Groundhog
Day
By Bud
Focht
Hi,
my name is Bud and yesterday was Groundhog Day. That famous furry little critter, Punxsutawney
Phil, saw his shadow so now we are supposedly going to have six more weeks of
winter.
I am
sure that on at least one of the 350 television stations there are out there they
aired the movie Groundhog Day yesterday. Since it came out 20-some years ago, I’ve
seen the movie enough times to know what the next scene and line are going to
be, so even though it is in my ‘top 10’ I didn’t look for it or watch it this
year.
But
I am sure many people did.
The
movie has become part of popular culture. Whenever someone is stuck in a repetitive
situation, they usually say “It was like Groundhog Day” even though what they
were experiencing had nothing to do with an overgrown squirrel in Western
Pennsylvania predicting the weather.
Since
I took an early retirement to care for my wife Terry, who is now in the middle
stages of Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease, many of my days are repetitive. I do
many of the same things over and over every day.
And
that is good for Terry. It helps her know what is going on. She is most
comfortable when keeping a routine.
Terry
and I sleep in late most days, hardly ever getting out of bed before 9 am.
Terry seems to function better when she sleeps in. On days when I try to get up
before 9 she almost always gets up soon after me. She has been asking me “What
is going on?” more and more often these days, especially in bed in the morning
before we get up. If I get up before her there is no one to answer her
questions, so I usually stay with her (she doesn’t really have to twist my arm,
however. I was never an early riser if I didn’t HAVE to be. Especially on cold
mornings).
Once
we get up I help her in the bathroom (she can no longer be alone for that
chore) and then I fix her breakfast, almost always granola cereal (warm this
time of year) with a peeled orange on the side, to go along with her morning
meds. After three years, a year longer than what most doctors believe they
work, she is still taking the Donepezil and the Namenda. No one knows if the
medicine is still working or not but I figure it can’t hurt. She no longer has
any side effects to them.
Every
morning after breakfast we do the previous day’s dishes. Washing and drying
dishes is one of the only chores left that Terry is still capable of doing so
no one is ever allowed to do dishes in our house except for her.
When
the dishes are done, we do our morning exercise. Since the temperature outside
is closer to 0 than it is to 70, we exercise inside. When Terry used to teach
an aerobics class at the YMCA 30-some years ago, she used these “Aerobic Stairs”,
a small three foot by one foot by three inch high step. We have two of them so
we do a stepping routine for 20 to 30 minutes. Just something to get the blood
flowing and break a small sweat.
After
a cooling off period I help Terry with her shower, then shower myself. Then we
are ready for the afternoon, which usually consists of running errands, going
to the store or watching country music videos on television if it is not warm
enough to do something in our backyard.
Riveting
stuff, I know.
But
I don’t get bored like Phil Connors (Bill Murray) did when he was stuck in
Punxsutawney. I actually like being stuck. Terry needs someone by her side to
let her know what is going on. Who better to do it than me?
As a
matter of fact, I wish we were stuck in a time loop like in the movie, where everything
starts over again every morning. Where Terry’s condition would not continue to
worsen.
The
writers of the movie said for Phil Connors to learn everything he learned leading
up to the film’s ending he would have had to be stuck for over 30 years.
In
the movie, after years of doing things with no consequences, like suicide, robbing
a bank, or even killing the overgrown gopher, Phil reexamines his life, his
priorities and decides to improve himself. That is how he finally escapes his personal
purgatory.
My
priorities changed a few years ago, when Terry was first diagnosed. Last fall
when her needs grew to the point where caregiving became a full-time job, I had
to reexamine my life. I decided to improve her life, by being her constant
companion.
Retiring
a good five years before I was really prepared to was scary, but it had to be
done. It is still scary when I look to the future, to try to make plans, so I
pretty much stopped doing that.
I am
not in denial, I just don’t give the future too much thought anymore. Ten years
ago I would not in my wildest dreams believe I would be doing what I am doing
now. So trying to plan for 10 years from now seems to be an unnecessary burden.
In
the Bible’s Book of Matthew, in the Sermon on the Mount it says something about
not to worry about tomorrow, because tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day
has enough trouble of its own.
Basically,
it is saying to live for today. That is
what Terry and I are doing. Today is all we worry about. I don’t even buy green
bananas anymore.
I
think it was Elenore Roosevelt who said “Today is a gift, that’s why they call
it the present.” When the kids were real
little they would try to go rapid fire from one present to the next on Christmas
morning, not stopping to appreciate each gift, just going for the thrill of opening
the present.
I am
afraid Terry and I are running out of presents, so I make it a point to try to just
stop and appreciate each present, each day.
There
is an old Hebrew saying that goes something like “When tough times come, there
is nothing bad that happens that does not have good associated with it.”
Having
to give up my career, my job, makes for tough times and Terry’s condition can
only be thought of as bad. But the good thing associated with it that did
happen was the fact that I get to stay home and be with my partner every day.
Every
day.
That
is the present I am stuck in. If that went on as long as Phil Connors’ did in
the movie, that would be the best present of all time.
Until
next time, live in the present and enjoy all of your presents.
Bud