Monthly Archives: July 2011

Having something to look forward to matters more to seniors

We didn’t take many family vacations when I was a kid.  In the picture above, we’re getting in two cars – that’s Dad’s Corvair Monza – to drive from Maryland to the West Coast where we would board the S.S. Lurline to Hawaii, where Dad would begin a new tour of duty.

Dad at 44 had lots to look forward to: an exciting new phase in his career, the opportunity to live in Honolulu, maybe a trip to take his children hunting in Eastern Washington when he visited his mother there.  And then there were our milestones to anticipate within a few years: brother Scott’s graduation from college and Bruce’s from Punahou.  My milestones?  I think my Mom was just hoping I’d stop clinging and learn to ride my bike (for the record, that didn’t happen until we moved to Seattle two years later).

I think one of the hardest things about being in your 90s must be that you don’t naturally have positive milestones to anticipate.  It’s not likely you’re going to  hunt and fish more, entertain friends more, or take up that hobby you’ve always been meaning to try.  A few do, but they have the rare gift of resilient energy and decent health.  For most, just getting up, dressed, shaved and showered is hard work.

I had big ideas when Dad moved to Sacramento that we would do lots of field trips – taste Zinfandel wines in the foothills, for example.  But regular outings have proven impractical.  Dad worries about being away from a john if he’s in the car for long, and he says he’s lost his taste for wine.

I therefore turned to planning periodic 3-day trips.  My brothers and I have taken Dad on several fishing trips: two on the Feather River, and last summer on the Williamson River near Klamath Falls, Oregon.  For his fall birthday last year, I took him to the Monterey Plaza where we enjoyed lots of room service breakfasts overlooking the ocean, and visited the Monterey Aquarium.

Wednesday we leave for our biggest trip yet: a 2-day visit to Seattle and 3 days in Suncadia near Cle Elum, Washington. Seattle was once home, so no doubt we’ll drive by the old family homestead on 11th Avenue East.  We’ll have the chance to connect with some old friends, my Dad’s niece, my brothers, and some grandchildren.

Dad’s gotten in the habit of asking, “So what’s coming up in the future?”  Just having an orientation to the future is remarkable.  My son, Tommy, recently interviewed a WWII Japanese Imperial Army veteran (now U.S. citizen) who is participating in a program called “Thrill of a Lifetime.”  Through the program, Eskaton, where the man lives, is trying to reunite the elderly man with his brother, who he hasn’t seen since 1951.  The goal of the program is to inspire each resident to live every day to its fullest.

Once upon a time, the days stretched ahead of my Dad full of opportunity.  Now his day-to-day world is confined, but it can be expanded by the anticipation that something good is ahead.  Let’s hope the trip lives up to its promise.

 

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The consequences of Dad losing his “filter”

In most ways, my Dad has mellowed as he’s gotten older.  I’ve read that, when it comes to anger, older people – especially women — are less likely to let things make them mad.  They have better control of their emotions internally and externally.

Very old people, however, are less likely to “edit” when a thought crosses their mind that would be inappropriate or uncomfortable for those around them.

This can lead to awkward but hilarious situations, especially when the very old person in question has hearing problems and speaks a little louder than the average person.  Six or seven years ago, our house was on the market and we left to give the REALTOR a chance to show it to a couple who was interested.  They arrived in front as we left in back.  I couldn’t close the window fast enough to mute my Dad’s comment, “She certainly knows how to fill a pair of pants.”  And he didn’t mean that in a good way.  We did not get an offer from that couple.

Or there was the time my Dad commented while still within ear shot, “That must have been quite a hat… before she sat on it.”  Or, “She has a face like a pudding.”

I am a slow learner when it comes to asking if my Dad likes the dinner I’ve prepared.  Occasionally I get a thumbs up, but I am equally likely to get the “so-so” fluttering hand signal.  And once he offered this little gem, “It looks like the dog’s breakfast.”

I shouldn’t be surprised that my Dad complains when he has to return to his assisted living community.  He hates it there.  It’s a good enough place, and he probably would like it if it wasn’t compared on a weekly basis to life at my house.

My house is, well, a house.  With a family that he’s part of.  With lots of room to move around, and people who bring you coffee and wine, serve up three square meals a day and talk to you.  His experience at his assisted living community simply can’t compete with that.

