Have you read STiLL ALiCE ??

I just finished reading – devouring, actually – the novel STiLL ALiCE by Lisa Genova. It is the story, told from Alice’s point of view, of her descent into Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease.

I don’t remember being this affected by a book in a very long time. I fear few things as much as I fear losing myself. This particular disease is a very scary bogeyman in my closet. Thankfully, no one in my family has it, so I am spared the genetic haunts.

SPOILER ALERT

But here’s the thing that has me in its grip right now. In the story, before she is too far gone, Alice sets up an “out” for herself and a way to remember to use it. Her reminding method ultimately fails, but she stumbles across the letter she wrote to herself and goes to carry out the plan. What’s clear to the reader is that her husband John found the “out” and disposed of it at some prior point in time. Alice is too far gone to care or even remember that she found the letter or tried to carry out the plan.

And that’s not even the bitter part for me. The bitter part is that after he eliminates her escape plan, he ultimately can’t bear to stick around and watch the end. I am struggling to find sympathy in me for his character when I feel he has betrayed her – that he exposed himself as a coward and hypocrite. Not to mention being unwilling to honor her wishes, expressed when she was still of sound mind. He makes some comments to their children about Alice’s “unilateral decision” that didn’t get carried out, but he made one of his own without talking to the rest of the family.

What’s right? How do we come to grips with these most painful of decisions? Is it possible to make good decisions about when suicide will be the good option? Is loss of self sufficient grounds? Was John right to do what he did? How can we care for our loved ones in the face of this kind of pain? As an aside, I have NOT had to deal with any sort of dementia in my immediate family. At least not yet.After reading this book, I sort of think watching a loved one go into that dark night would be worse than going there myself.

If you have read this book, I welcome your comments about these and any other issues raised in it.

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Cat or Mouse?

http://www.gocomics.com/speedbump/2011/04/21/


Speed Bump

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The B**ch is Back – Growly Girl Earns Her Name

Hi there! I am hijacking Mom’s blog to give all my friends this update cuz there are just too many lovely twitter pals that I want to share with.

I am feeling much better today. When mom came home tonight and gave me my meds, I GROWLED and GROWLED at her! Yucky meds! (Just so you know, I never bite or scratch but I do growl – a lot – when I am cranky). My leg is still swollen some but I can put some weight on it now and I am moving around the house a lot more.

Mom and I are very grateful for all the healing paws and purrs, and pawcircles, and prayers and good wishes from you, my Twitter friends. You are the bestest friends a little cat could have!

Hopefully the swelling will go down soon, but I still have EIGHT more days of antibiotics to go. I will keep you posted on my progress.

Love,
@grrrkitty

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Death Storm 2011

The snow is lovely. Unfortunately, the temperature was just warm enough today to make it slushy on the roads, and the “wintry mix” – I love that phrase – keeps falling. Pretty much guarantees that you would have to be insane to go out in the morning. Ice sheets on top of ice sheets.

I’m just hoping that the “wintry mix” is light enough tonight that it doesn’t bring down the power lines and leave us in the dark. Bad ice storms have done that to us more than once. Thank God for the gas fireplace, water heater & stove, so even when the power’s out for a couple of days we can cook & shower. And huddle for warmth by the fire.

So I am not setting the alarm for in the morning, and assuming the power stays on at worst I’ll be able to work from home. They make us take vacation days if we just slack off & don’t do anything at all.

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Mom’s Visit

My mother just left after a week+ visit. She is 86, and still pretty healthy. She lives with my sister and her husband in Ft. Worth, TX. They have a large house, and Mom has a separate apartment. They share the living and kitchen areas.

It’s been a few years since Mom came here to SC, and I took most of the week off from work to hang out with her. We get along great – I am very like her in many ways. We knitted together (she makes prayer shawls for the children’s hospital) which was fun. We also shopped, ran errands, ate out (a LOT) and watched football. I am not a big fan, but she is, and she & my husband talk sports.

What really gets me is how emotional I am feeling about the whole thing. It was really fun being with her, but I am highly aware that we may not have many more opportunities for this. She is more childlike now, more in tune with what she likes and dislikes, and WAY less concerned about what others think she “should do”. I was surprised by the overwhelming tenderness I felt towards her. This is a new emotion in our relationship.

I also was aware in a whole new way of how others responded to her. Not so much young people, but middle-aged & older. I saw over and over again that someone would look at her, and shift just a little. Like my friend Judy from work who was extra sweet to her. And the American Airlines employee who offered to let me go to the gate with her this morning to wait for her plane to depart. And the security screener who helped her with her things in the line. That little bit of compassion and kindness, that awareness of how precious our parents are, that hint of our OWN mortality.

And inescapably, I am keenly aware that I have no daughters (no children at all) to be with me when I am old. My niece jokingly offered to eat pizza with me when I am 86, in response to a tweet about this. I’m holding her to it.

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View from a (bigger) Cubicle

That’s right, I have a new cube and it’s HUGE by cubicle standards!! By far the biggest and nicest I’ve ever had.

This is my old cube. It is 6 ft by 9 ft, but 3 of those 9 feet are shelves. As you can see, the desk space is pretty limited and all the space is right there on the aisle.

This is my new cube. It’s basically a double-wide, 12 ft by 9 ft. WAY more usable desk space, AND you can walk in and move around. I can have little meetings in there, which is really convenient.

Plus there’s room for all my toys and pictures, the things that make life in a cubicle bearable. This move is also significant because for the first time in a couple of years, I have just one cube. I’ve had cubes in more than one building for a while, and hardly spent any time at all in my “home” cube. I felt a lot like a hermit crab, especially for the last few months. So it’s nice to be all in one place. Although I am secretly afraid that it won’t last, I am truly allowing myself to enjoy it in the moment.

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