Monday, August 12, 2019

Voices Carry

I've been thinking a lot about relationships lately, for...reasons. I said before that I wasn't ever going to do it again, the relationship thing. I said it over and over again for at least a year. I don't date. In June, I was out dancing, as I tend to do when I can, and the DJ played a cover of Voices Carry that I'd never heard before, and it made me tear up a little.  Okay, enough that I just kind of left. I think it was the last song, anyway. I've heard the original a bazillion times, and it never really inspired anything other than a love of Aimee Mann's voice. I mean, I know what it's about. But it just kind of hit me, like a locomotive, how much I really relate to it, in a very uncomfortable way. See, for almost fifteen years now, I have been, or at least felt like, either a placeholder or a side chick in every relationship  I've been in. Or both. I understand being social, I do, but a lot of times it has been perfectly clear that whoever I was with was looking for something shinier to come along. I've never had anyone be proud to be with me. I know I'm quiet. I know I'm difficult. I know I'm not a pretty girl. Goddess knows I know my failings. I've never had a facebook relationship status (not that that is real life, but I guess it drives home to me the point of how I feel about these things.) My last relationship was 7 years or so. There are people who know both of us,  that never knew we were together. There were people he specifically hid our relationship from, because they would be upset. "Don't say girlfriend or partner, she'll be hurt, because I never called her that...

There is someone I spend time with. This is absolutely not anything to do with them, it's just why I've been thinking about relationships. We've gone a few places together. They've held my hand in front of people we both know, which almost made me cry in public. This is in no way an attempt to change their behavior, it's coming to terms with something in me. I feel bad trying to explain things, because I've seen so many people use it as a form of manipulation.  I'm insecure, so you can't (fill in the blank.) That's not how life works. I'm not insecure about how they feel about me. Whatever it is, is new. We are still figuring things out. It isn't defined. We haven't had any big conversations about it. It's not necessary right now. Is it perfect? It feels pretty close. Do I know what I want here? Yeah, I really think I do. Is there something I would change? Sure. But I believe it will, organically.  I don't want something because I demanded it, I want it freely given. I have made the thing I want known. When they want it, too, really,  it will happen.  You want to know a secret? I've known this person for a long time, and I have more faith in them, as a person, than almost anyone else in the world.  Which is truth, not pressure.

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Torchwood Day 2019

This day, each year, is an important day for me. Not Father's Day, though I do usually do something for my Mom, since she is a single parent, and always has been, but June 16. I call June 16 my Torchwood day, or at least I have since 2006 or so. If you haven't watched Torchwood, you should probably go do that, instead of reading this. Or not. The intro to Torchwood says the 21st century is when everything changes. Many life changing things have happened to me on, or very near, June 16, so I use it as a day, each year, to reflect on things in my life, and think about changes that need to be made. On June 16, historically, I have lost a friend, had a friend buried, lost another friend (in a different year.) I finally knew that I had to end a relationship, though it took me a few months of planning to leave. I have seen The Cure, not knowing it was the last night of an almost three year relationship, and that I would be quite single in the morning. Nine years ago, I was in an ill advised relationship, and Concrete Blonde was touring, but not coming here, so I decided to take myself on a trip for a few days. I could choose DC or Atlanta. I chose Atlanta. On June 16, 2010, I decided that I was going to move to Atlanta. I also met the man I thought would be my forever human. To this day, he'll tell you that because I decided to move there the day that I met him there, that I moved to be close to him. I decided to move while talking to Sydney on the phone, standing in front of my hotel, waiting for a cab to take me to The Vortex to meet a friend for dinner. The man who would end up shattering me more of me than I ever thought possible was meeting the same friend. Which is how I ended up in the foyer of The Vortex with some strange man staring into my face and forgetting to let go of my hand after being introduced to me, for an oddly long time. It was an amazing show. It was a really great trip, the first time I had just gone somewhere by myself. I saw the whale sharks for the first time. I was hooked. This is the correct timeline, no matter what he'll try to tell you. There were other reasons to move there.

