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Dear Mum
The story continues …
As you probably won’t remember our
conversations from the last couple of days I have decided to put
these and what has happened over the last few days in a letter.
Hopefully you will read and possibly reread what I have put down.
You seem to be suffering from lack of memory any way, so this will
help you to remember.
Tuesday 2nd May
Last Tuesday afternoon I rang you only to
hear that you were expecting the doctor to arrive. Most people would
be worried to hear this in its self, as usually most children are as
concerned for their parents welfare as their parents are for their
own. You told me that your ‘dizziness’ had become much worse than
usual and you were hoping the doctor could do something for it. I
asked you to phone me when the doctor had been to let me know what
he had said. You phoned me back just before I left work and said
that the doctor had arranged for the chemist to drop you down a
prescription for a possible inner ear infection.
You also told me that the doctor told you that on no account were
you to drive your car! I was dubious that it was an ear infection as
you have been suffering this dizziness for some time now. I was
happy with your answer and told you I would speak to you the next
day.
Wednesday 3rd May
I rang you to ask what you wanted to do
that evening as you know we have the routine of seeing each on a
Wednesday evening, sometimes to have a takeaway or go out for
something to eat. You seemed better Wednesday lunchtime when I
phoned you, but you were then unsure as to whether you wanted to go
out or stay in. You told me you had been out in the car to pick up
your prescription from the chemist. I said that you had told me that
the chemist was supposed to have already dropped the prescription
down to you. You told me that the chemist had only given you one
tablet. I thought this strange at the time, but gave you the benefit
of the doubt – in other words I believed and trusted you. You broke
that trust. I asked you to ring me before 5.00pm that evening to let
me know if you wanted me to bring fish and chips around or for us to
take a run in the car to get them. You said you would, but didn’t. I
went home with my husband and not long after I got in, I tried
phoning you. I must have tried about 6 or 7 times, but no answer. I
told my husband that I was going straight round to see you as I
suspected the worst had happened.
Not quite, you were not dead. I tried ringing the door bell a
couple of times and then went around the back of the house. The
window was open. I went back around the front and looked more
closely into the lounge. I could just see your arm and head as you
were lying on the floor.
I ran across to your neighbour and told him you were lying on the
floor and I did not know what to expect. I feared the worst. You
will never know what goes through someone’s mind when they think
their mum might be lying dead on the floor. He came across with me
and helped me through the window. We ran into the lounge and both
saw you lying on the floor. You were lying face down in a very
strange position with your legs crossed up against the door frame. I
thought you had broken your back or neck as you could not move by
yourself. When we spoke to you, you started moaning saying that your
arm was broken. At this point I still did not realise you had been
drinking.
I immediately called 999 for the ambulance to come. You were
saying ‘Don’t get the ambulance’. They arrived within what seemed
about five minutes. One of them at that point smelled the alcohol
and asked you if you had been drinking. The blood in my veins froze.
I could not believe that you had had a drink after a supposed 16
months of sobriety. I wish I had had my camera to show you what a
state you were in. The two paramedics, neighbour and myself managed
to get you on to the pouffe. Your legs were all bent and you could
not stand.
Three times you told us you wanted to go home! You were home,
except you did not know this was where you were. I started to lock
up the house, all the time looking for the cats to ensure that they
did not get locked in. As I was looking for them I saw the empty
quarter litre whisky bottle between the sofa and the armchair. I
don’t think it was even the brand that you usually drank. Thinking
back, you must have gone to get the whiskey Wednesday morning before
you spoke to me, but then you were lying to me again weren’t you?
I snatched the bottle up and showed it to both the paramedics and
the neighbour. I pushed past them and rammed the bottle into my
glove compartment hoping it could be used in evidence or something
later. (I was to retrieve it and leave it with you on the Friday as
I left). At that point I was working on adrenaline and sheer anger
was driving me forward. I went with you in the ambulance and one of
the paramedics was asking lots of questions, luckily one of us could
answer them. He could see from my face and by the way that I spoke
that I was furious.
We got to the hospital and you were connected to a heart monitor
etc and you were moaning loudly due to the pain of the suspected
broken arm. At one point, I even told you ‘Suffer it, you brought
this on yourself’. You kept saying ‘what about my cats’ and ‘I want
to go home’. I told you to shut up several times. You were making
things much worse for me. You were eventually given morphine for the
pain and you were taken for an x-ray. As I was sitting outside
waiting for you, a woman who was sat with her two children asked me
what was wrong. I said you had a suspected broken arm. She asked why
you looked so drugged up. Do you know, I thought about this for a
second or two. You know I had two answers forming in my mind. Do I
tell her the truth that I had just found my mother lying blind drunk
unable to get up by herself or do I say that the morphine she has
just had for the pain relief has just affected her.
I decided to lie for you and told her it was the morphine. I
decided that this was the last time I would lie for you or your
alcoholic escapades. Had the two children not been there, I know my
answer would have been the former. I waited there in that hospital
for 3 ˝ hours. You did have a broken upper arm. You kept telling me
to go home. You did not and don’t realise that when you are taken
into hospital with the person who called the ambulance, this person
has to make all the decisions and bide by the hospital rules. This
meant that I had to wait and see if the doctor would accept you into
the orthopaedic ward for the night. I prayed this would be the case.
