The Ghosts of Christmas Past

Next week is Christmas.  As the mother of two youngsters, it is supposed to be a joyous, happy time of year.  More realistically, it is supposed to be merely a busy, stressed out time of year.  But, for me, I keep thinking about the last Christmas shared with my father. Cue the tears.  

Technically speaking, I opted out of my Dad’s last Christmas.  It was too painful and I couldn’t bring myself to see him.  I didn’t think I could be there for my boys in the way they deserved if I spent time with my Dad that day.  

Ouch.  It hurts to even type those words.

We would learn a few months after the holidays that the lung cancer that just a few weeks before, he was told, had been successfully treated, well, wasn’t.  Instead his changed mental status, violent, angry outbursts, surly mood, his disheveled appearance, his bitter, angry rants at his children, his insomnia, his paranoia, and his aggressiveness with doctors and nurses were symptoms of his cancer having an epic neurological impact.

It wasn’t dementia or psychosis that we were seeing, though that is what the doctors were treating.  It was a rare side effect of his cancer known as paraneoplastic neurologic syndrome.  Long story short, because of the cancer in his lungs, my father’s immune system went into overdrive, attacking what it considered to be an invader.  It started manufacturing antibodies that leaked into his nervous system, greatly and disturbingly wrecking the last few months of my father’s life.  Sadly, none of this was understood in real time.

Yellow socks indicate a fall risk. I spent a lot of time monitoring the color and circumference of my Dad's often swollen feet and lower legs. This day was a good day.

Instead, my father was bounced between hospital floors for almost two months.  He started on a medical unit, but when he tried to choke a doctor making rounds, he was bounced to the psychiatric unit.  When that setting didn’t work out so well either, he was bounced back to a general med floor where, a CNA told me on the sly, the attending doctor tried to convince my Dad he would have more freedom and independence if he moved to a nursing home for rehab.  No one wanted to claim him.

As someone who has spent over a decade working in healthcare with older adults, I was shocked and at an utter loss.  Our medical systems, even at a place in a major urban setting with a great reputation, had no capacity to treat what ailed my Dad. And, as it turns out, I had less capacity than I thought so, too. 

Worse, save for one neurologist who cleared him for hospice, every single medical professional assigned to him at three separate hospitals had zero curiosity about what was happening with my Dad.  Responses ranged from, “Well, you know he is old.  Dementia is common at this stage of life,” to the repeated suggestion that he was suffering from alcohol abuse that he hid from his children.  My father was a teetotaler that didn’t even like his children to enjoy a glass of wine at a special dinner.  It wasn’t dementia or substance abuse or psychosis, but the docs didn’t know that because they didn’t bother to take a thorough history or connect the dots.   

In between telling me I was a rotten child who betrayed him terribly, my Dad begged and pleaded with me that last Christmas Eve to exercise my power as his health care proxy to have him discharged to family’s care so he could spend Christmas Day with us instead of with the strangers in the in-patient psychiatric unit.  

It wasn’t possible, of course.  My Dad overestimated my powers as his POA.  Sadly, he may have also overestimated my powers as his daughter, too.  The truth is, I couldn’t do it.  After a couple weeks of daily hospital visits, I established a hard line around Christmas.  I opted not to taint that day with the curses and accusations and anger and bitterness of this man I loved dearly who was suddenly and excruciatingly not himself.

The holidays can be hard in the best of times.  Holidays with aging parents can be tricky and unpredictable.  Holidays with hospitalized parents can be downright unbearable.  I think, for the rest of my days, I will be haunted by my Dad’s last Christmas.  The guilt and helplessness I felt is a burden I still carry.  The season evokes those cruel days like a flexing memory muscle.  

May this holiday season find you and the older parents you love in a place of peace and comfort.  May you not be haunted by any Christmases past, present, or future.  And, if, like myself, you are, may you find the strength to cope with your ghosts of Christmas past to enjoy the beauty and love of the day.  

Mothers Dying: It Ain’t Right

It could be the gray skies and damp, chill air.  Maybe it’s because it is All Souls Day.  Perhaps it is just my morose mood as I gird myself for the upcoming daylight savings time change this weekend.  Winter is coming, yada yada yada.  Whatever the reason, right now I am thinking a lot about mothers dying and leaving their babies.

mother-grave

Beth is the writer and activist behind a blog I follow, The Cult of Perfect Motherhood.  She is dying.  Right now.  Today.  She may even be dead and the news has not yet trickled down to me, a mere fan.  This makes me very, very sad.  And angry.  Beth is fond of anger. She has used hers as a very effective tool to fight for women living and dying with metastatic breast cancer.

We started following one another a few years ago.  It might have been cancer that brought us together.  Or our mutual friends.  I don’t know.  We follow one another online, both blogs and personally.  I think the world of Beth.  She approaches her cancer with raw honesty, humor, directness, and truth.  No rose colored glasses, no sugar coating, just the power of her words and the sheer force of her will.

I will miss her tremendously.  I will be sad when I learn of her death.  I think a lot about her husband and children — a young son and little girl.  Beth spoke openly about wanting to be here long enough to see her girl start kindergarten.  It’s November now, and her girl has started kindergarten. That wish was granted, but not too many more will be.

