anything to do with me. They were all metaphors for her feelings about her life.
Her screaming illustrated her fear. She screamed as a kind of protection for herself, her body. This sounding was all she had by which to call attention to the fact that she was in a bed with strangers all around her because staff had rotated out and then rotated out again to better paying jobs. No one knew her anymore or had seen the pictures of her I purposely had brought in five years before to show staff that she was a real person, as a bride, as a sexy sunbather. But, on the afternoon I had brought them in, my mother, sobbing, had asked me to take the pictures away because she couldn’t stand to be reminded of her lost happiness. I left a montage of pictures on her wall, though, so I could point to them and tell the new staff who she had been and what she had done in her life. And the mad she held for her mother for being absent? I finally realized that she meant she felt abandoned
I think she didn’t realize she was frightened. When she often said that she wanted to get into her old Chevy sedan (“parked right over there in the garage”) and go home to Oakland, I then understood that she wanted to see her family again. Her prevailing anger was a metaphor that said she was mad because she wanted out of this life, but the reality was that she was still here. In those last months, when she still claimed she wanted to stop eating, all she had to do was see chocolate ice cream, potato chips, and her beer, and she would forget her resolve.
By January of 2018, she had turned another corner. She didn’t answer to the names I had called her for forever. She only answered to her first name, the one that staff always called her, Sylvia. She began to lose the memory of who I was, and, like Benjamin Button, she began returning, not just to her childhood, but past that and into the space where she was living before life itself.
During her last three months, I had to learn how to mother myself, while she cared for her life the best way she knew how. I was that periphery support person, that observer of her process of letting go as she discovered just what that meant. When she let me, I was grateful to be able to love her by holding her as if she were my child.