Voice

The one word prompt today was “Voice.”  “Gray Walls with Boxes”  is a rewrite of a poem I wrote four years ago.  In it I attempt to act as the voice of my sister Betty who is in advanced stages of Alzheimer’s.  Everything in the poem is an attempt to see the world as she was then seeing it, as evidenced by what she said to me and I recorded either in notes or with a voice recorder during our visits.

I often wonder whether those suffering from dementia are actually in a different world of their own making that is pleasant to them.  I think my sister now is, but four years ago––at the stage I describe in this poem––she was often in distress, confusing the interrelationship of people, objects, paintings on the wall, the television and what was going on around her.  To her, all seemed to be part of the same reality.

Gray Walls with Boxes

Once I knew words that fit together.
Now my mind still has the answers,
but rarely lets me in to find them.

People who seem to know me
bring pizza in a box
and we eat it in front of another box I’ve forgotten the name for––
a small world with other people moving in it that I don’t know.
Sometimes words appear in a ribbon on the bottom edge of that box
and I wonder if I understood them
if they ‘d tell me what I’m supposed to do.

On the walls are other flat boxes
with people frozen in them
and I think it is my fault.
There is something I am supposed to be doing.
There is something I am supposed to be doing.
“They are your pictures, Mother.
They’re there for decoration—
for you to enjoy,”
a woman tells me
when I ask her
if she’d like to take them
home with her.

I don’t belong here.
My high school boyfriend
must be wondering
where I’ve gone
and my daughter is as confused as I am,
claiming to be her own child;
and then one day my sister comes
and I have to laugh because they all
look so much alike—
my sister and her niece and her niece’s daughter
whom they try to convince me
are my daughter and my granddaughter––
so many layers of daughters
that it is too hard to keep them
all in mind.

But then that floats away
and I am trying to remember
when I am leaving this hotel
and I feel I’m not suited to run for president
although all those people
cheering at that big convention in that little box
want me to––
that little box they turn off and on each day,
sometimes before or after I’m ready
to have it turned off.

And they take me to that large room
where all those silent older people sit.
I do not want to go into this room,
but I am lucky, and we move through it.
Someone’s daughters have come to put me
into a box that moves us through the world
without walking. At first, I am so surprised by it,
then I remember what it is
but can’t remember the word for it.
As we sit in it, the world moves by
too fast, scaring me, and I try
to weep unnoticed.

But then they take me out of it,
give me popcorn
and lead me into a very large room
with many people sitting down
and an entire wall with larger people
moving on it, and it is so confusing, like déjá vu,
for I remember being in a room like this before,
but I don’t know if I’m supposed to
make them do something other
than what they are doing
or if I’m already controlling them with my thoughts
or if I’m supposed to be
up there on the wall with them.
I can’t remember whether these people
on either side of me are my sisters
or my children or strangers,
sitting chair after chair down the long aisle.

Most days, I am so sad all day long,
but sometimes my real self
comes to visit and I think,
how did I become a martyr like my grandmother
and why can’t I stop myself from crying, just like her?
One gray wall meets another at the corner
and I’m sure
that I am being punished
for things I did but can’t remember.

That blank face
in the mirror
has me in it,
but I can’t get out
and for a moment I know, then forget
that this is why I cry
and even though it tries to comfort me,
I cannot stop.

 

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/voice/

12 thoughts on “Voice

    1. lifelessons Post author

      Thanks, Patti. I hate to exploit the situation but also have an insatiable curiosity about what Betty is going through and I think she connects with that sometimes. I would hate to misrepresent what I observe so your agreement concerning what you’ve observed means a lot!

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  1. Linda Crosfield

    Caught it, I think. Hope to god I never know. I remember my dad, gone almost forty years now, sitting on the couch looking confused about something he couldn’t remember. “When I lick this thing…” he said. And the rest of us not looking at each other, knowing he wouldn’t.

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  2. dstrandberg2015

    I lost my father-in-law to this disease and your description captures what I thought he might be feeling exactly. I too hope that their world is ok for them and that their tears or angry looks or blankness becomes their new reality. Perhaps we will never know, but I applaud your trying to understand and I hope both you and your sister find peace in your own way each day.

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    1. lifelessons Post author

      You can’t know how comforted I am by your words, D. I wanted this to be authentic. Otherwise, it is just exploitation of such a sad sad condition. A friend was going to publish an anthology of pieces by caregivers of people with Alzheimer’s and I had contributed several pieces. Sadly, he abandoned the project, but I think it would be such a valuable resource.

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  3. lifelessons Post author

    I should add that I live 2,000 miles away from my sister and I am not her caregiver, although I did spend a few weeks with her just before she went into a care facility. I do visit her at least once a year and this is when I see the progress of this sad disease. She did not respond to any of us the last time I visited a year ago, but she does have moments of lucidity. Her daughter has been such a good warden for her mother and she has been in three different excellent managed care facilities as her condition worsened.

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  4. Pingback: NaPoWriMo – Day 7 – “The Endless Beauty Of An Authentic Voice” by David Ellis | toofulltowrite (I've started so I'll finish)

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