Required Reading

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Mother.

*names, details changed to protect anonymity. . . . duh.

 "It was a gift I ain't never seen coming. But as special and precious to me as being raised by her."

~ Ms. Ables

I saw this Grady elder one day in clinic on an ordinary weekday. It was a simple follow up for diabetes and hight blood pressure and high cholesterol and not much more. She was adherent to her medication regimen, kept appointments, and was up to date on all of her age-appropriate cancer screening. It seemed that she was in good shape.

Even though Ms. Ables was in her seventies, from looking at her smooth brown skin you couldn't tell. Her crop of silver curls was the only tell-tale sign that she probably earned a senior discount in Publix and Kroger. She had a beautiful smile, too. It was big and vibrant; so wide that you could see the gold edges of the partials she wore. But somehow it all just made her more pleasant to the eye. I liked her immediately.

"Is there anything you're particularly concerned about today?" I asked. Of course, the resident physician seeing her with me had already asked her this same question but I thought I would ask again for good measure.

"Well. . . hmmm." She twisted her mouth for a moment and chose her words carefully. "I feel like I lost a lot of weight over the last three years. And I guess it's good for my medical conditions but I just thought I'd mention it since I ain't been doing nothin' to lose that much weight."

As soon as she said that, I clicked into the weight flowsheets in her chart. The last three visits appeared to be pretty much two to three pounds in the same range. She saw me doing that and added, "It's been gradual. Nothin' real, real obvious. It's only when I run into somebody who ain't seen me and they say, 'Dang! You lost a lot of weight!' or 'Girl, you look good! What you do?' I don't even have the heart to tell them that I ain't done nothing."

I nodded at her and, following that prompt, moved back a few years to see what she'd previously weighed. Sure enough, I saw what she meant. Three years ago, she was 228 pounds. And now? She was a solid 180 soaking wet. "Wow. You have lost weight."

"Told you."

I looked up at her and pressed my mouth into a straight line. I mean, her screenings were all without evidence of cancer. Her blood work was pristine, too. Her address hadn't changed nor had her medication list. This was weird. "Have you been on any diets? Or given anything up since then?"

"No, ma'am."

I leaned my chin into my hand and squinted an eye. "Well, you're definitely right that it's been gradual. And it obviously started somewhere around 2012. Can you think of anything that has happened since then that could explain this?"

"In '12? Hmmm. No. Not as I know of."

"Okay," I responded. And honestly, I wasn't sure what else to say. I mean, anything life threatening that would cause weight loss of this amount would have fully been declared by now. But more than 40 pounds was a lot of weight to be losing without trying.

A whole lot.

Her mood and affect were light and normal. She definitely didn't strike my resident or me as depressed, but I've paid enough attention to some very strong people affected by depression and anxiety to know that this means nothing. Out of necessity people find their best "game face" and strap it on for moments such as this. And so. I went ahead and did a simple screen for depression which, for the most part, came up negative.

For the most part.

When asked her the question about changes in her appetite, she said, "It's there, but I just don't eat as much these days."

I didn't beat around the bush and came right out and asked. "Why is that?"

I needed to know. I mean, was it a money thing? Or an access thing like living in a food desert or not having transportation? Was it a dental issue--which is super common in indigent populations--requiring her to get a tooth pulled or to be fit for dentures? I wanted to know.

Turns out, it was none of those things.

"I eat to live now and that's it. But I used to live to eat." The side of her mouth turned up and some inexplicable emotion washed over her face. She cleared her throat and went on. "My mother and I used to have dinner together every night. She was a great cook and taught me all she knew."

I just stayed silent, nudging her to go on. She did.

"When Daddy passed on about fifteen years back, Mother came to live with me. Not 'cause she couldn't do for herself or nothing. Just because she liked being with people and such. Mother was like that. She liked people and company."

"That's great."

"Yeah, it was good for both of us. My kids' dad and I split a long time back and my kids were all grown and on they own. I was glad to have her move on in."

"Sounds special."

"You know? It was. It sho' was. And Mother? Whew-weee, she loved food." Ms. Ables shook her head then swallowed hard. "Jest loved it. Everythang about it. And nawww, she ain't never got real heavy or anything. But food was her thing. And a good meal with everybody together enjoying it? Now that was her favorite." Her eyes had already begun welling up with tears that she blinked back as hard as she could.

