Monday, November 22, 2010

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

When I got home Carol told me how Dona had acted "strange" today and wouldn't let her take a walk (I actually knew this already because Dona called me to tell me Carol had decided to walk to get a new key made). So, Carol and I had a discussion on reasons Dona would worry about her and not the other people going for a walk. Here are the reasons I came up with:
People going for a non-worry-causing walk...
1. Don't start their walk right before it's supposed to get dark
2. Stay close to home
3. Don't bring enough documents with them to pass immigration or apply for a large loan
4. Don't have a history of trying to walk to non-existent banks
5. Aren't a petite woman walking alone
We had a laugh about it and I began making dinner. What did she want? She wasn't hungry. This is why she ended up eating a huge serving of potato salad and a tomato & grilled chicken sandwich AND two donuts.
Yea, today was good, but I thought yesterday was good, too. That is until she read the newspaper and then started to tell me to be careful with the phone and my computer because someone who said they were with Medicare called asking for my flight information for Wednesday and they've since been tapping our lines and our computers... She has an appointment with Dr. Bob on Wednesday.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2010

When I was at work today Cynthia texted me that Carol not only didn't want to go visit Tom, but she didn't want to take her medicine and didn't want lunch. Cynthia said that Carol's stomach was growling so she insisted Carol eat, but instead Carol tried to get her to leave. I suggested putting the McDonalds burger on a real plate instead of keeping it wrapped up, which she tried, but Carol took this time to go take a nap.
She's been acting strange all week and over obsessing about her keys which she (or I) will find, then she will hide from herself, then spend the entire next day looking for. This week she's gone over to Dona and Bill's at least twice to get assistance with getting her a new set. So, when I came home from work, I was not surprised when she greeted me crying because her keys were missing. I went through my usual explanation that it wasn't a huge deal, and that worrying incessantly about one material object would drive anyone nuts. That she needed to take care of herself, first and foremost. This led to me asking her what she had eaten today. She said she had eaten things here and there (mentioned a peanut butter sandwich), but that she didn't feel like eating because Tom was so sick. Something in me kind of snapped there. "Carol, Tom's fine. He's doing great, eating well, handling things better. YOU aren't doing well. You need to take care of yourself!" "I know. I know, but my keys..." "Alright," I interjected, "You've spent enough time worrying about your keys for today and not enough time eating a real meal." I threw the hamburger and fries Cynthia brought for her into the microwave and set a place for her. "How about you sit here and have dinner, and I'm going to try to find your keys, OK?" "But, you just got home, don't you need to eat dinner?" "I assure you I've eaten enough food for two."
I get half way through pulling everything out of the first shelf in her closet when she comes in and starts mumbling about how she might not have checked her purse. "Carol, did you finish your dinner?" "No, but I'm getting full. I just want to check my purse." "If you aren't going to take care of yourself, then I can't help you with your keys." I say walking to the kitchen. She follows and I stand there as she sits, then head back to her room. The rest of that shelf and another half of a shelf gets torn apart and put back together before she comes in again. Same mumbling, same response, another walk to the kitchen, and I'm back to work. A couple more times of this and finally we reach a compromise with her sitting in the bathroom eating her burger (and explaining how HORRIBLE it is to keep losing her keys), while I look. I get through the closet with no luck, but did find the garage opener hidden in a shopping bag, two lighters and 2 packs of cigarettes.
I try to decide where to start next, laundry/hallway or bedroom? Carol tells me it's ridiculous that she always loses her keys because she usually puts them in her shoes where she can find them. "That's the ridiculous part?" "Well, not in the open toes shoes."
I look through the piles and piles of mail on her bedroom desk with no luck, but did find the cool bracelets my mom got us. The back of her pendant has her specific number with Medic Alert, and says something about how she has a mental condition (I can't remember exactly how it's phrased). The back of my pendant says I'm a caregiver for, and her specific number. She kept looking at the back of hers and asking me what mine says because hers says something about her mental health. I just say mine has our address on it. We will see if she keeps it on. The clasp on it is pretty tricky, but they're really loose on our wrists. We might have to get them tightened.
Finally I find her original keys (with the electronic lock/unlock thingy) in a drawer with a bunch of old scrunchies. She wanted to hold them, but then went to slip them in her shorts pocket. "Carol, let me hold on to those until we find a better way to not lose them." "Yea, who knows how long that will be." "I promise you it will be a lot less long then the time it took us to find them today." "But, don't you work tomorrow? What if I need to go somewhere?" "Well, tomorrow is Friday so I'll probably get off work early, then we can go wherever you like. My vote is for tiramisu!"
Votes on what I should connect her keys to? Carol's idea was to get a peg board up next to the door we could both hang our keys on... We need a better idea than that. I think it was suggested I connect it to a big piece of wood, middle school style.

Monday, November 15, 2010

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2010

Today I got home from work and asked Carol if she wanted to join me for dinner. She said that she would because she had worked up an appetite from trying to find her keys. I told her I had a set and she asked to see them. So, I showed the keys to her, and she also insisted that I actual start the car with them to distinguish they weren't Grandpa's. After all this is settled, she says, "I also haven't been able to find Tommy anywhere." "Carol, he's over at Emeritus in Jensen Beach. You've visited him a handful of times there." "I know, I just miss him." So, we go to check out her medicine and get her all set on that. The problem with the patch these days is that she doesn't shower very often and so it wont stick to her back most days. I tell her she should shower, and she agrees, but always puts it off.
I got her to eat a dinner of pork chops and Hawaiian bread with orange juice. Throughout which she commented on how she missed my Grandpa despite how much of a pain in the butt he was, but how "that's just how it is now." I told her that Cynthia and her were going to visit him tomorrow.
If you hadn't gotten the update on her this weekend, here's what you missed: I was working from home Friday, so I saw her come and go on 3 short walks. Before I left for Joel's I got her set up with her meds, a big lunch and a bunch of easy to grab and eat foods. As told by Dona (the neighbor and Carol and Tom's friend), after I left Carol decided to go on another walk, this one heading with her purse and her big check book binder to the bank that no longer exists. Then she was planning on walking to the gas station to get cigarettes. On Saturday she was obsessed with finding her keys, to the point that she implored Bill (Dona's husband) to help her create a new key. My phone was dead for most the day on Saturday, so when I got home at 8, I had missed all the drama. Carol was already getting ready for bed.
Yesterday I opened all the windows and doors in the house for the perfect weather, and Carol and I went for a long walk. I let her lead the way so if I ever need to come looking for her, I now know the path she likes to take. Then we hung out for awhile, me reading, her fussing with the trees in the yard for awhile. Dona and Bill invited us to go over to Conche Joes on the Indian River a little later, and although Carol didn't talk very much, she didn't seem anxious at all. When we got home she was excited to eat some of her little birthday cake she insisted we buy on Thursday, something she hadn't yet touched, surprisingly.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2010

I wasn't surprised to see Carol up this morning, as she went to bed at 6:30 the night before. I had gotten home from work and told her I was going to make pork chops. When she didn't come out of her room as usual, I went to check on her and found her curled up sleeping in bed. This means that she didn't take her medicine yesterday--also meaning that to try to work at home today is to dodge having the same conversation over and over and barely getting anything done.
I figured that in her state we would be better off visiting Grandpa tomorrow and going grocery shopping today during my lunch break, so off we went. Somehow as I was rushing her to make a Windixie trip in under an hour, she managed to talk me into one of those little birthday cakes that have a 4 inch diameter. So, there's that.
Around 3 she started asking about her keys. I felt like I blew her off the other night which resulted in her calling Bill, so I took some time to finally locate her keys in the folds of towels in her closet. She said she was happy to have found her keys because she was going to visit Tom. I wasn't going to make her drive herself to Jensen Beach, so off we went.
The whole ride there she kept holding her head and maintaining a face close to crying. When she saw the big letters of Emeritus she said very seriously to me, "you know what Emeritus means, right?" "What?" I asked happy that the silence was broken with an intriguing fact. "It means the end." She looked at me pointedly. "Where did you hear that, that can't be right." "The people there told me." "Really." When we parked I got my phone out and within a minute found that the real definition was " One who is retired but retains an honorary title corresponding to that held immediately before retirement." I told her this, but her mind was preoccupied.
Grandpa was sitting on his bed watching MTV when we walked in, "Hey Sunshine," he said to me and warmly greeted Carol. The conversation ran smoothly until he started getting mad about being there. Who has Carol talked to? Can't she talk to Dr Bob? Every time I interjected to help her, he said something like, "I wasn't asking you." So, I resigned myself to occasionally interjecting to ask him to lower his voice or stop swearing. Carol wondered randomly into the other room, and I went after her to make sure she was OK. "I'm done" she says and starts cleaning up the non-existent mess in the other room. I went back and actually had a nice conversation with Grandpa for twenty minutes. I was aiming to wait until he was supposed to go to dinner before we left, but then he said out of the blue "are you shopping in the boys section these days?" Alright, time to head over to dinner. "Do you think I look OK? I don't have any money so I hope your paying," he say. "That's OK, you look fine," and Carol agrees. "Yea," he says, "I guess we all look a little rough." "Grandpa, I actually look nice. I straightened my hair!" I pitifully point out.
We get him all set up at his table all by himself (guess he hasn't made friends) and chatted a little bit longer. He asked if we were coming tomorrow and Carol said that we were (we are?). She said we would come by probably at the same time (we will?). This prompted him to tell us a half strung together story about how places like that place now have all sorts of visiting hours (OK, understandable), but he was reading in the paper about these people going around taking a (here he did the motion of a hammer until we filled in the word) to peoples heads...
On the ride home I tried breaking silence by pointing to the sky and saying that I thought I remembered that Bill's favorite color was the color the sky was on a clear day. "Looks a little grey," she said sadly.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2010