 There are other things that have happened on Torchwood day. It just seems to be a day of change, for me. Not always negative.

If I had gone to DC, what would have been different? Would I have decided to move there? Would I have come back, and just, stayed? I know so many truly amazing people from my time in Atlanta. So many people I can't imagine my life without, now. I got more involved in conventions, though I had been to both of the ones I return to Atlanta for before. Multiple times, even. But I have the convention family that I have now, because of that decision.

So, today I ponder.

Gramma is still dead, and will remain so. I've been feeling lately like I am nothing but a burden. To everyone. So, I've been hiding. It's not uncommon for me to not leave the house, or put on pants, or talk to another person for two or three consecutive days.

To be honest, I am making positive changes. I start working tomorrow, at a job I will actually get paid for. I'm a little terrified, but it will be fine.  I'll be putting on pants and interacting with people, anyway.

That shattered heart and life are healing in ways I also never thought possible. I'm going to be okay.
It turns out, I can fathom, imagine, and manifest whole worlds without the pain he left behind.

It's a full moon. I love the moon. While I have many witchy ways, I follow astrology only haphazardly. It's just not my thing. I follow the phases of the moon, but not really horoscopes. I do know that this full moon is in Sagittarius, and that it signifies (for those who follow) celebration, philosophizing, owning your passions, seeking a sense of purpose, standing up for justice, and wild adventure. Excellent. I do these things most of the time. So, I will carry on. Well, I'm lacking in adventure, but there is adventure potential. There is someone that I spend time with that feels like adventure to me, even when still, even sitting on my couch. They feel like the joy of looking at the full moon, like a strong breeze under the stars, like sitting on a bank with my feet in a swift, cold mountain stream. Which are all on my list of very favorite things. It being Torchwood day, I feel I should be brave enough to pose a few questions that I wonder about. To say things that I stumble over not saying. But I most likely will not. It's Schrodinger's fear, I am both afarid and completely unafraid of the answers, while the questions are safely in the box. When the box is opened, though... perhaps there's another, smaller box inside.

Go look at the moon tonight. Here, it will rise at 7:59 pm and set at 5:25 am. I do love astronomy. It will be at it's fullest at 1:30 am. I think. The moon is beautiful, no matter what you believe.

I leave you with this, a video from the actual Concrete Blonde show on June 16, 2010. Actually from very close to where I was standing the whole night, though I did not take it. I was to busy crying at this point, no matter that I'd seen it live before, and I've seen it since.






Tuesday, June 11, 2019

June, So Far

   So, here's what's been going on. I'm still living in my Grandmother's house. A lot of really shitty stuff has happened, and currently I feel horrible. I feel like the worst person, ever.

  Gramma always said that my next oldest cousin was the beneficiary of her life insurance. She didn't have much, mainly to cover funeral costs. That's fine. He lived here about ten years ago, the last time she updated anything. The funeral costs had to be paid up front, so, the very cheapest funeral we could do, we did. She absolutely did not want to be cremated, and she already had a plot, and a stone, actually. She used to take flowers to her own grave site, after the stone was put up, almost twenty years ago. She had her own stone carved, because she was certain we wouldn't put the name she wanted on it. Which is possible, as it was never her name. She didn't want my Grandaddy's last name on it, so she has her first name, her mother's maiden name, and her last name. She never actually had her mother's maiden name.  Most people don't. As an odd aside, I did, because my mom has never been married. In the aftermath of her death, and planning the funeral and stuff, he told me that he was going to give me anything that was left, because, you know, I have nothing, because I took care of her for so long. Just to help me get restarted. I think it's an overwhelmingly, huge amount of money, around $800. I've been told it's not. I don't know. I worked for the same company for almost twenty years, and that's more than my biweekly paychecks were, net. More than that, I guess I felt appreciated. It was a huge gesture. It would let me get my feet back under me. We had this conversation with no one else around, sitting in the carport.

