Strange
Encounters of the Geriatric Kind
As I headed out for a spin today, Al was
coming in from lunch. I didn’t catch the name of the restaurant, but he said
the mackerel was good.
“What’s your name?” he asked. “I keep
wanting to call you Bob, but I don’t think that’s it.”
I told him my name. Then he asked
where I was from, and I gave him the Readers’ Digest condensed version of the
journey that began in Bethel Park, went through Ashtabula and has brought me to Columbus.
“I was born here, and I grew up here,” Al
said. “Then I went into the military, and I was stationed here a few times. Now
I’m back here. I should have gone to Savannah or Fiji. Fiji’s an island in the
Pacific. I always wanted to go there. Maybe I will go there. Everything I need
will fit in one bag, and I’ll just leave the rest of my stuff in the room.
Somebody else can clean it out.”
He laughed and then asked me where I was
going. I told him I was going to do a couple laps around the building. “Be
careful,” he said. “And don’t be going down the drive all the way to the road.”
I said I wouldn’t. But I lied.
I sat with Henry and Joan at dinner the
other night. Henry
is tall and looks younger than his eighty-some years, but most of the time he’s confused and isn’t sure
where he is. Joan is in a wheelchair, but she is alert and likes to laugh.
“Are we going home tomorrow?” Henry asked.
“We are home,” Joan said.
“We’re home? I thought we were on the ship.”
After waiting a minute or so, Joan turned
to me and said, “He thinks he’s on a cruise.”
I asked her if they’d ever taken a cruise.
She said they had gone on ten, maybe twelve over the years. I said I’d never
been on one. She said I didn’t know what I was missing; they had really enjoyed
theirs.
“Did you like the cruises?” she asked
Henry.
“Yes,” he said.
“What did you like best about them?”
“I could take them or leave them.”
“I said, ‘what did you like best about
them?’”
“Everything.”
Joan laughed half-heartedly. You could see
it in her eyes; she appreciated the humor in the situation, but she also knew
the most important person in her life, the man she loves, her best friend was
slipping away.
After I finished my meal and was headed out
of the dining room, I stopped to say hello to Eleanor and her tablemates.
“How are you?” I asked Eleanor.
“Oh, I don’t know,” she said. “I’ve been
better.”
“How bad can it be? You’ve got your
chocolate ice cream.”
Eleanor loves chocolate ice cream. Everyone
knows she loves chocolate ice cream. Her preferred dessert is two scoops of
chocolate ice cream. The waiters don’t bother to ask Eleanor what she wants for
dessert unless – heaven forbid – there is no chocolate ice cream.
“Let me tell you something,” Eleanor said.
“My momma didn’t like chocolate. We never had any chocolate in the house: no
chocolate candy, no chocolate cake, no chocolate ice cream. Nothing. The only
time I could have chocolate was when we went to my grandmother’s. I never lived
in a house where there was chocolate until I was over twenty years old and
living on my own.”
And that’s why Eleanor has two scoops of
chocolate ice cream every night.
Realizing that someday I too will be old, I
try to adhere to Mom’s admonition to treat my elders with respect. Sometimes
it’s difficult. I was in the laundry room the other day, listening to the
washer ca-chunka, ca-chunka its way through the cycle when a woman walked in. There are four
washers in the laundry room; two of them were in use. The woman looked over the
situation and announced that the washer I was using was her favorite, and she
wanted to use it.
Being the patient man I am, I said it would
be available in a few minutes. Being the impatient woman she is, she cozied up
to the washer and drummed her fingers on it. After several minutes of drumming,
she turned to me with a look of concern and said, “I’ve never known this
machine to take so long.” I told her a watched washer never completes the
spin cycle. Then she started to lift the lid of the washer. “Please leave that
alone,” I said. “It’s almost done.”
A few minutes later, it was done, and she
stood by the washer as though to make sure I didn’t get up and put my underwear
through another cycle just for the heck of it. “I need to get up there to get
my wash out,” I said. She stood still. I told her again. She moped her way to a chair while I
emptied the washer and dumped my unmentionables in the dryer. Then she put her
laundry in the washer she’d been waiting so long for and went back to her room.
She must have realized the error of her ways. When she returned it was with
some donuts, and she offered one to me. That night at dinner, she made a point
of saying “hi” to me as I was going out.
Monday evening I went to a performance of
the Columbus Community Orchestra. The orchestra, which is sponsored in part by
the school district, is a mixture of high school kids and older musicians, many
of them doctors from the area. Twelve doctors from the group call
themselves DNR and they did the last third of the show by themselves. And just
two of them, one playing saxophone and the other the guitar, did “Here, There
and Everywhere.” If you closed your eyes, you would have sworn you were in a
smoky club somewhere.
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