Cynthia got Carol to go to visit Tom today, but informed me that she was an emotional wreck about it. When I got home there were a group of neighbors standing outside with Carol wearing a purse. I guess she didn't know where she was heading, but she told me she had already gone on one walk today around the block, and just going for another, but realized it was getting dark so she stopped to talk to the neighbors. From what I got from Dona, it sounded like the crowd gathered because Carol was going out with her purse and no direction.
Today also marked the first day I've come home from work and the door wasn't locked.
So, we had some chicken quesidillas and talked about our days. She couldn't really tell me a lot about hers and I didn't want to pry if she truly had been an emotional wreck.
As I was heading off to my room to watch Glee, Carol asked if I had seen her keys. "No, but its too late to worry bout it now. We can talk about it tomorrow." "But, it is just HORRIBLE!" "Carol, it's really not." "Why does this keep happening?" "I don't know, but I look forward to figuring it out tomorrow."
Sometimes I worry about us girls staying here alone, but then I remember that we can't even find our valuables, making us a robbers worst nightmare.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2010

Today I asked Carol if she wanted to go see Tom and she said that she was going to wait until she got stronger--same excuse. I told her I was going for a walk, and that if she changed her mind, we could still go when I got back. At the last minute before I walked out the door I decided not to bring my keys after-all and left them on the dresser by the door. When I got back about an hour later from my walk down to the pier I asked her again and she said "No, I don't think so honey."
At many intervals throughout the afternoon she came to me saying she lost her keys and kept showing my this Ford key she had. I told her that the Ford key didn't go to her car and must have been from something older. After several sessions of looking around for her key everywhere imaginable, I just told her that keys are impossible to find when you're anxiously looking for them, and that I had a pair and it was not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. The last time she came to me about it at 7pm I asked her where she needed to go that she needed her key so badly right now, and she replied that she thought we were going to dinner. We have not made plans like this at all, in fact, as I reminded her, we had actually talked extensively about the wonderful looking chili that Dona brought over for us to have for dinner. I told her I was going to a movie, but got her set up with some dinner. I walked out to my car only to find that I did not have a key on my key chain with which to drive my car! Someone had actually taken the time to take my key (yes, Ford) off of my key chain. I walked in and asked Carol if I might see the contents of her pocket and possibly her purse. We finally located her purse jammed between her bed and her nightstand and (thankfully) easily found my key. "Who would do this?" She asked, "I don't have any need for your key." "I know, but you have a habit of this kind of stuff." "No, I don't." "I showed her what was under her pillow--two packs of cigarettes and a pile an inch high of mail (kid you not). I told her it was OK, and we found the key quickly, so no problems. Then, I rushed out the door to my movie.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2010

This morning I asked Carol if she wanted to go visit Tom, she said she was going to lay down for a little bit (10 AM), so I ran over to Walmart and got some things. After she got up and we had some peanut butter sandwiches and watermelon, I tried to get her to go see grandpa with me. She said no, flat out. "So you're going to make me go alone?" "Yes" "Any reason?" "I don't think I want to see him like that." "Well, he's going to be there for awhile. Are you never going to visit him again?" "I'll have to see." [long pause] "what if he misses you?" "Well, I have to live my life."
I figured I wasn't going to make any leeway with her, so I just went alone.
"Hi, Sunshine!" Grandpa greeted me from the tucked away room at the highest tower of this assisted living palace. My conversation with Grandpa was a lot like the one he had with John, just continuing to ask how he got where he was, then when I told him he wasn't doing well and was in the hospital and then either saying, "I don't remember that" or "well what the hell is this bullshit." The good thing was that whenever he started getting worked up, I would just look away and he would say, "I'm not mad at you. I just need someone to piss and moan to." Love it. I was hoping to just skip the whole conversation about Carol not coming with me, but the conversation kept steering that way. Where is she? Is she with her mother? She didn't sleep here last night. I haven't seen her in days. Is she OK? I told him that she is staying at their home in Port Saint Lucie (he seemed confused about where he had last lived) with me and simply had a headache and decided to lie down. "Well, she can have a headache HERE." "Can we go where she is now?" "Tell her I want her to come here... TODAY." I also offered to unpack the neat pile of boxes in the corner (that my mom had already unpacked), but he insisted it would be a waste to do so, because "they're" moving out to Carol's mom's house tomorrow. I told him tomorrow was Sunday--"The day after that then."
When I got home Carol asked me how my "day...morning?" was. I said it was fine, and that I went to go visit my Grandpa. "Oh, you went went there with out me?" "Yes, you said you didn't want to go." She nodded slowly, concentrating on the floor. "I just need to get my strength up." "Well, he sounded like he was really worried about you and missed you." To that she nodded again and turned to her room and shut the door. Didn't come out until I started making Lasagna a little while later.

Friday, November 5, 2010

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2010

Today when I got home Carol asked me twice how my day was and commented on how it was great that I got two days off for the weekend. I thought this was pretty good since she told Dona (the neighbor who came back to town yesterday) that I worked at a pet store... When I asked her what she wanted to eat she said we should make use of the left-overs. This in mind I got her to eat the most protein/fat rich left-over in the fridge, eggs and sausage. She asked, "now, where is Tom?" I told her he was at Emeritis in Jensen Beach. I told her he wasn't in the hospital, just to clarify he wasn't at Lawnwood, where she told Dona he was the day before. Carol asked if I could tell on that thing (my laptop) if he was doing OK and also commented that she was worried about him. I reminded her that she was going to go visit him yesterday, but told Cynthia that she didn't want to. "Yea," she explained, "I just don't want to see him like that." "He's going to be there for awhile," I said. She just solemnly nodded her head and went back to her meal.
Later we went to check her medicine, but the patches were gone from the box. I looked everywhere for them, and finally found them hidden under some towels in her closet. "Well, what the heck is going on?" she exclaimed. So many replies were going through my head, but I settled on, "alright, now that we found them, let's get you set up with a new one." Then I went to go work out. When I got back she was in her room.
I'm planning on visiting Tom tomorrow, so we will see if I can get her to come with me...

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2010

Carol was up some of the night last night, but didn't manage to eat anything of substance in that time. When I left work I also pondered over why the fridge had been pulled away from the wall in the middle of the night. A little early morning/late night kitchen cleaning?
Got home from work and Carol was no where to be found, but there was one of her "stews" on the stove. It was made with my left over chicken, so I know she didn't eat very much, if any by how meager the portion of chicken I left in there. When I was looking in the fridge for a more appetizing dinner she came in from the back door. I asked her what she wanted to eat and she said she wasn't hungry. This is when I decided I should say something, like, "you need some protein and vegetables in your system, will you be eating some of the stew you made?" and "I'm worried about you," and "your heart and brain can't function on only 300 calories a day in just sugar." She replied that it was nice for me to worry but she wasn't doing OK. I made a huge thing of nachos and although she didn't want her own plate, she did pick off mine. Is Mexican food the key here?
A bit ago I tentatively came in to her room where she had decided she needed to go lay down earlier, and I asked if she wanted me to put away her stew for her. I could just go ahead and throw it away, but I wanted to make sure she took her medicine. She did, but missed taking her patch. I set her up and made her promise she'd eat dinner....which she did...barely.
Between Cynthia and I, we will get her to eat a whole bunch tomorrow...hopefully.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2010

