It was 5 years ago when she sat for this photo, the summer of 2007. She was also living with us then, but things were different. Then, she was in transition to a nearby retirement community. She laughed often, had a Rodgers and Hammerstein song for everything we said, and took fastidious care of her makeup. Always an artist, she clipped pictures of interesting faces from the newspaper and used glitter pens to make and sell handmade cards. For my birthdays, I could count on gold ink on the inside of the card as well as the outside, bold loops in her confident calligraphy: Much love and luck. Grammy M. After she moved into her own place, I couldn’t stop by without being metaphorically lassoed and force-fed: I remember a day when she asked me at least 15 times if I wanted a sandwich. Her easel always in the corner, her walls were practically papered with photographs of her family: four children, their spouses, nine grandchildren, two great-grandchildren. It was easier to talk then. We talked about reading: biographies, mysteries, classics, the latest article in Time or Newsweek, interviews with the actresses of The Help. We swapped cooking tips and recipes, and I accompanied her to dinner in her retirement community a few times, enjoying conversation with some lively ladies who had experienced much of life.
A lot has changed in the last 5 years—really, in the last 5 months we've been caring for her. Now she spends her days in her recliner or in the backyard, watching squirrels or observing that all the trees are on the other side of the fence. Her routine is limited, but strict: eat Cream of Wheat and drink coffee, bathe with the help of a Hospice health aide, sit in the sun, nap, read, watch Jeopardy and Dancing with the Stars. Actions like climbing four stairs or pushing a chair into place sap her energy. Her physical limitations are growing but understandable; it’s harder for me to cope with the sunset of her mind. She asks to eat whatever she sees me eating and becomes fixated on issues that appear in commercials. A fog seems to be moving over her, limiting the scope of her vision, shrinking our range of conversation topics until often it’s just silence or us reading side by side at lunchtime.
It’s hard to love the helpless. It’s hard when the relationship becomes one-way. Much of the time now, Grammy can only absorb, not give back. I get tired and frustrated, and sometimes I catch myself writing her off, treating her as a burden rather than a person with dignity and value.
But when I find myself there, I'm basically saying that personhood is dependent on utility. Isn’t that often how we view people? We prefer the young, the beautiful, the intelligent, the rich, the witty, to those who don't “contribute” as much to society. We’d rather discard them than care for them. It makes me think me of the young adult book The Giver, in which the helpless are simply disposed of—the elderly, the weak, the sick, the deformed, the disabled. Their worth is measured based on their abilities.
But even as I scrape another morning's gloppy Cream of Wheat leftovers into the garbage can or have another conversation about squirrels, I have to realize that personhood is not dependent on abilities. It’s a stamp on all human beings: intrinsic, irreducible, universal. It was there from the beginning, when God said, "Let us make man in our image, in our likeness" (Gen. 1:26). Every person bears the image of God. Whether they can get up from a recliner or dress themselves or hold a lucid conversation is irrelevant to that. And thank God! Because one day, if I’m given the chance to grow old, even if I can’t walk, can’t hear, and can’t remember their names, I want my grandchildren to treat me with the respect and love that belongs to a fellow image-bearer.
My Grammy was young once; she drove a car and did Tai Chi; she was an artist who moved to Mexico and learned Spanish from scratch; she went through 8 pregnancies, lived in 4 states and 2 countries, and loved to dance. But even if she hadn’t done all those things, she would still be a person of infinite worth because she is fashioned and designed uniquely by God. So is every person: the homeless, children, the uneducated, the unborn, the comatose, the disabled. All are valuable and worth loving, covered with the fingerprints of God. And how we treat them, regardless of their utility, is the litmus test of our faith.
My Grammy was young once; she drove a car and did Tai Chi; she was an artist who moved to Mexico and learned Spanish from scratch; she went through 8 pregnancies, lived in 4 states and 2 countries, and loved to dance. But even if she hadn’t done all those things, she would still be a person of infinite worth because she is fashioned and designed uniquely by God. So is every person: the homeless, children, the uneducated, the unborn, the comatose, the disabled. All are valuable and worth loving, covered with the fingerprints of God. And how we treat them, regardless of their utility, is the litmus test of our faith.
