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On My Mind - August 1996
August 15/96
On this visit help came soon after I arrived and the 3 of us got him back into his wheelchair. This process...my putting a pillow under his head and reassuring him while we waited for enough assistance...was almost unbearable for me. I was on the verge of tears, and in fact had to disappear for a few minites before I took him out because I couldn't stop crying. The fortunate (?) part of this whole thing is that my father remains seemingly unaffected by this behavior, due I imagine to his dementia. He knows he shouldn't crawl...bad for an arthritic back..but I think it's his way of exerting some control over his environment...and over the people around him.
August 17/96
I find I am now doing the same with my father...watching him, trying to figure out how he now sees the world. It isn't easy. I wonder what scares him, what makes him feel secure, what makes hi m happy, what frustrates him. I no longer know how he'll react to situations...he is continually surprising me.
August 20/96
We moved my father to his retirement home on January 20 th this year (coincidentally my birthday; afterward at a dinner out with my brother, sister and boyfriend I threw up from the stress). For seven months he never mentionned this former house although he has always let me know in subtle ways that he really expected to leave the retirement home.
But two weeks ago things came to a head. He demanded to go home...pack up his TV (which he never watches any more) and leave "this house". I decided at this point that I could no longer avoid the issue...I told him he could not go home...he needed too much care etc. I told him about his best friend who was also leaving his home to live with his daughter in Barrie. He started to cry...which he has done ever since my Mother died...and then it was time for lunch. I wheeled him into the dining room and there he sat, crying over his soup. I thought "O God, he's going to stop eating and go into a rapid decline..what have I done?"
But God bless my father...one thing he has never had a problem with is eating. So he would eat, then cry a bit, eat then cry until he stopped crying, mainly because I wasn't freaking out the way I used to when he cried. I think he understood I could not be moved by this behavior and it ceased. Since then he has not demanded to go home.
During the past week or so however, he has been asking to see the house. This is a tough one...I don't feel I can deny him this...perhaps it's his way of saying goodbye to his former life..but I'm afraid doing this will really exacerbate the situation. However, I told him I would take him and Michael his companion, up to the house so Michael could see it. By bringing Michael I hope to keep my father in the present and not let him slip back into thinking he can return. I'll let you know what happens.
August 25/96
When I returned him to the home for dinner, I made sure the night staff realized where he had been so they could be prepared for some agitated behavior later in the evening. I am sure the worst is yet to come.
August 29/96
I'll see my father today, looking for some kind of confirmation for myself that I can go ahead and deal with the house; sell things, give things away...the ritual that finally ends what is left of a family's home and history. Right now it just seems too much too tackle but I know it will get done.
I miss my mother terribly but am glad she is not here to see this.
Later....went to see Dad after dinner. As usual he was in his wheelchair in his sun hat and sun glasses, looking out for me. We went for a walk and then returned for juice and another sit in the foyer before going upstairs. He has mentionned home to the staff and Michael but nothing about the visit to the house to me. When I was getting him ready for bed, he started talking about locks on the door. I couldn't really figure out what he was talking about but knew he was agitated about this. It seems there are many thought streams going through his head..he often goes off on tangents...but these thoughts can't seem to be completed.
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