Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Tales From the Grim Reaper Zone

 

The past few days I've been weaving myself into a basket full of depressing thoughts but in my defense, I didn't really know or acknowledge the state of my mind until this morning when I re-read some stuff I'd written about past Memorial Day Weekends. Those weekends were more about day trips along Lake Michigan or get-togethers with family than honoring loved ones that the Grim Reaper snatched from my world. Don’t get me wrong, I've done more than my fair share of grave decorating over the years but what is missing now is the counter-balance to the duties of Memorial day---the fun stuff. The picnics and pot-lucks. The mini day trips that included the feel of the sun and sand, the sound and the smell of waves hitting the shore. That sense of being part of something bigger than just myself is easier to feel at the Big Lake where its water touches the sky and fills the entire horizon, or at family pot-lucks where more often than not I used to bring my mom's version of marinated four bean salad.

I did this re-reading of past holidays instead of going to the Memorial Day event here on campus that was organized by our resident, self-appointment Veterans Committee of one. Given the ages of my fellow residents it's no surprise that anytime he puts a program together to celebrate or honor veterans it's well attended. But I couldn't bring myself to go this time for two reasons. One, because he planned to read the entire Constitution and I'd have a hard time hearing it from the lips of a rabid Trump supporter. And two because last year I felt like a fraud singing along with all the patriotic songs when I was not (and still aren't) all that proud of our country. Sing-asking God to bless our "Great Nation" is not something I felt I could do again, as if we are still the same glorious beacon of freedom and hope we used to be.

But my negative mood was about more that just not wanting to go to that event. I was dog tired from something that happened the night before. It started when a man parked in our guest parking area and walked to a bench in our green space. I didn't think anything of it at first, but eventually I realized that he was wearing mismatched shoes and he looked to be crying half the time. Turns out he was. I didn't recognized him but it also turned out that he lives here and he'd just come from being with his wife down in the assisted living building. The grapevines says she gives him a hard time and blames him for her being moved down there---temporarily if she plays her cards right. She had her leg amputated last year and just broke her good leg and caring for her was more than he could handle. He himself lost all his toes to diabetes.

After an hour of keeping an eye on the man I called our security guard and asked her to go check on him. It was her first day on the job and she was rattled. Long story short while I was on the phone the guy walked over to my building and sat on a bench not more then 12 feet from my open window. I still didn't recognize him---he looked so rough and he had his back to me. Another fifteen minutes past before anyone approached him and it was another resident who was coming home from seeing Wicked and was pressed into helping. The two guys sat on that bench a half hour talking and praying together. Finally Resident Two got Resident One up to his room. By 2:30 AM I was just dosing off to sleep when the fire department showed up and an ambulance took him away. I got two phone calls---one a half hour after the ambulance got here and one in the morning---updating me on this stuff.

This Memorial Day made my loses hurt more, I think, because I went into it thinking a lot about my husband, my brother, my parents and even the dogs that have passed before me. I miss having a close bond with another being. Because I was in an antisocial mood, I spent the whole four day weekend avoiding everyone on campus while licking my wounds. Woe is me, I had no one to hang out with and like it or not, I have no one to blame but myself. If you move into a continuum care complex---like I did---with a goal of not getting close enough to anyone that their dying would hurt, then you pay a price. Mistake or not, it's too late to unwind it.

At the mailbox this morning a woman ran up to me to talk about Resident One, the guy I called security about. She was visibly upset and she said, "This is when the shit is starting to hit the fan. It's so hard to see people go downhill so fast." Then she named three couples who started out together in our independent living buildings but one recently had to go one down the road to a higher level of care. "That's what they signed up for and knew could happen," I rationalized. "I know," she replied, "but it's happening faster than I thought it would." I didn't say it but I was thinking that we're living in the Grim Reaper zone and sooner or later he will get us all. 

Until next Wednesday when I promise I'll be in a better mood. ©

43 comments:

  1. Grim Reaper stuff for sure. I know that at our ages disabilities and deaths occur more often than when we were 50. We lost a neighbor on Memorial Day. Several more are rapidly declining... dementia is playing a big part in that.

    We were lucky enough to grill deluxe burgers and corn on the cob. Today I spent 4 hours with a good friend here who is rapidly declining. She surprised me by having way more stamina, ability to walk without her cart and we got everything on her list (TJ Maxx). When her hubby came over to carry home her purchases, she morphed back into her helpless, dependent self. Interesting1

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    1. We have a couple around here and the woman is in the early stages of dementia and she is like your friend--acts entirely more co-dependent when he is around. Not sure if it was always that way or he is just fearful that she's going to get in trouble, but he keeps a short leash on her. When someone becomes a family caregiver relationships do change and spouses often turn into more of a parenting role.

