To See or Not to See

October 10, 2010

Every six weeks my mother and I sit for up to an hour in a chilly waiting room in northwest Portland until a nurse from Ukraine calls out Ah-Leece!  She ushers us into a room with what Alice calls a “tilt-back chair,” and we wait for the doctor to appear. He will dismiss us anywhere from an hour to three hours later with a bag full of eye drops.

The young doctor grew up ten blocks from our house in Iowa. He attended the same school I attended, but thirty years later. Sometimes I want to tell him about the shortcut I used to take through the neighborhood cornfield–crows cruising overhead in an opaline blue sky and the rustle of mice in fallen shafts. But why would he care? Before he was out of diapers, that cornfield had been plowed under and turned into blocks of apartment houses. Place has always been important to Alice, and she feels connected to this man because of it, but he’s a taciturn Iowan, so it’s hard to say if he feels the same about her, or if she is just another elderly patient with a degenerative eye condition. He sees so many every day and he gives them all injections. In their eyes. Including Alice. Okay, not another word about injections, but maybe this is a good time to bring up that expression we’ve all heard and shrugged off but may want to reconsider: Old age is not for sissies.

The treatments help Alice keep what little remains of her sight. She loves to read, to watch people, to see what they’re wearing, hairstyles, clothes, make up. She spins stories about what she sees, even though her vision problems leave her with a world partially obscured by a black spot smack in the middle of both eyes: The silver-haired woman with a white cane in the waiting room doesn’t get along with her son, who sits beside her for short stints and then wanders off. Those two men are army buddies, the way they lean into each other and laugh (I think they’re probably lovers). The child who waits with her grandmother stomps twice around the room singing Who Let the Dogs Out at full volume, and Alice concludes the grandmother regrets bringing her along. Each new person walking in gets tagged with a new story.

My father always took me for a milkshake after trips to the dentist, and I always take Alice for hot chocolate after these appointments. But this last visit she wanted something else. At The Place she’d heard buzz about a store where everything costs only a dollar. She wanted to go, even though her left eye, her good eye, was blurry after the you-know-what. (Sorry.) I knew my mother, child of parents who’d skidded by on next to nothing long before the Depression even started, would love a giant store filled with glittery and cheap goods.

She guided her walker up and down the aisles, tossing things into the cart that I pushed: cocoa butter body lotion (“This stuff really works!”), toothpaste, chocolate covered peanuts, mouthwash the shocking blue of an as yet undiscovered Hawaiian lagoon, hand towels, soap, curlers, a hairbrush, and more. “I’m so happy,” she said. “I love it here.”

Mr. Fickle, whose name she mysteriously changed for the day to Mr. Feegle, has a birthday coming up so she headed for the cards. “I don’t think Mr. Feegle would like this one.” She held up a cartoon of a wizened face and read it.

Outside: You don’t look your age…
Inside: NOBODY looks that old.

She found that funny, but discarded other jokey cards with elders whose breasts drooped to the floor, whose wigs went flying off in rain storms, whose false teeth floated in water-filled glasses, or got stuck all by their lonesome in birthday cakes, or dropped into the flush of a toilet and, like the supposedly amused recipient, swirled around in the final drain of life. “Stupid, stupid, stupid,” she muttered quietly. Because of her eye problems, now with the addition of blurriness, nearly every card ended up north, south, east or west of where it had started. I tried to slip them back into place without her noticing, even though I wanted to rip them to pieces.

She picked up a large card with a river scene and the silhouette of a tall strong male fishing. “To a WONDERFUL man,” the outside read. Inside, it claimed no one was kinder than he. “If only it didn’t have that word wonderful on it…” She placed it in a slot two rows south of where it belonged.

She finally settled on one with candles and a blessing. The message was about gentleness. “He is gentle,” she insisted.

We inched home in rush hour traffic. “It’s a good thing I’m not driving,” she said. “All I’d do is look at the trees.” I thought about her lack of skill at the wheel even back in the Midwest where trees were few and far between and her vision was excellent: the time she passed another car on a hill while I screamed beside her, the time she pulled out of a gas station and into a lane of oncoming traffic, and countless other close calls. She’s as bad as her father, famous for driving a borrowed Model T so fast over railroad tracks that all seven of his children, each holding a paper bag of popcorn, bounced so high that not a single kernel stayed in the bags.

After living in Portland awhile, she can now tell when we’re approaching home. I heard a little sigh.

I got her new goods put away, settled her in, and placed her eye drops on the desk next to her La-Z-Boy. I leaned down to kiss her goodbye.  She thanked me for a good time. “We got some really good bargains today, didn’t we?”

She had pushed the appointment–that black spot smack in the middle of her day–out of sight.

17 Responses to “To See or Not to See”

  1. Ketzel Says:

    How I envy Alice, happy with lagoon-blue mouth rinse and new soap. It’s the wanting more that does me in. But don’t let her pleasure in the little nothings fool you. What fuels this woman is this astonishing you.

  2. Carol Bergh Says:

    I was feeling more or less mired in a veil of melancholy this evening after yesterday getting a haircut that brought to mind more E-T
    than Audrey Hepburn; today listening to the director of St.Stephen’s in Mpls. talking about the grim realities/statistics of homelessness and then later the financial dilemmas in my Church– but then the “visit” with Alice. Thanks for the uplift!
    Carol

  3. Beth Kaye Says:

    Loved this.

  4. Meg Glaser Says:

    So glad to hear that the trip to the Dollar Store was a success. Black spots be gone! Thank you.

  5. Gordon Says:

    This story was worth $1.50.


  6. Aren’t those cards awful? They piss me off, too.

    “If only it didn’t have that word ‘wonderful’ in it…” If I’d been drinking Coke, I woulda snorted it out my nose. Love, love, love Alice. And your posts about her.


  7. Ah, what a wonderful post – Alice is amazing and your descriptions of her and her day are in glorious technicolour! Loved it. :-)


  8. A wonderful piece about sweetness and hardship, Andrea. Solace for us during a difficult time.

    Joanne and Bob


  9. [...] her feet in a white vinegar foot bath and had added a few drops of cocoa butter lotion from the Dollar Store. She swears by vinegar’s power to cure all aches and pains. (Here’s a list of the [...]


  10. [...] We talked about the universe for a few minutes, but it didn’t seem to make sense to her in the way I expected it to, so I decided to pick up some children’s books at the library—children’s books because the concepts she had lost or that had gone missing for one reason or another would be explained simply and in print large enough for her failing eyesight. [...]


  11. [...] was our third trip to the Dollar Store. When the wash cloths she’d purchased on our first trip came back from The Place’s [...]


  12. [...] wanted to know if the Dollar Store was anywhere near the hearing aid specialist we were going to see. Ever since our first trip to the [...]


  13. [...] her feet in a white vinegar foot bath and had added a few drops of cocoa butter lotion from the Dollar Store. She swears by vinegar’s power to cure all aches and pains. (Here’s a list of the wonders of [...]


  14. [...] We talked about the universe for a few minutes, but it didn’t seem to make sense to her in the way I expected it to, so I decided to pick up some children’s books at the library—children’s books because the concepts she had lost or that had gone missing for one reason or another would be explained simply and in print large enough for her failing eyesight. [...]


  15. [...] from her old, simple, small-town life. She has endured much pain here—eye injections for macular degeneration, hip surgery, and the emotional anguish of making and then losing (to death)new friends, as well as [...]


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