July 1955, age 19. |
Here we are, sharing the same birthday. July 28th, 1941 The pretty little girl in the frilled dress with The Important Bow in her hair, is This Sister |
There
is, of course, none of that sisterly honesty now; she cannot remember
anything much. Some language remains, and her descent into dementia
has been long and slow; she lost, long ago, the sudden rages against
the insidious dying of the light. Concentration, memory and focus
have gone; her instant reply to any question is, ‘I don’t know’,
an effortlessly easy answer which doesn’t demand any shadow of
exertion. There is no obvious desire to please, nor indeed, to
displease, yet the old gentleness endures. She can still hold short, simple
conversations but soon after eating, can ask again for food, not
remembering the recent meal. She does nothing all day; the TV may be
on but she doesn’t watch it. Her endless, pointless, docile
waiting, punctuated by the occasional visit, seems untroubling to
her; she is oblivious to her condition and does not even notice that
she can no longer perform simple tasks like making a cup of tea. She
is just content to sit and await the next minute; the next hour; the
arrival of food and drinks and perhaps, the next stranger. In fact,
waiting is the wrong verb; waiting implies an object, event, an arrival, a person
for whom one waits; my sister waits for no one; she just sits. Without memory, life is
almost meaningless but without consciousness, the pointlessness of
existence goes unnoticed.
Earlier
this year, I went to stay for a few days at her farm, and one of her
sons had the brilliant idea of taking us back to see the little
semi-detached a few miles away, where we had grown up. The house
looked pretty much the same though the garden was quite different but
I didn’t mind; I was delighted to see it still standing among the
numerous other houses in a tarmacked suburbia unrecognisable from the
rutted country lane of eighty years before. A rare survivor. Even
better, nearby was a little country park containing the original wood
where we had played so often in our childhood. All our games, our
competitions, our gang meetings, our quiet walks and noisy play; our tree-climbing,
our finding birds’ nests, and sometimes, eggs, our conker-gathering
and black-berrying, had been centred there in what had then seemed an
expansive, almost magical, wonderland but which now was clearly seen to be
modest in size. Her son dragged the wheelchair over the humps to the
part nearest to our old
house and we sat her on a convenient log and I supported her back
because she was afraid of falling. The space seemed familiar to her
and the delight for both of us was infectious. For me, so many
distant memories and a few names; for her, an intangible happiness
and a total and rare relaxation that stayed for a long time. All the
usual anxiety vanished from her face and she, suddenly care-free,
looked ten years younger. I recounted a few memories but we couldn’t
share them. But we did share the bonhomie, the sudden joy, the
positivity of a happy surprise. The feelings bound us together and we
smiled in idiotic delight at each other.
I hear now, from her family, that she is delighted with the new home because it is so much better than the hospital which she hated. She knows she isn't back at the farm but, at least, for now, is contented with her room, some familiar furniture and linen, the rural view from the window, and the frequent family visits. The drug regime is to be reduced and, we hope, a safe sort of peace descend. Her family grieves for the self she has lost and her many years of hardly living, but she doesn't know what life used to be. To be warm, safe, fed is enough. That, and to feel loved.
I hear now, from her family, that she is delighted with the new home because it is so much better than the hospital which she hated. She knows she isn't back at the farm but, at least, for now, is contented with her room, some familiar furniture and linen, the rural view from the window, and the frequent family visits. The drug regime is to be reduced and, we hope, a safe sort of peace descend. Her family grieves for the self she has lost and her many years of hardly living, but she doesn't know what life used to be. To be warm, safe, fed is enough. That, and to feel loved.
No comments:
Post a Comment