After a long weekend of hanging out with John (although he got out of town last Friday) and Logan, going on the boat, boogie boarding on the beach, checking out the Jensen bar scene, relaxing by the pool, eating Cuban food at the most famous Cuban restaurant in Little Havana, Miami, and being treated to the most expensive Halloween night out (cover was $30... PER PERSON at the Mansion in South Beach, Miami), I was forced to drive my boyfriend back to the airport this morning and accept that the rest of the day would be spent in my cubicle...and trying to get Carol to eat dinner. While I was at work Cynthia brought Carol to visit Tom and asked if I would like her to bring over her trailer some time to get the rest of the stuff to fill his new bachelor pad. Up until now I have been able to pass the task of visiting my grandfather off without me ever getting involved, so I haven't seen the place. Thoughts on moving more furniture in...people who have been there...? You guys didn't inform me you got him set up in a palace. The way Cynthia was talking about the place, I thought she might plan on moving her whole family in there. Let me know.
Cynthia says that Tom seems really lost and wanted to know when he got to go home, but didn't seem angry or on edge about it. Carol was doing really well with Cynthia from what I saw, which was about ten minutes when they got home at 6:30, but she hasn't been consistent with her eating. On Sunday Logan made Mahi Mahi and chicken tacos and Carol kept grabbing more and more, but yesterday we asked her if she wanted tai food (described finally by Logan as healthy lo mien), but she said she'd be fine with left-overs (to the word "healthy" she revolted). She pulled out two plates of left-overs, tacos and her KFC pop-corn chicken from Sunday, but when we got back I saw that she just combined the two plates into a higher stacked plate and put it back in the fridge. She didn't come out again. After Cynthia left today she asked if I was hungry, I said yes, thinking we would figure out dinner together, but she just handed me a cheeseburger from McDonald's that I'm sure Cynthia bought for her. I told her that it was her burger and I was in the mood for a salad anywho. She didn't think she was hungry and went to her room and hasn't come out in about 3 hours. As far as I can tell, she's eaten Halloween candy all day, and not much of it. Which reminds me to also tell you that she hasn't been acting panicked or crying, except on Sunday (Halloween) when a child came to the door and she didn't have candy to give him (how this is possible...?) and she told me that his dad got "really mad at her." I told her that the child will probably receive tons more candy and we can just go to the store and get more for the children that come later and she told me through sobs that she thinks of ALL the kids as her kids...OK. So we ran over to the gas station to grab some candy to get us through until Logan and I went to get groceries later, and she was fine. Then when we finally did go get groceries I got a little apprehensive myself because there were LOTS of kids in the neighborhood. More than our trivial about of gas candy could supply. I rushed Logan through his fish and salsa, etc purchases, loaded candy in the cart and we raced home. I saw the candy was no longer near the door and so I asked Carol how it was going. She told me that some kids came and she didn't have candy (seemed way more relaxed about it) and we told her we now had plenty! Waves of kids came to the door all night-I don't think I've ever been the sole candy-hander-out person before-but later on I looked in the trash to find wrappers of the gas station candy in the trash...

Pinapple Fest in Jensen Beach this weekend! So, if anyone knows of any children around the age of 4 and 5 who like carnivals and live in Florida, you should let them know about it. Big bonus if the parents' names both start with J and they want to take the boat out with their awesome neice!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Guest Post From John

Moving Day.


I don’t know why Jean was so wound up. It’s nice and peaceful here. We passed in the airport, I saw someone skipping and doing cartwheels in the middle of the airport. Odd I thought, even odder to be Jean. We (she) talked (I listened and took notes.) She left me with a 2 inch binder full of documents, copious notes, and a 20+ item todo list. No worries I got all week...Plus she really did all the hard work.


So moving day was scheduled for Tuesday. Tom was due in sometime, no one could really pinpoint. I guess Emeritus time is like Jamaica time. It happens when it happens. I decided to visit early to knock a couple items off the list and survey the land.


Emeritus is a national long term assisted care provider. The facility itself is rather nice. It’s in Jensen Beach, across the road from the Indian River. From Tom’s window, if you look though the palm trees, you can see the water. The downside is that this a special memory care unit, specializing in Alzheimer’s care. Which means the ‘inmates’ are locked in to prevent them from wondering off. After conversing with a few of the residents, physically wondering off was certainly a possibility, mentally wondering was ongoing. I’m not sure which land some may have visiting. But as is their motto at Emeritus, ‘Every day is a new journey.’


Upon entering the ‘unit’ (basically the 3rd floor), I observe the daily news and story time. This is where John the memory unit director, relays the daily news and stories of the day. All the mobile residents were in attendance circled around a couple of tables. Thinking this was poker time, I asked what the ante was, and I hope it’s not strip poker (cause the old gals had way more clothes on than I.)


The story of the moment was about a gator that was in someone’s yard. I had heard that earlier in the day, but I expressed my surprise anyway. To this Abby #1 and #2 both expressed great interest that I was involved somehow.

Abby #1 & #2: “Did you see it?”

John: “Oh Yes, it was enormous”

Abby #1: “How big?”

John: Pointing from one wall to the other. “Big as a boat.”

Abby #2: “Really”

John: “Oh Yes, I was afraid to get out of my car.”


Oh, what stories we can tell at the memory unit. The rest of the visit fairly uneventful. I went home afterwards to rest up for the 3 o’clock visit. Knowing Tom would probably be there and Carol would be along.


Honestly I don’t know what to expect when I see Tom. But I’m guessing that he will want to go home, and that’s about what we got. We arrive to find him in his chair (he doesn’t realize that it’s his chair, even though the cushions are molded to his butt.) He’s smelly, unshaven, and confused. Carol is good with him, explaining five or ten times what happened to get him here. She helps him change clothes, cause he really needed too.


Sidenote: It took me a while to figure out why he had a latex glove sticking out of his pocket. It wasn’t in his pocket, but tied around two or three belt loops acting as a de-facto hospital belt. Who thinks of these things?


Jean did an awesome job furnishing his room with his clothes, chair, bed etc.. But Carol and I had our best laugh after changing him. For some reason he thought that long pants should be the outfit of the day, so we tried to outfit him with the only pair of long jeans in the dresser. We were complexed, because they were too small, which is odd because all of his clothes are normally 3 sizes too big. Carol eventually realized that maybe the pants were hers, but also surprised that they almost fit him.


While changing again, I excused myself, because really... who wants to see that? So while I was waiting in the commons area, outside of Tom’s room, Abby #3 walks by. She waltzes straight into Tom’s room like she belongs there. I have no idea what happened next, but about a minute later, she came out and then took a chair across from me in the commons. I study her, not really knowing what to say. About a minute of silence later, she looks at me and states, “Well it looks like you can handle this area, I’ll leave it under your control.” And then further, “I need to go home and take care of the kids.” My reply, “I, I mamm, got it covered.”


The rest of the day, mostly uneventful. We visited about an hour and a half. At around 5pm, we escorted him to dinner and made our get-away. Moving day complete.


Day 2.


Same people, different personalities. I knew Carol didn’t put on a new patch yesterday, but didn’t push her on it. It was a potentially explosive day and this mine field is new to me. However she was eating well and generally quite sociable. Today was a different story. She didn’t want to eat and when it came time to visit Tom, she was very apprehensive, with heavy sighs and breathing. I thought she may start hyperventilating. I gave her an option of not visiting Tom, saying that Emeritus suggested that we don’t visit the first two weeks, so Tom can adjust to the surroundings (they did indeed suggest this.) But she said that it was her “job” and that she needed to do what she needed to do. She attempted to bring back the same soiled cloth that we brought home yesterday. Not remembering that we did that.


When we arrived, Carol didn’t want to go in at first but did anyway. Tom was more combative today. Wanting to know, “where the hell have you been?” So in general more like Tom. Carol too was ready to fire back. I thought maybe we would have MMA battle. New day, new journey.


At first I remained silent, mostly because I feared to tread in unknown waters, secondly because I couldn’t not watch. Eventually, I did start to steer the conversation to calm waters. Carol decided that she needed a break and bounced from the room. John the director must have saw Carol in the commons area, so he came to visit. Tom reran the same conversation past him. To which I saw John start to get flustered. Once again steering the boat back to calmer waters.


The man has a single focus. I’m used to repeat conversations with Tom, but generally, the topics switch between Jim, work, where am I living, where’s my hair, etc... Not now, one and only one topic. I can understand why the current topic is stuck, but holy cow, it necessitates patience.


Tom: What is this place?

John: It’s a assisted care facility.

Tom: What?

John: It’s kinda of in between a hospital and home.

Tom: Why am I here?

John: Because you had some health issues a week ago.

Tom: Really?

John: Yes, you were in the hospital for a week.

Tom: Honest to God, I don’t remember a thing.

John: Yes, I know. That’s why you are here.

Tom: If you weren’t telling me this, I would think that I’ve gone bonkers. (I bit my tongue on the obvious comeback here)

John: Yes, I know.

Tom: When will I get out of here?

John: When you get better.


And so on and on. Rinse and repeat. I stop counting the times, but somewhere beyond a dozen time we had this conversation. Eventually it dawned on me, I was having a Groundhogs Day moment. Bill Murray keeps repeating the same day, making adjustment along the way to improve the outcome. I was doing the same with Tom’s conversation. I was fine tuning the replies to avoid the pitfalls. Example, steer clear of the doctor topic:


Tom: Who’s keeping me here?

John: The doctors will decide when you are healthy enough to go home.

Tom: Which doctor?

