Showing posts with label mum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mum. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2011

Smiling Through the Tears.

I found something the other day. I was at Wise Woman's house doing some of the dreaded sorting one has to do after losing someone near and dear, when I needed a notepad to jot down some info. Found one in her telephone drawer. Opened it, turned over the few little pages she had used.

Now, my Mum was a bit of a wowser when it comes to drinking. Not a teetotaller, no. But definitely a little prim and proper on the topic of alcohol consumption.

So we never really discussed the drinking habits of a Madmother. I thought I hid it well - you know, the wine for the whine, good job grog...

Obviously not.

This was what greeted me on page three:


Didn't know whether to laugh or cry. So I laughed. Because that is what she would want me to do.

I miss you, you Wise Woman from whom know secrets were hidden or desires masked...



Tuesday, August 10, 2010

A Letter to My Mother,

My Darling Mum,
You know I adore you and you are my best friend in the whole world but sometimes you drive me crazy. I love the fact you are fiercely proud of your independence, but as it looks like we are rapidly heading into another spontaneous fracture situation please, please listen to me. Do not bend to pick ANYTHING up, do not twist, lift or even stand too long.

You are an incredibly strong-willed woman but as the daughter who loves you and who has now witnessed four of these fractures, I am very aware just how much the agony and pain cost you. You turn 91 in 2 months time,  have lost 8 inches in height in the last decade and now weigh only 43 kilos. You are human and as such are fragile at this time in your life. And your bones are letting you down. I realise how frustrating this whole situation is, especially for a woman as intelligent and self-reliant as you are. And you constantly worry about putting pressure on or being a burden to me.

Let me tell you this: you could never be an encumberance, for you are the reason I can put one foot in front of the other and remember to breathe when things are bad. You are my strength, my calm, the one person who loves me exactly as I am, even though you quietly yearn to wash out my mouth when I swear, without you to guide me I flounder.

I love you Mum, and cannot bear to think of life without you, so please, I beg you, listen to me because I selfishly want you around enjoying life for a lot longer.

Your adoring daughter

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Mother's Day 2010 - What Else Would I Blog About But...

A Wise Woman?

Mum and I

I know I talk about my Mum a lot. She is an integral part of our family, as Boy 2 says: "There are five in OUR family." She is the only grandparent our children have left, and really the only one they can ever remember having in any detail. This year she turns ninety-one, but you would never know it. In my mind a ninety something year old is doddery and vague, their life light dim and fading. Not Wise Woman. Wise Woman is still more than capable of putting me in my place (Big Boy relishes these exchanges when I am in trouble), she is sharp of wit and mind, retains her sense of humour and the absurd, and although frail in body, she is quite spritely. We share a slightly offbeat sense of humour, and spent many hours doubled over in hysteria as my late father, Grumblebum, would be getting madder and madder, calling us a pair of fools. Which of course made us laugh all the harder.
1996

Saturdays are her boring day, so we made yesterday the "Nanna Mother Day". We had a wonderful day at her lovely home, cleaning up the garden, spoiling her with presents, chowing down on fish and chips and just laughing and enjoying each other's company. I even did some mending. Big Boy had never in our seventeen years together, seen me with needle in hand. Shows you how much I adore my mother.

After nearly losing her last year I will never underestimate how much she means to me and our family.


My Mum, my wonderful Mum. Most people are a little stunned when they meet her for the first time. Wise Woman is every inch the refined lady, a truly gentile woman, softly spoken and NOTHING like her brash, loud daughter. Most friends swifly glance at both of us in disbelief. Her? Me? How?


The infamous 1990 NZ trip. Geyser probably about to blow...

Only those that know us well, and have seen us together over the years see the hidden similarities. Or maybe, not so hidden but just a little below the surface resemblances. My mother, my best friend, my rock. Every day I thank the very compassionate God that granted me longer with you.

I love you Mum. You are as beautiful on the inside as you are on the outside.


Saturday, December 26, 2009

A Moment to Savour Christmas

The best of all gifts around any Christmas tree: the presence of a happy family all wrapped up in each other.

~Burton Hillis~




The rain is tapping the windows in a frenzied attempt to enter our home. Its staccato rhythm blends with the joyous laughter of Boy 1 and Boy 2 as they explore the intricasies of new possessions, and wallow in the rare pleasure of not having to be anywhere other than here.

Yesterday was the best Christmas Day I can remember for many years. I think last year served as a huge reminder that Christmas in not about presents, or possessions. It is about family.

Twelve months ago I could barely summon the energy to put up the Christmas tree. Presents were shoved in gift bags, no attempt made to hide or keep surprises, Christmas did not exist in my heart. My mother was deathly ill. She bled every day and the chronic anaemia had taken chunks from her senses: of taste, her ability to swallow, her eyesight (not the best anyway), her concentration and worst of all, her desire to live. She cried daily, exclaiming: "Why do I have to wake up to this hellish life every morning? Why can't I just die."

Christmas day she was so unwell that she didn't even want to see her grandchildren. I packed up her baked lunch into an esky, took it to her, sat and watched as she picked, and fiddled, and ate barely a morsel. I then packed up the dishes and returned to eat my now cold meal, well after my family had finished theirs. And my heart broke a little more, as it had daily in the months since the nightmare began.


