Looking elegant. |
And here it is, that date. Nine Eleven. It’s a date I have dreaded for a while.
A year ago, my mother passed away, on the eleventh of
September. She had suffered with Alzheimer’s for years. It’s a foul, disgusting
disease, both for the bewildered victims and for those who know exactly what is
happening.
The thing is, my mom was supposed to be that old lady who
would drive us all in her VW bus around Ireland and Arizona into her
nineties. She was one of the first people to keep an organic farm in our town.
She was an English professor, and there were always one or two students huddled
around our kitchen table, chatting about Joyce or Yeats or sophistry.
Her speaking voice was incredibly beautiful. For years she
read poetry professionally. Her tour de force was the section in The Waste Land
spoken in a pub, in a cockney accent. For my 21st birthday she took
me, my sister, and our friend to Paris. We stayed in a cheap boarding house on
the Left Bank. It’s still my favorite part of the city.
Was she perfect? No,
in italics. Her temper shook our house at times and drove my sister and me to
our rooms. I swore that once I saw dragon smoke arise from her nostrils, during
one of those rages.
She studied at Trinity College, in Dublin. She backpacked
around Italy. She volunteered at a birdwatching center. To watch all of that
personality and intelligence ebb away was pure torture.
The night she finally ended her long fight was very
peaceful. A full moon hung outside the window, kept open by the wonderful
nurses at Mum’s final home. A slight breeze blew the curtains outward. My
sister and I sat there and chatted and wept, while our kids played and
decorated Granny’s bed with the stuffed animals and teddy bears she always had
with her in her last years.
It was exactly the type of passage she would have chosen for
herself. There were no tubes, no machines, and no drugs beyond those that kept
her in a simple sleep.
“Her diminished
size is in me, not in her…” There are many others who sense that same thing as autumn
begins. They lost friends and fathers and sisters on that date, the day years
ago that was far more terrible than my own personal Nine Eleven. I can only
wish for them a moment of peace, the calm I felt when the moon glowed outside
the open window, when the curtains blew in the soft breeze.
And just at the
moment when someone
at my side says,
"There, she is gone!"
There are other
eyes watching her coming,
and other voices
ready to take up the glad shout;
"Here she comes!"
3 comments:
Oh, Alison, this is a beautiful tribute. I think that is when Alzheimer's is cruelest--with fiery, intelligent people. They can so often be angry because they know what is missing... just not in specifics. I'm glad her passing was so peaceful.
What a lovingly and beautifully written tribute, Alison.
Very nice. I would have liked to hear your mother read from "The Waste Land."
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