Alzheimer’s
disease came into my life in January of 2001, and at the
time, it seemed like the lesser of two evils.
“It’s either a
brain tumor or Alzheimer’s disease,” the neurologist
said, describing what he thought was wrong with my
mother.
“Can you get
Alzheimer’s in your fifties?” I immediately asked.
The answer was
yes. You can get Alzheimer’s disease in your fifties, in
your forties, in your thirties. The earliest reported
case might have developed in the brain of a 27-year-old.
That doesn’t matter. What matters is that it happened to
my mother when she was 54 and was a vibrant, young,
energetic woman. It happened to my mother when she was
in the prime of her life. In an instant, she was old. In
an instant, she was sick. In an instant, she was dying.
“She has about
three to five years,” the doctor told us.
I used to think
it was called Old Timer’s disease, but have come to
master the pronunciation of the scientist who discovered
this condition. He discovered the more rare form of the
disease, the early-onset Alzheimer’s that my mother has
lived with for the past four years. In that time, she
has lost many of her cognitive abilities, each falling
slowly from her consciousness, piece by piece like tiny
snowflakes that collect on the barren grass. She stopped
driving, stopped cooking, stopped cleaning the house.
She forgot how to dress herself, do the laundry, cook
dinner. Now she is having problems remembering what to
do after she goes to the bathroom. With each change in
my mother, my family and I adapt – trying to accommodate
for everything she is losing, while working to keep her
spirits up, her lips smiling. My father is her
caregiver, and so am I, and so are my brothers, and so
is her sister. We have formed a circle of love and
support around my mother and around ourselves to provide
the best care that we can. This is not easy for any of
us.
I think of my
father who is 62 years old, a dentist who still holds
regular hours in his private practice, and of the life
that he planned with my mother when they reached this
part of their lives. Those plans would have included
travel, buying a vacation home in Myrtle Beach, time
with friends and grandchildren; not dressing his wife
every morning, pulling her sixteen pills from their
bottles and then putting them in pudding so that she can
swallow them. Not arranging for her to attend an adult
daycare center three times a week and then carting her
around on the other days so that she does not get bored
staying home alone with only the television to entertain
her. And then I think of something that he told me
shortly after my mother was diagnosed, something that he
repeats to me time and time again when we discuss any
change in her condition – “Whatever is, is.”
For my family and
me, Alzheimer’s disease is what is. It is what now
defines my mother and her life. It is what has forever
altered our family structure, the way we relate, the way
we live. Caring for her is filled with challenges and
struggles, sad moments that water my eyes with tears and
days that leave me wondering why. Caring for her is also
filled with infinite joy, surprising gratitude, and an
insight that only individuals in similar situations can
share.
She was just a
mom to me before she got sick. Not a person, not a
friend, not another woman, just a mom. I was comfortable
with her in that motherly role, giving advice, baking
bread, helping with homework.
Now, Mom is
becoming a person for me. I am learning who Paula
Kassolis is. And I am learning how much I like her. With
Alzheimer’s disease, I cannot expect anything from her.
She cannot disappoint me or embarrass me. She is what
she is. The more time we have together, the more I
appreciate her life and her love and her laugh. Her
laugh is the best, a steady chuckle that begins with a
roaring “Ah ha” and repeatedly peaks and plateaus, up
and down, her hand on her stomach to control the giggles
and her face red with delight. Her eyes tear when she
laughs and I think crying and laughing might be one and
the same because our bodies go through the same motions:
short breath, erratic facial expressions, red face,
tears.
I cycle through
so many phases of coping with her disease. Anger passed
quickly, but sadness resonates above my head. And today
I realize how much I will miss her, not as a mother, but
as a person. And I think I will miss her laugh the most.
Her three to five
years are dwindling quickly. It’s been four years since
her diagnosis, and now I am just waiting. She is almost
living on borrowed time, and I am never sure of when I
will become a nameless face she cannot identify. Time is
a vacuum to her. It exists and she knows it exists, but
it has no meaning. She wears a digital watch and can
read the time back to me if I ask.
“Let’s see…eight, four,…seven,” she
says. “It’s eight forty-seven. Yep, eight, four, seven.”
But ask her what most people are doing at 8:47 in the
evening and she won’t know. Ask her what time she wakes
up in the morning and she will tell you noon.
Eastern
philosophy speaks of time – of breath time, not clock
time. We can measure time by the ticks of a clock or we
can measure time with the breaths we take to fill our
lungs with oxygen. I like to think that Mom is on breath
time where the eight, the four, and the seven are just
numbers that don’t have to mean anything at all.
A metal plate
hangs on her bedroom wall. The copper was intricately
cut to emulate both the sun and the moon and painted in
a bleed of colors — teal, purple, orange and yellow. The
sun’s exterior has twelve rays shapely carved to look
like flames of fire. Inside the core sits a crescent
moon with a face etched onto its surface. The plate is a
sundial, an archaic way of calculating time. The sun and
moon, working in tandem, depicted through metal that
draws no distinction between when one ends and the other
begins.
Nickolena Kassolis’ writing has
appeared in Sonora Review and Welter. She is currently
writing a book-length memoir about her mother’s
experience with Alzheimer’s disease. Nickolena has a
Master of Fine Arts in creative writing and publishing
and lives with her husband, Scott, in Pennsylvania.
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