So why is it so painful to me when he complains that returning to the “hacienda” (as he calls it) is like going to prison?  Or that he’s in a drought when he’s there for a few days?  Or that he can’t get the temperature right at night and it’s like an oven (although he was wearing a wool sweater when I picked him up)?

He can no longer filter his comments, and his short term memory loss means that he will keep feeling and commenting on the same anxiety about returning to his apartment, over and over.  It’s the perfect recipe for my guilt.

It isn’t that different than when I had to drop my son or daughter off at day care, and they didn’t want to be there.  They might cling or cry, but I reassured myself that they would get caught up with activities once I left the scene.  I go through a similar exercise when it’s time for Dad to return to his apartment.  He doesn’t cling or cry, but he can’t help repeating his distress about returning.

At least I knew my children would move on to a new developmental phase.  With Dad, I  have to comfort myself.  He won’t outgrow it.

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The hole in my father’s heart that only my mother filled

Saturday would have been my mother’s 94th birthday.  She meant to be that old – maybe older – because she saw herself in the mold of “Han Han,” her grandmother who died well into her 90s.  Han Han always said of illness, “Just make up your mind and throw it off by morning.”  That advice worked for my Mom throughout most of her years, but not against the dementia and lung cancer that led to her death in 1999.

It is because of my mother’s death that I am so conscious of my time with my father.  But to think about my father without my mother is to consider the unimaginable.  From 1939 on, Hank and Eileen were an item.

Every couple has its stories.  My Mom and Dad had the story of their meeting, the story of their first big row, and the story of the marriage proposal.  “That first day, she walked into Dr. Pedelford’s Browning class, dressed to the nines, on Brooke Fink’s arm,” my Dad would recount.  “Two weeks later, she walked out on mine.”   Getting ready for a Gamma Phi dance, my Mom learned from a visitor that Dad still had his fraternity pin on a girl in Yakima.  When Dad arrived to collect her, she handed him $5 for train fare and told him not to return without it.  And then there was Eileen’s cable in 1941 that said she had received Dad’s marriage proposal and was headed East by train with her mother so that they could be married.  Only my father swears he never asked her.  “She married me,” Dad always says.

My mother was a force of nature, not given to feeling sorry for herself or others.  She would have made a great litigator, and wanted to pursue law, but her attorney-father declared that there would be no female barristers in the family.  She took what life threw at her as the wife of a Marine, through the separation of war, and her daughter’s three year battle with leukemia.

On her birthday, what I remembered most was not her formidable strength, but her passion for my father — or rather, the passion they had for each other.

They had the kind of relationship that was a universe unto itself, the world of Hank-and-Eileen, a union forged with heat, strong and impermeable.  In the days after my mother died, my father recalled some of their intimate moments like movie images, how she looked with the glow of moonlight on her body.

My father often said, smiling, that he fought for his pants every day of their marriage.  My mother wasn’t one to back down in a fight, and their fights were loud.  They faced off like two cowboys following a common code of honor.  I never heard them insult one another, or dump pent-up resentments.  And when the fight was over, it was over.

Whether it was grief, illness or anger, my mother moved on.  If she worried, it didn’t show.  To the best of my knowledge, she wasn’t one to dwell on what she couldn’t fix.  She let things go.

But she never let go the fierce passion that she felt for my father.  It’s still evident in the photo above, taken after their 50th wedding anniversary party.  Mom didn’t just look at Dad; her eyes locked on to his.

When my Dad quotes Shakespeare’s description of Cleopatra on her barge, I always imagine that he sees my mother in his mind’s eye:  “For her own person/It beggar’d all description: she did lie/In her pavilion — cloth-of-gold of tissue–/O’er-picturing that Venus where we see/The fancy outwork nature….”

He was fascinated by her, but under no illusions that she was perfect.  I also thought that Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 brought to mind my mother for him:  “I love to hear her speak, yet well I know/That music hath a far more pleasing sound:/I grant I never saw a goddess go,/My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:/And yet by heaven, I think my love as rare,/As any she belied with false compare.”

My father’s love for my mother held the conflicting elements of her personality — her thorniness and her love — in perfect homeostasis.

I once asked my father if he had ever strayed outside their marriage, since no doubt he had the opportunity with unaccompanied tours of duty.  He said, “It was never worth the cost.”

I miss my mother.  But my father misses her more.

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