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Caregiving Ups and Downs – Calling 911

Painting of the Ups and DownsI shouldn’t have waited to call 911 for help.  Actually, not really 911 – the non-emergency one.  The ups and downs got to us.

We’ve been enjoying life each day in new ways.  We did make it to the concert two days ago and had a blast.  The Venice Art Center was an easy venue for Larry – small, no stairs or ramp, or tables, to navigate around.  The band, Mike Imbasciani and the BluezRockerz, played blues from 1928 to 2018, influence by rock, folk, and country.  They were loud and fun and people were dancing in their seats and in the aisle.  Big up!

Yesterday we had visits from the CNA and the hospice nurse to do wound care on the pressure sore on his heal, which didn’t look any better.  Bummer.  The nurse also brought up the fact that he is up for recertification in hospice.  If he gets “live discharged,” meaning they don’t think he qualifies, we’ll have to reconnect with all his doctors, go through a sleep study to get his Bi-pap machine ordered, and see a respiratory specialist to find a way to get his Cough Assist and suction machines again.  And no more CNA for showers.  UGGG!!!  Big down!  We’ll worry about that when the time comes.

It was a beautiful afternoon and Larry came out in his wheelchair to walk Bear with me.  Then we lit a fire in the firepit and enjoyed cocktails outside, while I cooked dinner on the grill.  His butt hurt sitting in his wheelchair, so after dinner we moved him to his lift recliner. We watched a fun mystery on TV and ate chocolate cake.  Big up!

Then, in trying to transfer him back to his wheelchair to go to bed, something happened.  I was holding him and he was leaning on the walker but somehow we lost his balance and he didn’t have the strength to hold himself up and I didn’t either so he slid to the floor.  No fall, no crash, no injuries.  But now he’s on the floor.  Big down – literally and figuratively!

Months ago, that wouldn’t cause much of a problem.  We had a method of turning him to one side and getting my knee under his armpit and then helping him get one foot under him and with a chair nearby to lean on we could get him up.

Normally I’d call a neighbor for help but it was 10 PM.  I didn’t think we’d be able to do it ourselves but he wanted to try.  We tried once and he felt so heavy.  I almost lifted him myself but couldn’t.  He insisted on trying going the other way, moving the wheelchair around him.  I said “one more try is all I’ll give you.”  No dice.  I called the non-emergency 911, they came (in a firetruck with lights flashing so we’ll have neighbors calling today) picked him up and all was well.

Except…

This morning I can hardly walk.  Somehow I did something to my foot in my attempts to get him up.  It’s hurting in multiple  weird ways.  Huge down!

It’s frustrating, uncomfortable, and inconvenient.  And I feel stupid for not calling for help in the first place.

Lesson to self – things have changed.  What used to work may not work.

 

 

Making Life Brighter for Both of Us

Original painting of a yellow and orange sunflowerThis new year (all 10 days of it) I’ve tried to find something fun or different for us to do each day.  Some things are little, like a walk together (he rolls in his chair, I walk).  Some things are bigger, like a trip to Arcadia – an old town about an hour inland from us.   It’s making life a little brighter for us both.

My daughter (the PhD researcher in Palliative Care and Hospice for people with dementia) commented that what I do is focus on living rather than dying.  Yes, definitely.

Somehow, accepting the dying has made living easier.  We’re not resisting.  We aren’t focused on fixing the symptoms, just making our way through them as gracefully as we can.   With as little aggravation from the healthcare system as possible (grrr) , but that’s a post for another day.

Maybe the fact that he said he thought he was going to die in February has made our time seem more precious, but strangely I don’t feel more urgency.  I just feel more present in today.

I wake up thinking “what can we find to do today?”  One night we played Scrabble – he’d slide the letter tiles out from behind a screen and I placed them where he pointed on the board.  We’ve had neighbors over for a cocktail – can’t do dinner anymore, it too hard and slow for Larry to eat.  One night I was walking the dog and saw a friend out in the street and said come on over.  We lit a fire in our firepit, they walked over with their own drinks, and we sat visiting outside as the sun set.

Last night I’d invited a woman I met in our community yoga class to bring her husband for a cocktail.  He’d lost part of a leg many years ago in a paragliding accident and they have a great energy that I enjoy.  We had some bourbon, some marinated mushrooms and olives I’d picked up earlier at an Italian market.  Larry had a couple choking moments but it didn’t seem to bother them and we had a lovely visit. I’d even thought to make dinner before they came so it was quick to heat up after they left.  Yay me, or “brilliant” as our guest would say as he’s a Brit.

