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Five years ago today I lost my mother.  On the 27th of January of that year, I made this drawing of her as I sat by her bedside.  At the end, she rarely even opened her eyes, so she always seemed to be asleep.  That was funny because when she was still at home, she told me that she hated sleeping, and I remember writing a poem about it.  I have no idea where it is now, and the only bit of it I recall was the line how she would meet Death, sitting up in a chair, refusing to close her eyes.  I couldn't have been more wrong, could I?

She had suffered from a peculiar form of dementia for years.  Lewy-body dementia, it's called.  You can look it up; it's not an attractive disease.  I'm only now beginning to realize how long she'd been ill, and I find it disconcerting that we could have gone so many years without actually realizing that what was happening to her actually had a name, a diagnosis.  It wasn't just Mom getting old and difficult.  It wasn't just the diabetic retinopathy affecting her vision.  It wasn't just age-related incontinence on a grand scale, or persistent allergies or an essential tremor, or any of a hundred other little indignities that this fucking disease visited on her.  (I still, to this day, wish it was a person so I could peel it like a grape and roll it in salt before I stabbed it to death.  That's the level of anger I still feel over what it did to her.)

The dementia was so demanding, so draining that until I realized that my father didn't have a clue how to use the ice dispenser on the door of the freezer, something he'd used every day for years, I didn't realize that he was suffering from Alzheimer's.  That's how much of my time and attention Lewy-body dementia demanded.  I short-changed him because I couldn't not focus on her.  I spent fifteen years watching her die of this.  Fifteen years that I knew about.  It was churning away in her brain even before I became a caregiver.

I remember that there were days when she seemed fine, when the only sign that there was something wrong was that she couldn't remember things too well.  And sometimes I'd tell her a joke, usually the same one because she never remembered that I'd told it to her.  I'd say, "Mom, do you know why cats lick their own butts?" and she'd say, "No, I don't.  Why?"  And I'd say, "Because they can."  And every damn time she'd giggle a little and say, "Oh, you!"  Every time.  It got funnier with each telling.

What wasn't funny were the middle-of-the-night hallucinations, the tantrums, the spite and the anger.  What wasn't funny was the day she said to me, "I'm losing my mind, aren't I?"  And I lied.  I lied and kept on lying because I couldn't ever say to my mother, "Yes, you're losing your mind.  You're going to end up sitting and staring until you finally just stop."  I swear to you that if I could have stood between her and this thing that was eating her up I'd have done it.  I couldn't.

I did what I could to make things better.  I brought her a tray of snow when she couldn't go out, and watched her build a little snowman.  When she could go out, I pushed her around the block in her wheelchair.  Later, when she was in the nursing home, I brought her ice cream and took her  out to sit in the sun.  Most of the time she closed her eyes and didn't speak.  When she did talk, it was about the distant past.  She thought I was her mother.
 
 
One day I sat down with her at the nursing home -- this was after I'd started taking anti-depressants and had begun decompressing -- and apologized to her.  I had no hope of her understanding anything I was talking about.  She could rarely concentrate on what she was hearing, much less comprehend the meaning.  I told her that I was sorry I'd been short-tempered, and mean, that I hadn't understood things, that I hurt her feelings and said things that I didn't mean.  The whole time I was talking she was looking around aimlessly as if she saw things that I couldn't.  I very nearly stopped because it seemed so pointless, but I pressed on because it had to be said. It was the right thing to do.  When I finished she looked right at me which she hadn't done in... probably months, and said, "Thank you for that."  And then she was gone again, lost in that odd, narrow world she inhabited.
 
 

 

The day she died, I'd come to the nursing home for one of those meetings they ask you to attend where they tell you what they're doing and how the resident is responding, and honestly I knew it would be the last time I'd see her, but I didn't say so.  Then I went to her room and sat down with her.  She was restless; I hadn't seen her that active in years.  I held her hand and talked to her.  I talked for a long time and I said a lot of things that I needed to say to her.  Not apologies this time, other stuff.  She stopped moving around and she looked at me.  I don't know what she was seeing, but she grew calmer.  And then she closed her eyes.

I left the room to go have a little cry, and while I was gone she died.

Eleanor C. 1935

Mom was beautiful.  She didn't deserve the end she got, but none of us have a choice about that.   She was the finest woman I ever knew, and I will miss her every day of my life.

If there's someone you love, tell them.  Whenever you can, as often as you can.  You think there'll be time; you think tomorrow is soon enough.  It's not.  It's a lifetime of tomorrows, all of them missing the things that make today special.

 

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persimmonfrost: (monster)
{{Creator:Carlos Schwabe}}

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Meridian Sozu kills things. At least that's what she believes. For as long as she can remember, she's been a kind of miniature grim reaper, her path littered with the corpses of living creatures who have died in her presence. She is something of a pariah among other children her age, and understandably so, but even her parents seem to hold back around her. Only her baby brother accepts her completely and seems to love her unreservedly. On her sixteenth birthday, her world changes forever.

Meridian is a Fenestra. She doesn't kill, rather she is a kind of window. She facilitates the passage of souls into the afterlife. Unfortunately her parents, who have known this all along (Fenestras come from hereditary Fenestra lines.)have never told her what she is or that when she comes into her full power on her sixteenth birthday, she will have to leave them, perhaps forever, and be trained to do what she was born to do without it killing her.

I have to say that I was captivated by this story; in spite of the teenage protagonist and a storyline that remains a little simplistic, the book is still sophisticated enough to be enjoyed by adult readers. It's quite dark in many ways, a touch political, and it presents a mythology which meshes nicely with a number of spiritual beliefs. The story flows smoothly, making it fodder for a marathon read. I began it around midnight and, had I not had to get up early the next morning, I probably would have read straight through.

That doesn't mean I don't have some quibbles with it. I found the portraits of her family sketchy, and disappointing particularly in terms of how they dealt with Meridian. They let her go sixteen years thinking that she kills living things by her very presence, not just by not reassuring her that the constant parade of dead things is not her fault, but apparently by withholding the sort of physical contact Meridian craves. They keep her utterly ignorant of the fact that there are agents of dark forces who will try to kill her or worse. They never bother to tell her that one day they will have to give her up, perhaps forever. Instead, on the morning of her sixteenth birthday, knowing that these dark forces are getting closer, they still send her off to school with a promise that they'll explain everything when she gets home. You have to know that's not going to end well.

I really don't know why Kizer made the choices she did in terms of Meridian's parents, but they come across as ciphers at best and at worst, terrible parents without whom she is much better off. Unfortunately it also robs the book of some of its emotional impact. I have a suspicion that this is the first of a series of books about Meridian -- I hope I'm correct about this, but there's no indication either in the book's blurbs or that I've found on Kizer's website -- and I hope that if I'm right, Kizer will allow Meridian to deal with her upbringing at some point.

The story of Meridian's training with Auntie and Tens, and the situation in the town where she's been sent is still satisfying enough that I was willing to overlook any shortcomings in terms of characterization. Along with a decent coming-of-age story, Kizer gives us a Big Bad who is frightening, particularly in terms of the current state of world politics, and a sweet, if low-key, love story. Its conclusion works for me, which is the ultimate test of a story.

Meridian
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Tracy Rowan

August 2013

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