Skip to main content

I Heart Trellis

Early in our relationship, though we were traditional nine-to-fivers, we were driven to create something together. At 36 and 43-years old, respectively, we were beyond creating babies. Besides, we came into our relationship with a perfect daughter each. Mine was 13 and his, twenty-three. Both blonde, bright, and beautiful and his came with a bonus, a baby!

I came into the relationship with a condo that needed no work. He had a work-in-progress in the woods, actually two. We would spend our lives together redesigning and improving these "cabins in the woods". But, before that we took an afternoon cutting down young alders to use to make a trellis. Working together, we .wove supple, young branches into a nine-foot tall trellis with two hearts stacked one atop the other. We were in the gooey, sickeningly sweet, first months of love, forging a new life together.

Here we are seventeen years later, separated by circumstance, through no fault of our own. I live in a hospice facility on a steady decline thanks to ALS. Our cabins, our creations, have been sold to satisfy our government to get me on medicaid so we could qualify for a facility that can actually care for an ALS patient. My husband sleeps on the floor of our home, alone, without me. His life is a treadmill: home-ish, work, hospice, home-ish again. Repeat. (I say home-ish because that home that we made together, will ultimately, be sold-off to satisfy ALS debt.)  Where shall he live when I'm gone?

Cut to earlier today. We're on a balcony of my facility, listening to live music from a street fair. It's Bastille Day! We decide to participate in the festivities from our perch. I "dance" by waggling my power wheelchair back and forth on the deck. We smile, we laugh, he claps, and then we share a moment. In my best effort, despite my dysphasia-affected speech, I ask him if he remembers our heart trellis. His tears tell me he does.

My tears, our tears, speak to our continued devastation and loss.

ALS is a dreamkiller.

Comments

  1. Tina, Thank you for sharing your life and disease with me. You are such an inspiration. I truly hope this blog ends up in a book!
    God Bless You!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your continued kindness and support! I wish I knew how to transform it as such.

      Delete
  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Kate

I think about my friend, Kate Struby, who died from this horrible disease in 2013. She lived here at Bailey Boushay House before I did. I reached out to Kate online through FaceBook because I loved her photograph with her head thrown back in laughter. I also loved her posts. I guess I just loved her spirit. I got to finally meet her one month before she died. I happened to be at the University of Washington Medical Center for my quarterly appointment when I saw her FaceBook post. She was awake and in the medical ICU. She was a mere few floors down. I would not be stopped. Relativeor no, I would meet my FaceBook friend. Thank God I did. I rolled into the room to find a beautiful, ethere.al woman flanked by two friends. Although it was an impromtu visit, she said she knew me immediately.I was in awe of her with her fiery spirit despite the ravages of our shared disease. She, unable to lift even a finger, lifted my spirit.

Immersion Therapy

Please excuse my selfish absence from posting to my blog. I wish I could say that I've been out diligently finding a cure for ALS, or tirelessly working to fund research, or hunger-striking to bring public attention to beacon the cruelty of not having access to care facilities geared specifically to the specialized needs of the ALS patient. Alas, I have been binge-watching Scandel, The 100, and binge-listening to audiobooks. I'm currently enamored of mystery and thrillers by Chelsea Cain and Lisa Unger. I cannot do a Helluva lot these days but I can still waste time. ALS ought to have some perks. I can immerse myself in completely in entirely new situations, raise my excitement level and learn something new to me.

Tuesday

Tuesday is shaping up to be my best day of the week. Every day holds the requisite eating, changing, television, and napping. But Tuesday, I got a glorious, hot bath in a handicap-accessible bathtub with my Angela and Lisa, reorganized my shower caddy with my Lisa, read "The White Album" by Joan Didion with my Lindsey, "supervised" doughnut-making and sampled same with my Sandra among others, and listened to Ryan Feng play classical piano. A new book fell into my lap today. Of course, I mean that figuratively. "Play It As It Lays" by Joan Didion was just laying on top of the informal Bailey Boushay House library cart, so I borrowed it. .Guess what we'll be reading? I feel very blessed!