Mamma mia!

5 minute read time.

My mother died two years ago today.

Before I say anything else, I should explain that she was 93 years old, in reasonably good health, still lived in her own house, had relatively recently, thanks entirely to my sister's tireless efforts, agreed to have both a cleaner and a carer, and, so far as anyone can tell, died peacefully in her sleep. We should all only have it so good.

Do I miss her? I wish I could say yes, but I really don't. I don't miss the monthly duty visits, two agonising hours of sitting in her living room trying desperately to spark a conversation or find any point of mutual interest - or, in my case, trying to get her to hear me at all; she either couldn't, or pretended she couldn't. I don't miss the constant worry, even after she'd agreed to have help about the house, that she might fall, or someone might break in, or ... I don't know; all the things you do worry about with very old ladies. I certainly don't miss the mess and the smell - yes, again, even after she'd agreed to have help. I used to clean as best I could while I was there, but it was never enough. And we couldn't, in sheer self-preservation, have visited her any more often than we did.

It is a little odd to think that her house, as it was, is gone - either demolished or renovated, I don't know which, but you certainly couldn't have moved straight in there the way that it was. But, in a way, that hardly matters: it still exists in my head, unchanging as it was over the 30-some years my parents, then just my mother, lived there. The paperback books, shelved in no particular order, all tilted to one side or the other and, apparently, never touched; the shelf of ornaments they'd had ever since my childhood - the Scandinavian painted horse, the ginormous purple brandy balloon, the horrid Aborigine head that used to frighten me when I was a kid; the hugely expensive Bang & Olufsen stereo unit that, again, had been untouched in all the time they lived there; my father's wretched collection of ornamental bells; the windowsill with its proud display of dead flies and photos of every one of my parents' children and grandchildren except me ... It's all still there, and I don't think it will ever go away.

What I do miss is somebody who would give love unconditionally: who would always be there with a hug, an understanding word, a cup of tea, a shoulder to cry on. But I never had that - none of us did. That wasn't who my mother was. It was probably very good for us, and extremely character-building. Still, sometimes I think I could have done with a little less character and a lot more sympathy. Who knows? Either way, ain't never gonna happen.

I wonder how my mother would have dealt with cancer? I suspect she would have treated it much as she dealt with Hitler: with the utmost contempt. She'd've had anything cut off and/or out that needed to be cut, gone through treatment with dogged stoicism, and probably beaten the crap out of the thing. I don't need to wonder how she would have dealt with me having cancer. She would have found a way to make it my fault.

So, there you are. She was a difficult and not a very likeable woman, but she was an individual, and she took very little nonsense from anyone. You could, I suppose, do worse. And she's the only mother I'm ever going to have.

I myself am at present being far less stoic. I had two weeks in between the end of my fourth and the beginning of my fifth cycle of Taxel, because of the neuropathy in my fingers. I was almost starting to feel human by the beginning of this week, although still so tired that a walk down the main street in Bicester was enough to wipe me out, but one dose of Taxel and I'm back to a state of general uselessness, unless anyone knows of a good use for sleep. Judy and I have just been to Brackley to shop, and I was too wobbly to drag myself around Tesco. I've been lying out on the bench in the garden, but it's starting to get too cold for that. Winter is going to be a drag ...

I had a bit of a scare on Monday morning, when I woke with a temperature of 102 (Fahrenheit, that is, of course; else I wouldn't be typing this now). I don't know what caused it; I was together enough to do all the things I needed to do - phone the triage team for advice, get an emergency appointment with my GP, call my brother and ask him not to visit (woe!), contact the district nurses - and, by the time I got to the GP's, things were back to normal. But something definitely happened. I just don't know what, and I suppose we never shall find out.

The main thing is, I was well enough for chemo on Tuesday. I had to throw a bit of a tantrum in there; because I'd had to put off the district nurse the day before, my PICC line dressing hadn't been changed, and the DTU nurse tried to tell us we'd have to get the district nurse in to change it the next day because they (the DTU) were too busy. Cue tantrum. She changed the dressing. I win!

