Monday, 14 November 2022

Conversation with Tracey

 A couple of days ago I had a conversation with our neighbour Tracey over the back fence. The conversation got onto the topic of aged parents with Alzheimer’s disease.

Tracey: It’s hard when they don’t recognize you. My mother got to the stage where she didn’t recognize any of us, her kids.

Me: Mine neither. She would look at me and you could tell she was thinking “I know you are possibly someone who featured in my life, but I’m afraid that’s as close as we’re going to get, sunshine.”

Tracey: The night before my mother died, she recognized me. We knew she was close to the end and we were all in her hospital room. She said “Good, Bridget is here. How are you Bridget?” I was glad that I was the only one in the room that she recognized. She died that night.

Me: Bridget? But . . why did she call you Bridget?

Tracey: Oh, when I was born, mum wanted to call me Bridget but Dad didn’t like it. He insisted on calling me Tracey. Mum always called me Bridget when I was a kid.

Me: Oh right . .

Tracey: It’s funny – when I had the cancer operation I died on the operating table. Was dead for about a quarter of an hour before they could revive me. When I came out of it, it was the first time I ever saw my son Daniel crying. He never cries. Anyway when I died I saw my mother. She was wearing the blue dress she always wore, with the pearl earrings. Her hair was freshly permed. She said “Come on Bridget, pull your socks up girl, you have to get back out there. We’re not ready for you here yet.”

Me: Golly, right. I’ve heard of that sort of thing happening a few times. I used to work with a bloke who had been in the Army. He caught malaria overseas and when he came back to Australia he had a relapse. He was in the Alfred hospital and they declared him dead. Put a sheet over him and all. The orderly who was taking him to the morgue noticed that one of his big toes twitched under the sheet. The bloke I worked with said that he went down a long corridor towards a light, and a voice said “Go back, it’s not your time.”

Tracey: I’m not a religious person and I always thought that was it whey you die, but it makes you think. Anyway after that, I was in intensive care for two weeks. You have to be pretty sick to be in intensive care for that long.

Me: I was in intensive care for two weeks, when I was 20, but I only remember snatches of it.

Tracey: How’d you end up in intensive care?

Me: Motor bike accident.

Tracey: The worst part of it for me was the naso gastric tube. The doctor tried and tried but couldn’t get it to go past my throat. In the end, one of the nurses did it. The doctor was sure she wouldn’t be able to since she had only been there two days, but she got it to go in straight away.

Me: I had one of those. I only have very vague memories of it going in but I remember pulling it out. I used to pull out all of the tubes they attached to me – I was a bit crazy. It really pissed the nurses off. With the naso gastric tube I remember pulling and pulling and thinking it was never going to end.

Tracey: I thought the same thing when they removed mine.

Thursday, 10 March 2022

The final de-brief

 

Sarah, one of my Facebook contacts posted something on social media the other night. A good friend of hers has just died. Now Sarah is almost the same age as me, only a couple of days older in fact. She’s like me in lots of ways, we share many world-views. Except for one thing: Sarah is a practicing Catholic and attends church regularly and I’m not and don’t.

Sarah’s post said the usual things about the passing of a close friend but then she said something that I’ve heard a few times from the recently bereaved. She said that she hopes the dead friend can put in a good word for her “up there,” the implication being that when you die, you get to attend a de-briefing session with God or maybe some lesser heavenly official. Maybe cover off the highs and lows, the things you’re proud of and the things where you think you could have done better. Sarah hopes that her deceased friend will include some kind words about Sarah at the de-brief.

Now if Sarah thought about this, she could realise it’s a classic case of “careful what you wish for,” and it could in fact impact on her chances of passing through the pearly gates.

For a start, Sarah is assuming that her dead friend will qualify for heaven. Heaven’s entry requirements are pretty stringent from what I hear. What if the dead friend is headed for hell and tells the devil about Sarah? Nobody wants to be on Satan’s radar screen.

And even if the dead friend qualifies for heaven, will God accept that she knows Sarah better than He does? Will He place more emphasis on Sarah’s friend’s testimony than on His own opinion of Sarah? I think not. After all, God knows us very well by all reports, can even read our minds and identify thought crimes. That is something even good friends don’t do very well.

Moreover, even assuming God is interested, how does Sarah know that her friend will say positive things? Her friend could be holding some hidden grudge and tell God for example, that Sarah is very bad at returning borrowed books, has in fact lost more than one novel that the deceased treasured.

So if I were my friend, I would be hoping that the deceased just keeps her trap firmly shut if God tries to get any information on me out of her.