FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Something
of Her Very Own
By Annabelle Gurwitch
PAGE
TWO
My
dad and sister had voiced concern about the possible negative side
effects of brain surgery. Memory loss, physical handicap, speech
impairment. I wondered if instead, this surgery might improve my
mother. Perhaps this tumor was the cause of my mother's inertia.
I had always suspected her brain was like a gas stove whose pilot
light had gone out; or not unlike a clogged drain, her brain, once
freed from this obstruction, would be revitalized. Why there'd be
no stopping her.
After seven hours, Dr. Heros entered the room. Yes, Dr. Heros, pronounced
"heroes." Uh-huh, if you heard that in a movie you wouldn't
believe it. We formed a circle around him. We spoke in hushed tones,
nodded heads, he touched my arm, and when he left I turned to my
sister and said, "I can't remember a single thing he just said."
Luckily, Lisa had gleaned that my mother's tumor had been completely
removed, plucked as it were, like picking a daisy. Tests would be
performed later to determine if the tissue was cancerous. They were
now ready to close her up. I had been so nervous, the only detail
I was able to focus on were his long thin steady hands that had
just been inside my mother's head.
Two hours later, we watched through glass as her inert body was
wheeled into the intensive care recovery. I watched as they hooked
her up next to other patients seemingly in equally or more dire
condition. My mom was the only patient at the Jackson Memorial Hospital
ICU that day without a police escort.
Soon we were led in to see my mother. It was inconceivable that
only a few hours earlier her head had opened up, and here she was
giving us two thumbs up when we told her the operation had been
a success. As we sat with her, Seinfeld came on the TV in
the ICU. It was an episode in which I had guest starred. In this
episode, my character falls into a coma. There's my image, stretched
out prone in a hospital bed, lying in virtually the same position
as my mother.
The next day, it was as if she had fallen off the face of the earth.
We found her alone in a room hooked up to machines. We stayed with
her all day and observed as the occasional nurse... sauntered
is the only word I can use to describe it, in and out of her room,
on a schedule that was truly puzzling. Sometimes they came when
you buzzed them; sometimes they were on a break and they were not
to be disturbed. One uttered under her breath, "This ain't
the Ritz, Honey," when I insisted that she look in on my mother
because her IV -- her only source of nourishment, painkillers, fluids
-- had run dry an hour earlier!
My family decided that someone should spend the night with Mom in
her hospital room, lest reruns of Melrose Place should prevent
the nurses from answering an emergency.
A rabbi once told me that you don't need to believe in the prayers,
or even know what they mean. The mere act of reciting them brings
you closer to God. Maybe it's the same thing with love. Maybe that's
why I heard myself say, "I'll stay with Mom tonight."
Maybe, I just saw it as a chance to exercise control over her. Now
she was all mine. But instead of venting all my pent-up disappointments
and frustrations, what came out was: "Would you like your teeth
brushed?"
"Uhmmm."
"Do you have to go to the bathroom?"
"Nnnn..."
"Are you in pain, mom?"
"Uhh..."
"Let me comb your hair, you know, I read a study that said
that when women put lipstick on they don't suffer from as much depression."
"Mmmnn..."
I tended to her little needs until she fell asleep.
When that nurse said it wasn't the Ritz, she wasn't kidding. Uproarious
laughter was how my request for a cot was greeted. One nurse took
pity on me and procured a gym mat and a sheet, which I placed on
the floor next to my mother's bed. At 2 AM, the night nurse looked
in, took pity on me, and admonishingly said, "Get up, we never
clean the floors, you'll catch something." She returned wielding
an ancient wheelchair, which reclined just enough for me to collapse
into. I fell into a twisted sleep, the last image that of my mother's
sagging behind peeking out of the back of the hospital gown as she
lay on her side.
In the morning, we began a regimen of walking the corridors. A really
enterprising person would secure the right to advertise on hospital
walls because they get a lot of foot traffic. We passed the other
brain tumor patients on our way around with each rotation. Each
had one clean slice of hair shaved off an otherwise untouched hairstyle,
bandage covering the tumorous area -- an eye here, an ear there.
My mom was sporting a kind of mohawk, one razor width sheared right
up the middle of her head. Every patient on the arm of a father,
mother, spouse, or offspring. Who were these people? Each one so
lovingly tended to, totally absorbed in the acting of walking a
few steps. We attendants, we nodded to each other as we passed,
smiled encouragements to each other, little murmurs of acknowledgements.
But who were they? I'll never know. I never talked to any of them,
for the three days my mom was in that ward. There just wasn't any
room for someone else's story.
"Does she seem any different?"
"No, no, she seems fine," I said when my sister came to
relieve me. "In fact, she seems exactly the same."
"The tumor was benign," Lisa said. With the knowledge
that my mother would live, I collapsed into a deep sleep on one
of the army cots my father had rented for my sister and myself.
In movies, the mother dies. The mother passes on, knowing she was
loved. The daughter learns compassion and becomes a better person.
In real life, my mother made a remarkable recovery. The energy of
the crisis passed and a lassitude once again enveloped her.
Now, several years later, my overachieving sister and her family
are marching for diseases we don't yet have. My father, at last
glimpse, cell phone glued to his ear, was negotiating a settlement
for some inscrutable business deal. My mother and I drifted into
our usual pattern -- she, back to her lunch dates and me with my
hurried phone calls. There is, however, a small but rather expertly
stitched, lovingly rendered, animal print needlepoint pillow resting
on my bed.
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