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Wednesday
May 30, 2012
6:22am EDT


  >> Static Item >> Essay >> Emotional >> ID #150895  |   Show DetailsPrinter Friendly Page Tell A Friend
Acustom to a Soul
Speaks to our essence and the context in which it dwells.
Rated:
13+
by
Avg Rating: (2)
Is one's essence defined by the age of the body or their culture, economic status or gender? What are we naked; without our statistics to label us?
My mother has gone through a true metamorphosis and continues to do so. She wears different costumes of the mind. Each costume is unique and from a different time in her life; drawing upon a different life experience. Alzheimer's disease has sponsored my mother's time travel.
My mother was the provider of the family, thanklessly working two sometimes three jobs to make ends meet. Now her life has turned itself upon its head for she is completely dependent upon the family for her basic survival needs.
I am painfully aware of my mother's constantly changing context of time, emotion and libido from which she speaks. The self my mother is most ill at ease with is the one that is forced to deal with the glare of the here and now reality. Although I feel relieved each time she returns, it is a selfish relief for her face is filled with angst of her awareness of her debilitating disease. The overwhelming grief she feels comes in thrusts. She experiences her life's memories; memories of which she is the product, slip away one by one, dissecting each factor of her being-forever irretrievable. The cruel twist that she is aware of the echoes and shadows the memories leave behind.
I went to the mall to buy a present for the daughter of a friend of mine that was having a fourth birthday. I spotted a Raggedy Ann in the window of a toy store. I saw its potential so I dodged and weaved my way through the toy store, bought it and slipped out. As I passed expensive jewelry displays, headless manicans in evening gowns and a department store saleswoman assaulting me with perfume spray, my claustrophobia broke lose to the noise of a herd of giggling teenagers I saw marveling at each window display they passed.
Suddenly, I came up with what I thought was a brilliant idea. I would give my mother a make over. I quickly made my way to the nearest cosmetic counter and bout a small fortune in make up, lotions, sprays and such all inspired by visualizing my mother's joyful and excited expression in my mind. I felt the genius within me had emerged and like a skillful surgeon, about to rescue a woman's libido through a very delicate cosmetic operation.
When I arrived at my mother's door, I knocked for what seemed like fifteen minutes. I felt fear of perhaps confronting a yet unknown version of my mother. My favorite version of my mother is her at thirty-five. It is because of the tremendous power of nostalgia yet it was more. It made me a wide-eyed innocent eight-year-old once again. At thirty-five my mother is a real dynamo. She is a combination of Audrey Hepburn from "Breakfast at Tiffany's" and Elizabeth Taylor from "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolfe?"; a powerhouse with elegance.
I remember when I was actually eight seeing her as possessing all the secrets of great womanhood..of life. Now, being forty-one I am able to talk to my mother, frozen in time and realize that there are no secrets to her greatnes..this is merely experiencing her "essence". My relationship with my mother is one that deals with the variables of our conscious mind and the psyches of one another set in a maze of time.
My mother finally cracked the door open just enough to peer outside. She squinted at me like a mole struggling to see within the sobering sunlight. Upon my entrance, my mother walked slowly back to the couch, stooped shouldered, head hanging in a quiet sadness and mumbling softly to herself. I watched her increasingly small frame as she sat down on the couch. Needless to say, I hadn't got the welcome I had come for. Her fragile body, meek and helpless contrasted against the portrait of her at twenty-two the hung on the wall behind her; mocking her. The painting dramatically showed my mother's essence with every brushstroke. In it she wore a stunning emerald green, floor length evening gown. It's Dracula-like collar stood high behind her neck. Her fresh ivory skin was set against the stark blackness of the hair. She with the antithesis of her own self-portrait as she sat upon the couch, her gray skin looking washed out; blending into her gray lifeless hair of today. She wore a hair net with a few dangling bobby pins. Her pink terrycloth robe was showing what she must have had for breakfast that morning.
I opened the windows as I always did. I often would wonder whether I was trying to let fresh air and sunlight in or trying to let the dark, malodorous funk of depression out. I sat down next to my mother and told her of my makeover idea. As I began to speak, careful not to appear neither insulting nor condescending, I had to ask myself for whom would I be doing this deed? She tried to appear pleased with my idea, however I think she was just happy to have the company. I felt trapped within the room's darkness.
I started to remove the bobby pins from her hair. I asked her if she would also like to have her finger and toenails polished. She nodded. Like a zombie she stared at her feet that were nestled within two pink fuzzy slippers. I stood behind her and picked up the hand mirror and placed it in her hand. We both found our reflections. She turned away; eyes wild and frantic. I gently removed my mother's hair net and started to brush her hair. I kept flashing back to when I was a child and used to watch her in awe at the skill my mother displayed as she painstakingly and with expert precision, put rollers in her blue-black hair; every roller planned, every pin in place. But now my mother's hair reflected the absence of color from her life.
Suddenly, my mother bolted forward. She stood up and raced to the bags I had left by the door. Her body language had clued me in on a shift in psyche. Many who spend time with my mother mistakenly compare her to one who suffers from multiple personalities. My mother's "personalities" are all her, just at different times in her life...different ages; multiple contexts, if you will.
With her back to me, she sat down on the worn carpeted floor. She started to rock back and forth and made what sounded like a cooing noise. I rushed fearfully around to face her. She was cradling the Raggedy Ann doll with her eyes closed smiled.
Suddenly, she opened up her eyes, frowned and looked at me, "Mine!" , she protested. "This is my dolly!". She put it under her robe.
"Mom! Are you O.K.?", I said already realizing the absurdity of the question. She slowly took out the doll and began to disrobe it, all the while keeping a very watchful eye on me. It finally sunk in that she was herself at about the age of five or so. I had not yet experienced her at this age. I didn't quite know how to deal with it. I smiled as I watched her as I had the ironic, memory of so badly I wanting her to be my playmate when I was a child.
"Do you like my dolly?", she asked me.
"Yes. I know you are a great mommy too!", I told her. She started to giggle like a little imp. She took the brush from my hands and asked if she could brush my hair. She told me that "just yesterday" her mother had taught her how to braid hair.. I complied.
She brushed my hair as she had done millions of times before but this time singing little girl songs all the while. Although my mother is dependent and feels powerless most of the time, that afternoon, she taught me a lesson that no other mother would have the tools to teach; a lesson that transcended Alzheimer's disease; that transcended time. That afternoon I realized that I have a unique opportunity to connect with another person with such completeness regardless of age or era. This exceeds the boundaries of the normal human I felt that if I could be unselfish long enough to stop mourning my mother, that I would see that I was thinking too small. My mother will no longer be defined by the restraints of age.
I am in awe of the fact that I can know my mother as a seventy year old woman confronting her own mortality in 2001, a thirty-something emerging feminist of the 1960's, an awkward adolescent who's naiveté knows no bounds of the 194o's, or a bright-eyed child of five; pure and unjaded by time of the 1930's.
It's been a year now, I still like to time travel with my mother. However, to her present self I am a stranger to her. For her to remember me, I have to be her little one of long ago. It's almost as if the powers that be struck a deal with my mother....she is only allowed to have a given memory if she surrenders to it with complete abandon.
Yes, my mother still teaches me that there is one constant within human existance..whether we call it a spirit or the soul, it is the part of us that cannot be changed by time or circumstance.
© Copyright 2001 thoughtpainter (UN: quirkypen at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
thoughtpainter has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
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