How do you love the helpless? What image-bearers in your life deserve your love and respect?
This is a truly beautiful testament, both to your grandmother and to the intrinsic worth in every human being. I see something similar in the way my friend Stacey cares for her daughter Sophia, who has severe limitations, though Stacey refers to them as "differences". I'll be keeping you in mind, and hoping you find patience and humor when you need them.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Liv. I like that: "differences." I'm glad if this helps make sense of the experience in any way.
DeleteThis is such a beautiful post. Alina, you really have a way of getting to the heart of things: simple things, heartbreaking things. I am in awe every time I read one of these reflective posts. No matter what topic you start with, you always lead us to something beautiful, something to treasure. Love you.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Angela. Words and beauty are God's gifts, and I really feel like He leads and inspires my writing process all the way :)
DeleteAlina...Alina...Alina, you never fail to bring tears to my eyes every time you open your heart and speak (dab, dab). Whether it is spoke or written words, you are on a mission to share your most intimate relationships with those of us bold enough to listen. I've had the pleasure of meeting your dad (thank you for sharing him with me and a room full of ladies) and now your grandma. I certainly feel very blessed (dab, dab). May God continue to bless you along your journey. ~esther
ReplyDeleteThank you, sweet Esther. It means more than I can say that you are "bold enough to listen."
ReplyDeleteYou put your finger right on the heart of the matter when you said, "It's hard to love the helpless. It's hard when the relationship becomes one-way." Yet, we do it willingly with babies. Why is it so much harder with the elderly? One finds oneself angry at times because someone we love is old and "different" from how she or he once was. We want them to shake it off, just get back to being the person we always knew and loved. They can't. And it's all part of The Plan of making us love through different angles of the same prism. It's all about saying goodbye...and part of that goodbye is to our own youth as we see it draining through the same hourglass of time.
ReplyDeleteWell said, Jodi. I think the difference between loving the elderly and loving babies is that babies are at the beginning of their lives. Every day they learn something new, become stronger, more experienced, more accomplished, waxing to their zenith. That's exciting to watch. The elderly, by contrast, are on the wane--every day you lose a little more of the person you knew, say another goodbye. And you're right--part of the difficulty is knowing that we will eventually be in their same shoes.
DeleteDear Alina: Your faith and courage bless me, reminding me that the journey is worthwhile, and that God is faithfully, lovingly at work... (dab, dab)
ReplyDeleteVery moving and very well said. I can especially relate as I lost my mother 5 months ago to severe brain trauma and it was so hard to see her slipping away. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad if this can help in any way. For me, giving words to the experience is part of the overcoming process.
DeleteDear Alina,you captured the meaning of unconditional love to it's very core. I'm so sorry about your Grammy, yet I know she feels your love through your frustration.God bless you and enjoy her eating her cream of wheat and reading side by side, these are moments you will surely miss one day. I just lost my Mother in law last month and I actually miss her phone calls that at one time bothered me and so many times did not answer.Take care of her and a big hug to your Mom
ReplyDeleteThanks for the reminder--even the fidgety little things will be precious someday.
DeleteExactly so, Alina. Thank you for expressing it so well. Love to you all.
ReplyDeleteLove to your family too! Thanks for stopping by to visit :)
DeleteAlina, if you think of your Grammy as a child who needs to be taken care of, you might find patience more easily. It is a difficult position for anyone to be in so cut yourself some slack. I hope other family members are also looking after her. Don't turn away any offers of help. You need them as much as Grammy needs you.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Patricia. No, I'm not the only one caring for her by any means--I'm blessed by the showers of love and help that come from family, church, neighbors, etc. And I'm learning--slowly--how to take breaks :)
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