Why it’s a good thing that my Dad talks to himself

Back in the day, Dad could dance!

I thumbed through the February issue of SELF magazine earlier today and read this: “Find out if your crew is confidence-boosting and how to connect with pals who buoy you, even on ‘I feel fat’ days.”

An hour later, I took my 95-year-old Dad out for his daily constitutional, a two-block walk that now takes about 40 minutes to complete since he frequently stops to let his moderate chest pain subside.

Every time we start on our walk, he has to confront the steps. He approaches them very cautiously, especially since having a stroke eight years ago.

Out loud he says, “I think I’m gettin’ to be an old man.” Or, “Woo, I feel tottery today.”

After we cross the street and he takes his first rest stop, he says, “C’mon, Henry. You can do better than that.”

But sure enough, his joints eventually loosen up and he gets into a slow but comfortable walking rhythm. Momentum is on his side.

Then he says, “Atta boy, that’s the Henry we know and love.”

Although my Dad usually expresses his dismay at how difficult it is when he begins his walk, he never fails to cheer himself on when he starts to walk more confidently.

SELF suggests readers use alternative scripts to use in response to friends when those friends say things like, “I’d kill to have Gwyneth’s abs.” SELF tells women to stop beating themselves up.

While Dad often begins by commenting on his frailties, he also verbally encourages himself to keep trying, and then compliments himself when he sees improvement.

I doubt that SELF will ask my Dad to submit his workout tips, as they have with Jillian Michaels and other hard bodies. But we could all learn a few things from him!

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Understanding my Dad through poetry

A cartoon created as part of a book given by Dad's colleagues at Canadian Armed Forces Staff College in 1957

Communication has become very difficult for my Dad: bad hearing, slowed comprehension, harder articulation. But my Dad has something most people do not: a bottled up store of memorized passages that seem to uncork of their own accord.

As my Dad lay on a gurney in an Emergency Department exam room last Sunday, he suddenly exclaimed:

I am Ozymandius, King of Kings. Look on my Works ye Mighty, and despair!”

I don’t think the ER staff was impressed. In fact, if I hadn’t been there, they might have though he’d jumped the track. But I knew exactly what was going on. My Dad’s unconscious mind summoned up a passage that he felt was germane to the situation.

Though I wasn’t familiar with it, I quickly googled the phrase on my iPhone and found it in a poem written by Shelley in the 19th century.

The poem describes an old statue with a powerful visage that survives despite being shattered and sunk in desert sands. Dad’s exclamation was the inscription on its pedestal.

The more I thought about it, the more I felt it was the perfect passage for a unplanned visit to the hospital. It was Dad’s way of saying, “I may be diminished by age and illness, but I am still here.”

Then, later in the week, another fragmentary bit of poetry served as Dad’s way of saluting his nurse, Dawn. He offered, “And the dawn came up like thunder, outer China ‘crost the Bay.” Kipling’s poem “Mandalay” celebrates his love of the Orient. While Dad’s memory was jogged by his nurse’s name, I’m not at all surprised that he came up with a poem that celebrates a “neater, sweeter maiden in a cleaner, greener land.”

And then today, after Dad was complimented for his meticulous oral hygiene during his six-month check up at the dentist, out came this one: “My strength is as the strength of ten, because my heart is pure.”

I’m sure my Dad meant it a little self-mockingly. But while he may not be everyone’s idea of Sir Galahad as described by Tennyson, I think the phrase somehow fits him. He’s always been a straight-up-no-bullshit kind of guy; in fact, that trait almost got him court martialed during the war when he disregarded an order that he knew would have been a mistake.

He may not be everybody’s idea of Sir Galahad, but he is my Sir Galahad.

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Expectations and aging: finding pleasure in what we CAN do

Dad with the world before him, in 1939

If you’ve seen one person over 80, you’ve seen one person.

I have a large number of older people in my life, including my 95-year-old Dad, to whom this blog is dedicated. A rare few, like Win, a 95-year-old compatriot of my Dad’s, seem to have found a magic elixir. Win recently wrote that he is still driving, keeping up a 4 bedroom house and pool, and only has physical difficulties rising from a chair.  Sheesh! He sounds like me!

Another important person in my life is getting older, and he’s kicking and screaming his way into his “golden years.” He is pissed that women treat him like – well – an old guy. In his mind, he is still virile and desirable. Physically, he’s doing pretty well. He’s a good conversationalist, still enjoys athletic pursuits, and remains involved in business. Emotionally, however, he’s not very happy about this aging thing.

