Tag Archives: Christmas

Let love light the way…

I believe caregivers have a unique blessing, being able to give back to the ones who loved and cared for them through life.  Not everyone gets the opportunity to return the love given to them so unconditionally. Give a hug, squeeze a hand, spend a little time letting your loved ones know you are there. Even if the memory doesn’t stay, the feelings remain and your warmth will tuck them in at night. You are their angels. Merry Christmas and sleep peacefully, my readers and friends!

Faded photos and stained glass windows…

I have heard many people say that if they were escaping from their home because of a fire, flood or other disaster and could only grab one thing it would be their family photo albums. The early photos of my parents are almost all black and white. Mom had this beautiful face, nearly black hair and a Grace Kelly figure and I have always thought that Dad resembled a young Elvis Presley. I am not sure what the story is behind their wedding photos but the few that exist have the word “proof” punched into them. Maybe they were so poor in the beginning that they couldn’t afford an album or maybe their wedding album was lost in one of their many moves. Whatever the story, those pictures, even in black and white are extremely well preserved. I love looking at them and what a beautiful couple they were from the very beginning. Through the years, their lives were documented in photos and a few precious videos.

When I was in grade school the Polaroid instant cameras were very popular. These cameras didn’t put out the best quality pictures but we sure had a lot of fun playing with them. I remember getting a yellow nightgown with little orange birds on it for Christmas and my mom making me pose for a picture. After waiting for the picture it turned out that the only part that did not develop was my FACE. I decided that just wouldn’t do so I drew a face on the picture. My mom saved the picture and it still exists in an album at Dad’s house. We saved thousands of photos in a huge drawer in my parents dining room for years until Mom finally got a wild hair and organized all of them by year and even captioned many of them. I remember looking at the album containing the last two years of her life and wondering, looking at the many pictures of her, at what point was her condition so advanced she could no longer be saved. I know it is a futile effort but can’t help thinking something could have been done so much sooner if she had not been so stoic…if she had not appeared so healthy. I remember looking at a picture of her holding my cousin’s two year old son on her lap helping him eat a popsicle just a few months before her diagnosis and thinking, “She was already sick then and nobody knew it”. Wondering which picture was the point of no return could drive me crazy. It’s a cruel exercise in self punishment, and yet I can’t help it.

Now my Dad is sick and we know it, in fact have known it for quite some time. There is no definable point of no return for his condition. Alzheimer’s is a slow, ruthless illness, it’s early onset subtle and often overlooked. Perhaps someday we will know for sure it’s cause, how it may be prevented, and if it may successfully be treated but until then there is no way of knowing exactly what occurred to put my father in the life he is presently living. There is no one picture at which you could look and say, “Yes, that’s the one…that’s when it all started”.

Our day to day observations continue as his illness advances. I am trying to teach my girls to be compassionate and loving, to try not to get frustrated with his repeated questions. Allison came with me on a recent visit. I made sure he ate and took his meds. Allie volunteered to feed the animals and talk to her Grandpa while I wrote a daily entry in the family journal. As I sat writing, I overheard Dad asking her the same questions over and over:
“What’s your name?”
“How old are you?”
“What school do you go to?”
“What grade are you in?”
“What’s your name?”
“Who’s that in the kitchen? Is she your mom?”
“Who’s your dad?”
“What’s your name?”
I was so proud of her. She took it all with a smile and, like me, trying not to laugh each time he asked her name. After a while he laughed, too, and said, “Why do I have the feeling we’ve already been down this road?”
“It’s okay, Grampa, I understand”, she said hugging him. She would never want him to feel silly for repeating himself. Allison is such an old soul. Like me with my dad, she loves to hang out with Mike while he is engrossed in his hobbies. He collects movie memorabilia, and likes to paint movie models and statues. I don’t know if she will ever be into those hobbies, herself, but someday she will understand her dad’s interests and appreciate them as part of who he is. For now she sits with him in his “man cave” while he works on his models and watches Sci-fi movies much the way I would find ways to entertain myself in Dad’s garage so I could watch him work.

I suppose many kids don’t understand their parents’ passions when they are growing up. For years Mike has enjoyed all kinds of science, history and nature shows. He records series after series on the DVR filling up the memory with all of his favorites. One time the DVR was so full Kelly and I decided to play a practical joke on him. I taught her how to re-name all of his shows. “Ancient Aliens” became “It’s Aliens, Man”, “Mythbusters” became “Blowing up stuff”, “Modern Marvels” became “Dad’s Boring Show”, “How the Earth was Made” became “Why, Dad, Why?”. Mike was less than amused but we thought it was funny as hell.

Having been exposed to both of my parent’s many pass times, nothing about Mikes hobbies and shows seems particularly over the top. Actually, engulfing one’s self in an outlet seems, not only completely natural but necessary for developing a personal identity. I, myself have had many self taught hobbies over the years although only recently has writing become one of them.

As I have previously mentioned, my mother learned how to cut stained glass windows. Several of them still decorate the inside of Dad’s house. I often wondered where mom gained inspiration for her various endeavors. Like Dad, Mom was never satisfied with a life of leisure. She was always busy with some creative project, whether it was sewing, tiling, painting, embroidery, ceramics or stained glass. Of all of them, the stained glass stood out for two reasons: the gorgeous finished products, obviously, and also the havoc that the soldering irons wrecked on her beautiful hands. For some reason the burns and blisters were worth it to her…badges of honor for her hard work.

We collected so many photos over the years: Dad’s airplanes still in the building process, Mom arranging bouquets for Paula’s and Hillary’s weddings, me or one of my siblings sitting in the skeleton of a fuselage, a table full of little girls Mom was teaching to sculpt green ware, a picture Dad took of Tom with Eddie perched on his arm, Mom and her daughters in their Easter dresses standing in the breathtaking garden she planted and nurtured all on her own, etc. Photo after photo of them using every minute of their lives with real purpose and passing that love of life and creativity along to their children and friends.

One of the problems with looking at more recent photos is that I get lost speculating “When did Dad/Mom start getting sick?”, losing the entire point of taking the picture in the first place…to capture the moment, to record the life, to appreciate who they are and how they lived.

The extraordinary man that is my father is slipping away and as his memories fade it would be easy to think of Dad’s life like an old, discolored Polaroid photo, losing it’s essence and definition…but I would prefer to think of Dad’s life like a stained glass window, a work of art with light streaming through it, perhaps losing it’s brilliance as the sun goes down and yet no less valuable for the details no longer visible as the lights grow dim. Time will go on but we can still find ways to shine the light through the colored panes and show the wondrous example he and my mother set for us all.To be continued…