Having followed Beth as she approached her death, I am reminded of another mother I knew peripherally almost ten years ago now.   Angela, an old acquaintance of my husband from the college days they shared.  She died in 2009 after complications from liver surgery related to her own cancer diagnosis.

Angela wrote to me in 2008, before Facebook.  At the time, she referred to all of us — herself, Donna, and my husband and I, as “survivors.”  It was the spring and Donna was in a good place in between her winter stem cell transplant and her summer relapse. Angela used old fashioned email, having tracked it down through a trail of mutual friends.  She wanted to thank me for writing about our daughter’s cancer struggle.   I will never forget the humility of reading her first email to me.

Donna’s youth and innocence, for me, highlighted cancer’s particular cruelty.  All of my fears about cancer and my kids are around issues of abandonment, and how they will be without me, not how I will be without them.  When people talk about how “brave” and “strong” I am, I try and be gracious with their sentiments, but I know that my “strength” is nothing compared to what you and Jeremy must have struggled through in your dark moments. 

I wrote Angela back, disavowing her of the false notion that we, as parents of a child with cancer, demonstrated more strength than a young mother living with cancer.  Nope.  Apples and oranges, my friends.  We lived in very different subdivisions of Cancerville and trying to compare the strengths and hardships of those in different zip codes would come to no good.

At the time Angela wrote those words, we all had reason to be hopeful. The next year, Angela would die in August and Donna would follow in October.  She left a husband and two young daughters behind.  With cancer, so much can change so quickly.

Angela has stayed with me all these years.  Her words gave me precious insight into the reality of a fellow mother living with the fear of abandoning her young children through death.  At the time, having just been through the trauma of Donna’s stem cell transplant, they felt like a kick to the gut.

When you parent a child with cancer, it’s common to wish that cancer on yourself, to relieve your vulnerable child from the pain and suffering you wish you could take on yourself.  Angela helped me understand the flip side of that mother-child cancer coin.  Beth has done the same.

I think about these four kiddos who will grow up without their mother.  No Beth or Angela there to finish the job they started.  Mom is a photo in a frame, a memory, a promise that never quite came to pass.  Mom is tears and sadness and a perpetual hole.  Mom is words from a loving Dad.  Mom is the hope that there was enough time to have provided a solid foundation.  Mom is an obituary. Mom is a grave marker or an urn on a shelf.

Oy.

I lost my own Mom when I was 35.  I was still too young and miss her every day.  My heart breaks for two little girls I never met whose Mom worried about abandoning them.  Today they are eight years older, both teens.  My heart is breaking for a brother and a sister whose Mom, a force of nature with a heart of equal parts steel and gold, will not get to influence them on the regular as they grow up.

Cancer sucks, folks.  Big love to all of you who lost a mother to this beast.

I Miss Being Mothered

Today is my Mom’s 83rd birthday, except she hasn’t celebrated a birthday past age 70, when she died.  That’s almost thirteen years of not being mothered.  I miss my Mom, but more and more, I realize how much I miss being mothered.  Selfish as it is, I miss those things my Mom provided me.

There is a comfort and familiarity of being in your Mom’s embrace, being in her presence, feeling safe and loved and allowing yourself the ability to regress to a time that needing those things was more socially acceptable.  I am 47 years old now – a mother myself for the past twelve years, but I have no shame in admitting I miss being on the receiving end of things I can only hope I am providing my boys.

Life is lonelier without my Mom around.  It’s terribly cliche, but the older I get, the more I realize how little I know.  About most everything.  Did my Mom feel the same way?  What did she do?  How did she cope with X, Y and Z?  Where did she find solace?  What did she do when the world was going to hell in a hand basket?  Who comforted her?

My Mom and I on my wedding day, 2001.
My Mom and I on my wedding day, 2001.

I was 35 when my Mom died, pregnant for the first time and a few months away from delivering.  After a year of intense caregiving, I grieved my Mom’s loss deeply, but was thrust forward by becoming a mother myself.  Nursing and folding onesies and taking out the diapers filled my days and heart.  Much of my sadness politely stepped aside to make room for the joy of a new baby.

In those early days, I focused on my baby, my Dad, and other family members who were grieving deeply.  I kept busy and tried to provide what was needed of me, at work and at home.  Now, a dozen years later, I realize more than I did then, how much I struggle myself.  There are fewer people for me to care for, to focus on, and here I am, yes, feeling alone and motherless and sorry for myself.

I just want her warm arms, that welcoming lap, and kind eyes to take care of me once again.  Except this time, I hope I wouldn’t take it for granted.  How precious and fleeting both motherhood and being mothered are.

Mom, Mommy, Mother, Mama — I miss her so.

I wish my boys knew her.  I wish she could remind me when I am being silly or stupid.  I wish I could ask her what it was like when Nixon resigned.   I wish I knew more about what motherhood was like for her.  I wish she could comfort me about things that are too closely tied to her absence.  So many wishes, all of them tied to me missing being mothered.

Selfish, but true.