Carol: Doctor So and So

Tom: Agitated. I’ve never even seen him! How can he make decisions about me!


And so it went on and on....


Eventually dinner time came. We walked him to the dining section and sat him with 2 old-timers, who may or may not have been conscious, but seemed harmless. Maybe their were on a far away journey....



JB


Saturday, October 23, 2010

Guest Post from Mom
I thought I'd give Erika a break and post a blog. I got to Florida on Monday night. Tuesday seems so long ago but I drove to the other side of Florida to get my brother Joel so we could make decisions together with Carol. What seemed obvious to me and maybe anyone reading this blog, is that my Dad can no longer be taken care of in his home. Kind words and patience, which Carol had more of than most of us, cannot keep him from being frustrated and confused, irritable and frightening. Fortunately, I think, the hospital and his doctors agree. I hope our family does too.
They gave us a list of places to look at and while Carol and Joel went to visit a couple of them on Wednesday, I rummaged through the pile of bills, flyer's and notes that were on Carol's desk to see what, besides the water bill, I had missed since she just stacks them and doesn't let anyone see them. I looked on the desk, in the desk, under the desk and under her pillow (where we last found her car keys). Each advertisement for a pizza joint was just as lovingly attended to as the final notice for payment of "HOUSE INSURANCE". Just one of the many details to attend to this week.
Joel and Carol came back from there trip just as Erika and I got back from a seminar about how to apply for aid and assistance benefits from the veterans administration. They are depressed about the homes they visited but Erika and I were pretty pumped up about the number of euphemism that one man could use when talking about the needs of our "loved ones". We all had a little wine which seemed to help. That and that fact that we got a new list of places to visit.
Joel and I went a visiting on Thursday and found two places that we thought were pretty good. Of course I liked one and Joel liked the other better. Now we wait so they can interview Tom and see if they think he will fit into their establishment. Joel goes home and Carol and I go shopping for food. Do you know how many kinds of cookies there are in Publix? I do now. Toll House are the preferred favorite. Erika and I go shopping for baby presents and little girl birthday presents---- spent too much money. I think because it felt so good to do something life affirming.
Friday Carol and I went to both the homes that Joel and I had agreed were ok. She sided with Joel and both places were willing to take Tom. So we are signing him up for a lovely place where he can see the ocean from his room. He can't move in until Saturday so that will give us some time to furnish the place. I went to the lawyer on Friday afternoon after taking Carol home. Now all I have to do is find more documents, including a marriage certificate for Tom and MY Mom which should be interesting since I can't ask her and she eloped AND I don't know when exactly or where exactly they were married. The veterans administration certainly knows how to keep their money by making it difficult for you to access. Here's my advice to anyone ------ Preplan for your own demise and do not make your children and "loved ones" hunt for documents under your bed.
Today we (Carol and I) bought Tom a bed and have begun discussing what of his things we should take to his new place. He looks terribly frail and right now it would be hard to believe that he could frighten anyone. Carol is handling it with far more grace than I could hope for but we are helping her to put her husband in a home-- one he's not going to come out of. It's #$&^ing sad.
Good news, John is coming on Monday so we can tag team and Erika and Carol will have some help getting Dad settled. I will go home on Monday to my "real job".

Monday, October 18, 2010

MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2010

Grandpa was upset about his car and saying someone "stole it," then talking to my mom, calming down, then getting worked up again for pretty much the whole weekend straight. On Saturday I decided I had had enough and went to visit Joel and his family on the gulf coast (3 hours away) for the night. I got Tom and Carol fed a big lunch and got their medicine in them, packed a bag and walked out the door as Grandpa continued to shout at me.
Going to visit Joel's family was just what I needed. Their new home is nice and open with a pool screened in the back, and located in good location between cities and the beach. I went from being told to get out of Tom's home and missing hugs, to feeling like I belonged, could relax and barely had a moment where the kids weren't giving tons of affection. A big breakfast on Sunday and we were off to Manesota (like Minnesota!) Beach. But, later on Sunday I had to go home to make sure the Grandparents had eaten all day and had taken their medicine, so I headed home reluctantly.
I knew Grandpa hadn't calmed down when Bill told me that he had been calling him all day. I walked into the house through the back door because I had been locked out of the screen entrance in the front. Grandpa was on the phone with my mom talking about his car, and Carol asked me, "Where did you come from?" So, I told her that the front screen door was locked, and can she please try not to do that anymore. I swear I didn't say this in a mean way, but she started crying and saying that she didn't mean it. She must have been yelled at a lot since I left. I calmed her down telling her that I knew she didn't mean to and it wasn't a big deal.
Back to Grandpa, Kenny and my mom had decided to lie and tell him that it would cost $2,500 to fix. After showing him a map of where his car was on the computer, and more answers from my mom, they decided it would be best if they had it towed (unfixed) back to the house, and wait until Bill came down to try and fix it for cheaper. I wrote him a letter explaining all this, and even drew a little map of where his car is. He said thank you for doing all that, and seemed generally calmed down. I took this time to start getting ready for bed. Right when I'm about to fall asleep, Carol knocks on the door saying I needed to answer some questions Grandpa has. So, we stood in their bedroom with him in his boxers as I continuously explained the situation with his car. Finally I located the note I had written him and read it to him. I told Carol I had to go to bed because I had to work the next morning and she said she could understand because she had to as well (she had even written PGA on the calendar). I told her that she was just going to have to keep referring him back to that note, and fell asleep exhausted.
At about 3am I heard a forceful knock on my bedroom door. So I groggily said, "What?" to which the reply was "it's the police" WHAT?! I came out and he explained that Grandpa had hit Carol (was very vague) and referred me to some pamphlets on domestics abuse that had been placed on the counter. He said that they had to hold my Grandpa for awhile, but decided to take him to a mental health facility instead of jail. They had also debated for about 20 minutes deciding if they should take Carol to the hospital or not, but since she was still breathing heavily after all that time, they decided it was for the best. Yes, I slept through all of this. The police officer was the very last one to leave and was going to lock up the house, but noticed my door shut and decided to "make sure".
So I get to the right hospital and find my way to Carol who looks incredibly small in all the hospital blankets. I talk to the doctor, I put my mom on the phone with the doctor, and a few nurses gush at how sweet my grandma is. Since she left the house without her shoes, purse and only in her night robe, we walk out of the hospital with her wrapped in hospital blankets and shuffling in hospital socks. The nurses assure me she doesn't have these things, but she keeps asking where they are, even at one point telling me that we should find Tom in the hospital because he probably has her stuff. I tell her that Tom isn't in the same hospital and she peers at me confused. I get her home at a little before 5AM and explain the importance of getting some rest. I'm shocked she doesn't go straight to bed with all the relaxers they gave her. She knocks on my door within ten minutes and shows me her cell phone and her necklace which she thinks one of the police officers left at the house, adding that we should "put it somewhere where the kids can't get to it." I walk her to her room and tell her we will figure it out in the morning.
I went to work this morning, and when I get home at 3pm to check on her, she's still sleeping. When she wakes up we have some food and the doctor in charge of Tom calls to hear what happens. I find myself reminding her of things to tell the person because she starts out being like, "Oh, he was stressed this week...he gave me a kind of hurtful love push..." Then I get on the phone with the doctor to explain Tom's behavior since I've lived here, and give her my mom's number who she also talked to. She seemed like she was really understanding and helpful. Even explaining that it is common for people who are losing control to act out in these ways.
Otherwise, my mom is coming into town tonight (I leave for Palm Beach in about an hour) and Carol is kind of lost still. When I went to the bank and came home she asked me where Tom was. I reminded her that he is going to be gone for a few days and we need to concentrate on her being healthy and SAFE. She says it's too quite and keeps saying how it's a good think MauMau is around so it's not so lonely. Hopefully having my mom around will liven the house up some.
She just came in and asked where Grandpa is again. She says she really wants to make sure he's OK. We went from an angry house to a very sad house.