  Turns out, he was wrong. My Mom is the beneficiary. She texted me last week, and told me that she was the beneficiary, and that after she paid back the funeral cost to another cousin, who paid for it outright, she would have just enough money to fix her truck. Her truck has been broken for a couple of months, she's been driving a borrowed vehicle. I was just, shocked. I guess I had been counting on that help more than I thought. I didn't say anything, at the time. I was so hurt.

  So, I talked to her about it this weekend. I told her that P had been going to give me the left over money. She said that she knew that, but she didn't think I knew. That she really needs her truck fixed, and she's tired of being poor, and that she has helped me out since I've been here, caring for Gramma. Which is true. She has paid my phone and car insurance, and helped with groceries when I couldn't afford them. She retired right before the economy crashed. She lost over half of her retirement fund. She works a full time job, now. I don't begrudge her getting her truck fixed. I don't. She can use that borrowed vehicle for as long as she needs, the owner honestly doesn't care. He's a single guy with five cars, he likes when they are driven more. He's out of town a lot. She says she feels helpless.

  I feel helpless. I did the right thing by coming back, I know I did. But I never realized how little help, or concern I would get from my family. Mom did help Gramma, but she resented every single moment. Every single dollar. They really didn't like each other. At all. Even during the hospital bit, Gramma yelled at her, about how she didn't know how they could be related. (I always stood up for Mom, for the record.) Mom is the executor of the estate, and she and my uncle will split the money from the sale of the house, or he will buy out her half, or whatever. The estate hasn't even been filed yet. Mom doesn't have time. She works. She's overwhelmed. I know these things.

  What would I do with that money? Live. Buy my own groceries without having to justify every apple. Buy gas. Finish moving my stuff.  I need my independence back. I need to be able to make my own choices, without needing help with every little thing. I need to feel like the past two and a half years of caring for Gramma were appreciated, maybe. To feel like, just maybe, my time and effort were worth something, or even appreciated. Yes, I've been told it was appreciated. Everyone else is treating this whole thing like it's a big inconvenience. Mom did say she would give me any left over from fixing her truck. It's going to cost more than the money she will get.

  I feel like a horrible person for even talking to her about it. She's upset. I'm disgusted. I don't even want to see her, but I have to go live with her. She knew he was going to give it to me. She's upset that I fucking knew, and she's mad at him for telling me. I haven't slept since Saturday night, for more than an hour or so, because I feel so bad, and I'm so upset. I go back and forth from feeling like the most shallow, materialistic, ungrateful human on earth, to feeling like I fucking earned part of that. I have made myself physically sick over this. I've cried until I feel like my head will split open.

  I called her this morning and told her I don't want any of the money. I hate how this has made me feel, and I'm done. She told me that she knew that wasn't true, and I screamed at her. It is true. I wouldn't have fucking said it if it wasn't. I'm packing up the rest of my stuff to get it out, I don't have any clue how that's actually going to happen. The flip side is, I'm not helping with the house, anymore. I'm not taking anything else to the dump, I'm not helping go through anymore of Gramma's stuff, I'm fucking done. Done.

  I have taken a job, I start next week, hopefully.

  I had made some stuff to sell, but I fucked something up in the process, and they are unusable, unsellable, so I'm getting rid to start over, but I may pack that stuff up for now. I'm very upset at how I screwed up, but I know that new things are a learning process. A lot of what I did was experimentation, anyway, so I'm counting this as a learning bit, and scrapping what I have. I must say, I have made some pretty lovely trash in this adventure. But i have the technique down now, I thing. When i make some money of my own to get the correct things I need, I'll try again. I was really trying to make some money to get through, but, defective.

  I'm not asking for help. I am honored at the love and support I have received from my friends to this point. I know everyone is exhausted of my being helpless.  Not nearly as exhausted as I am. Not nearly as disgusted as I am. I'll probably sell some of my camera stuff, maybe. To get me through. I'll be okay. I'm scrappy.