Larry looking at the turquoise waters from Sharky's PierSeveral days ago it was perfect weather.  Sunny, about 75 degrees, a light breeze.  We drove south to the next town where there’s a fishing pier (Sharky’s) we’d never been on, figuring we’d get out on the water before the red tide returns.  The water was turquoise, people were catching big stingrays, there were bright colored umbrellas shading the tourists in their bathing suits, and the egrets and pelicans circled overhead.

What will we do today?  I’m not sure.  We have the hospice volunteer coming  this afternoon so I can do errands.  But maybe tonight we’ll go to a little jazz concert at a neighboring art center.  Or maybe we’ll find something right at home.

Caregiver’s View of What Will 2019 Bring

What will 2019 will bring?

The holidays are officially over.  On Wednesday with the help of our CNA I dragged the Christmas tree to the curb for pickup today.  Last night a neighbor put our boxes of Christmas stuff up on the garage shelf.

Putting away the holiday decorations has been bittersweet.  Last year I wondered if we’d have another year to celebrate together.  This week as I put them away I didn’t think about next year, just that I was happy we’d had this year.

New Year’s Eve we went to a party – first time in many years we were out past midnight.  Friends brought the ramp from our house to the house of the party so Larry could roll right in their front door.  He got confetti bombed at the stroke of 12.  I keep finding glittery squares around the house as they fall out of his wheelchair and they make me smile.  It was kind of a normal night.

It’s easy to get jealous of friends who are in London or in Paris.  Friends who celebrated with family.  Friends who are headed out on their winter cruise.  Family who are skiing.

So I muster my energy and get us going.  We went to the beach in the golf cart for a sunset.  New Year’s Day I took out the kayak for the first time in about 9 months, and  I got Larry on his recumbent bicycle.  He struggled keeping his feet on the pedals and he pedaled very slowly but he made it down the street and back with me and the dog trailing in the golf cart as an emergency pit crew.  Two nights ago, we had a picnic dinner by the firepit.  Yesterday came with me to walk the dog for the first time ever, rolling the wheelchair out the garage and down the street to the paths that meander through our community.

What will 2019 bring?  I have no idea.  I can’t imagine it will be a good year.  What do I wish for?  Maybe less energy fighting the medical system and more time enjoying each day.

I asked Larry what he thought 2019 would bring?  What did he hope for?  He said “to make it to February.”  His symptoms have been pretty controlled recently so his comment shocked me.  “I’ve always hated February.  I just have an instinct about it.  Black February,”  he said as I questioned him more.  I asked if he’d ever felt this way before and he said no.

His comments sit heavy with me.

He’s seemed in pretty good shape.  But it can turn so quickly.  All of a sudden yesterday morning his breathing was awful.  He was gasping, panting rapidly.  Here we go again.  The day was full of challenges. In the bathroom. Eating.  On and off gurgling breathing.  A rough night.

Today is better.  Our first hospice volunteer from the Transitions program is visiting.  She brought us Indian food for tonight’s dinner.  I’m writing this in a rocking chair on the screened porch of the little town library.

Who knows what 2019 will bring for any of us.

 

 

 

 

Respite Care from the Patient’s Viewpoint

Larry is home looking at Christmas cardsPart 1 and Part 2 of my perspective on the healthcare professionals with whom we engage was from my point of view and today I want to present respite care from the patient’s viewpoint.  Larry went into respite care for five days so I could get some good nights of sleep and some time to restore.   He was willing although not thrilled about going.  “I had to psyche myself up before I went,” he said today.

Overall, his experience mirrored mine in some ways – they are mostly set up for bed bound patients.   He said “it was so quiet – too quiet.  I was the only one out of my room.”

“The food was pretty good,” he said. “I could have an ice cream sundae whenever I wanted.”

“Most of the nurses were good, but one didn’t listen to me.”  That particular nurse didn’t listen to his explanation about how to use his catheters and made it more complicated and less comfortable for him.  (I had been told they mostly see indwelling catheters, not the disposable straight catheters we use.)

She also didn’t listen when he told her there were two parts to his Bi-Pap machine face mask.  She started with only the hard plastic part that attached to the tubing and didn’t use the part that goes against his face with the soft silicone gasket.  So by the time she realized what was wrong, he had a cut on his nose from the plastic.