Friday, October 15, 2010

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2010

I had to go through the back porch door when I got home from work because the screen door in the front was locked. In the kitchen Grandpa had a phone book in his lap and asked why I was coming in so much later than usual. I reminded him that I was actually an hour earlier than usual, but maybe he was thinking about Cynthia. Why did he have the phone book in his lap? On Wednesday he decided that since his car wasn't working (Bill took a fuse or something out which I have) that he would have it towed to a shop. Not only does he not remember what shop it got towed to, but for the past few days he has been pretty sure Carol and/or I took his car somewhere behind his back, i.e. "NO ONE TELLS ME ANYTHING!" He's calmed down in the past few days, even telling my mom yesterday "Everything is fine here. My car's being repaired and it should be ready tomorrow," but the search continues. Perhaps it's better wherever it is and with whatever idiot towed a car for a man who clearly couldn't make that decision. I wonder how many places he had to call before someone said, "Yea, you can't have a normal conversation for 5 minutes, but yea, let's tow your car." So anyway, I ask Grandpa where Carol is and he says he doesn't know but she took the little car. By the looks of Grandpa, I'm guessing he was yelling at her about the car and she escaped (on Wednesday it got so bad me and Carol took a 2 hour dinner at Olive Garden). He said he had just eaten a sandwich so I gave him his medicine and took a cue from Carol and headed out to a yoga class.
When I got back Grandpa greeted me at the door in his boxers asking, "Are you finally home?" Then looked taken aback when he realized it was me. "I sure am, miss me?" I answered anyway. I headed towards the kitchen and he said, "if you find Carol will you tell her to come into the bedroom as soon as possible?" Uh? "I'm in the kitchen!" Carol sang from the kitchen. So Grandpa decided to come to the kitchen in his boxers to confront Carol with the important thing he needed to talk to her about, "Do you have a light?"
Grandpa shuffled off to his room and Carol said, "Well, yea, like I was saying, I had a good day." Uh, when did we start this conversation? This is the first thing she's said to me today. I play along as I look for dinner and nonchalantly ask her where she was when I got home. She said no where special, then said not too far from here. I'm pretty sure she couldn't remember. When I opened the fridge I noticed a bottle of wine that was 1/4 full and definitely wasn't there Wednesday night. I know because I had to tear apart the fridge on Wednesday trying to find all the water in there to brush my teeth, etc, as the water was shut off until Thursday afternoon. Maybe it would be a better situation if I didn't remember all of these things.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2010

Woke up this morning at 5:48am to Carol hovering over me. "Holy shit," I say. "What's the matter?" she asks. "I'm sleeping. Let me sleep. Please shut the door on your way out. I need to sleep," I say in a high pitched, wtf/terrified way. After tossing and turning for about an hour I finally wake up and get ready for work. I walk into the kitchen to get my breakfast to go. No, "good morning"'s were interchanged. As I'm about to walk out I can't help but ask, "So, what were you doing in my room this morning?" "I heard something and came in to see if something was wrong." "OK," and with that I was out the door.
There isn't a lot to say about yesterday because I simply did not come home from the time that the car rental place picked me up at about 8:45am (an hour late) until 10:45pm (after work, working out and a movie). I told Cynthia, "hope you can make sure they take their medicine while you're there, because I'm not messing with them AT ALL today."
Why? Well, if you read Bill's post on Bultman.com, then you have a good portion of the story. When I got home Grandpa and Carol were in the garage looking at his car so I assumed they tried to drive it and Bill's plan to disable it worked. Grandpa looked pissed as he directed the car into the garage space. Never mind the fact that I can park a car in a garage on my own. It took me a second to get the bag of laundry detergent and paper towels I bought that day out of the back and by the time I turned forward, Carol opened my door and asked me if everything was alright. "Yes, except Grandpa looks like he's ready to kill me." She started mumbling about how a long time ago she realized she just needed to let his anger slide off her back... right. Grandpa was guarding the door to the house and demanded the keys. I said I had to set things down and that I needed the keys. I manage to get by him, but he yelled at me the whole way in to the kitchen. He wants to know why I took his car. He wants to (loudly) inform me that no one asked HIM if I could take that car (we have a lot). He says he needs the "little" car because the big one doesn't work and something about getting the neighbor over to look it over. I escaped to my room to see if Bill left me the pieces to put it together, but realized if I went to the garage I would surely be caught in the act of putting it together and yelled at even more. I suddenly felt trapped. It was getting dark outside so I didn't feel safe really walking anywhere by myself and if I took Carol's car I was surely doomed when I got home. I decide that I would have better luck walking in the dark then staying the rest of the evening with Grandpa so I go to the kitchen where he sat fuming (not smoking so I knew he was mad) to get everything taken care of health wise before I potentially ran away and never came back.
I ask him if he had had dinner and he starts yelling about how they already ate and he's not a decrepit who can't make his own god-damn dinner. So I give him his medicine and he explodes on how he doesn't need medicine. I try to rationalize, but this only gets him angrier until he says "get the fuck out of my house." I say "fine", grab Carol's keys and go. While I'm at the gym Bill talks to him telling him something like "this type of abuse is unacceptable and we're taking you to a home straight away if this behavior continues." and my mom reserves me the lovely rental vehicle I am driving now (a Ford Focus ironically). I don't really want to go home, but I'm encouraged by Bill's voicemail, plus I brought nothing with me except keys and my license.
When I get home I take a shower and I go to the kitchen to make dinner (I hadn't eaten in 9 hours) and Carol comes in to tell me that she needs the keys to her car and she'll just drive me when I need to go somewhere. I tell her that she has keys to her car and I probably wont need to drive her car anymore, but I might need to early in the AM for work and she wont be up. "Remember I told you those are my only keys to that car," she says like I am 5. "Carol, you drove your car last night, so I'm sure that isn't true," because she did, in fact, take her car for a drive at 2am early Monday morning. "No, I didn't" she says, and I'm literally shaking from head to foot because I'm so hungry and angry and sick of just having to internalize all of it. "I am not talking about it right now, I'm going to eat dinner in peace." I put my foot down. "Fine," she stomps off.
I'm looking into the freezer unable to concentrate on what I want to eat when I hear the distinct sound of Grandpa shuffling towards the kitchen, so I run to my room and lock the door like I really am 5. This doesn't help because then he's screaming at me from outside my door to give him back his car (WHAT?!) and I am afraid to open the door because he sounds so angry. Which means I'm basically locked in my room. I call my mom to have her call him so he backs off. So, then I'm curled next to my door trying to hear their conversation which starts off with him yelling at her that he's not yelling at me, telling her that he wasn't told I was going to take his car, then him asking her when I'm going to leave. Apparently he also said this nice line, "I don't really like being taken care of." and, to this I agree with my Mom who says, "No shit".
When he gets off the phone with her and I get ON the phone with her, I hear him quietly knock on my door, "Uh, can you come move the car into the garage?" He's so polite and calm I tell my Mom astonished, but he started losing patience in the 20 seconds that I didn't immediately open the door because he asks again in his normal tone.
So he has me guide the car into the garage under his stern dictation and then follows me back to the kitchen where I get to work on nachos because it's the easiest thing I can think of. Here we have this conversation over and over, "do you have the keys to my car?" "I need 20 minutes to eat." "well, do you work tomorrow?" "I need 20 minutes to eat peacefully." "You really had to call your mom?" "She's worried about me." "When you're done will you put the car in the garage?" "We just did, you can go check." [He goes and checks and comes back] "Do you know anything about my car not working?" "I need 20 minutes to eat dinner." By the 5th time we have the same conversation his voice is angry and menacing again. As I'm putting away my plate, he walks over to me and starts getting in my face about getting out of his house and I'm actually scared of this old man so I'm practically cowering and so he asks "what the fucks the matter with you" and I admit that I'm afraid that he's going to hit me. To which he announces is a "great idea."
Wish me luck.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2010

For updates on the weekend here at casa loco, please see Bill's posts at www.bultman.com. Also, scroll down to see William in his school's production of Alice in Wondertime if you haven't. We might have a thespain on our hands! I'm also told Ginny made quite a few costumes in it. If she wasn't going to Mexico next week I might be inclined to beg her to create my costume for me and Logan's Halloween trip to Miami.

For now we are off to... well, anywhere there isn't a haze of smoke. Happy 10.10.10!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2010

Today I got home at 7:30 and Carol was sleeping (she hadn't taken her meds) and Grandpa exclaimed when I brought him his meds, "Oh, I forgot you were stopping over tonight." Yup, just stopping over. I put Carol's meds (patch clearly marked 10/5 on top of pill container) on her bathroom counter. Hopefully she will wake up and take them, but she's been up worrying most of the night for the past two nights, so the sleep might be more benifitial then the medicine. Source of her extreme all night anxiety? I got into a smaller car crash on Sunday (not to be out-done by the Joel Bultman clan) and am driving her car until my is fixed. She's so stressed about it in fact, that after giving me a key later Sunday night (after some convincing from Bill and my mom), she went and moved her car to the neighbor's house. When I left for work yesterday morning, I asked her where her car was and she asked why I needed to know. Did I needed her to move it so I could get my car out. I reminded her that I was going to drive her car to work, and she said that she didn't think that was a good idea. Can she drive me (an hour there and back two times everyday?). Finally I spotted her car and took off towards it.
She had stayed up all night going through her bills so when Cynthia came yesterday to take Tom to his vet's appointment, Carol was short with her. Carol also kept saying that someone had messed with her check book. I asked Cynthia if Tom was at least in a good mood, and she said he was. I think that depression medicine is working. It seems like Carol is the one that starts arguements with him now, like, "I told you to turn off the lights when you left the bathroom." It's certainly a different world then the one I first arrived at.
And I know it's not my news to tell, but I can't help it. Today Beth had a precious boy, Wyatt Robert Hagstrom, 7oz 20 inches. He's both healthy and gorgeous!

