By the time she was 13 she was a beauty, appearing older
than she was and having experienced much more of life than someone twice her
age. When she was in her 70’s she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and
was having difficulty with the common tasks of daily living, yet her long-term
memories were still intact and vivid. She spent an afternoon relating some of
the events of her life. A few were happy memories, though tinged with the
realities of a young life spent in abject poverty and paucity. Others were
tragic and horrible. It was a sign of her disease, I believe, that enabled her
to discuss both pleasant reminiscences and heartbreaking vile memories with the
same light-hearted tone. Remembering the past no longer brought her pain or
pleasure. She just seemed to need to unburden herself before she became unable
to recall anything and was lost to us as well as to herself.
When she was 13 she worked as a waitress at a local diner in
Johnson City, Tennessee. Many of its patrons were truck drivers who stopped to
eat and rest and refuel before continuing their cross-country journeys. One of
the handsome diners was especially taken with the allure of the young waitress.
He often traveled that way on this truck route and would stop in whenever he
passed. They talked and flirted, and she was thrilled by his attention. He
eventually asked her to marry him and go with him to his home in Florida. She
readily agreed. He was 35 years old, handsome and most importantly, it was an
adventure that could take her away from the hardships of her life. I asked her
about the twenty-two year age difference and she just grinned sheepishly and
said, “Well, he thought I was actually 16.”
Soon after they were married the two of them left her
old home in Cuba Landing, Tennessee, to travel to Florida. Her family stood by to see them off. My mother, years later,
wondered why the family wasn’t concerned that an older man was taking her away.
She only remembers feeling relief that her sister had an exciting chance to
escape from the misery of their life there in the hills of Tennessee. Most of
the rest of the brothers and sisters and their mother eventually fled to
Florida as well. I often wonder what my
life would’ve been like if my mother had not followed my aunt.
Soon after moving to
Florida they had two daughters. Aunt Gwen tells of not being able to breastfeed
and my Uncle Gene sewing nipples from pieces of leather to attach to bottles to
feed the babies. They were married for over 50 years and to me always seemed
like a happy couple. After Uncle Gene died and Aunt Gwen began to become more
forgetful she would often talk to him as if he were there and set a place for
him at the breakfast table.
I saw Aunt Gwen recently. She is in a nursing home in Florida. I helped feed her lunch, she has forgotten how to eat and must be reminded to open her mouth, close her mouth and then to swallow. They say soon she will probably forget how to even do those things. She is mostly nonverbal though she does attempt to talk but the jumbled mumbling resembles a sentence that cannot be understood. She smiled a few times. And she looked at our faces with a troubled look like she was trying to remember who we were. When I left her room I kissed her and told her I love her. She uttered the one word I could understand, which was “yeah.” So I will hold on to that and believe she knows I love her and am comforted that her 'yeah' was her way of saying she loves me too.
2 comments:
A moving and heartwarming tribute.
It’ was so sad to see her this is a reminder that she had a life before Alzheimer’s and love and a great big devoted family. Thanks for writing this
Post a Comment