I couldn’t figure out why his hair looked so bad when he came home until he told me they’d only given him one shower in the five days and even then they only put water on his hair with a washcloth, they didn’t wash it with shampoo.  Plus they only shaved about an inch on each cheek and left the rest of his face to go to stubble.

He ate all his meals alone at the dining table in the common room.  Two musicians played the first day and he was the only one listening.  The volunteers were great, but overall it was just too depressing.

I just asked what would have made it better.  “Not going,” he said.  “It was  a place where people go to die.  People were crying.   There were rooms with whole families surrounding the patient.  There was a group of about 20 people that took pictures in the common room.  I was probably in their picture.”

That’s my Larry – photo bombing someone’s funeral picture.

In retrospect, we intellectually know that’s what a hospice house is for.  It’s to take care of people at the very end of their lives.  We should have expected what he experienced in respite care.  But the social worker and the nurse were SO encouraging.  They led us to believe it would be fine, he’d even enjoy it.  They didn’t talk about how different a situation he was in from the other patients. That’s where the disconnect was.

Painting the family roomI did get some good sleep. I also painted our dark family room a light color and we’re both enjoying the new look.  I feel so loved that he was willing to endure the respite week to take care of me.

 

 

 

 

What I Want from Healthcare Professionals, Part 2

Yesterday, I talked about the gap between where my head is at as a caregiver and where the healthcare professionals’ minds seem to be. Because of that gap, these last five days of respite care resulted more in emotional trauma than rest for me.

Original painting of an angry state of mind

Disconnects started immediately. Our nurse comes in our front door where there are stairs, so without asking any questions, she sent five men and two transport vehicles to take Larry to the hospice house. She never asked if we had a ramp. I don’t know how she thought I took him out in his wheelchair. After I showed them the wheelchair ramp, four guys and one vehicle left.

I followed them to the hospice house to help him get settled, even though she said I didn’t need to. I was glad I went because the nurses had never seen the Cough Assist machine, one of his required respiratory treatment devices. I had typed out some information about his disease along with an example of how we spend our typical day. I explained the equipment, the list, answered their questions, then visited a bit with Larry. I also had to correct their list of meds which had many errors. My goal was to help them help him have the best stay possible.

It was SO hard to leave. I felt so guilty. So sad to leave him in that depressing environment. He watched me walk out. AHHHH!

On the way home, I received a call from the hospice nurse who’d received a call from her clinical supervisor who’d received a call from the nurses I’d met with. Instead of empathy for what was so difficult for both of us, and appreciation for providing useful information, I was chastised for the detailed list I’d prepared which they felt required “one on one nursing care.” I was told they weren’t set up for that.

My heart started racing. If the nurses had had concerns, why didn’t they tell me while I was there? Why not ask questions of me then when I could have answered them, or I could have taken him home if they weren’t prepared for his situation? I had assured them the information was just the way we spend our days at home, not a schedule.

Our hospice nurse didn’t listen to me. She didn’t seem to care what the emotional impact of her comments were on me. She didn’t care about where I was coming from. She had an agenda from her supervisor. She just kept repeating to me that I had to tell her I was confident that the nurses would provide good medical care their way.

I was worked up by the time I got home to an empty house. Then the phone rang. It was the hospice house clinical supervisor telling me they couldn’t provide “one on one nursing care” and didn’t know if they’d be able to do all his respiratory treatments with the cough assist, because they’d never seen it before, and didn’t have staff or volunteers that could help him with his daily exercises.

I was furious. So much for rest and relaxation. I was ready to jump back in the car and get him but it was 8 PM and he was 45 minutes away (which was another unpleasant surprise of the day – I thought he’d be going to one of the hospice houses only 10 minutes from our home.) I told the supervisor I’d drive down and take him home the next morning if they couldn’t use the equipment. So much for the reassurances from our hospice nurse that they’d just “follow his plan of care.”

The next day they were, if fact, able to use his equipment, and I received a call from another nurse thanking me for the helpful information I’d provided. But it was hard to unwind the damage to my headspace. I was guilty, I was angry. I didn’t have much confidence.

I visited a few days ago. It’s a horribly depressing place. It’s drab, it’s brown. It’s full of ugly drab brown art – someone’s idea of death?

I found out that he was the only patient there who was NOT bedbound. No wonder they thought he was going to be a lot of work. Those nurses were used to a different type of patient. They weren’t prepared for where we were. And we weren’t prepared for where they were.

