Jan 182021
 

Memory is a brain activity by which we encode and store data. As we all know, the process often produces untrustworthy results. When I couldn’t find my glove this morning, I “knew” absolutely that I’d dropped it last night when I walked the dog. I went back to the exact spot and searched. It wasn’t there. When I came back to the house, I discovered the missing glove in the pocket of a coat I don’t remember wearing on the night walk.

Such things don’t yet worry me. I can still retrieve the numbers, codes and digits I require. My basic data storage and retrieval is still operational.

I’m more caught up by what we mean when we talk about memories, our recollections of the past. I have specific visions I can see: my uncle’s farm, my family around the dining room table, my fifth-grade classroom. Some of these images are sharp, others are hazy and filtered.

One oddly specific detail I do recall is riding an old-fashioned streetcar–the kind that ran on tracks and connected to overhead cables. The last trolley in Milwaukee, where I grew up, stopped running before I turned nine. If I was riding at that age, I must have been with my mother. It’s hard to imagine her sending me alone. I was not an adventurous sort and even a familiar ride might have generated some concern on my part. We didn’t have cell phones from which to send anxious text messages and receive reassuring replies.

So perhaps she was with me and I can’t picture it. Nor can I swear to the time of year, although I feel it might have been early autumn.

What I do remember is looking out the window and noticing a woman in a turquoise dress. What used to be called a housecoat, with buttons (maybe gray) up the front. An everyday dress. She was substantially built, I think, not likely to be bothered by the stiff breeze off Lake Michigan. Permed hair, I think, maybe brown or blond. She was carrying something, a purse and maybe another bag. Just then, a stray gust kicked up her dress and revealed a black slip beneath.

Why do I remember this event after so many years? I’m not sure. I know that after a while, I made a point of pulling up the image of the woman in the turquoise dress with the black slip just to see if I could. It was like a game, a challenge I gave my brain to hold onto the picture. Not because what I noticed was so unusual or amazing, but because it was so ordinary.

That memory seems to be divorced from any emotional context. I’m amused at its persistent presence, but that’s about it. It doesn’t trigger in me a sense of pleasure or pain. The smell of baking bread, on the other hand, reminds me of my childhood. Not because my mother baked, mind you, but because downtown Milwaukee was home to a large Wonder Bread factory. Other sounds summon up snapshots of a ballgame, an afternoon sledding, a spring day. Those memories make me smile.

Remembering people is harder for me, especially those whose permanent absence is a constant ache. We’ve all received instruction in the throes of grief to “remember the happy times” or to “make new memories.” I haven’t been able to effectively manage either of those brain exercises, to tell the truth. The death of my sister is too recent, too raw, and too seared on my brain to spend much time fondly recalling our madcap road trips together. Touching that part of my life hurts as much as touching a hot stove.

I’m told this will pass.

As for making new memories, that’s also been a challenge. The pandemic has stalled my attempts to find comfort, let alone accumulate new experiences.

This too shall pass. At least I want to believe it will, and that someday I can welcome back old memories and welcome new ones.

In the meantime, I’ll place myself on that old streetcar and become, once again, an eight year old girl watching a woman in a turquoise dress walk down the street, her black slip peeking out from underneath her hem.

Jan 292020
 

“Heel” is a simple word. A body part, or a part of a shoe. As a verb, the act of repairing a shoe or a command instructing a leashed animal (usually a dog) to follow closely behind its owner.

Then there’s “heal,” which is a more complicated verb. When it comes to physical injury, the definition is “to cause (a wound, an injury, or a person) to become sound or healthy again.” The implication is that the thing or person being treated will be somehow restored. Sample sentence? “He would wait until his knee had healed.”

Then there is the second definition: “to alleviate (distress or anguish)” What it suggests is a lessening, an accommodation of sorts but not a restoration. Sample sentence? “Time can heal the pain of grief.”

Which is to say, the griever becomes far better at coping, more adept at getting through a day, open to the idea of living, laughing, loving. Never wholly repaired. Ever. Like an aging body, it will always hurt.

I’m surprised more people don’t seem to understand this about grief. Hasn’t loss touched a great number of us? Any episode of “This is Us” or the myriad doctor shows revisit the subject time after time. True, the passing of the elderly may cause less pain, though that is also fungible. Lives cut short are always a shock to the system.

Yet most people are supremely awkward around grievers. Some feel compelled to share their grief stories. Others want to flee. I get it. Listening, just listening, is hard. Being around people in pain is a colossal downer.

Writers are natural grievers. In the effort to tell stories that resonate, we must tap into universal experiences that include joy and hope but also pain and loss. We are required to feel what our narrators feel. Further, we are by nature somewhat solitary. Isolated at times by our own unruly emotions, we must rely on whatever words we have at our disposal, so that we may reach out, connect and find the truth in our own one-of-a-kind process. Such efforts may benefit others. It definitely benefits us.

