One of the major reasons I moved back to the US from Kuwait was to help take care of my mother in her elder years. I had 4 great years with her. She might not think they were so great, as she was declining in health and couldn't get around, but I still had time with her and I'm so grateful I was able to be there with her. She has been my best friend for as long as I can remember.
I talked her her 5 times a day. She lived only 15 minutes from me, but we were always in touch. The most difficult thing about my days is the drive to work when I would always call her and hear her perkly little voice in the morning - telling me how great a day I was about to have, and asking where on the road I was. "Where are you now?" I heard her on my drive the other day, and I responded, "No, where are YOU now?" and we both had an imaginary giggle. I play her voicemails sometimes on my way to work now just to hear her voice and pretend that she's still here.
Mom had lived in a beautiful condo next to a lake for the past twenty-something years. She spent her days looking out at the water and the people on or near the water. The geese, the foxes, little boats. My sister and I moved her into assisted living after some bad falls. She really missed the lake and was sad because she was no longer mobile and had to be helped to do most things.
So, I'm going to write about her transition and departure and then backtrack a little when I can push myself to write more. I have a terrible memory and blogging helps me keep the details in mind.
Mom had had several falls at her condo and mom agreed that it was time to move into assisted living. Mom moved close by to my sister and me in June. The home looked like the Ritz Carlton and I think mom was reluctantly happy there. Mom had lost a lot of mobility during 2020/Covid when she basically stayed at home much of the time and wasn’t walking (which she loved). Mom was no longer able to get up the stairs (2 inside the condo and 10 to get up to street level). At the AL home, she was helped 24/7 by some very loving caregivers (most attended her funeral). She had a walker and had started using a wheelchair to get around. My sister got her the Cadillac of all motorized wheelchairs and although mom never learned/wanted to drive (and had to learn the basics of “driving” her chair), she got around pretty well. All of the other residents were envious.
Mom was
taken to the ER several times for unstable blood pressure. She had a very bad geriatrician/GP (in my
opinion) who didn’t’ listen to her symptoms (swollen ankles, loss of voice,
difficulty breathing, BP spikes and lows).
We found her another GP and about 10 days before her final admission to
the hospital. The new GP had ordered
oxygen and the appropriate tests (blood/echo).
It was, at that point, too late. I’m
not a doctor, but I feel very bad/guilty that I didn’t understand her symptoms better
and that they were classic of congestive heart disease. Had we known, we may have had more time with
her. However, mom was 89 and by her own
accounts, ready to let go.
She was
admitted to the hospital on November 14, and it wasn’t looking good. Mom was
in/out of consciousness and coherency (kept telling me to take care of the
sandwich mom had left on the table and to get her blue sweater from the
cleaners) and her color was bad. She spoke to the nurses and told them what a wonderful life she had lived (I think she knew it was bad).
The next
day, her best friends and us/immediate family gathered around her. Mom regained consciousness for about 45
minutes (“rally”) and made us all laugh, thanked us for loving her, and told us
mom loved all of us. Some of her last
words were, “This is weird. I’ve never
done anything like this before. Have
you? You’re all here! I guess it is true what they say that you are
surrounded by ‘your friends and family.’
Are these going to be my famous last words?” She also advised her grandson, my nephew, to
trim his beard. Mom asked if we could
sneak in a bottle of her favorite wine (Meursault) the next day; we were
planning it. She then went to sleep again.
We
admitted her into hospice that afternoon, and at 4am the next morning, mom passed
away. True to form – with humor, grace
and dignity.
It was the
best transition any of us could have hoped for.
She didn’t want to have a prolonged death or be in hospice for any long
amount of time (I believe that less than 12 hours was sufficient for her!) Her best friend, Liz, suggested that we play
Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” at her funeral.
Mom left
VERY specific instructions on what mom wanted at her funeral and we followed
them pretty precisely. (She left a file
folder for everything.) She was cremated
and has a beautiful blue hand-blown glass urn (which is in my living room);
eventually I will make the trip to the UK to her favorite islands (Channel
Islands) to scatter her ashes (“on a
beach, somewhere sunny”). We were asked NOT to have “one of those online
obituary things” but these days, it is the best way to get the information out
there, so it is out there.
Her celebration of life was the best funeral that I’ve ever been to (and better than any wedding I’ve attended). We laughed, we cried, we had great food and music surrounded by loving, interesting people. Mom would have loved it. We expected maybe 65 people and over 140 showed up; many who had just known her briefly or who mom had touched lives with like check out clerks at the grocery store, people who she had met on the trail with their dogs, handymen, her hair stylist (MY hair stylist), contractors, etc. She had a posse of close friends who mom had found late in life and they were all there for her. The service was held here in Virginia at a venue on a lake with vaulted ceilings. Mom had asked for a song to be played (“Ascent of the Lark” by Vaughn Williams) which is usually played by a violinist or cellist, so we had a string quartet that played and it was amazing. A few of the guests said that they saw a heron take flight from the lake right after the song; befitting. We had asked for yellow roses and peonies and the woman who coordinated the celebration did a stellar job of finding them – in bloom – in the winter. Everything was beautiful and perfect and happy and sad.
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