I told him I’d take him home that afternoon, that he didn’t have to stay. He said no, he’d “stick it out.” That’s love. He was doing it for me.

If we’d had clear expectations of how it was going to be, we wouldn’t have done it. If the social worker and hospice nurse had asked about our concerns about respite instead of making assumptions, they might not have encouraged us to do it.

He’s coming home in an hour. I can’t wait. We won’t do respite again. Not there. Not in that way.

What I Want from Healthcare Professionals

What I want from all the healthcare professionals we encounter seems to be too much, because I don’t get it from most of them. I assume clinical competence. I hope for emotional competence.

Hand drawn postcard

I get assumptions rather than questions. I get excitement about diagnosis but not compassion about its impact on us. I get intimidation and scolding rather than appreciation for sharing information. They seem far more focused on where they are rather than where we are, on what’s important to them rather than what’s important to us.

An acquaintance from a Parkinson’s support group recently called to ask if we liked our neurologist. She and her husband were unhappy with his doctor. We’d had his doctor and left the practice. That neurologist was very pleased with himself, with having a community reputation for his diagnostic abilities.

Larry was frustrated with the Parkinson’s meds not working and that same doctor offered up the possibility of a potential ALS diagnosis. He seemed intrigued with the possibility and potential satisfaction for getting a diagnosis right, but showed no compassion about what that might mean to us!

Then there was the hospice social worker who called three times without identifying himself other than a first name, and then proceeded to insist on coming to visit Larry early in the day, though in our chart it asks for afternoon visits only. I explained that Larry sleeps until 11. He said he’d come at 11. No, I explained, he needs to dress, eat breakfast, and have his respiratory treatments. He said he’d come at 11:30. No, I said, nothing happens that fast here. He proceeded to get angry. His goal was to check off appointments on his list, not help us. Rather than offering support, he completely irritated me.

Most recently was the disconnect between my concerns about Larry going to a hospice house for respite care and the assumptions the hospice nurse made. Also, the scolding I received for the information I provided when Larry arrived at the hospice house.

My concern was his quality of days at such a place, and my guilt that it seemed to be a selfish thing to ask of him so I could rest. Our hospice nurse thought I was worried he wouldn’t get good medical care in case of emergency. I was worried he’d have a miserable lonely time and they wouldn’t understand his disease. She assured me they were highly competent nurses. They’d know all about his equipment and could just follow his “plan of care” on his record. I wanted to bring him there and get him settled. She thought he should go by medical transport.

See any disconnects? Tomorrow I’ll share the result of those disconnects.

Good Days

Seems like every few months we run out of good days and I get overwhelmed – the tight ‘I can’t do this anymore’ feelings.  Then something happens that loosens me up.  It happened again this week.

Last week we had a number of wheelchair problems.  He drove holes in the wall with his footplate.  He drove off a path at a sculpture garden, taking out several bouganvillea and miring his wheels in soft dirt.  He thought he could walk to the bathroom with the walker when the wheelchair was having technical difficulties and couldn’t so sunk to the floor.  “I can’t do this anymore,” I told him.  “We have to look for a facility for you to live in.”

And then several nights ago he had a breathing attack in the middle of the night.  I finally woke up and curled up next to him with my head on his shoulder and my hand on his chest.  He relaxed and somehow so did I.

This caring for someone is sacred work.  I don’t even know what that means but it’s somehow very important.  Yeah, there’s all the medical stuff we have to do, all the advocacy (even with, maybe especially with, hospice.)

But the really important work is how do we have a good day.  How can I, as a caregiver, make this a good day?  How can we continue to enjoy life?

Dying slowly is hard work.  But what’s better?  Dying fast?

We had a stark comparison as my ex-husband, my kids father, died recently from injuries sustained when his cycling group was hit by an elderly driver.  He never woke up.   Brutally hard for all who loved him, including me.  But what about for him?  He loved cycling.  He had retired early and found a new outlet for his younger athletic passion, and a new group of buddies to share it with.   He died, it appeared, having a good day.

Larry can’t act as fully on what were his passions.  But we try to get as close as possible.  Being outside.  Cooking – the new hospice volunteer loves to cook and they made an amazing roasted red pepper goat cheese lasagna this week.  Sports – he still plays in his fantasy football league.