Saturday, October 2, 2010

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2010

This morning I went to the grocery store before they got up, but I knew they were awake when I got home because I was locked out. Not just from the front door that I have a key to, but to the screen door as well. I walked around the house with arms full of groceries to the back door where Grandpa got up from his chair to let me in. "Now, what the hell?" he said. "Carol locked me out." "Yea, she does that." Of course, having Grandpa in the kitchen when I put away groceries means that I get berated for buying too much. It's like a race to put everything away before my sanity gives in. Then, we had a breakfast of banana nut muffins and strawberries.
I went to the doctor in Palm Beach today, but not just any doctor, a Chinese herbalist and acupuncture specialist type doctor, Dr. Lin. No typical doctor here takes Health Partners Insurance, so I gave her a try, but it was kind of odd. She asked me all about myself and my health while examining my tongue and checking my pulse by hand. Then she took me to a room where she put a needle in the top of my head, 2 in each of my arms, my wrists, 2 in my knees and 2 in my feet. After twenty minutes of feeling like my body was falling asleep, she came back in and told me all the things I can no longer eat in order to get better, things like papaya, watermelon, cold drinks (DIET COKE?), salad (in excesses), red meat, spicy foods and cinnamon. She was especially concerned about the cinnamon situation repeating it sternly to me several times with her thick accent. Then her assistant mixed me up 32g of herbs/vitamins/weird dirt colored powder to drink like tea 3 times a day, and I was good to go. Since I was in Palm Beach anyway, I also stopped at the Garden Mall for some new age therapy.
When I got home I realized that breakfast never really ended, because 4 muffins (I kid you not these things weren't little), all the strawberries, 5 cake cookies (the ones with yellow frosting and sprinkles) and a handful of fun size candy bars were gone. To top it all off Grandpa was sitting at the counter spooning fudge brownie ice ream onto one of the muffins to eat. When he left the kitchen he put away the ice cream in the fridge again. But, I didn't mind much that there are now crumbs in the melted Kemps, as my medicine woman doesn't want me to eat ice cream either.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2010

At 4am MauMau insisted that I crack the bedroom door open. At 5am I woke up with a light piercing my eyes through the wide open door from the kitchen. Carol was at the end of my bed petting MauMau. I said something like "wahtuudohngheh?" She said something like "Sweetie, I didn't understand you, what?" and I said, "I'm SLEEPING" so she left. I then proceeded to have a very odd dream for the remaining 2 hours of sleep.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2010

Came home in the pouring rain to find Tom and Carol on the porch exclaiming how beautiful the storm was. We had a dinner of breakfast sandwiches (his choice) and cheesy potatoes and broccoli. The vegetables were the kind that you put in the microwave for ten minutes, which really wasn't a task worth doing because every minute (literally) Grandpa commented on how I was keeping it in for too long, etc. All these comments were said under a stern glare like I've never come in came in contact with a microwave before. See, here, this is a new model mi-cro-wave. Works pretty well. Don't have to put it in for that long.
Over dinner Tom had a strange fascination with Carol's jewelry. He kept continuously pointing it out, i.e. "you have 4 gold rings on...all your jewelry is gold." Good news: he could correctly identify which pieces he had given her. Bad news: He said she had 3 necklaces on which confused us until we realized he was counting bracelets as necklaces. Actually, maybe he never knew the difference?

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2010

In case anyone was holding their breathe (or waiting for their parents in law to show up at their doorstep in Colorado), Tom and Carol didn't go to their doctor's appointment. It was raining out and so when Cynthia showed up Carol told her they shouldn't go. Cynthia is bringing them to get blood work done Thursday and a new doctor's appointment will be set for next week.
When I got home I couldn't help but ask Carol, "did you get to your doctor's appointment today?" "There was no doctors appointment today," she replied, "there's nothing on the calender." "Really?" I say, and we go to look. "I don't know what you're talking about sweetie, there isn't anything on here. Are you feeling OK?" All I can think is that this has to be karma for calling her out. I pointed out where she scribbled out all the information about the appointment in pen, which triggered her to tell an elaborate lie about how she had called Dr Bob this morning and they had NO RECORD of any appointment ever being made. "Something really weird is going on here," she concluded. I really should have just left it be because then I could have saved myself from the overwhelming need to shake her saying "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT?!"
Grandpa hasn't come out of his lair since arrived home.

Monday, September 27, 2010

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010

I was just pulling into the driveway when my friend Kathryn called, so I chatted with her on the front porch before going in. Carol heard me and opened the door to "check" it was me. Then I saw her sillouette in the window hovering for a while as I continued my conversation. When I came in Grandpa was sitting in the kitchen like he was waiting for me. I heated up some left-over tator-tot-hotdish, but Carol was no where to be found. Grandpa and I talked about my work over the food, and he asked, "did you make this?" "No, my mom did." then a few minutes later he asks, "When is Jeanne coming down, soon?"
Later on I came into the kitchen where Carol was hovering over the calendar. I took the ice cream out of the refrigerator and the ice tea off the top of the refrigerator. Typical monday. 45 minutes later when I was on the phone in my room with my mom, Carol knocked on my door, "It's Carol!" She was wondering when their doctor's appointment was tomorrow. My mom told me she remembered 10:30 or 11 so I wrote it on the calendar. I had written earlier that Cynthia was going to drive so I asked her why that was earased. She held up a pen and said she didn't have an earaser. A pencil with an earaser set close to her hand. I re-wrote that Cynthia would drive them and told her this, but she said that her and Tom were planning on going somewhere after the appointment. She said they hadn't been over to that side of PSL in awhile and they were planning on hanging out so Cynthia coming over would be unneccesary."It would be a waste of her time and money and a waste of my money," she said. I started to protest but she was getting snippy and my mom told me on the other side of the phone to not even bother. It's true, tomorrow will be an entirely different story.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

JEANNE FEMRITE'S GUEST BLOG

Hi. We're sitting in the kitchen, waiting for Tator Tot hotdish to come out of the oven, just had breakfast, Tom is smoking a cig. The telephone rings....Tom answers and says "okay" and hangs up. When asked what that was he says, it was for Carol, a reminder that she had an appointment somewhere, some spot, something. She doesn't know what for. No one does. No concern on anyones part.....just another day in Paradise.
Came on Friday. got to the house about 7:00 pm. My initial take was that Tom looks worse than ever, hallow eyes, thinner (if possible). Sick. The next day I either got used to it or he was more tired than usual because he looks about the same. On Saturday morning (11:00--- he sleeps about 16 hours a day) he is surprised to see both me and Erika. Did we just come over from our house or did we sleep here? Dr. appt on Tuesday.
Carol, on the other hand looks the same and has risen to the occasion. If i didn't know she had been wearing the same clothes for three days, I'd think she was doing ok. She talks to us, is funny and charming. Goes with Erika and me to Walmart (the usual adventure), to the beach, just being one of the girls. UNTIL.......the middle in the afternoon when she wants to know who bought the lovely purse that was on the counter, did we just get it? She had bought it at Walmart about three hours earlier, brought it home and put her new stuff in it. We had spent about 1/2 hour picking out the purse and talked about it when we showed it to Tom. SOOOOOO... same thing, different day.
Erika and I did get out, ate Thai food and went to a movie. We played copious amount of rummy and talked. Good times. Come down and visit. It's good for everyone. I told Tom that BIll was going to come down and fix the boat. He seemed to think that was a good idea. So do I. I told Erika to buy Kayaks, another air purifier and a blender. If we are going to be here, we ought to be comfortable. After all "It's paid for" and Tom planted all the trees.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2010

I'm currently waiting out the storm. It's such a weird thing to one day hand him his medicine with no comment and the next be presented with escalated fury. I swear I don't do anything different. Today (after a dinner of mac & cheese mixed with chicken and peas) I gave him his medicine, like I usually do, while he sits in his chair after dinner. "I took them this morning" he says, and I tell him that I'm pretty sure that's not true. "YES I DID!" (why are we already shouting?) I keep my voice friendly without being condescending as I show him his box of medicine perfectly separated into days. I showed him how tomorrow's had pills in it, so if he didn't take todays, then what would he do with two sets of pills tomorrow? His boney finger points to last Sunday's slot, "I took the one from here this morning." "No, I know you took that one on Sunday." "You just filled this up again." "I wasn't even here this morning," I explain, "I just think that if Dr. Bob told you to take them then you should." "You've been talking to Dr. Bob have you?" He shakes his head, "well that's just great." I am thrilled to be having this argument again this week, but I can't help it. I need to believe in my conviction that rational thought will pull this through before the season premier of Glee comes on. "I'm not talking to Dr. Bob, you told me that was the arrangement you guys had." "I'LL TAKE IT IN THE GODDAMN MORNING!" When he says this his lips actually curls up at one side, and those ice blue eyes that Ginny commented on, just look horribly cold, although I imagine everyone telling him throughout his life that they're beautiful. "I'm talking normally, aren't I Carol?" I look to Carol who nods as she wipes away non-existent crumbs on the counter. "So, why do I feel like my grandpa is going to come at me with a knife?" "You're too pushy!" He says, and I walk away before I tell him my opinion of what he is too much of. From the kitchen I hear Carol take a crack at, pleading that it for his heart. Saying she wants him to feel good and get a good nights rest. "OK Tommy?" When I came out ten minutes later, they sat quietly with her staring off into space and him drinking his coke an smoking another cigarette, the pills still untouched. So now I am writing this in hopes that it will pass enough time before I bring the pills to his room with him completely forgetting how he didn't want to take them. And, really, I'm mad that I even allowed myself to get involved in all the madness when I knew that this was what it was going to come down to.
Well, he didn't take them. Gave me the same excuse. Although didn't remember we had just had the argument.

