May
2000
May 16/00
I have wanted to write in my diary many times, have thought about
it but somehow have not found the time. I am tired, discouraged.
Maybe the last few weeks are catching up with me. I need to write
about this time in my life so I remember it and so that you who
have been following my story will know what has happened. So I will
back-track the best I can; my memory is not serving me too well
these days.
On April 27
I was in an all day Alzheimer conference. Not really the place I
preferred to be but I had registered and paid so there I was. I
saw some professional acquaintances who seemed amazed to see me
and offered their condolences. I was surprised (not for the first
time) at how quickly the news of dad's death had spread. As always
I learned at the conference and was glad I attended.
Tomorrow I
leave for Ottawa for an end-of-life conference till Sunday morning.
I was invited by Health Canada to attend but felt it was something
I should not miss. My sister told me I was nuts to go, especially
since I had to start moving on the weekend. Yes, I committed to
move for May 1...only upstairs 4 floors, but still a major effort.
Ottawa was
very good for my soul. I learned more about end-of-life; ironic
this event should happen after my father's death. I was doing quite
well until the last hour I was there. A panel ended the formal proceedings;
a family physician on the panel Dr. Bill Dalziel expressed his concern
that so little reference had been made to the many seniors who were
dying while suffering from dementia...in a nursing home. At the
end of the panel presentation the audience was asked if anyone had
anything else to say. I was the last to stand before the microphone.
I introduced myself and stated that I hoped I could get through
what I had to say. I could not. As soon as I tried to continue the
tears started to flow but I said what I needed to say - that I had
a father who had just died in a nursing home, suffering from dementia.
I said that it was just dad and me, alone with no support and I
hoped that palliative care in this country would move to help people
like my father and daughters like me who know too little about helping
a loved one die with peace and dignity.
I sat down
and started to swear at myself for having lost it. Numerous people
came up to me to thank me for having been so honest; several women
who worked in long term care facilities told me that dad and I being
alone would not have happened at their facility. Somehow this did
not make me feel better.
I arrived home
at about 2:00 PM on Sunday to find my bedroom furniture moved for
my by friends. I looked around at my new apartment and as happy
as I was to have the extra space (A real office) I knew how much
work lay ahead. So i bucked down and started pacing and moving boxes.
A couple across the hall from my old apartment asked me over for
pizza about 8:00 PM, a welcome break. Then back at it till about
midnight. Although I slept in my new home tonight, I left the animals
downstairs until I was more settled.
Next day (May
1) my sister Debbie and her husband Larry arrived from London to
help me move before the memorial service. We got a huge amount done.
I had a meeting with the minister at 1:00 PM at the church to go
over the final details about the service...what she would say, where
we would sit, basically the order of the service. She asked me how
i was doing. Although pretty exhausted, I told her I was doing alright.
My brother
arrived from Calgary about 3:00; got him moving as well! I had arranged
that we all go out for dinner tonight. I had long thought that my
father's death would be the only time we would all be together for
a long time; unfortunately Lanci (from California) was not present.
But we had a good time; Doug and Debbie went back to the hotel.
We agreed to meet at my place the next morning.
More moving
before the memorial service but at least I am finally in. I brought
the cats up last night; they seem very happy. Oreo was in boarding;
I left her there after I returned from Ottawa until I was moved
and the service was over. At 12:30 we drove to the church. The flowers
I had ordered for the front of the church were stunning; light,
beautiful and fragrant. Another beautiful bouquet had joined ours.
My friend Judy from Allianz Canada had sent them. Even though we
requested donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation instead of
flowers, she had sensed that I would appreciate the flowers. She
was right. The guest book was set up at the church entrance. An
adjoining room was set up for a reception after.
Finally it
was 2:00 PM and we walked into the church to sit in the front pew.
There were so many wonderful faces of friends and family; I greeted
as many as I could before join the family. We had made sure the
service was simple and it was. After the organ music the minister
opened with a prayer, then a hymn. She then spoke about dad and
his life. And then it was my turn to give the Eulogy.