They asked me if you had someone to look after you if you went home
that night. I said no. They also asked me if you could go home with
me. I said no. I had picked you up from these alcoholic traumas all
my life and did not want to continue on that course. I wonder now
why I helped to save you that time you took the overdose, only to
see you continue on this self destructive path. I was eventually
told you could stay. My heart leapt. It meant I could go home to my
husband, the one good constant person in my life. It also meant I
did not have to worry about you and that you were being looked after
by somebody else. I did not have to worry for a few short
hours/days. At that point I did not know how long you would be in
hospital. I did not eat that evening as by the time I had got to
your home and seen to your cats it was quarter past eleven at night.
I did not visit you again in hospital. I had made up my mind at
that point what I was going to do.
Friday 4th May
You phoned me Friday morning saying you
were allowed home. You said ‘I don’t suppose you can come and pick
me up can you? Oh no you are working’. I think the penny dropped as
to what kind of situation you now found yourself in. I told you to
get a taxi. You said you had no money. I told you that you would
have to get the money when you got home. I also told you that your
key was with your neighbours. You said ‘Bye’ and put the phone down.
You phoned and left message on my work answer phone saying you could
not get an answer from the neighbours. I phoned you back and you
told me that you couldn’t be picked up until 1.00pm – my lunch hour.
You were even selfish enough to ask me to pick you up two packets of
cigarettes, which like a fool I did. You do not know now how that
made me feel.
In fact I wonder if you can sympathise with anyone. I told you
that I would pick you up outside the side of the hospital. You
eventually came down in a wheelchair and looked like death. I took
you home and explained all what I have written in this letter. I
told you that you were lucky it was on one of the days I was seeing
you. I also told you that had it been three days or more the cats
would begin to be very hungry and would start looking for
alternative food sources. Yes you. If you were dead they would turn
to your own flesh for food. I am not sure you believe this, but it
is fact. As I told you at the beginning of the letter that you
probably won’t remember our conversations from that afternoon, so I
have made it easier for you.
I stayed with you for about an hour and you told me I was going
to be late back to work. I told you to think about this and that it
was not my fault if I was going to be late back to work. I also told
you that I had arranged ‘meals on wheels’ to visit you. You told me
several times that you did not want them.
How much more selfish can you get mum. I told you that it was not
for your benefit, but for mine. I said that ‘I was not doing anymore
running around for you.’ I needed to know that you would get at
least three or four hot meals a week from a regular source for at
least a couple of week whilst your arm recovers.
You have not been bothering to cook for yourself recently have
you? You usually survive on cereal, soup and toast. How do you think
this makes me feel that you are ‘surviving’ and not ‘thriving’ as
you should now be. This is the problem mum, you do not think about
the consequences of anything before you say or do anything – it is
always about you. You told me not to tell your sister and
brother-in-law as you could not bear what you call their ‘nagging’.
Well this ‘nagging’ as you call it is the sound of concerned people.
You forgot in your drunken state that you spoke to your sister on
Wednesday afternoon so they knew even before me. Your best friend
who was diagnosed with cancer was so concerned about you too that
she rang your sister to see if they had heard from you as she was
used to seeing you on a Thursday afternoon. Yes mum, count the
people up till now who you have hurt and had worrying about you.
This is not to mention the inconvenience to the hospital staff who
incidentally deal with drunken cases all the time, so it is now just
run of the mill to them. At this stage I have not mentioned my
brother who did not know anything until I phoned him on Thursday
evening. He is at a disadvantage as he can’t just call round to see
if you are OK because he lives away from us.
Saturday 5th May
I take time to go and get you some basic
shopping items and spend time choosing some easy meals like tasty
soups and ready to heat meals that I think that you will like to
eat. I spend an hour with you wondering if you really are
appreciating my company. I have already said that I doubt that I am
being a good daughter to you, yes you really have me wondering this.
You told me that I was the perfect daughter. I can not see this as I
am fast becoming numb to this and acting out of duty rather than the
love I should feel.
Sunday 6th May
I phone you to see if you are OK and to
see how you are coping. You tell me the nurse has been again. You
also tell me that the next door neighbours have warmed up the soup I
brought for you. You say how kind they are, you do not know them
well. I say yet two more unsuspecting fools playing a part in your
life. The merry-go-round continues…
Monday 7th May (Bank Holiday)
The phone rings at 9.30 am. It is you
telling me you can’t get dressed. You ask me if I was still in bed.
I was. You say sorry. But are you really sorry mum. I get some
tea-bags and a paper for you and bring it round. You have not eaten
anything since the soup yesterday afternoon. I ask where two of the
meals are I brought for you are and you tell me that you have put
them in the freezer. What bloody good are they in there? I ask you
if you have given up? You tell me no. I am beginning to wonder…
Yes you have done very well to remain sober for 16 months, but I
hope that the events over the last few days will show you that you
cannot drink again. I have spoken to my brother in depth about how
we feel. We have both decided that if you drink again we will cut
off all communication with you. You will be on your own. The problem
is that if something like this happens again and we are not there to
help, everyone will say ‘Poor woman, even her own children weren’t
around to help her.’
They will think we must be bad evil people, but you know that is
not true. You will be OK as you will just be the poor alcoholic who
died on her own. So there you have it, the decision is yours.
I have phoned the doctor and made an appointment for you to go
and see him. He has suggested I bring you. He will do tests on your
ears for the ‘dizziness’ and is going to suggest you get some memory
tests undertaken. I suspect that you have the early onset of
alcoholic dementia, but we will wait for the professional diagnosis.
Yours dutifully,
Gill |