Monday, September 20, 2010

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2010

When I got home today Carol said I looked tired. Why don't I sit down and relax? She said she has pulled a few things out for dinner. In the kitchen I find grandpa trying to figure out how to cook a frozen breakfast sausage patty while eating potato salad from the container. What we eventually arrive at is a plate (!) with a sausage sandwich with tomato, what I couldn't salvage from the salt and pepper on the potato salad and some pineapple. Carol came into the kitchen during part of this and left quickly. The past few days she has been trying very hard to be in control, and when I assert any kind of authority she either lashes out, or disappears. On Saturday she even said to me when I asked her how her day was going, "all I do is clean, cook and work." For a moment of my self involvement I was thinking, "you cook?" but then the real question arrived, "where do you work, Carol?" "At the golf course just north of here." I looked at the calendar to find that she wrote that she had to work yesterday (Sunday) and today. I'm not sure about today, but I know she didn't "go to work" yesterday. Am I missing something here?
An hour after Grandpa had finished dinner, Carol started offering me all sorts of food and mentioned seeing what Tommy wanted for dinner. She seemed confused when I told her we had already eaten. She says finally, "well, I'm going to have some potato salad. Do you want some?" and then the conversation starts over. I finally had to have another dinner in order to get her to eat a real meal. As in, "I guess I am pretty hungry. Thanks for reminding me. Ooops. I heated up too much. Do you want some? Oh, and while we're at it, this pineapple looks great, doesn't it?" It's a weird charade to pretend that she's helping me when really I'm helping her.
There's no hope for me and Cynthia being two separate identities. I thought it was just me that was confused as her, but I went to visit her at her work Saturday night, and she told me that Grandpa mistakes her for me all the time. She says most of her visit they ask her about MauMau and tell her how pretty "her"cat is. Even Carol asked her if she could turn off the fan in "her" room. The fan in my room is actually an air purifier, and I guess I should be glad someone is getting asked at least. Everyday I come home and it's off (even though I keep it on low in the morning) and sometimes things are moved. Little things, like a shirt I decided against and threw on my bed is folded. I tell her that I know it's her house, but I think I've earned the right to not have my things messed with when I'm away. I explain the air purifier keeps away the second hand smoke from the kitchen so I don't wake up coughing. "What? I never went into your room!" She'll say aghast. Then, it will happen the next day. I'm pretty sure neither MauMau or my Grandfather is folding my clothes while I'm gone, but if I had to choose the more likely, I guess I'll have to start scolding Mau.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2010

I don't understand Carol's stews. Actually, I'm surprised she doesn't walk around like a zombie as I have found her several times this week in the kitchen past midnight smoking cigarettes/drinking my white wine/eating ice cream. When I arrived home from work I asked what she was cooking and she said left overs. I didn't really know what that meant because all that I could think of in the fridge for left overs were mashed potatoes. In a sauce pan on the stove I saw she was cooking a strange, cloudy mystery chicken stew that was about 75% onion. Enough to fit in a cup. The mashed potatoes were missing from the fridge. Without dismissing the stew I set to work creating "more" to the meal: pork chops and peas. Carol fluttered around me in need for something to contribute, and finally decided to cut up thick chunks of tomato, which were actually a great contribution. The whole time Grandpa sat on his chair acting as the peanut gallery, "What is THAT?" "There's something in the microwave I think you forgot about." "Did you see our cat? What a beauty" "Hand me a coke, will ya?" I had set the table exactly how we'd always been sitting since I got here, Carol at the end, then Grandpa, and me closest to the porch. Today Grandpa sat in my spot which had more food (because I don't eat like a 7 year old). I managed to switch the plates around before he doused my share with all that pepper and salt. "Well, what the hell is the matter with you?" he wanted to know. I thought it was a bit of an over-reaction. Grandpa started to work on the meal while I went to find Carol who had disappeared. I still have no idea where she goes, but she returned before we were half way done with our meal. After dinner I gave Grandpa his medicine, and he voiced his now almost routine response, "I'll take it in the morning." He didn't want to start tonight...? Start? I didn't push him, I know how that ends. Instead I backed off and when Carol said, "Tommy, I think your meds are next to you," and he said, "I'm going to take them in the morning," I chimed in cool and non-commital: "It seems to me that you're supposed to take those type of medicines everyday. At least that's what my doctor always tells me whenever I get a prescription." Grandpa, "Look at me. I've lived this long." Then (still calm and cool) to Carol I say, "wouldn't you think heart medication would be something you wouldn't mess around with?" I even shrugged like it was not something I really cared about either way and went back to my reading. "I'LL TAKE IT IN THE MORNING," he says. Still looking down at my book I say, "I didn't realize you had gotten a doctor's degree is all." "WELL I HAVE." Then, quietly (because I'm too much of a smart-ass to refrain myself, "Well, I guess I missed that in your bio."
I had cleaned up all the dinner except Carol's stew, which she insisted need to simmer some more. She went to the front porch to have a cigarette, when her stew met it's inevitable demise. My grandfather, who never cleans his own dishes, must of felt the need to contribute to the cleaning up and with a loss for ideas poured the stew down the disposal. He then looked at me pointedly and turned around to go his room, leaving the stove top still on.
I had a chat with my father about what to do about the Tom-Meds issue which calmed me enough to give it another go. Sure enough, I walked into his room where he was watching Wheel of Fortune (in white boxers. who sold these to him? does this man not own pajama pants?) and gave him his medicine. No fight at all. Then, just because this was too easy, I went to check that Carol had taken her meds. Sure enough, she hadn't. I brought them out to the kitchen and showed her how all of the Thursday medicine slots were full and how the patch marked 9/16 was not used. I thought this was stellar logic, but she had logic of her own, "sweetie, the calendar says I already took my medicine." Fair enough. I told her I was 100% sure she hadn't based on the evidence, and all the days were running together this week for me too, so I can understand if she accidentally marked that she had on the calendar.
In other news, I'm getting more optimistic about my homesickness with Ross just down here, Joel and Co. moving down, Bill visiting on the 8th, Mom possibly visiting over MEA, Logan possibly visiting of Halloween and halfway to Thanksgiving. I'm starting not to get the desperate need to run up to strangers at the grocery store offering hugs and/or pleads, "will you be my friend?"

Sunday, September 12, 2010

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2010

When I woke up this morning at 9 no one was up. When I headed out the door at 10:30, Carol was doing her usual make coffee-smoke a couple cigarettes routine. Tom was no where to be found. When I got home at 2:30 Carol was still in her pajama robe and Grandpa was missing, although she said he had be up and about today. I went to my room to work on some stuff for work. At 5ish I starting on dinner and Carol was standing staring off into space in the kitchen. I asked her if she was OK, and she said she didn't think so. We chatted about my day and MauMau for awhile while I made chicken, mashed potatoes and green beans. Grandpa came out and we all sat down to dinner and he starting asking me his questions, i.e. "Do you come everyday?" ("yes, I've been living here for 2 months) and then "So do you usually go home for dinner?" ("I, um? My home is in Minneapolis where my mom, Jeanne Femrite, lives"), "That's my daughter" ("That's my mom, which makes you my Grandfather"). Grandpa finished half his meal and then got up to find something to put it in. He stood at the cabinet for awhile and turned away from his mission. Then he went to the fridge, poured some milk into a coffee mug that was inexplicably sitting in the fridge, and took out the corn muffins. "Wait, Tommy, wait a second," said Carol, and I thought she was going to tell him to finish the meal still sitting on the table if he was still hungry, but instead she got him another plate for his corn muffin. I don't know. I starting cleaning up and Carol told me all about my Great Grandpa Slick and the prohibition. I've heard about him, but this was a good conversation because it seemed like a normal conversation that you would have with your Granddaughter, minus the gambling and boozing. Of course, Grandpa kept interrupting to tell us every time MauMau switched his position- "Now look at this, he wants his pets... do you see this now?... Do you think he wants to go outside?" My cat is the source of most of our conversations... the good one at least. Grandpa got up from his chair and put his mug of milk that was originally in the fridge, into the cabinet (milk still in it). I asked him to wait a second to go in because he hadn't had his medicine. He looked at the pills and realized that there were 6 pills there instead of 5 (we added the anti-depression medicine a few weeks ago, although I don't see a difference). I told him the 6th pill was a vitamin he and Dr Bob decided on a few weeks ago to make the other pills easier on his stomach (such a liar). He went and sat down for a while longer, and must have decided against the pills because when he got up and went in, they were still there. So, of course I had to bring them in to him. Otherwise, I've just been cleaning and doing laundry today. Productive, calm Sunday.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2010