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  2. Mourning is appropriate. It's better than not having people you loved.

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    1. So true! Someone should embroider that on a pillow for me so I don't forget it again.

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  3. Oh, I have a hard time with summer holidays these days... when my kids were young, we'd go to a brother-in-law's for all of them. Then the kids had a neighborhood pool with big celebrations with all their friends, so that was great. But now -- I don't have a grill, I don't like planning outdoor events when you then have to be ready to come inside if the weather doesn't coordinate. But then I'm jealous that it seems like EVERYONE ELSE has fun things to do on the holiday. WEIRD....
    I am also grieving a cousin -- diagnosed with cancer, a treatment plan started and the prognosis was years, but then he was gone within a month. Sigh...

    I'm hoping that after you've been able to write this post, and think things through, that your mood will lighten a bit. Sending good thoughts.

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    1. Thank you. Writing is like going to therapy for me. My mood is much lighter now---a few days after writing this---and I have a game of mahjong to go to this afternoon and that always makes me happy.

      I know what you mean about summer holidays being harder these days. Its just life and it comes with the territory as our worlds get smaller and smaller. I often remind myself that I disappointed my mom a lot when I opted to spend my holidays weekends some place else other than seeing my folks. So the universe is evening the score, so to speak, when I feel lonely over the holidays.

      Sorry about your cousin.

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  4. I'm sorry, Jean. Sometimes we just have to feel our feelings in order to validate our innate humanity. Perhaps it's a Good Thing that you still feel deeply. Then you know you still have all your wits about you and that you care.

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    1. Oh, I like the spin you put on my woe-is-me post (feelings). I will try to remind myself when I get in a funky mood like I wrote about that caring deeply means I'm still on the right side of the grass.

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  5. The Older we get the more our own Mortality and that of others is sharper. The Young don't think much about the End of Life, since, they assume a long one is stretched out before them. When you reach certain milestones of Aging, well, that's a shorter stretch out in front of us isn't it? And, being close to people is more complex than isolating is. I do think Humans are meant to be Social Creatures and when we disconnect it just doesn't feel Natural or Normal. I like my Solitary Time and Guard it, yet, make an effort to be Social and keep a Balance. Perhaps considering that would be Helpful Jean. You can be Nice to all of them and Close to none of them if you so choose, but, mingling with others is beneficial to you in so many positive ways. I do see your sentiments about National Pride, given the current Political Climate, it's difficult not to see what's happening as a National Disgrace and embarrassment and it does Trouble me. November really troubles me, Win or Lose, it's likely not to play out amicably any more than the last Election did. Such polarization has not improved, it's only worsened and I doubt we'll ever be a United States of America anymore, and that saddens me. We're in a serious decline of dysfunction and with too many people with questionable moral compasses and what they admire and proudly Support, it is actually alarming to me. Very Hitleresque... and we know how that played out.

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    1. I do socialize every day, except on the weekends. I eat lunch or dinner with a group, play mahjong weekly, go to a crafter's afternoon, go to all the lectures. But I don't confide in others the way I do in my blog because the grapevine and gossip spreads too fast and I try to stay politically correct. It is what it is and if I hadn't moved here I would be much more lonely. I do like living in a CCC but it comes with challenges like any place else.

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  6. I couldn't stand to be around the flag wavers who are Trumpers either. It's okay to take time for sadness. You are still mourning your husband, your brother, and those you have lost. I'm glad you wrote about it and are feeling better with mahjong to look forward to. I think you have done a good job of making a new life for yourself there.

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    1. I'm generally pleased with my choice to move here and how it turned out. Any distance I feel is my own doing and that's isn't unique of just this place, and these neighbors. I've spent my whole life holding back parts of myself, not getting close to people and taking my time to form friendships.

      The flag waving Trumpers drive me crazy. Their view of what a perfect America looks like is of a time that was fake because all the bad stuff was swept under the rug.

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  7. The trump flag wavers have made a mockery of the flag. They fly it, sometimes upside down, with their confederate flags. Actually they have made a mockery of what our veterans fought against. Mary

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    1. My oldest niece lives in a county that has a group of Proud Boys who run around in their pick up trucks with the a bunch of flags in the back including the American flag and a Trump flag. They hang them in the trees by their houses. Her reaction was to get a flag of her own to (in her words) to "reclaim the flag." I admire her for that but I couldn't do it.

