I
went for a walk with my mother yesterday. I walked out the back door
with the confused imposter who had been living in her body the last few
years and ended up with my real mother by the time we circled the
building and stopped to rest by the front door.
Her
wheelchair supported both of us until I finally let go to sit on the
bench. She rode in the seat and I hung onto the handles, gripping a bit
tighter than necessary. If the migraine vision stole my balance or my
hip dislocated, I could imagine what she might do to herself trying to
rescue me, since that’s what real mothers do.
We
had forty-five minutes to kill before the ambulance would return her to
the nursing home. She called it the hospital but I think she knew the
difference this time. She needed to pretend, the way I had the week
before when I wheeled her to the dining room down the hall and called it
taking her out to dinner.
She
tucked the surgeon’s report between her leg and the side of the chair
and used both hands to drink her diet Sierra Mist, screwing the cap back
on after each sip. I wondered which excited her more, having a drink in
a bottle instead of a Styrofoam cup with a straw, or realizing she had
the dexterity to manipulate the cap without help. Her hands looked
confident. Maybe she remembered how I had complimented her penmanship
when she signed the forms in the office.
She
noticed how green the grass was despite the heat, and decided the
thumping noise in the distance must be a large construction tool. It
must have felt good for her to be outdoors. In the last year, she had
been out only to pass from a car or ambulance to whichever railed,
motorized bed she would occupy next. She smiled at a little girl passing
with her mother, removed the cap to take another drink, and laughed
when she realized it was ninety degrees and she was wearing a sweater.
People would think she was crazy but she really wasn’t even warm.
She
remembered I had no air-conditioning in my car and apologized for
making me come out. I reminded her I like heat, and said I was glad to
be there. She mentioned knowing someone else was supposed to have been
in my place and the nurse had to call me, but believed me when I said I
wanted to be there.
We
talked about the good news from the doctor; the hip had healed and he
released her to put all ninety-six of her pounds on it again. In her
mind, that meant she could go home soon, and she proved once again that
she was in her right mind by telling me in detail all the things she
needed to do when she went home.
I reminded her how much she appreciated the nurses and therapists at the hospital,
and how she had saved every menu to show me the wonderful meals they
served. She said those things were nice but she was still anxious to go
home before she got too spoiled to all that pampering.
I
wanted the confused imposter to replace my real mother so I could avoid
the rest of the conversation. Her eyes met mine and asked for the
truth, as no one but a real mother can.
Today, I hope she doesn’t remember that I told her the truth.
Originally published August 2006, Author's Den and Gather
1 comment:
Wow, powerful stuff.
I don't want to ever do that to my children, but, sadly, most of us don't get to choose.
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