I decided not not to overthink it and bit with the obvious question. "Did your mother pass?"

"Yes, ma'am. She went home jest before Christmas in leb'm." I liked the way she and many of my Grady elders pronounced the word eleven as leb'm. And I also liked the way death was described as "going home."

"I'm sorry."

Ms. Ables sighed hard. "Yeah, baby. Me, too. Once Mother moved in, it was just us for some time. We was both up in age so look like we was jest two peas in a pod, me and her. And since she loved food and cooking so much, we made dinner side by side in the kitchen and ate together every night."

"Wow," I said. At this point Ms. Ables was sweeping tears off of her cheeks. I pushed a box a hospital-grade Kleenex in her direction. Watching her cry made me feel this dichotomous mixture of sorry I'd asked about her mom and yearning to hear more about her. Now that I know how good it feels to talk about someone you love--especially when they're no longer alive--I stuck with embracing the latter. "What kinds of things did your mom like to eat?"

Ms. Ables placed her hand on her bosom and laughed hard and deep at that question. Immediately I felt glad I'd asked. "Chile," she sucked in a big drag of air and chuckled again. "Mother liked it all. And see, since she was one of them old school cooks, she knew how to make everything from scratch. But the reason I'm laughing is 'cause later on she got into them cooking channels. And I tell you she'd have me in the store and down by that curb market with her looking for all sorts of stuff. I mean anythang you name, Mother and me tried it out. Right there in my kitchen."

Shit. This is the kind of thing that always makes me want to cry. I mean, I can't even type it well without crying so you can only imagine what I was like when I was there. But surprisingly, I held it together. That is, until she said this:

"And no matter what, Mother had me set that table jest like I did as a girl. And you know? I would. I set it just like she taught me every single ev'nin. And Mother believed in eating on your good plates. We ain't never had no china or nothing. But we had some nice stuff and we used it every day, me and Mother. We sure did."

And that? That did me in. Man. I tried my best to smile at her as the fat tears rolling down my cheeks mirrored the ones that had been sliding down hers. Because now? Now, I got it. I got why this woman, who used to live to eat now only eats to live.

"I'm sorry," I finally whispered while patting my eyes with tissues from the same box I'd just handed to her a few moments before. And I said that because I was sorry. "It's just . . . that. . .it's just a beautiful image, Ms. Ables. You and your mother dining together like that. I can see it."

She froze and closed her eyes for a moment. Her breath hitched briefly, then she gave her throat a clearing. Ms. Ables' eyes were somber when she opened them to look at me again. "So guess it do make sense why my weight fell off, don't it? 'Cause now I just eats to live and that's it. I mean. . . " Her voice faded off and crackled a bit. I could tell these words hurt but she pressed on. "Now I just like to get meals on over with, you know? I picks something real simple to make, too. 'Cause a real complicated recipe make me miss my mother too much." She looked frustrated when the tears started to return.

All I could do is sit there. Sit there with my eyes on her and not flinching as she honored her mother and told her story.

Ms. Ables looked skyward and then dropped her head. "Lord Jesus. Mother, I miss you so much. I mean every single day, Lord knows I do."

Now she was weeping. And let me tell you, it broke my heart into a thousand tiny pieces. I reached for her hand and she let me hold it. "Take your time, Ms. Ables."

And you know what? She did.

"You know? I still eat on the good plates, you know? Jest 'cause I know Mother would want that. And my life a good life. I go places and do stuff and enjoy my life, too. But it's just that meal time. Something about sitting down to a meal that I believe is probably gon' hurt my heart until I take my last breath. 'Cause that? That I associate with Mother. And I doubt I'll ever reach a point where I don't feel that way. And that's okay with me."

I decided it was okay with me, too.

So there you had it. This is why my patient had lost more than forty pounds in three years without trying. And you know? I'm realizing more and more how much you can learn about people by asking the right question and then--the real key part--by actually listening to what they say in response.

More discussion revealed that Ms. Ables was indeed enjoying a very good quality of life outside of meal time. We completed a PHQ-9 depression assessment, too, and she didn't meet criteria for depression with that one either. Ms. Ables just missed her mother. Plain and simple.

