Not all journeys are fun, but there are many one cannot avoid. Especially at midlife. Saturday, June 22nd I lost my mother, she passed peacefully from this life. The last months have been filled with the fear and worry about her health, and making decisions, painful decisions. My mother had emphysema, and she had become very frail in the last year or so. We tried to make her wear oxygen 24 hours a day, but met with absolute resistance. The doctor suggested assisted living, and that request met with an adamant no. We brought in Home Health, and boy, did that piss her off! No, none of this journey was easy.
Not wanting to force her into Assisted Living, we hired Home Health, and popped in on her unexpectedly to see if she was wearing her oxygen. She finally did start to understand that oxygen made her feel better, but she would not wear it out of her apartment. Bingo and Poker Games were the highlight of her social life, and she refused to go to those events with oxygen. So stubborn!
The last two weeks of her life were tough…mom had pneumonia and was in the hospital. Of course, she wanted me to take her outside for a cigarette, and she told the cardiologist she did NOT want to quit smoking, thank you. At first we believed she might get better, but that hope soon gave out. Knowing, or sensing, that the end was near, I asked her sister to fly in, and my son as well. She was surrounded by family and those who loved her to the very end. She was almost 86 years old, and lived a full, eventful life. It is a good feeling to know that nothing was left unsaid, that everything was in good order. For anyone who knows my mother, they will appreciate this: 30 hours before she died I had her sitting up and playing Blackjack with my aunt and I!
When one does not have enough oxygen to the brain, one becomes forgetful, and personality can change. While trying to get her to wear her oxygen 3 weeks ago, I was informed by my mother that I was not right about everything, and when she died she would come back and haunt me. I have to smile at that, she could be a feisty little woman, and you know what? I hope she does come back to see me. Haunt away, mom! I’d love to see you again. Rest happily with Daddy and all your loved ones who have passed. But feel free to haunt me a little.