Thursday, April 18, 2013

April 17



Next week is my mother’s 86th birthday.  Today she is no better than yesterday or the day before.  I hoped that a day’s worth of amoxicillin would clear up the extra confusion that appeared with her urinary tract infection.
            At 3:45 p.m. I knock on her door and go in.  Lying down on her side, she acknowledges my greeting.  I stand at the end of her bed and attempt conversation.  From this perspective, I see the sharp ridge of her hip and the skeletal frame of her body.  She cannot get comfortable and restlessly shifts her legs.  She coughs, pushes back her hair from her eyes, adjusts her pillow. 
            She still calls me by name.  But she wonders where I live and is not sure about where she is, either.  She tells me she is very, very tired.  Eventually, I come around to the head of the bed and pat her shoulder.  She turns to give me a hug.  I encourage her to get some rest, and I leave.
            Heart heavy, I walk the shoreline path at City Beach, searching for words . . .
If I were an artist
I could not splash my canvas yellow with daffodils,
nor could I create spring shades of green.
Today my brush would stroke gray clouds and gray waves,
the seascape of grief.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Flashlight Adventure



            Suddenly I was awake.  The house was too dark and quiet.  The power was out.
            “No problem,” I thought, “I’ll just grab the flashlight in my nightstand drawer.”
            Sitting on the side of the bed, I fumbled around with the flashlight.  It’s one of those handy purse-size ones, with the push-the-end design to turn it on and off.  However, no matter how I pushed, nothing happened.  Finally, I unscrewed the cap.  Putting my hand over the end, instead of catching batteries, I felt something soft, squishy, and wet.
            “Oh, no!” I exclaimed out loud, thinking of the damage battery acid does to skin.  I blindly walked in the dark to the bathroom to wash my hands.  Fortunately, there was a trickle of water.  (When the power goes out, so does our water pump.)  Then I groped my way down the hallway to the coat closet where I keep the big flashlight.
            Finally, there was light to guide me back to the bathroom where I had placed the little flashlight on the counter.  Except there was no flashlight:  instead, a Cortizone-10 cylinder with its spongy applicator (perfect for itchy mosquito bites) sat on the counter. 
           

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Grandma Time



            In March, I had many quiet evening hours in the Hemminger household, holding Joelle so everyone else could sleep.  Sometimes I dozed, but mostly I read books or played games on my Kindle.  It didn’t take long to learn that Joelle needs to wiggle around until she finds that perfect place of repose.  My job was to assist, shifting her around to good sleeping spots on my shoulder or cradled in my arms.  When she started out on my shoulder, invariably she ended up on my lap.  I allowed that controlled slide, one infinitesimal shift at a time.  My tummy made a comfy pillow and provided soothing digestive sounds for her newborn ears.
            I also enjoyed my share of not-so-quiet early evening hours alone with Benjamin.  After playing on the floor with him and singing my repertoire of songs to him—always starting with his request for “The Wheels on the Bus”—invariably, I would get out his favorite toy, the See and Say.  Initially, it was used to motivate him to walk and to climb up on the couch.  He loved to have me snatch it away and hold it at the top of the couch.  He laughed with joy and rubbed his hands with excitement before clambering up to fetch it.  Then he would practice walking with it, crawling with it, standing with it, lying down on the floor with it—all the while pulling the lever like a pro.
            All that cuddling time and playing time allowed for no writing time.  There were also diapers to change, meals to make, dishes to do, walks to go on, and errands to run—it took three adults to barely keep up with the daily business of caring for children and running a household.
            Back home now, I have plenty of time to write, but how I miss the cuddles with Joelle and the play time with Benjamin.  I don’t mind the break from diapers, though.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Memorable Evening



            It seemed like a good idea at the time.  I would babysit for Benjamin while Dana and Shawn went out for dinner, taking one-month-old Joelle with them.
            By 7:45 p.m. Benjamin was getting sleepy.  I walked back to his bedroom to fetch his pajamas, and he toddled right on behind me and crawled up on his bed.  Never one to discourage bedtime for a three-year-old, I decided to change his diaper right there on the bed. 
            I had just unfastened his diaper when everything happened at once:  my left arm was suddenly soaked in warm pee; I shouted out in surprise, which scared Benjamin so he started to cry; and the front door opened. 
            Dana and Shawn quickly took my place so I could wash my arm.  Both laughing, Shawn finished the diaper job and Dana stripped the now-wet fitted bed sheet.  Benjamin stopped crying, and Joelle kept sleeping.  Unfortunately for them, she had not exactly cooperated for their dinner date.  Earlier, while she screamed in the car seat, they had driven around town for twenty or thirty minutes in the attempt to help her go to sleep, which she finally did.  Naturally, though, she woke up in the restaurant just as their meals were served.
            Let’s just say it was a memorable evening.
           
           

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Benjamin and Grandma



            I’ve been waiting almost four years for this. 
            Benjamin’s initial surprised look when I appeared for breakfast the morning after my arrival warmed my heart:  in the past, he has given no sign that he even notices me.  By the end of our first week together, he had me figured out:  the sequence of his favorite songs I sing, that I will honor his request for his See and Say most of the time, and my Cheerios routine. 
            Dana and Shawn use the See and Say as motivator and reward for practicing important skills like walking and climbing.  Though Benjamin does not talk yet, he clearly knows how to make requests with either signs or actions.  So when he crawls over to the couch, grabs the fleece throw, and turns to look at me, I understand he wants to play the See and Say game.  I pull out the toy from its hiding spot behind the end table and hold it at the top of the couch.  He laughs and then works hard at climbing up on the couch to get the toy.  I allow him a few turns with it once he is back on the floor and then snatch it away again.  He laughs, and we repeat the sequence.
            Even though Benjamin does not call me by name, he knows who I am.  And that is what I have been waiting for since the day he was born.