







One of the last memories I have of emotional connectedness with my mother involves standing in my backyard crying over discarded flowers, grieving the loss of a tiny baby that was gone as quickly as she came. In my mind’s eye, I see my mom hugging me close, quietly repeating, “I know. I know.”
Now, four years later, my mom doesn’t know. She doesn’t know that my little Blond One wildly jumps into pools with no reservation but carefully enters a room full of people, just like her own daughter did. She doesn’t know that the Little One was born without life but we still saw that this child had her husband’s ears. She doesn’t know that the Baby One was a surprise and now, in the 97th percentile for weight, is a daily reminder to his mama that there is a bounty of goodness.
She doesn’t know me, and that stings the deepest recesses of my heart. The hug years ago in the backyard that conveyed understanding and brought such comfort has been replaced by a hug that is laborious to endure. She hugs me now with the same amount of enthusiasm that she hugs any stranger. Because I am a stranger.
My mother doesn’t not want to know. On the contrary, she would want so deeply to know everything. But Alzheimer’s Disease is wreaking havoc on her mind, systematically stripping away all of her knowing in the process.
I long for the mother who knows.
I long for the incredible cousin-camp-hosting, memory-creating grandmother she would be.
I long for the stories I had yet to hear that remain locked inside of her.
I long for her help
I long for her hugs.
I long to know because I don’t know everything either. I don’t know how to love her where she is. I don’t know how my grief will surprise me next. I don’t know how to tell my children about their grandmother. I don’t know what she WANTS, as she isn’t able to express her needs and desires. And I don’t know what the next steps for her care should look like.
All my attempts to tie this up cutely at the end have failed. I can’t say, “Well, neither of us knows, but at least we’ve still got each other,” because that is not the reality of our situation. I don’t have my mother and there is not a thing in the world that is cute about that. But I do have hope, and that is also the reality of our situation. Because of it, I place stock in the future Good that there will be a time that all knowing is redeemed. And when that happens, no thing and nobody can stop me from having the cutest reunion ever with my mother.
(Erin lives in Charlotte, NC, with her husband, Joel, and their two adorable children. She seeks balance in her life with exercise, cupcakes & ice cream. From our vantage point, that seems to be working pretty well for her!)
1984: This photo is treasured by Erin, as her mother is “doing the life” that Erin is now living with her young ones. Pictured here as an infant with her brother, Brian, and sister, Allison.