The Internet at my work was down so I ended up coming home early. The first 3 questions Grandpa asked me were, "You're a little late aren't you?" "You usually come earlier, don't you?" and "Isn't our cat pretty?" I made pot roast (or at least microwaved it), corn and mashed potatoes for us three, but Carol wasn't feeling well, which of course just means she doesn't want to eat dinner and have to explain that to me. I wrapped her plate up and put it in the fridge for later.
So, Grandpa and I sat down to a beautiful meal. I knew today was going to be a little less normal by the previous questions, but I was not prepared for when he decided to put his coke over his mashed potatoes. He immediately realized he had made a mistake, and said, "Oh, hell," but I pretended not to notice so he pretended he didn't do it. "How's it tasting?" I couldn't refrain from asking after ten minutes. "Tastes good." He didn't finish the meal, said he was full, asked me if I wanted the rest of his. "That's OK, you put a little more pepper on your food than I prefer, thank you though." "THERE'S NOTHING WRONG WITH IT." "It's fine. I had my share anyway."
After the meal, and discretely disposing the remainder of the coke roast, I went to the store real quick. When I walked back into the kitchen, there was Grandpa propped up at the counter with his salt and pepper, dipping a doughnut into potato salad. I didn't utter a word to this either. I just got his medicine for him and set to work refilling their medicine dispensers. Then the argument we have about every 2 weeks started. Calmly at first, of course, "I'm not going to take these tonight. I'll start tomorrow," he'll say. "It's been 24 hours since you took it. Dr Bob said you're supposed to take it everyday," I reply. "Oh, you're talking to Dr. Bob?" "No, but it's the arrangement that you have with him to stay healthy. You're my only Grandparent and I want you to stick around for awhile." "I'm not your grandparent." "Well, if you're Jeanne's dad, and I'm her daughter, then you're my grandfather." He thinks about this for a minute and I actually think my head is going to explode. "Yea, she sounds familiar." Then we sit in silence for awhile as I contemplate my next move. I have a good chance of him not remembering what we were just arguing about, so I have a chance to have a better outcome. "I think your medicine is next to you to take," I start. "Um, no, I think I'll wait for tomorrow to take it." Damn. "Well, Dr Bob said you're supposed to take it every 24 hours and it's been 24 hours." " I haven't taken any medicine in 5 days- it's not a big deal." "Dr. Bob wouldn't prescribe you a medicine if it wasn't a big deal." "Well Dr Bob isn't a real doctor." What?!? "I'm not sure he could write prescriptions if he wasn't a doctor. I'M not a doctor, I'm just a concerned Granddaughter. I want you to stay healthy." Yes, I did use the same line I give Carol. "You're not my granddaughter!" "Um, yes, I am?! and I would really appreciate it if my grandfather kept himself healthy." "Yea, like you care," he counters. "I do care. Otherwise I wouldn't be here." "THEN YOU CAN JUST LEAVE." "FINE, MAYBE I WILL!" Fantastic, Erika. Way to not take things personally.
I call my mother and put her on the phone with him then go seek out Carol to refill her medicine. Where I find that she has not actually taken her medicine today either. I inform her of this, but she goes and gets the calendar that says she has taken it. She says she's very good at it and never misses. I explain that I know she's good at it. That's why I know she missed today because we keep such good track of it and never miss a day. She's still showing me the calendar and reminding me that it is a 24 hour patch so if we did it this morning then we don't have to do it now. I grab a glass of water, put it in her hand, put pills in front of her and maneuver a new patch on her. I'm not arguing with anyone else about medicine.
In the kitchen I see my phone next to the shot glass of un-taken pills. I re-phone my mother who was left waiting for me on the line. The scoop was that he had agreed to take the pills but told her he couldn't find them. I get him a glass for his water in the cabinet and find his glass of milk he had earlier there, too. I keep her on the phone as I go into the lion's den. Here he takes the pills and the water easily... and now I sort of feel like I just explained a bizarre dream I just had. This is why tonight's blog is going to end with-...and then I woke up.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2010

Friday night my brother and I went to Fort Pierce for "Friday Fest," which is apparently put on the first Friday of every month. We walked around for awhile, me looking for a baked good that would make missing the state fair OK (not found), and Ross contemplating the reaction he would get if he wore an Affliction style shirt with a huge image of Jesus's face on it to Thanksgiving dinner (decision will be revealed on November 25Th). Then we sat outside of Tiki Bar watching the fishing boats and festival crowd go by. When we left we also caught a little bit of the live band playing awesome 90's music--Beastie Boys anyone? I pulled Ross away to go to the bar that everyone has told me to go to, Mother Truckers. A sand bar with another live band, this one playing music like "Brown Eyed Girl". Of course, I did get a little lost on the way and we ended up at a biker bar with a live band playing 70's music for a little while before we got to our final destination.
The next day started with cinnamon rolls and a trip to the beach. A random guy in the lobby of my work last week started chatting to me about how killer the waves were going to be, and he was right. Even the main beach in Jensen was covered in surfers and skim borders. There was some sort of charity event going on where they were teaching people how to surf for free. We were going to go, but somehow it never happened. Relaxing and spending time in the waves was just perfect enough. Later on we went to get Smokey's BBQ, then when we got home Ross ate a little bit more with the Grandparents. For the night we tried to go to a club someone at the Humane Society recommended, but it was OBVIOUSLY a mistake. The bouncers outside the bar checked my purse as they patted Ross down for weapons. When we got in we saw that there were ten people in there, AND they wanted cover--5 dollars for me and 10 for him (early arrival discount). We left and went to an Irish Pub down the street that had (surprise!) live music. This time it was a girl lead singer that sang Cranberries and definitely pulled it off (hard thing to do).
Sunday was a rainy, movie day. Grandpa and Grandma behaved themselves. Grandpa didn't walk around in his boxers and Carol even made a stew(?) with left overs that I didn't even realize were in the fridge. Since none of the recipe could be distinguished from any meal I've eaten here, Ross went out and got us Mexican from Moe's. We ended the night playing Rummy 500, and Rosa's little sister beating him by over 100 points both games.
When we left for the airport yesterday morning at ten Carol was in her nightgown starting coffee and having her 2nd cigarette of the day. Grandpa was not up yet. Luckily we had a long car ride to the airport, so I could see Ross's amazing dance moves. If you haven't seen them, I encourage you to put on some Katy Perry, and step back. If what it looked like sitting down was that outstanding, I can't imagine how it looks in full.
I made it through a rain storm that debilitated me down to 40mph, only to find that I was alone with the grandparents again. My first order of business was cleaning out the fridge and that stew. After one particularly large/loud batch through the garbage disposal, Grandpa started fussing at me. I told him he could clean out the fridge if he'd like. He told me that that was fine, he would. I said, "Really, because left-over dinner I made for you 2 weeks ago just went down the disposal." We glared at each other. Home Sweet Home.
Today I bought groceries and when I got home I got the usual slack for buying too much. I joked that Ross ate everything out of our fridge. "When is Ross coming?" Grandpa wanted to know. Then (instead of putting each prescription in to the computer operator) I went to the Walmart Pharmacy to drop off the Grandparents' prescription for this month. When I got back, 5 doughnuts were already missing. I pointed this out to Carol as proof that I have to buy all that food I buy, but she told me that doughnuts aren't food, they're delicious happiness. Remember that.

Friday, September 3, 2010

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2010

Happy September! Ross got in yesterday at 5pm. I got out of work early to drive the hour and half to Orlando to get him. I'm shocked we even found each other in the whirl-wind of families trying to see Mickey and go to Epcot. A lady who sat next to him on the plane asked him if we were going to Disneyland. We decided to skip that adventure and just head back to the Grandparents'. "Ross Tomas" appeared to have made it OK while I was at work, although Carol has been hiding from him and Grandpa keeps commenting on him constantly staring into "that box" which is more commonly known as my computer, although when I first got it I was so excited I gave it pet names. I got home from work early (I've done well and deserve to leave early, according to my boss) and Ross and I decided to get stuff to Grill burgers. Grandpa isn't too sure about us using the grill when it's hot out, but he ate his half a burger happily. Carol didn't eat with us, she ate in her room. I think she's scared or Ross. Now me and Ross are heading to Fort Pierce. Super excited.