I drove my mother home from the hospital last night after she visited my sister. My mother has memory issues. Just before we left, she kept saying, "I have to change into my nightgown." And I kept answering, "It's too early for that, Mom. Too early."
She seems a little lost right now. My sister, Rose, is her constant daily companion. Rose makes her breakfast and lunch. Sometimes dinner. In the afternoon, they play Casino together, although I don't think either of them really remembers all the rules of the game. In the last couple weeks, they sometimes talked about my father.
I don't know what to do for my mother to make all this change tolerable. Rose will probably be home in a few days. That will help. However, my mother has outlived most of her friends. Now, she's outlived two of her children. Her life is becoming a series of subtractions.
Saint Marty has a poem for his mother today. It's about soloing through life's losses.
Soloing
by: Philip Levine
My mother tells me she dreamed
of John Coltrane, a young Trane
playing his music with such joy
and contained energy and rage
she could not hold back her tears.
And sitting awake now, her hands
crossed in her lap, the tears start
in her blind eyes. The TV set
behind her is gray, expressionless.
It is late, the neighbors quiet,
even the city--Los Angeles--quiet.
I have driven for hours down 99,
over the Grapevine into heaven
to be here. I place my hand
on her shoulder, and she smiles.
What a world, a mother and son
finding solace in California
just where we were told it would
be, among the palm trees and all-
night super markets pushing orange
back-lighted oranges at 2 A.M.
"He was alone," she says, and does
not say, just as I am, "soloing."
What a world, a great man half
her age comes to my mother
in sleep to give her the gift
of song, which--shaking the tears
away--she passes on to me, for now
I can hear the music of the world
in the silence of that world:
soloing. What a world--when I
arrived the great bowl of mountains
was hidden in a cloud of exhaust,
the sea spread out like a carpet
of oil, the roses I had brought
from Fresno browned on the seat
beside me, and I could have
turned back and lost the music.
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