Courage at Twilight: Bad Dreams

Mom phoned me from the first floor to where I worked on the second floor: she was too dizzy to get up and prepare lunch for herself and Dad, and would I please help. It was 4:30 p.m.  Dad complained at 7:00 p.m. that the bratwurst I served for dinner had upset his stomach.  I gave him an antacid.  Aide Jenifer texted me a photo of the bed sore on Dad’s bottom, and aide Diana texted that he almost fell getting out of the shower.  Nurse Chantelle brought calmoseptine cream for the sore and ordered a corrugated cushion.  Dad forgot aide Gloria’s name, and his head-crushing spells have returned.  Mom cries at his complaints.  And I can no longer seek Sarah’s counsel and support with a quick text or call.  Every day seems to bring compounding ailments, none of them small to my elderly parents, Dad 88 years old, and Mom 84.  It is what it is, and my job is simply to address the moments as they come.  “I still have a huge hole inside,” he laments.  To these griefs and ailments, add Dad’s worsening dreams.  Last night in his dream he was with Sarah as she snowmobiled along the obscured trail, her visor snow-streaked, was with her as she left the trail and crested the berm, was with her as she hit her head against the tree, saw her lying dead in the snow, watching and feeling and being present as the terrible event unfolded and finished, helpless and bereft.  He awoke and struggled to sit on the edge of his bed, where he sat until the full light of morning, afraid to lie down and go back to sleep for fear the very real dream would return.  Knowing what happened is bad enough.  Watching it happen is one-hundred-fold worse.  Experiencing it with her was infinitely more painful.  How awful, I thought, and served him with all the compassion and tenderness of which I am capable.

 

(Pictured above: my office credenza, with law books and portrait of Sarah.)

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