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    2. I feel the way your niece does about reclaiming the flag, and I fly it right next to my rainbow flag.

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    3. That's a combination I can support. LoL

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  8. Some of my favorite quotes that address your feelings I think. I feel the same often. I am a widow, no children and only 3 friends I feel close to that are all older than me at 77.

    "There's a point in which life stops giving you things and starts to take them away."

    Ernest Becker wrote in The Denial of Death: “To live fully is to live with an awareness of the rumble of terror that underlies everything.”

    Historian Will Durant possibly said it the best: “The past is not dead. Indeed, it is often not even past.”

    Mary

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    1. Thanks for sharing those quotes. I may have to track down a copy of The "Denial of Death."

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  9. I wouldn't want to listen to a Trumper read the whole Constitution either. My city is probably 90% Republican but they still didn't trust the election results as being counted accurately so they spent a ton of money on having the Republican primary counted by hand. Yesterday I went by one of the voting sites for a local election. There was a big sign by the woman running for a seat on the board of education that said "Make education great again! Vote for (the woman's name), a true Conservative like Trump!" There is so much wrong with that, I don't know where to start.

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    1. Wow, that sign would help me decide who not to vote for. Her, she couldn't display that sign withing 1,000 feet of a polling place.

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    2. The sign was directly across the street from the polling place. She won in my county but lost the election overall to the incumbent. But he's a Republican too, but maybe not as nuts.

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    3. Board of Education positions are important in today's world where book bannings are getting commonplace and history books are being re-written.

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  10. Yeah, I hate that "toxic patriotism" that seems to be growing lately, in my country as well. It's gotten so that I immediately distrust anyone flaunting Canadian flags on their vehicles (especially if tied to a hockey stick in the back of a pickup truck) or on their properties. It's become a symbol/signal of hatred and white supremacy, to me. I'm not completely proud of my country either. This signalling via patriotism is a way of "othering", as in I'm (white/born here) Canadian (and you're not) and that makes me special/better...which is not how I was brought up and not the Canada I remember when looking back through my (rose-coloured) glasses.

    I think it's very normal to experience melancholy these days and at our age. Not only are we confronted with what appears to be an overall decline in human kindness and rational thinking, but our friends and family are declining and this is reminding us that we are on that same path. As other commenters have said before me, this means at least that we are/were loved, and still have our wits about us. I found it comforting to read their words and I hope you do too.

    Deb

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    1. Thanks for sharing your feelings and observations, Deb. From what I've seen the same things the U.S. and Canada are experiencing in our politics and social woes are happening world wide. It's like a virus that travels.

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  11. And the really sad thing is that this is happening because people are willfully ignorant, racist, far right religious nuts and corruption is everywhere..
    When I get depressed, which I do, I remind myself that we lived in better times and seemed to be making progress in equality and openness. So we saw the better times and our memories of family and friends and those times, hopefully make it all worthwhile. Mary

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    1. I think/believe that society takes one foot backward for ever two steps we take forward with all the gains we make in social justice issues. So if we take a longer range look, we are making progress in ending racism, etc.

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  12. The grim reaper doesn't just take lives, he takes things that help us get through life like being able to have clear and focused thoughts so we are not walking around in a fog

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    1. I know that fog! I don't see it often but and it lifts as quickly as it comes

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    2. By the way, Resident One was released from the hospital but has to stay in Respite Care down the road from our Independent Living apartments for a week or two---long enough to get his diabetes in better control.

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  13. That is such a sobering Memorial Day weekend. Seeing your neighbor in that state is so deeply saddening and sobering. It's frightening because I think deep down we all wonder when it will happen to us. I suspect he was deeply depressed (on top of whatever else might have been at issue) and that's both understandable and so difficult. As for the Memorial Day event, you couldn't get me far enough away from something like that. I find it terribly hypocritical that someone who supports someone trying to destroy our constitution would have the nerve to read it aloud to a group. And the same with the songs. I'd emigrate elsewhere in a heartbeat if I knew where to go and could afford to. And I worry that it is only going to get worse and more violent in the coming months.

    The Grim Reaper Zone. That really is perfect. I saw in the comments you were feeling a bit lighter -- I'm glad. But I sure understand where you were coming from.