We wrapped up the end of the visit and tied up the loose ends. I reached over and gave Ms. Ables a big hug and she hugged me right back. And all of it was authentic and good. Truly it was.

I thanked her for introducing me to her mom and that made her smile. Then, one of the last things she said before I left was this:

"This probably sound silly to a lot of folk. I mean, look at me--seventy-four years old and crying over losing my mama like she ain't never get a chance to grow old. Mother made ninety-four. Ninety-four! And she was in her right mind that whole time, even up until her last days when she just fell on asleep one day in her chair and didn't wake up." I stepped away from the door and sat back on the edge of the chair when she said that part. Then Ms. Ables rested her eyes on mine and finished. "But here's the thing: Mother wasn't just my mama. She was my friend. And I loved growing old with her. It was a gift I ain't never seen coming. But as special and precious to me as being raised by her."

And that? That I knew I'd have to place on a post-it note in my heart to come back to later. Because until then the idea of living long enough to become an elder with your parent was something I'd never even thought of. I guess because it calls for planets and birthdays to be aligned just so, but still. I now know that hearing that will surely change the way I view loss in those who get the chance to experience that uniquely special phase together.

Sigh.

See this? This is Grady. A world of people and lives and lessons and love. Of Ms. Ables and Mothers and so much more. And me? I'm just glad to be here, man. So, so glad.



Yeah.

***
Happy Wednesday. And thank you, Ms. Ables, for showing me yet another dimension of love between mother and child.

This reminded me of this poignant word that Billy Bob Thornton shared on the show "Master Class." Some piece of me relates to this, too.

15 comments:

  1. Well, I'm sitting here crying with Ms Ables. What a beautiful story; I'm so glad you were there for her and that you wrote about it here.

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  2. And in a rather stunning tale of what can happen if a mother is damaging rather than loving:
    A friend of mine lost almost a hundred pounds in the last three years. She just could not eat. No medical reasons found. Her friends would force her to finally eat something. They would cater to any food she might vaguely desire. Everyone was so worried.
    Then HER mother died.
    Guess what? Her appetite is back. She is eating again and with enjoyment.
    Yin/Yang.

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    Replies
    1. I can relate to your comment and it's so strange to be able to do so especially when so few people can. Blessedly, I have a "Ms. Ables" relationship with my daughter and we're sowing "new seeds" in our family from now on.

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  3. I have tears in my eyes, this woman spoke to my fear about losing my mother. I'm not ready for it and I will never be ready for it, even at 94.

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  4. Wonderful and caring doctor who took the time to listen to her patient. So happy you do not have time limits as to how long you can stay with a patient. One of the problems with the change in medicine with focus too much on the business model is that some doctors are mandated to stay no longer than 15 minutes after the initial visit. So happy your patient had such a good relationship with her mother.

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  5. I held the tears until she said "Lord Jesus. Mother, I miss you so much. I mean every single day, Lord knows I do."
    You never really think about elders missing their elders...

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  6. You have such a gift for listening, and getting people to open up and tell you their stories. Thank you for sharing this one, and for making me cry. You need a box to check for more than one tear ;)

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  7. This brought tears to my eyes. I remember once - over 25 years ago - I was at home alone and passed by the hallway mirror and thought that I saw my mother. When I stopped and looked again, it was, of course, me I was seeing. A few days ago, your brother gave me a hug as we were parting, but instead of letting go, he held me a bit longer and told me I smelled just like his Mema (your grandmother). I miss my early morning calls with my sweet Mama. I believe, however, that so much of her lives on in me - her face, her hands, her feistiness (especially as I get older!) - even her smell! I am honored and humbled to be so much like her and I miss her every day.

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  8. This made me cry! My mama died when I was 16 so I'll never get the chance to grow old with her.

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  9. This made me cry...It's been four years on the 28th of this month and I don't think you ever get over the loss of a parent, you just learn to exist until you meet again.

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  10. I'm crying, too. Seems like you guys needed each other in that moment. I have been volunteering in the Grady ED for a little over a year now and I have read your blog since I started. Grady is such a special place and I love being there so much. I really enjoy reading your stories, Dr. Manning. Your passion for life, medicine, and your patients really shines.

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  11. i wish I could find a doctor like you...not an easy endeavor, sadly.

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