We don’t know how much time he has.  Just like my ex-husband, and just like all of us,  we don’t know which will be the day he dies.  I want him to die having had a good day.

That means my caregiving work is primarily about good days.  That makes me smile to write it.  That doesn’t mean it’s easy.  It’s never easy.  But it does change my perspective.  We can both have good days.

Five Important Caregiver Lessons from a Respite Weekend

Original painting and quote from SenecaI learned five important caregiver lessons from a recent respite weekend.  I went on a yoga retreat because the info was sent to me by Lynn Burgess who teaches a yoga class at our local Parkinson’s Place.   I knew I needed a break but  didn’t have time or energy to plan anything by myself.  Larry’s son was coming to visit anyway so generously scheduled his trip so I could go.  They had fun together.

What did I learn?

  1.  Fatigue Blindness:  You don’t see or feel how completely worn down you are until you have a break from it.  I slept 30 hours in 3 days.  It took me a whole day to realize I didn’t have to jump to help if I heard a noise.  So if we have an opportunity for a break, we need take it even if we aren’t desperate.  Just like people need a real vacation from the responsibilities of work (including from emails, etc.) we need a vacation from caregiving responsibilities.
  2. Emotion in the Body:  I found that the physical movement in the yoga classes released emotions I had stored in my body, not just my heart and mind.  I had a leadership and coaching mentor who always talked about the muscles and cells of the body storing emotion and stress but I’d forgotten about it.  Though I originally figured I’d only attend a few of the yoga classes and spend the rest of my time doing nothing, I found the yoga an important part of letting go.  Talking, thinking, writing, sleeping isn’t enough.  We need to move.
  3.  Ease and Action at Once:  The yoga instructors kept reminding us to pay attention and relax parts of our bodies that weren’t needed in a particular pose.  For example, if you are doing a twist at the waist do you need to tense your shoulders, or your mouth?  I felt it as metaphor for being able to hold the pain of this disease (and other challenges we encounter) as well as feel the joy in other parts of life, or a day.  And to not waste energy I don’t need to be using (like when I resist what I cannot change).
  4. Opening up Space:   In class we were continually reminded to open up space in our bodies – to move the ribs away from the hips, for instance.  We could move more easily into the yoga poses if our bodies were open.  It reminded me how we hunch over to protect ourselves from physical pain and we hunch psychologically to protect ourselves from emotional pain.  Then we get stuck and rigid in that hunch.  We might be able to move more fluidly through our days and manage the emotions and challenges of caregiving if we could open up and allow more space in our minds and hearts.
  5. Breathing into Discomfort:  I was often surprised at how noticing my breath and breathing deeply would dissipate the discomfort of a particular stretch or twist.  The tight muscles would just soften.  We hold so much tension as caregivers – the tension of being ready to jump when we are needed, the tension of holding our grief in check, the tension of managing our desire for our old life, etc.  Maybe noticing shallow breathing, taking deeper breaths, breathing into the tension and discomforts of the daily tasks will make them easier.

view of the sunset from my hotel room
Sunset and Moon from My Hotel Room

I wasn’t sure about going, leaving Larry, but I’m so glad I did!  I’m grateful for the perspectives, the opening from being in a different place, and doing something different to renew and restore my head, heart and body.  I hope I remember my five important caregiver lessons now that I’m back in the real world.

 

Choking, Do Not Resuscitate, Green Beans, and Joy

Dark and Light - Choking and Joy in 24 hoursSo this week, my husband was choking and lost consciousness.  We were eating dinner. It was his last bite.  Usually if he has any trouble swallowing, I help him to stand up and just straightening up seems to clear things.  This time I got him standing but he  stopped breathing and collapsed on me.  I had to lower him to his chair then drag him from the chair to the floor without dropping him or hitting his head on the tiles.

By the time I got him to the floor he was gray.  I tried the Heimlich first and turned him to his side in case anything came up.  Then I turned him to his back again and did some chest compressions in the hopes he’d start breathing.

All the while this was going on, I was wondering whether I should be doing it because he has a DNR – Do Not Resuscitate.  Thankfully he did start breathing!

The next morning he was choking on his pills but at least didn’t lose consciousness.  So scary!

A few hours later he wanted to go to our Off-Key Chorale, a group that was formed by the Neurochallenge Foundation as breathing/singing therapy.  It’s for patients and caregivers but also has a few good singer volunteers so we sound quite wonderful, all things considered.

So death and life within less than 24 hours.