  I read back through this, and it doesn't read nearly as emotional as I feel. As painful. As horrible. As heart breaking. I thought nothing would ever hurt me as much as the relationship apocalypse. I was really fucking wrong.

  Things are changing. For the better. I just have to get through this bit.  There are flowers, and thunderstorms, and cats. I miss my dogs, they've been at Mom's since April. At first because I was at the hospital so much. Then, because I'm moving there any day now. Yeah. Pretty sure I can't get that dresser in my Corolla. When I walk out of here with the cats, I'm not coming back.

  There's even someone who makes me smile. A lot.

  It's a brave new world.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

She's Gone

  My time being a caregiver for my grandmother is done. She's gone. She started having a pain in her right arm in February, she died May 19, 2019. I spent a lot of April and May by her bedside in different hospital rooms. Despite my best efforts, she died alone. I'm pretty sure I haven't told anyone that, at all, in this process. She wasn't aware. She hadn't been aware since Friday, she died at 2:45 on a Sunday afternoon. She had been moaning that morning, so they gave her a morphine drip. The moaning stopped, then so did she.

  I'm not handling this well, at all. A lot of my stuff has been moved, but I still live in her house for now, for complicated reasons. There are things that I should be doing, that I'm not. I'm just, not. Right now, I'm sitting in the den where she spent most of her time. Sitting where I would sit on the couch, reading or playing with my phone. Her recliner is in front of me, to the right. Where she would sit and watch TV, and do the crossword puzzle from the paper every morning. I still start everyday by making coffee, and getting the paper from the paper box at the end of the driveway. I bring it in and sit it on the arm of her chair, then I pick it up and wander around aimlessly with it. There's a TV table in front of her chair. There's a pair of shoes under it, from the last time she walked in and sat down and took them off. That would have been in April.

  I'm looking for a job. I don't know what I want to do. Well, that's not true. I know what I really want to do, fairly passionately, but it requires some learning and a trade school degree. That's not really possible right now, money wise. Groceries are barely possible money wise right now. I haven't gotten paid the entire time I took care of her, I'll figure it out. I need to be making stuff to sell, but my jewelry stuff has already made the move that I haven't, including the already made stuff. The candle stuff is here. I just, haven't. I don't know why I can't just do the things that I need to. I'm such a fucking wreck. I fake being okay pretty well in public, though, so, no, I'm probably not going to cry on you or be a big drag.

  About this blog, it's kind of a diary. I write more than is public. I do know people that follow it, because I'm not this communicative in "real life." Well, usually not. Also, while I am a wreck, not everything sucks. I do smile. I do write. I do see a couple of people kind of regularly. One of those has brought more comfort and patience and steadiness into my life in the past few weeks than I could ever have imagined, and I am imminently grateful. No words can express it, really. And no, this isn't passive communication, they know damn well how much I appreciate them, or I hope so. I say it a lot. Probably not enough. I'm interested in actually taking pictures again. I'm interested in other things that I haven't been interested in a while. My life is a little less flat than it has been in a long time.

