https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWjBM48YP0s
Do you remember that old movie...On Golden Pond...starring
Henry Fonda, Katherine Hepburn and Jane Fonda? It’s the story of an older
couple dealing with the husband’s increasing dementia and his estranged
relationship with their daughter.
I saw this movie in the theatre, and have purposefully never
watched it again. This avoidance has its roots in the upsetting experience I had
in the theatre, with the audience. I’ve never thought about it much...until what
bothered me in the theatre was almost acted out in real life.
I found the movie very endearing, liked the relationship
between these two old people who had been married for so many years. Their
playful bickering reminded me of my own grandparents, who were married more
than sixty years.
It was one very dramatic scene that upset me, well, not the
scene itself but the audience’s response. The old man goes for a walk and gets
lost in the woods surrounding the cottage where they have spent years of their
time.
I have to go by old memories here and may not be accurate,
so forgive me if I don’t relate the movie as it really is. As I remember it,
the old man is in the woods, spinning around, lost because nothing looks familiar
anymore and he’s frightened and unsure.
What upset me was that I was so emotionally moved with this
man’s plight that I was crying...and the audience was laughing. I couldn’t
believe the group of people sitting around me could be so unaffected by this scene.
(I will admit that in all my years of nursing I have cared for a number of
demented patients, whether the cause be Alzheimers, stroke, or any number of
diseases that affect the brain, and so may have had more personal experience
than most.)
Last week a friend of mine had a brain fog experience, not
as dramatic as the movie, but still very upsetting. She was coming over for
coffee, and was bringing some mail that had been delivered to my old address.
I was waiting, and got a sudden phone call. “Are you
alright?” she asked. I was surprised because I had spoken to her earlier, but
then she did know I’d been sick.
“I’m fine. Why” I asked. And then she tells me that she had
been knocking on my door and no one answered, so she’d called to check. But I
had been sitting here, in full view of my door and no one had been here.
It was a bad moment, because she had to realize she had been
to the wrong unit, and that a place as familiar to her as my place should have
been...was suddenly not familiar at all.
I watched her park, walk toward my unit, and then keep right
on walking. I went out and called to her, and in my mind she still looked
confused, a bit lost. She tried to cover it up, and we walked to that other
unit, picked up the mail that she had left at the door, and made light of the
whole thing.
But I know she’s been avoiding me, because I was witness to
this ‘lapse’. We all have moments of forgetfulness, like losing our keys or missing
an appointment etc., but it is hard when these episodes occur with an
increasing frequency. Losing your memory, your awareness of self, recognizing
it as it happens can be devastating.
I feel for my friend, and worry because this is just a small
sign of what is to come.
Getting old sucks, big time.
2 comments:
I remember that movie and think I'd like to see it again when I can more easily relate to the family situations portrayed. At the time I saw it all my kids were young. My grandmother had Alzheimer's and my mom was so afraid of having it too as she aged that she took a lot of vitamins and did other things to strengthen her brain and memory. She died in her 90s, never having lost her memory at all.
How great that your Mom never had to endure the pain of Alzheimer's and to live nine decades is a feat in itself.
My sister-in-law's mother had Alzheimer's and I know how difficult it was for her to watch her Mom's personality disappear even as she remained physically healthy.
thanks for commenting.
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