On the way to singing, I told him he was really scaring me with these choking episodes and to cut it out!  He said he was scaring himself.  His speech is difficult to hear at best of times but almost impossible to hear in the wheelchair van, which is very noisy.  I pursued it when we got home.

What was scaring him? I asked.  He said it felt like he was dying in that moment.  Panicking that there’s nothing you can do about it in the moments before you lose consciousness.

I told him how I wondered about his DNR and asked what he wanted me to do in those moments?  Should I just leave him be?

He said “I’m not trying to hurry this along.  Do what you can.”  Then something like “don’t do more.”

So a couple times I’ve confirmed with him  that what he wants is for me to try but not to call 911.

As I’ve thought about it, a DNR is so that if you have something awful happened that stops your breathing, your heart – like a heart attack, or a stroke – you don’t want extreme measures to bring you back.  You don’t want to be brought back in even worse condition than you already are.  You don’t want things done to you that will have negative consequences, like broken ribs.

Choking and Heimlich isn’t quite the same, is it?  If I can help him clear his airways, if I can help him start breathing again, I won’t have caused negative consequences and choking by itself doesn’t have long term negative impacts (like a stroke, for example).  I’m not strong enough to do chest compressions that would break his rib, for example.  His bones have to be mighty strong if he’s fallen about 300 times and never broken anything.

So I feel reassured that I understand his wishes.

But it’s still been quite a tough week of rapidly changing emotions.  It’s not a roller coaster, it’s more like jumping off a cliff attached to a bungee cord (not that I’ve ever done that – or will ever do that!)

I’m just going to hold onto a quote I read from another caregiver.  “Never, ever let the fear of tomorrow steal a single moment of the joy today.”  I would add – never let the pain of yesterday steal a moment of joy today.

I’m also not going to give him tiny cut up pieces of green beans ever again!  Who cares if he gets his vegetables???!!!

 

Caregiver in Suspended Animation

Original painting of Blue Heron in suspended animation in the reedsI’ve been feeling off since we returned from vacation – in sort of suspended animation.  I can’t seem to recapture my resilience.

We had the breathing crisis in August which felt like the end for awhile.  Then the move into hospice, which also felt like the end.   My anxiety was high.  I was in action.

Then the recovery of some strength and better breathing and almost back to pre-crisis (except for random episodes of weird symptoms).  Then things seemed stable enough for me to manage alone with him, and to plan the vacation.  Then vacation (with it’s own mini-crises).  Lots of action.

Now we’re back, but where are we?  Are we near the end?  We’re still under hospice care.

Are we proceeding with our lives?  We went to a Selby Gardens outdoor concert last Sunday and to the beach for sunset on Thursday.

I asked Larry if he thought being in hospice was a psychological disadvantage that outweighs the benefits?  After all, they know nothing about his disease.  They’re good with the equipment we asked for, good with sending meds, good for the CNA help.  But medically they just shake their heads when I mention a weird symptom.  So does being in hospice make us feel closer to death?

He said “No, all positive.”

In some ways, I just feel like I’m always waiting.  Like now.  Waiting for him to wake up so I can help him.  Then I’ll wait for him to finish on the toilet so I can help him.  Then I’ll wait for him to finish eating breakfast so I can help him with his breathing treatments.  And always waiting for the next shoe to drop.  I can’t wait for him to get better.  I don’t want to wait for him to get worse.  I can’t do anything about any of it.  I’m in suspended animation.

I know, I know.  I need to stay in the present.  Right now I’m just finding it hard.

Just the other day I looked out a window and saw a couple doing their morning walk together.  Just a simple walk.  I was SO jealous!

His breathing has been gurgly recently.  It’s such torture to listen to.  I asked him if it bummed him out that it had gotten worse again.  He shrugged and said “not really – it’s all just part of the disease.”  He has such amazing equanimity.

We weighed him.  He was 168 pounds.  Later he joked to me.  “Last time I weighed myself I was 190.  I missed the 80’s and 70’s.”  He takes it in stride.  I see a gaunt face, a body wasting.  (Although his gaunt face is actually making him look very sexy.)

I used to go at 120%.  I never had time for anything.  Now I have lots of time, in some ways, bits of time here and there, unknown lengths of time.  It’s hard to start anything when you don’t know how much time you’ll have.  Even a cup of coffee.

So here I sit.  A caregiver in suspended animation.  Looking for my resilience.