  I've had a few people ask if I'm moving back to Atlanta, since I moved back to take care of Gramma. Right now, I couldn't even if I wanted to. Which I don't. Other than people, I can count the things I miss about Atlanta on one fucking hand. One is pretty big, though. I miss having good dance events to go to, more often than they are here. There are awesome events here, don't get me wrong, but there isn't one night of any week that I know that I can get that release. I'm pretty much a Don Henley song, all I want to do is dance. All of the weekly nights here have failed, due to disinterest, older goths, I don't know. This literally causes me pain. I guess it evens out to maybe twice a month, but still. Given my choice, I'd dance five hours a night, twice a week in a club. Yes, I know I can dance alone, at home. I do. It's different. In Atlanta, I know that at least each Saturday I could be wherever VJ Anthony is spinning. Well, it's the same place each Saturday, just the theme changes. I miss Coffin Classics night, like, whoa. So much. NC has a more Industrial crowd, for the most part. Even though I'm an introvert, and I don't like to be touched, dance floor energy feeds me, even on slower nights. I also miss really good bagels, though my very favorite place there is gone, now. I miss being able to see the whale sharks whenever I wanted. I spent so many hours just sitting there, staring. I miss Community Q BBQ, though the recipe for the best mac and cheese ever, from there, is hysterically readily available, and super easy. I don't miss traffic, hand gun fire (we get rifle and shotgun fire pretty often, here in the sticks), or the chance of running into someone with whom I have quite a bit of common interests. At least I used to, anyway. Who knows, anymore? Some people shift with their company more than others. So, probably not. I do wish I could visit more, say, every Coffin Classics Saturday, say, but I can't right now. Ha, just the two times a year I'm guaranteed to run into the aforementioned soul for twelve hours a day or so. I'm giving all of that some thought, too.

Enough for now. I will leave you with the eulogy I read for my Gramma, though some of you have seen it.

Dorothy Lee Whitley
3/14/1931-5/19/2019

My Gramma loved a lot of things.
She loved people and laughing and talking.
She loved tigers, especially white ones.
She loved gardening and all plants and flowers.
She loved country music and dancing.
She loved her family, her mama and her sisters.
I heard her say, more than once, that Big Mama was too good for this world.
She loved her kids, her grandkids, and her great grandkids.
Heaven help anyone standing between her and Avery.
She loved coloring books and crossword puzzles and chocolate.

I could stand here all day and tell you the things she loved.
I could even tell you the things that she hated,
But this probably isn’t the time for that.

The truth is, everyone you meet takes away with them a different version of you.
No matter how consistent you are, people will view you through the filter of their own views,
Personality, experiences, and even mood.

So, I’m going to tell you some of the things that I took from her,
Some of the things that make me, me.
I would not be who I am, without her.

I worked in photo labs inside of camera stores for almost twenty years.
Photography has always been a passion of mine.
By the time I was 10, Gramma had taught me f-stops and shutter speeds and framing a scene.
I could selectively focus a manual camera.
She taught me the right combinations of factors, and then taught me that the “right” way
Was not always the best way to achieve the image you wanted.

I am an intensely geeky individual, with a deep love of science fiction.
Gramma loved PBS, so I grew up watching Doctor Who and Dark Shadows on summer afternoons.
When Doctor Who restarted in 2005, I knew the stories, the incarnations of the Doctor, and the old villains.
I grew up with a Gramma who watched with me, and then chase me around the yard with a whisk in one hand and a sink plunger in the other, imitating one of the robot villains.

I love the sky, day or night.
I always know the phase of the moon.
Because of Gramma, I can look at the stars and point out Cassiopeia, seated on her throne, or the Pleiades, and tell you their stories.
She taught me to always look up.
She loved satellites crossing the sky every bit as much as she loved shooting stars.
She taught me about space and space exploration.
During the day, she always looked for shapes in the clouds, and would make up little stories about them.
I still do.
On days like today, she would say that God had pulled a blanket across the sky.
I can’t tell you how many hours I spent with her, when I was young, laying on our backs on the pier at Bath Creek, looking at the stars or clouds, and listening to the water lapping at the pilings.
It’s still one of my favorite sounds, to this day.

About that pier.
She taught me the joy of running, full speed, down the lawn and right off the end of it.
Just jump.
From this I learned that you don’t have to always see what is waiting for you clearly.
I also learned that the pain of jellyfish stings is temporary, and will be followed by ice cold watermelon from the cooler, always with a sprinkle of salt.
Just like hers.

I might not dress like anyone else, or make the same choices, but I’ve always known that Gramma loved and supported me, no matter how strange I might be.

She taught me to argue, just to get a better understanding of a situation.

It was a privilege to be able to spend the last two and a half years with her.

She was simply the best Gramma for me, and I will miss her forever,
And always carry her in my heart.



Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Doorways, Sadness, the state of me

Every doorway is a choice, every choice is a doorway.

This is a key piece of my personal philosophy. I am a result of my choices, as are you. I am, at heart, an existentialist, constantly searching for some sort of meaning, that I'm not even sure exists. I identify as a witch, I firmly believe that some magic is science that we don't understand yet. I also believe that visualization is a powerful tool that can appear to be magic, if our belief in self falters. Much like my relationship with my vanquished loved ones, my relationship with certain deities is quite conversational. I fully realize that they are representations of aspects of things that provide focus. I follow no defined path. The deities that call to me are from vastly differing pantheons, but quite a few of them are associated with doorways and crossroads. Anubis is usually associated with being the Egyptian god of the dead, but he is also the god of divination and doorways. Death was a doorway to somewhere else for the Egyptians, after all. Papa Legba is the Keeper of the Crossroads.
I speak to quite a few Voodou loa, but always Papa Legba first. I have a large Anubis tattoo, with a matching tattoo of Sekhmet. Most people assume that it's her sister, Bast. Bast is a motherhood goddess. Nurturing and caring. Sekhmet is a war goddess, goddess of wrath and vengeance. The only way to stop her vengeance is to mix beer with the blood she has released into the streets, so she drinks it until she passes out. Sekhmet is to remind me to slow my roll.

Doorways. Each is a choice. Doors can be opened to something new. Doors can be closed, to keep one hidden or sheltered. Doors can be opaque, translucent, or transparent, just like choices. Doorways are deeply mystical, to me. I speak in my head to Anubis and Papa Legba, to articulate needing help with choices.

I am deeply unhappy, and catastrophically unfulfilled, at this point in my life. I made the choices that got me here. I do not know how to get out in a satisfactory manner. I take care of my Grandmother. I am her only caretaker. I receive exactly zero income from this. I pay the bills from her social security, which leaves very little. I am poor. Devastatingly so. Several friends unexpectedly gave me money in December, which allowed me to get the final heaters that we needed for the winter, and restock basic pantry necessities. I am grateful beyond words. Truly. I am left, now with a series of choices, from here.

Do I find a job, to bring in money? (I am looking) If I find one, then I leave her alone for part of the day, putting her, my pets, and everything I own in danger. Her dementia is advanced. Also, I could face neglect charges if anything happens to her.

Do I focus on making my jewelry, and trying to sell it? Like anyone who makes things, I have stuff, still, collected over years, to keep creating. However, it doesn't seem to sell. I know that I'm supposed to keep trying, in the face of complete rejection of my craft. If I wear any of it, people ask where it came from, I give them cards. Nothing. I have sold a couple of pieces, but not nearly enough. I am going through the process of getting what I have out there on social media, again. Making things brings me some amount of peace. I can't start an Etsy store, because of money. I have to do everything by PayPal, which I'm okay with. I don't even have Netflix, because I can't guarantee having the $10 or whatever, in my account each month, I definitely can't do Etsy fees. I am looking for places to carry it, in boutique stores, but that requires gas money and such. Vending events needs upfront money. Unfortunately, and not melodramatically, food comes first, these days. There are many days a week that I never even get dressed, and I go nowhere at all.

I have tried to do the state and federal forms for all kinds of assistance, everything that's been suggested to me. I can't even fill out most of the forms, because a lot of the info needs to come from a woman who can't provide it. I need a lawyer, I guess? That needs money. Find my ombudsman? I've left messages and sent emails and I get no answer. Call this person...I promise that I have tried. I don't know why I can't make it work, I promise you that I feel really fucking stupid, so I don't talk about it much, anymore. The dismissive answers I receive feel really judgmental, sometimes. I'm aware that I'm failing horribly. I know I chose this, but now all of my decisions involve, fully, the welfare of another human, and now I feel just as abandoned as she doesn't. It's just like having a toddler that remembers being completely in charge for forty years, with zero concept of how much she has changed.