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    1. I usually do recover quickly when I get down and especially after I've written my feelings out.

      Regarding it getting worse and more violent, so much is riding on this next election that's it's scary and I think about it too much at times. But on the good side, I've started painting again and doing some light crafting. Trying to pull myself out of my funk.

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  14. Oh lordy. The last thing I would attend is some crazy Trumper reading the Constitution. As if they have any intention of following it. I just hope the Orange Nightmare gets convicted. He's sure squealing enough. Sounds panicky.

    Poor Resident One. So many challenges as we age. We're having friends with some significant health problems lately, and Memorial Day is a sad reminder to many. I'm glad to see you're feeling a bit more upbeat. I'm sure it's hard to keep yourself a "safe" distance from people with you being a social person. Glad you have mahjong!

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    1. I'm in a happy mood right now, having just heard that Trump got convicted on all counts!

      I'm actually not a very social person. I see people here only hour to two five days a week. Very easy to keep to yourself in these apartments when you want privacy.

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    2. YES! All 34 counts. :-)

      Good to know about the privacy. I have a sense there was a lot more socializing going on/required and I would struggle with that.

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    3. Nope, nothing is required, not even meals. I've lived across the hall from a guy I've only seen 3-4 times in 2 1/2 years. There is a core of very social people who do classes and activities all day long and who plan social stuff on the weekends, but there are probably a 1/3 of the people who live here who keep to themselves. I'm in the middle. I spend my mornings and evenings in my apartment and do one meal a day, although at times I don't even do that and get a take out instead. I pick and choose classes and lecture on a case by case basis and there is absolutely no pressure on anyone to do anything.

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  15. I'm intrigued by that Durant quotation. I came across this oft-quoted line in William Faulkner's novel Requiem for a Nun: "The past is never dead. It's not even past." Given that Faulkner and Durant were contemporaries, born only two years apart, I can't help wondering if Durant didn't take that from Faulkner. In any event, however you phrase it, it's true.

    Speaking of the past, now I want that marinated four bean salad! There was some disagreement among the women I grew up around over the number of beans that should be included (there were three bean salad enthusiasts), but I haven't had it in years, and it's a great dish for outdoor events. Some added celery and onion, of course; now I'm wondering how thistle stalk would do!

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    1. I'll bet the thistle stalks cut up like celery would blend into a marinated bean salad perfectly. My mom and I add red peppers and/or pimento too and I'm not sure if most recipes called for it but a little sugar really makes it good. The store-bought kind doesn't seem to have any in it.

      I've quoted that Faulkner line quite a few times in this blog. I've never seen it attributed to anyone else. Either way, I love it. It makes me feel less alone.

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  16. I understand and support your reasoning for not going to the Memorial Day service. There's only so much hypocrisy a person can take. Also being alone can be therapeutic in ways that forced togetherness obscures.

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    1. I've always been good at recognizing when I needed therapeutic alone time. In the last year or two they seem to come around holidays.

      One of my fellow residents said last night at a dinner table of 12 that he'd like to shoot the judge and another won said the whole trail was rigged. They were both unhinged by the verdict.

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  17. It was absolutely AMAZING to see that 34/34 outcome. Such brave jury people (and such snivelling cowardly GOP legislators).

    I've noticed that the media now uses "lies" rather than "mis-spoke" etc in relation to that agent orange.

    I can't speak to a t-supporter. However, a friend said that's not going to solve anything - and as you said in an earlier post, people must communicate with each other.

    A terminally ill acquaintance wanted to live just that bit longer to see the outcome of the 2016 elections (he was NOT a t-supporter) and died happy. Who knew that USA would face the same situation in 2024?! ~Libby, Oz

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    1. I was shocked by the verdict. I thought it would end in a hung jury and it would all be for nothing. If he gets house arrest, I hope its not at Ma-lar-go where he can golf every day and have tons of people come down to do his bidding. I want him to loss is passport and have to spend at least a month in jail so he'll know what it's like and where he'll go back if he breaks the terms of his sentence. At this point in time it's the Republican Party leaders who are still behind him that is the problem.

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  18. Not too late to comment? I was SOOO EXCITED that he was convicted of 34 felonies. I'm devastated that he can still run for government office of any kind!! How is that possible? And the interviews with idiots who still want to vote for him as President. I'm dumb founded.

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    1. They are such low information votes they should be ashamed of themselves for not trying to understand why the jury voted the way they did. They take Trump's word that it was rigged.

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