As I’ve written, my Dad’s world is rapidly shrinking. His poor hearing cuts him off from most conversations, and now he has chest pain every time we go for a walk. He’s had to give up beloved pursuits like hunting and fishing. And yet, most of the time, he’s in a good mood. I’d go so far as to call him an optimist. Even though he often comments, “Lo, how the mighty have fallen,” when he carefully tackles the four stairs descending from my house, he takes heart from the fact he can complete a walk at all. “Now that’s the Henry I know,” he’ll say when a walk has gone well.

What’s the difference? Why do some people, even in the face of medical or physical challenges, remain fairly happy?

I was really struck by an article in today’s New York Times about the impact of one’s expectations on one’s well-being. Research reported in Your Brain at Work by David Rock suggests that dopamine is released, causing a feeling of pleasure when something positive happens — that is, if it beats our expectations on the upside. Unfortunately, when an experience is worse than we expect, our negative feelings are stronger than the positive ones we get from the favorable better-than-expected experience. (For you engineers and math lovers, Mr. Rock puts it algebraically: “If we expect to get x and we get x, there’s a slight rise in dopamine. If we expect to get x and we get 2x, there’s a greater rise. But if we expect to get x and get 0.9x, then we get a much bigger drop.”

The article concludes:

It seems as if it is best to have low expectations of things out of our control, realistic expectations of things we can control to some degree and high expectations of ourselves.

My Dad has had a lot of experience in his life with things that are outside of his control. He had an influence on the progress of battles for the Pacific in WWII, but he didn’t have control. He couldn’t control the leukemia that eventually claimed my sister in the 1950s. And he could not control his way out of heart disease, although he has been able to successfully manage it since 1963.

He also epitomizes what the article describes in terms of having high expectations for himself. He has emotionally muscled his way through many difficult circumstances.

Who’s happier? The fighting-every-step-of-the-way senior, or my Dad, with far more disabilities at 95. I think I have to conclude that my Dad is. He’s an optimist, but apparently is able to roll with it when things don’t turn out as hoped.

I know we Baby Boomers are going to have a VERY difficult time coming to terms with age. We have changed our world through our sheer numbers, but we will not be able to get God – and medicine – to serve up challenge-free “golden years.” It’s up to us to manage our expectations… and choose happiness.

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How an optimist deals with her Dad’s aging

He still is "up" for Christmas: Christmas morning 2011

When I moved my Dad to California in March 2006, I had great visions of the fun we would have. I imagined that we might hunt for the best Zinfandel — a favorite grape of my Dad’s — at the many wineries in the El Dorado, Amador and Lodi appellations. Not long after he moved down, however, he fell with a twisting motion and was almost unable to walk while nursing an IT-band injury. It became uncomfortable for him to spend more than an hour or so in the car. Then I thought we’d enjoy the majesty of the Sierras. When I took him to Tahoe several months later, I warned him to be careful about drinking more than one glass of wine while at high altitude. Predictably (in retrospect), after one glass of wine, a second one sounded even better. I ended up spending the night in the twin bed next to Dad while he experienced a racing heart beat. And I decided that it simply wasn’t safe to take him to high altitude. So, no wine tasting and no trips to the glorious mountains.

Dad’s health challenges may have deflated my plans, but I learned to focus on his capabilities – what he could do – rather than his limitations. He was (and is) still himself: a lover of poetry, a loving father and grandfather, and an informed citizen who keeps up with world news through the TV and New York Times.

Like my Dad, I’m an optimist. But I confess this optimist has struggled for the past six months. And that’s why I haven’t blogged. I’ve been increasingly irritated with people who don’t make the effort to connect with my Dad, which includes (on occasions) family members.

I won’t kid you. It’s work to get Dad to understand you. If I s-l-o-w way down and try to maximize the use of consonants, I can usually get things across to Dad despite his 90%+ hearing loss. But now it takes two to three attempts to get even the simplest of ideas across in an environment with absolutely no background noise.

I’m sad. I don’t like to think about my Dad’s diminishment, but we are increasingly in the “no fun” zone of aging. I feel for his dignity when I have to pull the car over and hand him a urinal because he can’t make it to the nearest gas station. Or when I assist him with toweling after he showers, as I do now. (Dad still seems to be following Marine Corps protocol for showering, which involves soaping up and rinsing off in exactly four short bursts of water, followed by vigorous see-sawing with a towel to ensure that there is absolutely no moisture and chance of jungle rot. Unfortunately, the see-saw move was causing him to lose his balance and fall.)

