Saturday, August 4, 2012

Here and Now


I am one of the many whose mother resides in an ‘adult community’. Those come in a variety of service-oriented options, as well as being skillfully named in order to distance everyone involved from the guilt-laden “Old-folks home.”
   The facility she is at has three distinct quality of life categories, as the residents are shuffled from one to the next intensive handling by the progressive deterioration of their ability to tend for themselves. The independent living folks, like my mom, are pretty much left to their own whims and devices; within reason. The independents live on the third floor of the complex. Those requiring assistance, and are less physically able, but still lucid and able to communicate, stay on the second floor. Those requiring 24/7 care reside on the first floor which includes those afflicted with Alzheimer’s or experiencing garden variety dementia.
   They all commingle in the large dining room during meal times as well as out on the idyllic and well cultivated grounds; replete with ponds, gazebo’s and park benches. My mother sat down next to a solitary woman on such a bench. The woman turned to her and asked
“have you been here long?”
My mother replied, “Not long, just two months”
“I've been here for over two years.”
(prolonged silence)
“Are you alone?”
   My mother glanced around at all the elderly shuffling the paths under the awnings and pebbled walks nearby, and knew she must be referring to being there with a spouse, since it was quite plain they were anything but alone. So she replied,
“it’s just me, my husband passed two years ago”
(Another protracted pause.)
“I'm here with my husband. He doesn't come out much; until it’s meal time”
   The conversation lulls to silence, as is the growing pattern of the conversation; the birds chirp in the willows and the birch, the creek bubbles gaily on its meandering journey across the grounds.  The old woman turns to my mom.
“have you been here long?”
   It was in that instance, the blinding flash of the obvious, where she remembered being told a key to remaining sane in that place was to always begin a conversation with,
“And which floor do you live on dear?”
Otherwise it can be quite the surprise when you discover you're not in a conversation with anyone in the here-and-now.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

and as one who is still on this side of the fence of living independently without fanfare..I would ask..."have you been here long?"

Albert ~ said...

You know...letting go of the past has its benefits. I mean really, think about it. Fresh start every day is like freedom without purchase. "Have you been here long?" how about "All my life" Deep...way deep...where's the light switch its pitch black here kind of deep.