My personal life is fairly nonexistent. I feel like no one wants to really spend time with me. I can't really afford much, anyway, sometimes not even gas money. It's weird for me to contemplate how many people are leaving facebook. I understand the reasons, I do. But, then, those people will just be gone from my life, as it's most of my social interaction.

So, I'm looking for doors, and contemplating the consequences of going through them. My drug of choice, that brings me peace and clarity (and isn't a drug or a substance at all) is unavailable at the moment. I dance. A lot. Around the house and yard, which is great, but isn't what I need. I see exactly one person, other than my Grandmother or Mom, regularly. One of my oldest and most consistent friends. I try for once a week, to get that hug I know is coming. It costs me nothing but gas, and the smile I get upon arrival is everything, and is holding me together right now. It's not like I'm turning down invitations.

I know I'm sad. I know it's unpleasant. I'm doing the best I can from being squished between a rock and a hard place. I know my best isn't good enough.

I know.

Wednesday, January 2, 2019

A Typical Day in Dementialand

I wake up around 7:30 every morning. Well, to be honest, the dogs wake up around 7:30 every morning, and they are leash walked, so that is when I get up. I open Gramma's bedroom door to glance in on her, and I usually get my first "What?!?!" of the day. This happens a lot. This phenomena needs a bit of expansion, this "What?!?!?!" that haunts my days and nights and rings through my head when I sleep. It seems such a simple word, one oft repeated in daily life. Gramma says she has a hard time hearing, but she doesn't, I took her to the specialist to have her checked. Her problem is all in cognition, not aural at all. She simply doesn't understand what she hears immediately. Generally, she understands about 6 beats later than most, if she gets it. (Some things she swears are completely alien, more on that later.) This simple word, necessary for everyday life, is not merely muttered as an inquisitive, it is screeched, loudly, generally while I am mid word answering the very question at hand. It has a peculiar, nasal, impatient, angry parrot, nails on chalkboard quality. I probably hear it a hundred times a day. It is always grating and makes me clench my hands, or roll my eyes if facing away. It's always very loud, as if she can drown out her own confusion. I do one hell of an impression of it, but I probably won't do it for you, I generally only say it that way to my Mom, who will then, gently, lovingly, slap me about the back of my head. Around 9:00am, the lady of the manor rises from her bed, puts on a robe, and shuffles to my door. My bedroom door is directly across the hall from hers. She greets the dogs "Good morning poochie! Good morning poochie! Hey poochie!," then looks to me, I spend most of my days in my room. So, I'll be sitting in bed, looking at my computer, reading my Kindle, playing games on my phone, something along those lines, drinking coffee. She'll ask what i know good, what day is it, anything she should know, anything going on, in rapid fire succession. Generally, there's not much going on. If it's Wednesday, her friend Jane will pick her up for bingo and lunch at the senior center. The senior center has Meals on Wheels lunch every day for qualified recipients. Most days, she does not want to go, but she loves bingo on Wednesdays. They each bring something to offer as a prize, a trinket, a book, candy, an orange, etc., and winners get to pick from the prize table. I finish my first (or second) cup of coffee and go into the den, where she has made herself a cup of coffee and settled into her recliner with the local daily paper, which I brought in when I walked the dogs. I'll ask what she wants for breakfast. When I first came, two years ago, now, she was still driving and cooking for herself. She could spend a night or two alone, she had been living completely on her own, up until then. Honestly, nobody really saw how bad she was, because she has always done stuff for attention. She is loud, and brash, and an attention whore, she always has been. She's also always been one of the most completely selfish and self centered humans on the planet. I got it easier than most, because I was her first grandchild, I was golden. Her second grandchild is the only boy, and blind. She is not a fan of the mother of my cousins, and was pretty disdainful, or downright mean to the youngest two. I went out of town for a couple of nights, when I had been here for a few months, and she managed to drive herself into town, get lost for hours, and lose $200. No more driving. We were