I know that Dad has just about as good of a quality of life and dignity as a 95-year-old can have, but it’s still painful to watch his decline. When we take our near-daily walks, chest pain (or “load” as he calls it) is increasingly our companion. No surprise, since his last cardiac bypass graft was expected to give out back in 2004. But still. It sucks.

Through this blog, I have sought to document my experience and the many inspirational moments I have with my Dad. But I realize increasingly that we are on the final stretch. It’s harder to write things that are uplifting.

So, to rob the line from the beer commercial, “This blog’s for me.” Today’s post is really about the grief of knowing it’s just not going to be pretty from this point on. I’d do anything to spare my Dad, but this final journey is outside of my control (and for a control freak, that is a very hard realization).

If you’re given to prayer, pray for his release, for his homecoming to God and his reunion with my mother. Pray for him to go in a “burst of glory” and not in painful decline. Pray for him not to be afraid of what will befall him in this last phase. Dad’s not sure there is an after-life, but, then, he’s not sure there isn’t, either. So we believers will have to do his praying for him.

Thanks for listening.

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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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The Zen of Dad

Dad meets Maddie, 3 weeks old

I’ve never been much good at meditation, or at clearing my mind during the breathing exercises at the end of yoga.  No sooner than I tell myself to “just be present,” my mind is ping-ponging in another direction.

Before I stopped working, it was really bad.  Dad would come for extended visits and I would take time off or walk with him during a break in my telecommuting day.  As we walked along the bike trail in Davis, my mind was busy ticking off what needed to be done for the kids, Todd, work, the house, Dad or friends and organizations.  I used to memorize a list by associating each task with a finger.  By the time I returned, at least all of the fingers on one hand had been assigned a reminder to be transferred to my “to do” list.

I grew up expecting that my father would not be in my life for as long as most people have their fathers in theirs.  His big heart attack when I was five was a startling awakening to the realization that parents are mortal.  My grandmother Nana, who had lived with us, had died the prior year, but Nana was old.  Dad was muscular, purposeful and vigorous, the guy who held me on his shoulders in the ocean waves.  Dads are supposed to be invulnerable.

Awareness of his mortality stayed with me through the years, always in the back of my mind.  Would he see me graduate from high school, college?  Would he be there to give me away at my wedding?  Would he meet my first child?  I certainly never expected that he would see me turn 50, or that I would celebrate his 95th birthday with him, as I plan to do this October 24.

Walking with Dad now, I have become far more conscious not only of what we are doing, and the daily changes along our three regular paths, but of my relationship with my father, this transient time with him.

Listening to Natasha Bedingfield’s anthem for the young and angsty, “Unwritten,” the chorus spoke to me as a reminder that this moment – every moment – with my father will not come again.  So I freeze the pictures in my mind, and try to remember them by associating them with the fingers of my hand.

Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten

 

 

 

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As good as a homemade present: my birthday call from Dad

Remember when your child brought you home a lop-sided ceramic dish or a woven key fob?  Those were always the most beautiful gifts you received because you knew how much effort went into them.  (Although I will say that the fill-in-the-blank interview that my then-preschool-aged daughter completed for Mother’s Day fell a bit flat when she completed the sentence, “My mother likes to spend time…” with, “on the toilet.”)

At 8 a.m. this morning, the phone rang.  After answering it, my husband, Todd, brought me the handset.  “Good morning, Bets,” said my Dad in his gravelly voice.  “I just wanted to say happy birthday.”

My Dad doesn’t really use the phone anymore, except to call when he hasn’t received his pills on time at his assisted living facility.  It took a big effort to think about calling, then find my number, make the call, and speak clearly.  It was a very brief, bittersweet moment.  In recent days, he had mentioned several times that he wanted to give me something for my birthday.  But, since I’m his gift-buyer, how would he arrange a surprise of some kind since he no longer drives and doesn’t know how to shop online?  His call was a wonderful gift.

I’ve been thinking a lot about my relationship with my father, how it has changed over the years, and, even more, how it has evolved since he first became a father in 1942.

