Yes, I still try to visit Mom every day. There are more days I don’t visit than I like to admit – but for the most part, I go.
I visit at least for a little while – sometimes 30 minutes, sometimes an hour.
We sit. We tussle. We talk.
Well, we kinda talk. All semblance of a coherent conversation is gone. I can ask her how her morning went, and the answer may be “Oh, okay”, or it may be “We don’t do that here” or it may be “Terrible – just terrible.”
“What was terrible, Mom?”
“Oh, these people just don’t know how to do it.”
In other words, there is nothing fulfilling in a conversation with Mom. There is no feedback – no interaction. In essence, I just make my mouth move in an effort to say something, but there really isn’t anything to say.
We were going through a long period of silence the other day when something occurred to me. Our Judeo-Christian ethic teaches us that real love is a love where there are no expectations. One person gives with no expectation of getting anything in return.
Well, that’s the ideal, anyway. We seldom do that. We give Christmas presents to other adults in the hope of getting something kewl from them – heck, we give Christmas presents to kids in the hope that we can buy their love.
In a romance, one person will tell the other that they love them unconditionally. But watch carefully – if in time, the person no longer makes the lover happy, the relationship ends. We expect our lover to return love, and when that doesn’t happen, we say the relationship is over. In other words, we expect something in return when we love somebody. We want to be loved too.
I wonder where I will be when Mom is no longer capable of returning love. Right now, she recognizes me the moment I walk into her room. She giggles with delight when we tussle. She returns love. I dread the time when she is no longer able to communicate with me – when she is no longer able to return love.
She is still teaching me lessons – hard lessons. I hope I am man enough to learn them. Can I truly love unconditionally?
Wow - that is a great blog. Thanks for the insight and the electric cattle prod to the conscience. You are unfortunately very right, even if we don't want to admit it.
Posted by: Paul Stanley | February 12, 2008 at 11:19 AM
How powerful --- How sad.
Posted by: Tom | February 12, 2008 at 08:37 PM
That is an unbelievably raw and honest blog. Good job. Thank you for saying what so many of us can't and don't say but absolutely feel.
Posted by: Rogena | February 13, 2008 at 09:34 PM
It's "Something That We Do". Wow dude!
Posted by: Russ | February 16, 2008 at 10:24 PM
Thank God for the giggles and the warm welcome, right?
Although it's hard to make yourself go for the visit, you know that you are doing the right thing. I believe, as you say, that it is a learning time for you and also, that right now, your mother is, once again, your teacher. How fine that your memories of her when she was herself are good ones. Ellen (esl-Ellen)
Posted by: | February 17, 2008 at 02:07 PM
It's something that we all want to get, but absolutely not something that we all can do. But yes, you are absolutely able to love unconditionally. That is proved in what you do for Mom everyday....
Posted by: Trang | March 12, 2008 at 01:18 AM