The moral of this story is, save your tantrums for when you need them. Most of the time I am very good and quiet, and just let them get on with it.

It didn't help that I was tired before we went into the DTU, having spent the previous hour talking to a woman from the Maggie's Centre. I don't say this wasn't useful; just that I can only do one thing per day, and we really do need to remember this. The upshot is that I have an appointment with a counsellor next Friday, so we shall see how that goes.

My mother would have been disgusted. She would have had no truck with what she would have called 'trick-cyclists'. However, she's not here. I am. So, STFU, Mother!

Bless you, dear, wherever you may be. How I hope there is not a hereafter.

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hoorah for tantrums that get you what you want....

    I hope the counselling helps too. Apart from anything, sometimes I find its fun to just do stuff that you know your mother wouldn't approve of or have any truck with... which in my case is most things.

    I think it was my fault she got cancer (stress) I was the fault of her grey hairs (stress) and bad teeth (pregnancy) I won't go on, you get the idea. I also know that me getting cancer would have been to take the attention away from her and typical. My mum told me I'd probably have a crap thyroid and cancer like her.

    I vowed I was never going to get cancer as 2 fingers up to her and putting crap like that on her kid.

    Damn.

    that's my therapy session done, thanks Hilary... crap dads next?

    big hug to you and I hope you get a day soon when you can do at least 3 things a day and at least 2 of them are fun.

    Little My xxx

  • Well it seems we all had mums who went to the same School of Crapness and Craziness.

    And how very marvellous that having a well-justified tantrum got your stuff sorted!

    I am also with LM... hope that good days increase and with them more nice things too.

    Big Hugs xxxxxxxxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Well Hils,

    I must knock one part of LM's theory on the head since I didn't have a crap mum! My Mum's only fault was getting me a crap step dad! His misfortune was that I overheard him say I needed a good thrashing and her reply was that if he laid one finger on me he was out on the street! Whoooooooooooooohoooo!

    Tantrums are useful and it seems yours was timed to perfection. Well done!

    You are lucky having a Maggie's Centre at your hospital. I had heard how good they were but the nurse we met at Swansea was excellent, and although neither G nor I came under her area, she put G in touch with an organisation in Aber that he ddn't know about.

    Hope the chemo's not too crap for you, but more importantly that it is crap for crabby!

    Big hugs,

    Odin xxx

    PS> I'm in Aber at the moment, since DIL was transferred back at an hour's notice, just as I was travelling to see her. Thanks Doc!

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hello Hilary.

    You know my opinion of Not Very Nice Mothers. I have deliberately tried to be the opposite of mine in every way I could. I feel sorry for mine but wish somebody else would take care of her and listen to her so I didn't have to. Lucky for me, daughter #1 has the measure of her and is happy to chat to her on the phone in the jolliest way, while ignoring almost everything she says. Ha ha. Win-win situation.

    As for counselling, well, I hope you find it helpful. A lot depends on your attitude when you start and on the person you get. I can't imagine your putting up with somebody wishy washy and head tilty. Hope you get somebody ballsy, like you.

    And I think you should have lots more tantrums, though it's stupid that you have to do that to get basic care. Maybe you've been 'good and quiet' for too long. I don't know how you've done it. I couldn't. I'm a terrible coward about pain and my default setting is 'whinge'.

    Big, bigger and biggest hugs x x x

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Well I'm afraid there's not much I can comment on regarding my Mum ....... other than I lost her way before her time was due and she was both a lovely Mum and Grandma. We obviously had our moments when I was in my teens ....... but that's part of growing up and I understood all that when I had my own teenage girls throwing strops and hissy fits.

    Sounds like you have been through a rough time lately, Hilary ...... so tantrums can be expected and hurrah when they work ! I hope that seeing a counsellor is a big help though, I really do think that being able to talk to one should be part of our treatments anyway .......    Sending hugs.

    Joycee xxx