My mother and father married the day after Christmas, 1941, less than three weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor.  My father had been commissioned as a second lieutenant with the Marine Corps Fifth Reserve Officers Commission class, and had been asked to stay on at Quantico as an instructor.  U.S. forces had been stretched to the limit across Europe, North Africa and the Pacific.  My oldest brother was born on the day that the Japanese Imperial Army launched its final attempt to regain control of Henderson Field on Guadalcanal.  Around the time my brother turned one, my father shipped out with the 4th Marine Division to take Kwajalein, an atoll in the Marshall Islands, landing on Roi-Namur in February 1944.

I came along 15 years after my older brother.  All of our relationships with my mother and father have been shaped by context.  My oldest brother’s, certainly, by the distraction and separation of the war.  My middle brother was born in 1947, a time when people refocused on family in the peace following the war.  He was also born with medical challenges that required multiple facial surgeries beginning when he was just a few months old.  Next came my sister, who was diagnosed with leukemia when she was one year old, and succumbed three years later, despite the efforts of my hematologist-oncologist uncle Ed.  My mother learned she was pregnant with my youngest brother when Midge’s last remission ended.  Navy physicians advised her to abort the baby, as they feared it would be too traumatic for her to have a baby during a period of such psychological distress.

And I’m “the girl who lived,” born three years after my brother.  My father only recently admitted that I was not planned.

My Dad says that he feels as if he has lived several lives: childhood-through-college, the war years, the period before Midge’s death, the period after, and the period after his forced retirement from the Marine Corps following his massive heart attack.  He has also had several distinct “fatherhoods.”  There is the father of the war, the father before Midge died, and the father after.

Although people will point to my Dad’s bronze medals as a symbol of his accomplishments, I think his greatest success was his evolution into a good father, a better father than the one who raised him.  To put it bluntly, his father was a … well, he wasn’t a nice guy (I just edited what I was going to say, recognizing that grandchildren or great grandchildren may read this).  He had most likely been abused before running away from home on a mean farm in Kentucky, later to bully my grandmother, and bully his sons.  Neither of my Dad’s brothers escaped that legacy, but my Dad did.

Over the years, my Dad evolved, and softened.  Fathers and daughters do have a different kind of relationship than fathers and sons, although my Dad raised me to be able to take are of myself and held me accountable, just as he did my brothers.  In the years since my mother has died, I have become his female confidante even as I have become his caregiver.

But I’ll admit it: I probably saw the softer side of Dad more often than my brothers did.  And today, my birthday, I am grateful for all of the events that converged to give me the time that I have with my Dad, now.  And grateful for this morning’s phone call.

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My Dad makes progress word by word

Dad used to think short pants were the ultimate indignity

This morning my Dad has his fifth outpatient visit with a speech therapist since his small stroke three weeks ago.  Lynn asked him how he felt about continuing.  Did he feel that he would benefit from more sessions?  Did he want to continue?

Dad answered her question with his own, “What is the expected outcome?”

She told him that he had improved a lot since she began working with him, but that he wasn’t quite where she thought he might be at this point, and that he might benefit from some additional sessions.

He repeated, “What is the expected outcome?”

A light bulb seemed to go off for Lynn and she said, “Here, let me show you.”  She wrote on the page of Dad’s workbook:

“We started out practicing saying words slowly and exaggeratedly.  Then we moved on to sentences and reading out loud.  Today we’ve been working on making sure that your responses to questions can be understood.  Next is conversation, and finally comes recitation.”

In showing Dad the ladder he’s climbing, she helped him to feel that he can improve, and, maybe, re-establish some control over a difficult situation.

I appreciated the dignity with which she treated him.  She seemed to recognize that, to my Dad, quality of life has a great deal to do with being able to summon up and recite passages from his beloved poems and plays.

But I also realized that she was giving him was a way of measuring progress, of validating for himself that he was improving.  It’s like having a personal trainer comment that you can now perform an exercise (or number of repetitions) that would have defeated you when you first began.

What she was giving Dad wasn’t hope, exactly, nor was she just cajoling him to be optimistic.  With her clinical skills, she was giving him a path for improving, and he could see that he had already come part of the way.

More importantly, she was helping to keep my Dad’s world from shrinking even further.  He can no longer drive, and he has difficulty following and retaining ideas the way one must to tackle full-length books.  He can’t hear in situations with more than a few people present, even though he’s a very social person.

But he’s still him, and he wants to be part of the conversation.  He wants to be able to share a story, or make a witty remark, or discuss the state of world affairs, or express appreciation.  All of these depend on being understandable.

I’m grateful that Lynn of Sutter VNA is helping him to retain his fundamental “Henry-ness.”

 

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