Truth is, I loved no one in the world like I did her. It's a cliche to say your mother's your best friend, but mine really was. Since my father died, it had just been Mama and I. She always made me feel safe, even as an adult. When my mother was ill, I had to be the strong one, and I felt woefully inadequate. I've never inspired confidence like she did. When she told me I could learn those lines for that damned kindergarten play, I did learn them--and knew every line in the whole production. When school was lousy(which it often was), I'd sit on the sofa with Mama while she read to me. Daddy would start the fireplace(yes, in southeast Louisiana), and sit near us in huge easy chair. Mama would hold me tight as she read novel or a tale by the Brothers Grimm. I'll always love Little Women because I can't even hear the title without thinking of her. On rainy days, we played a game called "Steps." The rules are only vague in my memory, but the game consisted of guessing the right letters and filling them in a puzzle. The game always managed to cheer me up, and when I was a kid, I always needed cheering up.
Mama always was there. I couldn't have earned three degrees without her confidence in me. She told me that the only person who lacked faith in me was myself. Mama gave me faith and love. She also willingly sacrificed for me. She took a thankless job so that she could be home with Grandma and me at night. She was wasted in that job, but she persevered--coming home bone tired and hurt. She initially had to endure undue rudeness from her male co-workers. Though they eventually came to respect her, these men actively made her life miserable during the first year of her time there. My mother worked hard so that she wouldn't have to use the little money my father had left for my future.
The woman who once looked out for my well-being lay helpless in a hospital bed. With the help of physical therapists and nurses, I almost carried her to a bedside commode, but the heroic effort was too late. Her backside was full of her own dirt, and sadly, she hadn't even felt the evacuation of her bowels. My mother became the child. I, her daughter, became the mother. I wiped her rear and threw the soiled wipes into the trash. I bathed her, gently passing a cloth under her breath and over her buttocks.
Doctors made objective projections about her possible recovery, but their hearts didn't lurch for her as mine did. The clinical observations did nothing to assuage the sickening fear I felt as she suffered loss of dignity and purpose. One night, she told me that she would rather die than live as she was. She felt glued t her bed, a prisoner in her own body.
Mama eventually lost her fight with old age and illness. Hospice workers came to the house to help me and her sitters with her care. Most days, she lay in a hospital bed that occupied half of the living room. She slept for hours. Only strong medicine controlled her pain. She would call out for the Virgin Mary. She cried for Jesus, Mary, and Joseph to help her. The Sunday before she died, Mama told me I had to let her go. It was the anniversary of my father's death, and I couldn't say those words.
During the coming work, my mother lived in a hazy, surreal world. Drugs kept the pain at bay, and she still managed to smile at me. She drank water and broth from a straw, and I didn't leave her as she existed in that limbo. Relatives visited, but no one really said why they were there-- to say goodbye. The sitters and the visitors joined me in the sad vigil. I took care of my mother. Everyone else tried to take care of me. Barbara and Valerie, her wonderful sitters, brought me coffee and coaxed me to eat. My fabulous relatives brought me food I barely ate and couldn't taste. They were trying to take care of the living while waiting for a death.
Mama died on Good Friday, 2008. My aunt and my cousin Trudy were there. I'll never forget her labored breathing. Each breath sent a needle into my chest. I stroked her hair and held her hand. I whispered to her. My cousin, a nurse, monitored her pulse. Eventually, we could no longer hear her breathing. A hospice nurse arrived, pronouncing her dead. More relatives arrived. Two people came from the morgue to take her away. They gave me a rose. I didn't see them take her body. The nurse tactfully asked if I'd witness her dispose of my mother's meds. I watched through tears as she flushed them down the john.
I eulogized my mother at her funeral. I followed my cousin Charlotte. She was a hard act to follow. During the funeral, I was in a grief-induced fog, but I cried endlessly in the coming months. Two years later, I sometimes still do. Since I was twelve, I've only communicated with my father by putting a bouquet on his grave. It was my way of saying I still thought of him and that I missed him. Now, I visit the same grave and place bouquets in two vases. I wish that I'd had them longer.
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