Time
Is No Longer Relevant
By Bud
Focht
Hi,
my name is Bud and according to Albert Einstein time is relative. Well, Einstein
and his brothers might have made great bagels, but according to me, time may be
relative, but time is not relevant. At least not anymore.
I’m
reminded of what Tommy Chong said when Cheech Marin asked him “Hey Hippie, want
to buy a watch?” and Chong replied with his classic response, “I’m not into
time, man.”
That’s
me. I am no longer into time.
I
saw a beautiful sunset the other day. The front of our house faces southwest so
our large picture window not only allows the afternoon sunshine to warm our
kitchen, but this time of year when the neighbor’s large trees have lost their
leaves the sunsets are more visible.
There
was a time, however, when I would have been a little upset about the fact that
the beautiful sunset was taking place at four frigin’ thirty in the afternoon!
Not
anymore though. Time doesn’t really matter to me anymore. Having to be at a
certain place at a certain time rarely happens these days. Mainly because it is
extremely hard for us to do.
We
get up when my wife Terry is ready to get up. We eat lunch when she is hungry. We
get washed up (showers on good days and messy Depends days) and dressed when
she is able. We go to the store when her mood and her bathroom schedule allow.
Time of day doesn’t really enter in anymore.
Before
I quit my job 26 months ago to become a full-time caregiver for Terry, now
entering the latter stages of early onset Alzheimer’s Disease, I wore a watch,
had a clock on my cell phone, a clock on my desk top computer, a clock on the landline
phone on my desk, a clock in my car and when I got home I had a clock on the
microwave, a clock right below it on the stove, a clock on the mantel in the
living room, a clock on the VCR (yes, I am old) below the TV, a clock on the
stereo and in the bedroom a clock radio.
Now,
I don’t even bother changing the clocks when Daylight saving begins and ends.
No,
the time of day no longer matters to me. And as far as time marching on, well I
am afraid, to quote the great John Prine, summer’s end came faster than we
wanted.
The
last time we had to be at a certain place at a certain time was a doctor’s
appointment. Our annual visit with the neurologist took place a few weeks ago
and I am afraid it was not very promising, not that they ever are. It seems the
disease is now doing some extensive damage in the left side of Terry’s brain, which
is why her communication skills are taking a big hit.
The
worse part is that now her entire brain is decaying. Shrinking. And she had a tiny
hat size to begin with.
It
started in the front, with her hippocampus. You know when you recognize someone
and are trying desperately to remember their name and right before they come up
to you to say Hi you remember it? That was the hippocampus going through your
memory files looking for that person’s name.
Terry’s
hippocampus was the first to surrender to the dark side. It then spread to the
outer layer, the cerebral cortex, which caused her to start freaking out about
a year ago, getting pissed off to the point of violence.
I
think the technical name for it is “Bat-Shit Crazy.”
We
started taking meds for the outbursts and the freaking out slowed down
tremendously. Unfortunately, the ‘episodes’ have returned. I always hated
reruns!
The
decay spread to the right side of her brain after that. I noticed when we would
have a catch she would stop using her left arm. I would have to throw the ball
to her left side to make her use both hands.
And
now it is wreaking havoc on the left side of her brain, the frontal, temporal
and parietal lobes on the left side, wreaking havoc with her ability to
communicate. Especially understanding what I am telling her.
She
has been speaking gibberish for some time now but understanding what is said to
her is now decreasing rapidly, and that is scary.
Trying
to give Terry direction when I am dressing her, washing her, feeding her or
brushing her teeth is getting more and more difficult.
The recent
visit to the neurologist was the sixth annual appointment. He’s a good guy and
I have always asked him to shoot me straight, and he does. He told me that judging
from the amount of decline between visit number five and the recent visit number
six, well, based on that, let’s just say there may not need to be a visit
number eight in 2020.
The
doctor asked me how I handle the stress of doing what I do, the stress of
dealing with what we are going through. I told him I cry in my beer. A lot of
beer.
Poor
me. Poor me. Pour me another beer.
Optimistic
people who have no real problems like to say, “When you are given lemons, make
lemonade.”
Well,
based on what Terry and I have been given, I’ll be making Poo Poo Platters, Manure
de Jour. I’ll be grilling up some Shit Burgers.
It
looks like we have a lot less time left than I had hoped. Statistics say eight
to 10 years after being diagnosed. Those optimistic people say sometimes it
lasts as long as 20 years. With early onset Alzheimer’s, however, it sometimes
lasts as little as five years. (see Coach Pat Summitt)
Terry
was diagnosed five years ago, although we feared there was something wrong for
almost a year before that.
The
time of day no longer matters to me. All that matters to me now is how much
time Terry and I have left and trying to keep her happy for as much of that
time as possible.
That
is the only thing that is relative to me.
Until
next time, enjoy the time you have. And Einstein’s bagels.
Bud
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteAs a sign of gratitude for how my husband was saved from Dementia, i decided to reach out to those still suffering from this.
ReplyDeleteMy husband suffered Dementia and it was really tough and heartbreaking for me because he was my all and the symptoms were terrible, we tried various therapies prescribed by our neurologist but none could cure him. I searched for a cure and i saw a testimony of so many people who was cured from Dementia, and so many other with similar body problem, and they left the contact of this doctor who had the herbal cure to Dementia. I never imagined Dementia has a cure not until i contacted him and he assured me my husband will be fine. I got the herbal medication he recommended and my husband used it and in one months he was fully okay even up till this moment he is so full of life.Dementia has a cure and it is a herbal cure contact the doctor for more info on drwilliams098675@gmail.com on how to get the medication. Thanks for reading my testimony .