Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Handle

Sometimes I won the spot under the arm. Some days I was relegated to the other side of one brother or another. Front row seat to Hop on Pop - under that right reading arm. I would hunker down warmly, knowing that this chance would not come again soon for with 9 siblings, my turn didn't come often. We knew all these books by heart already. We could read them ourselves, recite them without glancing at the page even. So it was not the book that held tightly. Her hands were what gripped me.

Unlike most of her children who got their father's stout hands, my mother had long and lean fingers. She kept her fingernails short and neatly filed. Her dry and always room temperature skin taut over straight and limber knuckles and palms. Her pointed index finger made a soothing white noise as it scrolled under each word without pause, without hesitation. It matched her voice precisely - there was something equally singsong about the movement. The books were old, having been read to 7 older siblings before becoming a focus for my younger brothers and I. They smelled old. They smelled like library books, stored primly - though that could not be farther from the truth. These Dr. Seuss/Ted Geisel books were open and bent daily, along with the multi-volume World Book Encyclopedias from the same shelf. My mother's finger and her hand whisking across the page would release the calming scent in brief waves.

My small thumb on hers did not slow the cadence of her voice or reading hand. I explored lightly enough not to disturb. I rolled my thumbprint over the horizontal ripples on her broad nails going up and then side to side, lightly ticking the vertical ridges with my thumbnail. The crescent moons of her nails shone white against the remaining pink that made up the near perfect rectangle.

Those nails, the joints, the linen skin were a sign of strength, capability and resilience to me, though I did not know it then. Those hands fed, clothed and cared for a family of 12, they brushed our hair, tied our shoes, and waved in time to impromptu kitchen tap dance solos just to make us smile. In 1978, 32 years ago on this very day, her hands began to care for a family of 11 - her partner, her love, her husband bowed in finality to pancreatic cancer after a year-long skirmish. I was not cognizant of all this then as I watched my mother's hands at the time. But I know it now as I look at my own hands and how I use them. My nails are short. I do not buff the ridges out nor do I polish them. I can do nothing about the stubbiness of my fingers except imagine them otherwise. I watch my own pointer as I underline the words in Hop on Pop for my daughters. I listen to the rhythm of my reading voice. There are things I have hoped genetics would spare me. There are things that I've inherited from my mother. And there are other things that I have outright taken from her, hoping to call my own. Hands that imbue a child's faith that such hands will be present and strong forever are among such things I have tried to wrestle from her and claim as my own.

Today I spent 4 hours in a waiting room with my mother as she moved in and out, following the protocol for a medical study she is taking part in. She gets monthly shots in the eye to stave off the vision-ravaging impact of Macular Degeneration.

My mother bears no silence, but fills all air with small vignettes from years ago or from this morning: stories about the grocery store her family "dealt at" when she was a child, stories about old friends she and my dad used to spend time with - people not heard from in over 30 years, stories about which recycling bin she needed to take out on Tuesday, about what the person in line in front of her at the bank did, about what she heard on the radio. Even as I understood and reminded myself today that she is asking for me to bear witness, for me to heed her, to give back even a small piece of the regal attention she used to hold when we all depended upon her, I still prayed for patience and guidance. Though patience, resilience and creative witness-bearing techniques are part of my life as a parent in general, but even more so as a parent of a child with a disability, I feel ill equipped to begin the climb to help support my mother while simultaneously bobbing and weaving in time to her slipping, sliding scale of what helps her hold on to her dignity. I can advocate for my child with different abilities. But I will have to learn how to help my siblings care for my mother as her faculties and health begin to take incremental leave from her 79 year old body.

As we had lunch at my dining room table after her appointment today, she told me a story I have known by heart in her words for at least 35 years, she gestured the same gestures that have always accompanied this story. During an adamant point, her index finger - the one that so precisely skimmed under the words in a book - came into focus. The skin was loose at the tip, the nail longer than I remember it, unshaped by a file. Knobs and swelling had taken over the last joint, the crook of which led the eye to take another, unintended direction. Her hands shook almost imperceptibly. I tried to envision that finger moving across the page with the grace and agility I once depended upon.

Time is diligent and devoted to it's enterprise. It will not yield. Even to a mother's hands.

6 comments:

annette said...

Wow beautifully written! Terri you truly have a gift in writting.

Anxious AF said...

Captivated.

Anonymous said...

Terri, Your writing is brilliant. And tears are streaming down my face. You do have a amazing gift.

Cindy said...

Beautiful, Terri. It is an unusual experience to watch our parents decline. They once cared for us and now we care for them. The roles reverse, and it's almost as if time goes backward for them...each year they become more like a child.

I think you, as the mother of a special-needs child, are well-qualified to help your mother through this time. You understand the importance of human dignity, and that is the most important quality to have in this situation. The circumstances are different, but the required skill set is the same as the one you have already mastered.

My word verification is "unnept"...how apt!

kaat said...

That made me cry.. I hope one of my sons will take the time to try to understand me, even if I frustrate him, in the future.

Mary SW said...

Wow...My eyes are welled up! These are the things we remember. We have such an important job don't we? Keep these reflections coming, they are inspiring.