I have a playlist I like listening to on the way to work called “Upbeat.” I admit most of the music is performed by The Piano Guys–they just inspire me, can’t say why. Maybe because a large portion of their music is upbeat. (Sorry, that’s the best I can come up with.) Anyway they do a cover of a Taylor Swift song called “Begin Again.” I chose the song for my playlist before I knew the lyrics or who made it popular, in fact, I chose it for the way I felt when I listened to the music. After I read the title, I had a flood of thoughts crowd in to my mind as I turned over the phrase several times.
Gaining more life years and looking back over my shoulder does something to me. I rejoice and I feel anxiety at the same time. I ask the questions, “Is this the last time I will ever. . .” or “Will I live long enough to . . .” This was brought home to me recently when I was cleaning out my quilting studio to make room for some family members who were planning to move back in with my husband and I for a while. I physically handled all the items in my fabric stash, my sewing and craft tools, my projects in clear little square boxes latched shut for which I had plans to open and finish. Instead, I opened many of them prematurely and dealt out the non-salvageable portions of cut and sewn bits of quilts. Memories of classes and get-togethers, even some favorite series I had watched on the screen as I cut and sewed, came into my mind, and I was forced to relive parts of my life just by touching the fabrics. I couldn’t work very fast–it was too difficult emotionally as I came to the realization I will never live long enough to complete all these projects. In fact, realistically, I had to be very choosy about keeping any of them. Finally one of my daughters who was more objective than I am came to help me finish the project of emptying out the studio.
Because of this experience and others, I have made a conscious choice to first 1. enjoy the moment I’m in and 2. look forward, accept and anticipate the changes in my life that are happening to me as I age.
I have a false sense of security that today will end and tomorrow will start and I will still be on board and move right along, but I don’t know that. Now or ever. As things in my life have shifted and I move on to the next phase and I wonder how to sail these uncharted waters, I put on a brave face and create anew, or, begin again. Good, upbeat music helps.
After the meeting I stopped at a grocery store to pick up a few things. Although I was making an attempt at normality, my head was still in the meeting and the cortisol surge released in my body from the panic I felt earlier was undoubtedly affecting my thought processes. I drove the cart around, trying to make sense of what it was I was doing there and remember what food we needed. I looked at the shelf for clues. Bread. Okay. I placed my hand on a loaf and put it in the basket. There was an unfamiliar paper tag on the outside of the wrapper and as I examined it, I read the words, “You’re not Alone, You’re Loved.” Where did that come from?? I felt a little surge of hope and wondered at the timing of the message. My head took over and pushed the thoughts of my heart aside. There was someone in the store putting notes on things, and I got one.
Ten days ago I decided, “Today’s the day.” I have a room in my house that serves as my office right now, and the last time it was used as a bedroom, I had hurriedly put up some wallpaper on one of the walls that was damaged, with no time to fix it, so I covered it well. My daughter-in-law has been living with me and in the daily process of talking to her about how they are working to make their “new” house livable, I have been gathering the steam needed to do some work on mine. So, she and I tore off the wallpaper in my office. There were several layers, right down to the wall board, which is problematic in my home. When the interior was originally painted, a strange type of acrylic paint was used that has a tendency to peel off, exposing the layers used to create the drywall, and the inside of the wallboard has the same qualities as cardboard. Think about trying to put anything with moisture on cardboard–dry wall mud, wallpaper, paint, etc—it becomes a ripply mess!
When it was off, I breathed a sigh of resolution, grateful that I had help, and that the process was behind me. I began the repair work. Dry wall mud, smoothed and sanded, holes patched, enough coats of mud to adequately sand the ripples “out” and then a light coat of mud to slightly texture the wall. It took days for it to dry and successfully cure to my satisfaction. Next was paint, a placid green, slightly tinged with blue, the color of some of the desert plants I had grown up with and come to love, peaceful and speaking of home. A second coat convinced me it was the right color. Then the thought-out, well planned yet bold experiment. I stenciled a mandala on a portion of the wall to make the place interesting and beautiful.
In Lucky’s case, she had an added challenge. Her executive functions failed her in this area of judgement and she didn’t know when to stop–pretty much anything. Pouring water into a cup. Unloading every item of clothing out of all her drawers while deciding what to wear. Coursing through the channels on the TV with a remote or listening to the hum of the car window repeatedly rising and falling. Exercising her little low-riding bike around the block so many times until whoever was following her was nearly too weary to spearhead the needed intervention to bring her in out of the cold.
The van turned the last corner before home and a little child, limp with sleep, bonked her head on the window as centrifugal force over-powered her body. My three-year-old granddaughter woke up crying, partly from the window/head contact, partly because her boots had been on the wrong feet for most of the morning and it was beginning to take a toll on her small body.
Yesterday we moved our daughter Lucky from a 45-person care facility located 22 miles from our home to a three bedroom condo with two other roommates, just five minutes from where we live!