As does IRL (in real life) contact. Americans may be bad with words but they are terrific huggers. Hugging isn’t for everybody and hugging everybody isn’t for me. I’m squirmy in the embrace of strangers. My family wasn’t overtly physical, although they were never at a loss for words. I’ve been a widow for eighteen years. My sister didn’t hug until the very end of her life. Being folded into an embrace is still a novelty for me.

I don’t mind it, though. It feels as if I’m connecting to something. To another being. To life.

Speaking of connecting, I know far more people now than I did when my husband was killed. Although many of these people remain virtual, others do not. They’ve stepped up. Not only are they reaching out to me, some are determined to get me out of the house. I have (what is for me) a crowded social calendar. It’s exhausting but it’s not a bad thing. I try to accept as many of these connections as possible. I’ve even done my own outreach, making dates and planning to fly off to see distant friends. That’s some sort of record.

Still, I try not to get ahead of myself. Grief drains me. I am often tired. I do practice what my friends call self-care. Less wine, less sugar, more protein, lots of exercise and the aforementioned social engagements. I am lucky to be able to do so and I don’t take that advantage for granted. I’m even grateful to keep busy with the paperwork that arises when one is solely responsible for packing up another’s life.

I’m not a patient person and age has only aggravated my impatience. I want to get on with things. Grief has other ideas about the how and the when, confounding the best laid plans.

I don’t entirely control my broken heart’s repair. For the foreseeable future, grief is the master. Where it leads, I follow. I heel, so that I can heal.

Jul 292019
 

Molly crouch nowMolly has turned fourteen, which means she’s either 88, 84, or 76 years old, depending on which chart you follow. I prefer the one at her vet’s office, which measures her size, weight, current health and puts her at 72 years. I prefer that calculation. I like to think that she, like me, has a bit more time left on the clock. Although such things are unpredictable at our age.

She’s a Cavachon, a mix of Cavalier King Charles spaniel and Bichon Frise. King Charles are much prized lap dogs, cuddly, sweet-eyed, sweet-tempered, a little needy. Bichons are playful, curious, bred to entertain. Molly is a combination of both, which means she has a big personality, a defined set of likes and dislikes, a touch of anxiety, an obvious preference for people over dogs, and a big appetite for playing and eating. Physically, she seems to have inherited the best of each—she remains a good-looking dog with soft fur and lovely eyes, ears, and tail. Her weight is low, her physical ailments few, even as her similarly aged canine acquaintances struggle.

Still, we’re both growing old, she obviously at a faster rate. At this moment, we’re moving together into what you might call early old age (although I’d prefer not to) and hitting the same issues, human and canine versions, at the same time. This has been a blessing and a curse. It’s also the reality of caring for a senior dog—or a senior human.

Molly thenIf you’d asked me twenty years ago whether I’d care for (much less worry about) a senior dog, I would have said, “Doubtful.” Then again, if you’d asked me where I expected to be, I’d have said in Florida or Canada with my loving husband. Then he died and I had some quick adjusting to do, which ended up not being quick at all. Four years of hyper-activity only helped me so much. After I slowed down, the walls began to close in. I still lived where I lived, one of two occupants in a house I couldn’t seem to leave. Thus, a dog. A puppy, actually, whom I purchased when she was nine weeks and I was four years into my grief and still deeply afraid of making lasting connections.

I’d never owned a pet, not by myself. I had no idea what to do. How was I supposed to care for this tiny defenseless creature? I thought I wasn’t up to the task. A childless widow, what did I know? How could I handle the responsibility?

Molly and Nikki thenShe was a mellow puppy, which made things easier. She was also a life-saver, an identity-changer (I’m a dog owner!), a bit of a headache, and an absolute guarantee that the low moods and the dark thoughts to which I am prone could not pin me to my house, let alone my bed. My canine companion’s immediate and ongoing needs have always compelled me to, as a friend once said, “Get over your bad self.”

Molly has experienced some changes as she ages. Her anxiety has increased a bit. Her energy has dropped. She sometimes stops in the middle of the room for a second or two, as if trying to figure out what she meant to do. She’s developed idiopathic head tremors, small impulses that turn her into a bobble head for three or four seconds. If her knee is bothering her or she’s tired, she won’t jump up on the couch or finish her walk.

We’ve both adjusted to these issues. She’s learned to use the stairs to the bed. I’ve learned to lift 17 pounds without hurting my back. She’s adjusted to the tremor wave by taking a wider stance when it hits. She loves her mat by the front door (so she can monitor my comings and goings) as well as her car seat. We’ve even experimented with a stroller, which she seems to enjoy.

She seems otherwise happy and healthy, my Molly, and interested in life. She trots briskly, at least first thing in the morning. She’s still up for car rides and road trips and walks and games like fetch and new adventures and food, always food. Like me.

Her life will begin to be measured in months, not years. Maybe Molly and Nikki noweven shorter intervals. Her health can turn on a dime. That’s hard for me to accept, but I must. Living with a rapidly aging creature is a teaching moment. I frequently find myself lacking in either patience or gratitude. The care and maintenance of a senior dog requires the one and urges the other. That’s a lesson I’m working hard to absorb, a lesson that will be Molly’s lasting gift to me.