I had tried not to think of this moment, mostly because I wondered
if I could get through it without crying. I walked up to the front
of the church, looked out at my family and friends, took a deep
breath and started speaking. I amazed myself. I spoke the words
I had prepared, I read from a letter dad had written me many years
ago - and I did not cry. These are the words I spoke. I sat down
beside my sister Debbie who held my hand tight.
After one last
hymn Abide With Me the service was over. I was in a daze I think.
I remember walking down the aisle with my brother who was sobbing.
I did my best to comfort him but I believe he was crying about many
years of family difficulties, things he would never talk about.
The reception was nice; talked to a lot of people, including the
few friends of my fathers who were still here. Everything was over
about 4:00; back to my place to change clothes, quickly pack and
off to london where I was attending a gerontology refresher day
at Western University. I picked Oreo up from the boarders and dropped
my brother at the airport. Arrived in London about 7 and stayed
with Debbie till Thursday morning.
May 5 was dad's
birthday; he would have been 92. He almost made it.
On Saturday
May 6 I gave a talk to the MS Society at a caregiver education day.
Although a bit teary when I told them dad had recently died, again
I was able to maintain my composure.
May 28/00
It's now May 28. I have been sick for a week, felled last Sunday
by a terrible sinus infection, topped off by the flu. I guess I
should not be surprised; my life for so long has been marked by
caregiver stress; the past 8 weeks have been a blur of travel, pain
and fatique. During the past month since dad died, I still have
not really mourned. I have broken down a few times. I have been
hit by pangs of hurt when shopping and automatically wondered if
dad needed something, only to suddenly remember he is not here to
need anything - or me. I started to wonder what was wrong with me.
Why am I not hurting more? Why am I able to continue on, seemingly
easily - when the most important person in my life is no longer
here? This week I had help with the answer.
On May 24 I
had registered to hear Doug Manning speak up in North York. You
may recall he is the author of a book I have recommended to many
caregivers 'When Love gets Tough' about placing a loved one in long
term care . I was still feeling quite ill but felt I should go for
the afternoon session which I did. And I am so glad. Doug is a baptist
minister from Texas who has become a speaker and writer. He was
terrific. His talk, entitled Dont' Take My Grief Away From Me' was
such an eye opener. He stated his belief that there are really no
experts on grief because everyone grieves differently. He talked
about the natural process of grief, the layers of grief and what
people need in grief.
At the break,
I went out for a drink of water. When I came back into the auditorium,
he was sitting alone up on the stage. I walked up to the edge and
asked for a moment of his time. I introduced myself and explained
that my dad had just died and that I wondered why I was not crying
more, feeling emptier. I asked if it was because I had cried for
so long before he died. Was it possible to do most of one's grieving
before a loved one actually died? He thought for a moment and said
that he did not think so. Then he described what had happened to
him when his father died...an experience similar to mine. At that
time he was a minister and after his father died, he kept on being
so busy with his work that it took him 8 months to finally wake
up one night, relive his father's death and finally begin to mourn
the loss. He told me that he believed that he and I was so emotionally
spent at the time of death that he had nothing left to grieve with.
he looked at me and suggested that the same thing might be happening
to me. he asked me to let him know what happens as delayed grief
is something no-one has written about. I told him I would.
After the break
Doug told us that he had decided to change the direction of the
last half of his talk and went on to talk about caregiver loss.
I believe - rightly or wrongly - that he did this for me, to help
me deal with my loss. I left the auditorium feeling comforted. Doug's
Web site is insightbooks.com. I recommend his writing to anyone
who is a caregiver.
I will continue
to record my thoughts and feelings here even though dad has gone.
I feel there is so much I have yet to learn and pass on as a caregiver.
There is so much work to do to continue to help caregivers deal
with the end-of-life issues they must face. I continue to be grateful
for the many supportive cards and email that still arrive - many
from people I have never met but who know me and dad though my journal.
Thank you.
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