Thursday, August 30, 2012

Holding Hands


Bless her heart. The hands that nurtured her children, made a beautiful home, and prepared a meal every night are no longer busy. They are idle as she sits in her room and stares at the walls, angles that go up and down monotonously, as she says. The clothes in her closet belong to the previous occupant, or so she thinks. No amount of reassurance seems to convince her otherwise. She remembers her children and grandchildren but may not remember that they were there within 10 minutes of leaving.
Of course there is George, her loving husband of 71 years. She always thought she would be the one to look after him as she did through the years, but now he cares for her, reluctant to let her out of his sight. It is so sweet the way he kisses her cheek every night before bed. It completes the day for both of them.
She still talks about her little mountain home and would much rather be there, where she also sat in recent years, but with a view of the pond and the Shenandoah and mountains beyond.  It was a home that they built together and where they spent their retirement years. She continued to work, her own cottage industry, designing and sewing beautiful window treatments for elegant homes in the area. She was talented that way, having learned to sew at her grandmother’s side. Great Grandmother did not like children to be idle, so Mom learned to sew buttons and moved on to making her own clothes and then clothes for her two girls. Her home, too, was decorated with beautiful fabrics turned into things made with her skilled hands. She fed and clothed us with love and creativity.
Those hands steered me to junior high school some 15 miles from home when I overslept. My little brother, pulled from his bed, slept in the backseat of our little red VW as we made the mad dash to school. Her hands, and especially her green thumb, made a beautiful flower garden where she spent many hours working the dirt and watching seedlings push through the ground. There was continuity to her garden, because she transplanted things from Grandmother’s home to hers and dug them up and moved them to the mountain home. The blossoms were a reminder of whose hands had lovingly planted them before.
We looked at a family album, and she no longer recognizes her siblings. But she recognizes her own mother who died at an early age, too young to see her five children mature into their teenage years. It was a difficult life after their mother died. And now Mother is 95 and has outlived all her siblings. Old age is cruel in many ways and strips away dignity and a sense of identity. I look at other people in the assisted living home and know that they, too, have led fascinating lives and have many stories to tell, if only their minds allowed it.
Any time that George has been in the hospital, she thinks he has gone fishing. And when she came home from the hospital, she told everyone that she had been on vacation with her family. I thought it odd at the time, but now think that she is envisioning a happier place for each of them. George would be rather be fishing, and she would like to be with loved ones, in a place with a spectacular view. Their favorite vacation spot was an Atlantic inlet where George could surf fish and she could walk along the shore and pick up shells, tasting the salt air and hearing the roar of the ocean.
Mom, I wish I could be there every day to help you maintain your dignity and pick clothes from your closet that make you feel and look lovely and lively. We could go for walks as I push you in your wheelchair, and we could spend more time outside. You have talked about walking to the Potomac. We would need better shoes for that long hike, but maybe we can take a bus. We would hold hands.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Mountain Mama

West Virginia, Mountain Mama. Take me home, down country roads. 

It's August and once again time to travel to that Wild, Wonderful state. Cousins will be converging from many locations for the McKenzie-Bowling reunion. The cousins are all my favorites and some may be favorite favorites. It's a grand weekend of greetings, hugs and food, food, food. I am a great-granddaughter of Ozella Ruth, but I only vaguely remember her. I was just a little girl when I met her, but it is in her honor that our side of the clan gathers.

My mother is no longer able to make the trip. In the past, she would faithfully come to the place that she called home for many years, not only for the reunion but for many funerals of loved ones. Mom is 95 and the last of her siblings, so now I go in her honor and to represent my own siblings (and try not to embarrass them too badly). Mom and her sister stayed at my house one year and slept in my waterbed. They giggled like teenagers as they bounced on the waves. Aunt Dorothy was the one who made us laugh most, so full of life and good times. It was always a special treat when she came.

A particular year that Mom was not able to come was especially memorable, and it's probably a good thing she wasn't there. My kids were 16 and 4, and I was in the running for Mother of the Year (not that there was such an award, but I would have been the front-runner). We arrived on the scene in stereotypical West Virginia style: Yancey had a BB pellet lodged in his arm, and Curly Slim had a black eye. Yancey had been playing with a friend who accidentally fired the BB gun in his direction. They didn't want to get in trouble with parents so didn't tell anyone what had happened. Curly Slim had a run-in with the arm of a chair. Mother of the Year, indeed!

My cousins always ask me come to the beach following the gathering of the clan. And that year, I said yes, let's do it! From the reunion, no bags packed, but a quick shopping trip for basic needs prepared Curly Slim and I for a spontaneous, beach-bound vacation. The only problem was a minor car wreck on the way from the reunion to meet them. But nothing to deter my enthusiasm, only a little setback. We come from sturdy Scottish stock--no wimps here.

By gathering, the cousins all honor their parents and siblings who are no longer with us. We are the new order of things. We meet and greet and share tears of joy and sorrow. But mostly, we laugh.