
In this movie, as often occurs in real life, love trumped reason with the two eventually marrying, thus creating a setup for untold mayhem as they melded their menageries.
After settling their 18 tax-deductions into bed, the two naively prepared to enjoy the first night together as husband and wife. The anticipation was short-lived, however, when three or four of the youngest burst through the bedroom door announcing their intention to sleep with the newlyweds out of fear of new surroundings as well as a raging storm. Life would never be the same.
The next morning I awoke at 3:50 AM. I hadn't received a page ~ I wasn't even on call. Wide-eyed, I lay in bed staring at the ceiling thinking about the crazy movie as well as lamenting another lost opportunity to "catch up" on my sleep. Suddenly an odd, random thought crossed my mind:
Until the past year or so, I had never seen Mother sleep.
Why the thought captured my imagination I will never know but it struck me in such a way that any return to sleep lost out to a chair and computer keyboard.
I would assume many would argue my family was a bit provincial. While we were certainly allowed in their bedroom during the day, I can think of no circumstance which would have warranted an intrusion into the sanctity of the room at night. I can add with absolute certainty ~ storm or no storm ~ none of us ever sought sanctuary in the safety of their bed; it simply never happened.
For myself, I find this business of jumping onto the beds of family and friends to be perfectly natural; I always feel a bit closer to others after these early morning, rumpled hair, blurry-eyed conversations ~ as if I have taken yet another step toward premium membership to a club. But for all the enjoyment of discussing politics or planning the day, I will admit to a sub-rosa "pull" that would have me get up and leave the room. Somewhere in the dark recesses of my dusty brain, the distant admonishment not to disturb the sanctity of a bedroom survives.
Following what I had always presumed was the natural order in everyone's life, Mother was up and dressed well before any of her children. Once we were all eventually enrolled in school, there was the daily process of making sure each was appropriately attired (siblings claim I once somehow managed to wear pajamas to school) followed by a hearty breakfast ~ that "most important meal of the day." After finishing, each of us was bustled out the door, packed lunch in hand, to then make our way to school ~ times being different, everyone walked.
If Mother then took a much needed nap, I never knew it.
Mother operated in high gear; when her health allowed, she was never deterred by any person or for any reason. She was the living embodiment of the proverbial Energizer Bunny.
When she wasn't shopping for groceries, making dinner, baking desserts, or cleaning she somehow managed to find time to garden, sew, knit, take the occasional art class, play bridge, or raise a never-ending lineage of stray dogs, cats ~ even fowl.
It was only after our stepfather retired from corporate life that we began to see the two of them slow down a bit; the first small step was in the form of short naps taken in the afternoons. I can personally sleep anywhere and at any time ~ medical school and residency has a way of conferring this ability. For the life of me, however, I never saw Mom take a nap on a chair or her favorite couch; she reserved sleep for the privacy of her bedroom.
Specialists have long assumed people need more sleep as they age; this is what I assume my grandfather referred to when lamenting that "youth is wasted on the young." The notion that sleep starts to deteriorate in middle age and steadily erodes with advancing age seemed so obvious that few challenged the prevailing wisdom.
Researchers now feel, however, that sleep patterns do NOT change much from the age of 60 or so; the studies seem to indicate poor sleep is not due to aging but, rather, results from illnesses and the medications used to treat them.
There also seems to be a recognized process whereby poor sleep feeds back to cause a further reduction of health. At least as regards pain, a common factor in disrupted sleep, a restless night can potentiate pain the next day which can further make sleep more problematic.
In Mother's case, she experiences what can only be labeled "fragmented sleep." Her interrupted pattern of sleep has led to impairment of her pain pathways. She feels pain more easily, is less able to inhibit pain, and develops more frequent neck and backaches. The vicious cycle ensues.
Fifteen months ago, while clearly suffering the ravages of Parkinson's disease, Mom walked through the front doors at GVM on her own two feet. Over the next couple of months, she did everything ~ including breaking through a security door ~ to "get the hell out of that place" ~ to go home. The nursing home could not initially deter our Energizer Bunny.
Effectively bedridden since the beginning of this year, however, she is no longer capable of pursuing an exit strategy or anything else that once mattered; instead, she spends more and more time sleeping her days away.
It has admittedly been unsettling seeing Mother spend so much of her time in sleep. Strangely, it has never seemed as if I have intruded on her privacy as I watch her sleep ~ so much about life in a nursing home requires everyone to forfeit most of what exemplifies a "normal" existence. Over time I have even come to somehow enjoy listening to the quiet cadence of her breathing ~ there is some small comfort in this.
But there is also the natural inclination to spend time lamenting the woman that was; the energetic Mother who could make everyone around her seem slothful as she moved through her days. This is clearly not the life she envisioned for herself ~ a fact which saddens all of us. I have a sense that if Mother were fully aware of her circumstances she would have a lot to say about how she is spending these days. As for the rest of us, we have learned to accept the simple benefit of sharing time together; asleep or not, being with Mother is a gift.
When asking my oldest brother to confirm or dispel my notions about Mom and sleep, he went even further adding he "wasn't altogether certain she ever slept."
He then relayed a forgotten memory from a distant Christmas Eve years ago when Mom "slept" on the floor of our room ~ apparently out of fear we boys would ruin our morning surprise. All night, as we tossed and turned from excitement, Mom was repeatedly heard murmuring the admonishment to, "lie still."
Whether she actually slept that night we will never know.
Rest assured, she was there when we awoke.
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