getting calls from bill collectors, so I took over paying bills. She had gotten herself into a lot more financial trouble than anyone realized. She can't cook, because she almost burned the house down with a fried egg. Twice. So, I make her oatmeal, and/or some toast. Mom usually boils eggs for her, and leaves them. I can't even keep raw eggs, because, as she says often, "I'll damn well do what I damn well please." Not that I know how to cook an egg, honestly. I don't eat them. She reads the paper and does the crossword. If I'm in the den, I answer her crossword clues, if she asks. It makes her feel good the next day, to see how well she did, when I help. About fifty times a day, every day, I hear "I guess I'm worse than I thought." She'll get a phrase in her head, heard on tv, or read, and she'll say it over and over. She'll ask me to explain it, and then swear she's never heard of such a thing. Like corn dogs, or summer sausage. She'll ask to to explain, and then screech "what?!?!?" at ear splitting volume when I'm about four words in. I'll start over. She'll shake her head. I'll explain it again. She'll shake her head. She'll pout, and tell me it's not her fault, she has dementia. I am far more aware than anyone on earth, Gram, I really am. She eats very small meals, and complains about how big every single one is. Every single one. Big spoonful of mac and cheese? Oh my god, it's so much! Unless it's sweet, she never runs out of room for dessert. She'll ask me to do something, then get mad that I've done it. She doesn't bathe if I don't tell her, and sometimes that's a fight. I am responsible for all of her meals, which is fine, I can make sure that she eats enough protein. Most days, I'm in the house with her all day, or she's out running to the store and such with me, If I can get her to not look like a hobo. She was never very girly, but she has always been vain, until this. True story, she got married in a grey skirt suit, which just wasn't much done in 1949. Every day is a battle in which everything I do is wrong. My Mom comes up every Saturday to help. They have never been close, at all. I am the only member of my family not born in Eastern NC, because Mom got pissed off and moved to Georgia when she was 19. My uncle is just like Gramma. Selfish. Entitled. A pathological liar. He has a son just like him. My female cousins help some, but I know they don't feel it's their responsibility. Once Gramma wasn't good for free child care, they pretty much let her to be. She's not my responsibility, really, either. I just believe that you don't get rid of people, and warehouse them when they are inconvenient. I will be here, to keep her in the house my Grandaddy built for her, as long as I can. I had a part time job, for a while, but my boss became ill. I'm trying to find another that I can work and still care for her. I am out and about at night, sometimes, because of all the things, she is not a wanderer. She goes to bed around 5, and stays in her room until about 9:30 am. To say money is tight is a hysterical understatement. I'm doing the best that I can. Which isn't good enough, but I'm still trying. This post didn't go where I expected, but there will be more Dementialand posts in the future.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

New Year's Day

2018 sucked, no doubt about it. I’m in a very dark place, and I have no idea how to get out. One of the biggest mental problems I’m having makes me feel beyond selfish. One of my oldest friends is dying, which makes all my suicidal ideation feel even worse. He is amazing and revered, and so very loved, in big loud ways. He’s a giant in body and spirit. He’s handling death far more gracefully than I’m handling life. I am having a stupidly hard time with the fact that I’m about to turn 45. My heart is still broken. That man took all of my ability to believe that I’m worth, well, any kind of relationship. Which is complicated by the fact that I have a crush. Or two. One is easy. It’s physical and involves a friend, who knows quite well. One of the biggest, shiny, bright spots of my year, was a completely unexpected, vigorous and thorough kiss. We were friends before. Friends we will remain. They’ve done a lot for my self-esteem, just for the fact that before that kiss, they are pretty much the shiniest thing in any room, to me, a smile like a son. The other is far more complicated but still seems to be happening. It would be a completely different thing if it were even possible. I wouldn’t even know how to approach it. Or if I should. Or if I’m prepared for the rejection. Or if I’m prepared for not being rejected. Not right now, I guess, anyway. Right now I'm just a wee spot completely out of control.