Friday, June 26, 2009

On Solitude

Marianne Moore, a poet, wrote that "the best cure for loneliness is solitude." This sentence explains my mother's demeanor. She spends a good deal of her day alone in her room, and yet everytime I visit her, or she comes downstairs, she is cheerful. I have asked her often, "Are you lonely? Are you bored?" Her response is always, "No, I'm content." On occasions, she has admitted to missing my father, but her missing him, I know, goes well beyond lonliness. His death has left a vacancy in her life that will never be filled, and yet her loving memories of him have colored in the darkness of her two years without him. She waits to join him, and she waits patiently. My mother has found solitude--that feathered cushion upon which she places her trust. A cushion that absorbs the outer noise so her inner voice is heard. She listens and finds safety in the space it provides.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Therapy

That which I most detest, I am.
Mom and I have been watching "In Treatment" on HBO. We thrive on watching others cry, lust, deny, and vent. As spectators, we can easily spot these patient's weaknesses and vulnerabilities, and we marvel that they can't see what we see. Like voyeurs, we are glued to the drama and especially enjoy the episodes where the therapist visits his therapist and behaves just as blindly as his patients.
As our own lives play out and we behave like humans do, it's comforting to know everyone else is just as nuts as we are. This is feel-good TV.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

New Day

Where did this day come from? Out of the thick as molasses night air I could barely inhale dawned a crisp sunny morning with a breeze that ruffled the hickory's feathery leaves and nearly made the maples chime. "Want to have coffee out on the deck today, mom?" I asked. She has not left the house in weeks, now favoring the filtered chilled air that makes it easier for her to breathe in summer in Virginia. Nodding, she removes her oxygen and hangs the noose shaped canula over a chair stem. We step onto the deck and immediately I see her eyes close for a stretched moment in gratitude. She scans the backyard, so densely leafed out by now that we can barely see the houses that back up to ours across the creek. As she inhales deeply, a smile creeps in. It's her wedding anniversary today, but her husband died two years ago. He loved to sit with her out on this deck. As if called, our red cardinal flies to the feeder and glances at mom. Deciding it's okay to eat, he gets to work pounding out sunflower seeds. Her silver curl stirs in the breeze. "This is lovely, just lovely."