Fast forward to yesterday morning. We awoke to the laughter of our manic boys, the house a shimmer with lights, and tinsel, decorations and loudly caroling, jiggling, mechanical Christmas figurines. The boys opened a few presents, but most were kept to be shared later, as we calmly began preparing lunch. Soon glorious smells of roasting chicken smothered in bacon wafted through the rooms. Boy 1 and myself grabbed an umbrella, and set off. To pick up Nanna. My miracle Mum. The rest of the day was one of the quietly happiest days of my life. I floated, wrapped in a cloak of contentment and peace. Mum stayed all day, and when I took her home she was tired but elated. And full to the brim with her huge meal of chicken drizzled with gravy, roast pumpkin, sweet potato, potato, broccoli, corn on the cob, and carrots, consumed with gusto. She even partook of her old tipple of choice, port with lemonade (eat your heart out Esme Watson). A huge contrast to last year's dismal degustation. She even had some of the steamed, alcohol drenched, impregnated with rich, decadent dried fruit pudding.




What a truly wonderful family Christmas day, the way it is meant to be. Full up of love; laughter; life; joy. A Christmas of the heart. God, I love my life right now.



Peace to you all.

 





Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Losing Mum - January 2009

A follow on from my last post, this is a piece I wrote over the dark months of December 2008, January and Febuary 2009. It was never finished as a miracle saved her, and I have not yet had to find out about life without my much cherished mother. I hope it is a long time until I do.


My mother is dying. Not today, not even tomorrow. But slowly, piece by piece, she is dying. And as she disintegrates piece by piece, so do I. I too am dying. I am emotionally dying. You wouldn’t know it to look at me. You probably wouldn’t even realise if you spoke to me. But I am. Slowly, secretly, quietly on the inside. Hidden away. Friends have not yet realised I have severed ties, that I can no longer abide trivial conversations or even manage to be polite. My ability to cheerily chitchat was the first part of me to dissolve. The quivering mess of raw nerves inside my calm outer shell start to expand if I interact with others in reality too long. They threaten to break the fragile cover and reveal their ugliness to the outside world, and I cannot allow that to happen. I am smart enough to feign commitments, to create obligations which prevent me from more than the obligatory, fleeting “hi, must run.”

It is getting harder and harder to leave the cocoon of my bed. But leave it I must, for as my mother leaches life, I must step into her void. She tells me she feels guilty for my illness. I tell her it is not her, it’s me. But I have now realised what a fraudulent life I have led for years. All the time I battled forwards, coping with whatever life tossed my way, laughing in the face of the Gods, little did I know that a gentle, firm hand was placed firmly in the small of my back, propelling me onwards, upwards. My Mother’s hand. It is only now as her frailties eat away her life I realise how much strength was within that small hand. How much of who I am, belongs to her. The hardest battle of my life must now be completed without her, for it is her loss, her death, I am fighting. Fighting a war I will not win. If I stay in bed and utilise the phone as my connection to the outside world I can fool my embattled, weary psyche that all is well. All is as it was, even as her disembodied voice betrays her weakness down the line. But my pretence is short-lived as I cannot abandon her for more than a day, and taking that one selfish day of denial unleashes endless feelings of guilt.

My body is now synchronising itself in sympathy with hers. Physically, as the cancer ravages her frail body, I am falling apart. Is it that we are so aligned, so close my whole physical being links to the betrayal of her body? Or is this just the physical manifestation of my weakness, my selfishness, my inability to save her? As I do not cope emotionally, my body reacts physically. Logically, I know I cannot rescue her, I know nobody can, but that does not deafen my heart’s response. Nor can my logic quell my small bursts of hope, the little explosions of maybe that help me to get out of bed each day and drag my deteriorating carcass into the shower in readiness for another day as her carer. Carer, such an ambiguous word. I am her daughter, her friend, these are my roles, and I should not have to destroy her dignity by helping her do the most demeaning of tasks. My soul weeps when I look at her sad, solemn face. Through her own tears she thanks me, in a quiet ladylike manner, so refined even in the face of degradation by age and illness. My Mum, oh Mum.

This is where it ends.  A week later she was rushed off in the ambulance and as her life was renewed, so too was I. This is not a piece I thought I would ever share but posting about our drive home made me realise how blessed I am, and how close it all came to this emotional house of cards falling down.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

#best09 Do I Really Want to Do This? December 1. What was your best trip in 2009?


Mum and I 1985

For some this would be a simple task, but for us 2009 was the year of Nanna. My mother was deathly ill in the first quarter of this year. Dying. Bleeding slowly, painfully, inch by horrific inch, to death. Inoperable bladder tumour. Unsuitable for surgery due to her age: 89; her health: chronic osteoporosis, atrial fibrilation, history of TIA; and the discriminatory attitude of doctors. All that changed on February 13th when she was rushed to hospital haemorrhaging. New specialist, new attitude, new life. Or maybe just the gift of her old one back. Slowly she regained strength, and claimed back her world.

So I guess the best trip for me was driving her home from the hospital, knowing she was cancer-free (yes, one massive 5cm tumour gone, completely). We even stopped at Maccas on the way. She turned 90 in October and is still living by herself, managing her financial affairs on her computer spreadsheets, laughing at life once more. Love you Mum, you are my strength.

Oh, and no holidays yet, but we are going away just after Christmas. I can leave her again now, she is so very well.