Bliss be gone. Up the chimney (or chimley as it is called by "my people"). It was a typical Sunday morning. It was cloudy and getting ready to rain. I got up. My mother got up. I gave her meds, made breakfast. I was hanging out and waiting for the gym to open at noon. It was around then that I went out to the car to get my gym bag. My mother was sitting in her chair. She looked up at me and said, "I fell again," I felt the tingling in the back of my neck.
"Are you o.k.?"
"I hurt. Do you think I should go to the hospital?"
"I don't know. I can't tell you how you feel. Stand up."
She did.
"Does it feel as if anything is broken?"
"I don't know. Maybe my foot."
She sat back down.
"You'd better call 911."
Shit piss fuck goddamn.
Ten minutes later, my mother was on the gurney and off to the hospital. . . once again .
I went into the house and sat down trying to sort through my cascade of emotions. I was familiar with this drill now. I would wait a bit to go to the hospital. It would be awhile before anything happened.
There was a knock on the door. I didn't want to answer it. It would be the neighbors wanting to know what happened. I sat. There was a harder knocking at the door. It was the woman from across the street and the woman from a couple houses down.
"What happened?"
I told them. That wasn't enough, though. They asked more questions, wondered aloud what I should do. I told them I was worn out with all of this. The woman across the street wondered if mom shouldn't be put in a home. I said she had been at rehab and just wanted to come back to her house. Of course.
"My mother was in a home, and boy, she ran that place."
I said that's what people do. My cousin, for instance. He father was in a facility and she and her brother never went to see him. Her husband's mother was in a facility near them and again, they hardly ever went to see them. His brother is in a rehab place very close to where they live, and they go to see him every couple weeks.
"That's what people do," I said.
"I'll be glad to come over and watch her for a couple hours any time you want," said the across the street neighbor.
"I don't need a couple of hours. I need a couple weeks, a month. . . ."
She stood up in a huff. She grabbed her dog's leash and said, "Come on. . . I'm going. I tried."
She made a show of it. The other neighbor stood mouth agape, looking.
"OK," I said.
"Asshole."
"I don't need this right now," I said.
"I don't either."
The other neighbor looked at me and said, "I'm sorry. She can be a bitch."
I just waved my hand and said, "I've got to go."
I was stewing on the drive to the hospital. It was going to be another long day sitting in an ER room.
When I got there, my mother was lying in bed connected with electrodes to the machine that beeps constantly. There was no chair in the room. I went into the hallway to look for one.
"Can I help you," a nurse asked.
"There is no chair in the room," I said.
"Oh. I'll get one."
She was strong. She brought in a very substantial chair.
Later a boy came in to take her to X-ray. She was getting X-rays all over her side and a CT scan on her head. I sat in the empty room and waited. Half an hour or so later, when she was brought back to the room, a nurse said it would take an hour, hour and a half to get the results. My mother asked for pain meds. He brought her Tylenol and a muscle relaxer.
"She gets Percocet and Gabopentin four times a day," I said. "That stuff isn't going to do anything for her."
"Why does she take Percocet four times a day?" he asked.
"What's your guess? What do you think she takes a pain killer for? Blood pressure? Runny nose? An infection?"
No, again. . . I didn't say that. I just looked like I said it. I told him I had her meds with me, and he said go ahead and give them to her. Hmm. O.K. First time I'd ever heard that one in a hospital. .
He left.
"I'm going to go for coffee," I told my mother.
The little cafeteria closest to the ER was closed. The hospital didn't look as clean and shiny as it had before. I had about half a mile's walk to get to the cafeteria. My knee was swollen from running the day before, and it hurt.
"I'm a mess," I thought. "I'm falling apart."
There is a lot more wrong with me than just my knee.
The cafeteria was half shut down. There was little hot food and what there was sucked. I got coffee. It was bad. I sat down for a minute. The hospital had definitely been downgraded. I had spent enough time here to know.
When I got back to my mother's room, a pretty woman was standing in the doorway. She turned and smiled.
"Oh. . . hello. She was just asking where you were."
O.K. Really terrible bad confession. I thought she was a nurse.
"I'm Doctor So and So. Your mother's X-rays didn't show any broken bones. Her head scan looked good, so there is no reason to keep her here. I'm going to get her discharged now."
"Great," I said.
When the doc had gone, my mother said, "That's good news."
"Yup."
It was going on five. We drove through the rain and the dark of day in silence. When the two neighbors were talking to me earlier, one of them laughed and said, "She always says you pick and bitch at her all the time." I now had an attitude. I told my mother what was said. This is something my mother likes to tell people.
I am a slave. You can scoff and laugh and do whatever you like. But I am a servant for over twenty hours a day. My mother can only sit and make messes. I never get to sit for more than a few minutes at a time. All the time. Every day. And there is no end to this in sight. I have no life outside of this and trying to get my own home repaired. I'm sick of people telling me they went through a similar thing with their grandparent or parent. They haven't. Nobody I have talked to was the sole caretaker without relief.
If there is a heaven and a hell as in the fairy tales, I am certain to go to hell. Really. For all the slave work I do, the way I feel about it will put me in the eternal flames.
Selavy.
Before my mother fell, I was looking at the IG page of a mixed media artist. She made tiny little books. They intrigued me (link). I'd sent her a message and she replied sweetly. I wanted to make something like this. I'd made a couple of books, but nothing of this scale. I'm afraid I love collages. It seems inane to me but I can't help it. Mixed media.
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| made with AI from her inspiration |
I've taken workshops. I am very bad at it. Very.
I was making dinner for my mother and myself--spaghetti and broccoli. Quick and simple but for the clean up. And I was thinking. I resigned myself to this. I haven't let myself admit that I would be doing this for virtually ever. Now I did. My life as a slave would continue for a long time. And so. . . I needed to get some things to make my life here more bearable.
I decided I would turn my mother's garage into my studio. I'd get rid of most of her things in there and set up a work station. I'd bring my stands and lighting and backdrops and all the paraphernalia for photoshoots. There was plenty of room. I would put in an electric heater for when it was cool and a portable air conditioner for when it was warm. I would get a printer to keep here, a bigger one. Fuck it. I'd sit in the garage and make pictures.
It didn't make me happy. . . but happyish. There was still the creative block, the bad and frustrating mixed media things I'd make. But. . . I decided that is what I would do.
Oh. . . the AA thing went out the window last night. When I was getting groceries for the spaghetti dinner, I also bought an expensive bottle of wine and a fifth of scotch. After dinner, I told my mother what I planned to do in her garage. No reaction. I kept thinking about what I would photograph there.
"Hey, ma. . . don't come into the garage. I've got naked girls out here, O.K."
Ha! I didn't really care. But would they?
"You live with your mother?"
"Yea, yea. . . listen, put on the mask and take off your clothes. HEY MA. . . DON'T COME OUT HERE!"
Fun scenario.
I don't plan on doing nudes anymore. I don't know. What pictures do people want to see now? We are saturated with images. Oversaturated.
There is an actual photo of my mother in the hospital bed, but I prefer the Rockwell version. Photography has begun to bore me unless I use it to make illustrations from the pictures. But I still have much to learn.
I'm a disturbed man now, I guess. I drank wine and whiskey and then a THC drink. I took a Xanax. I went to bed at ten and when I woke up at midnight, I took an Advil PM and a Tylenol. I still couldn't sleep and got out of bed at 4:30. I'll probably go back to bed after I post this.
Really. I've taken lots of media workshops. Everybody else in them was better than I. But the garage is the perfect place for me to try it. That is the usual place where old men carve wooden ducks.
















































