You’ve got to do more planning if you don’t have a car

My dad was still thinking about his car, or the lack of the car, when I stopped by to visit yesterday.

I arrived just as they were finishing lunch in the common room. There were a couple of dozen people spread around the room. Three other men at his table. There was a lot of food left on his plate.

He was wearing a t-shirt, with a gait belt riding high above his waist, and knitted stretch pants with a flowery design. I’m guessing they weren’t among the pants we’ve bought for him. Those have been disappearing at an alarming pace. Bonnie complained to the nursing director last week after yet another pair of fleece plants went missing. She chanted down a partial list of missing items. It wasn’t a short list.

We adjourned to a small seating area by the elevators. That sounds simple, but getting around is now a major effort.

I moved his walker from its parking space along the wall over next to his chair as he prepared himself for the effort of getting to his feet. He reached out and tested available points of support. The corner of the table. The arms of his chair. The walker. I reminded him to set the brakes, and he remembered that it requires locking the handles. That was good. All signs of memory are good.

Getting up onto his feet was difficult, and I was less help than I should have been, not sure where to push or pull to get the most leverage. But after several tries, he managed to lurch into a standing position with his weight shifted forward, then began the shuffle to the door, following his walker slowly into the hall and out towards the small seating area in front of the elevators. Several staffers moved to monitor his movement, but relaxed when they saw I was with him.

Then comes the process of getting back down, the walker-to-seat move. My dad shuffles into the right position, backs towards the seat, starts to bend his knees, slowly at first, then he drops the last foot or so onto the sofa. We both know it’s going to be hard to get back up.

We’re on the third floor. The window looks out over Beretania Street and a busy bus stop. There are two stuffed sofas with a view of the television near the elevators, with one high backed chair and several stacking chairs arrayed under the bulletin boards that contain legal notices, news for visitors, photos of guests, a calendar of activities that lists days with mid-afternoon breaks for ice cream, morning exercise classes, and occasional special outings or programs. There are green streamers hanging from the lights, some cut in clover shapes, signaling the arrival of St. Patrick’s Day next week. The television is tuned to a basketball game, Sam Houston v. SFA. Sam Houston was ahead. There’s only one other person there and I don’t know if she is watching the game.

Our conversation, such as it is, turns to the car, but with a twist.

On my last visit, he surprised me. First came the regular lament over his missing car. Can’t find it. Can’t even find the keys.

Usually it’s something like, “What am I going to do?”

But he shifted gears on that last visit.

“I don’t need a car,” he said with a shrug, his first expression of acceptance of carlessness. “I don’t mind walking. But I won’t be able to give you a lift home.”

“I don’t mind walking.”

I cringe inwardly, as the recollection clashes with the thought of our slow walk from the dining room, my hand firmly on the gait belt, helping to keep him upright and moving.

Today the car conversation picked up where we last left it.

He started with the familiar, “I don’t have a car.”

But then it was off again into new territory.

“It means that I have to be careful and do more planning when I go out. If I get too far, like out in Pearl City somewhere, it might be hard to get back on the bus. I don’t want to get in a situation,” he said, his voice implying the things that could happen if you aren’t careful with your travel plans.

He had several “situations” when he was still at home and driving. He didn’t give up driving completely until he was 94. His ancient Nissan station wagon with diesel engine and gasoline body had a tendency to break down or run out of fuel in the most awkward or dangerous places. Then there were the times when he got lost on the familiar track between the house in Kahala and his boat moored at the Ala Wai. Situations.

I like the fact that he seems to be accepting the idea that his car is gone. It’s important. I don’t know if he’ll remember the next time I’m here. Our job will be to remind him, over and over.

It was harder to get back onto his feet from the sofa, which was lower than the chair in the dining room. It took several tries before he defeated gravity. We walked back to his room, slowly, but together. I had a firm grasp on the gait belt, ready just in case. He did fine.

[text]I had to remind him which room was his, but he remembered that his bed is next to the window. The other three men in the room were already in bed. I guess the schedule is lunch, then sleep. A nursing assistant saw us and came to help as he was getting himself into the bed.

“Mr. Lind, do you want to use the bathroom?”

He looked confused. Then he looked at me.

“That sounds like a good idea,” he answered.

As he started getting up again, the alarm on his bed went off. It now plays a robotic version of “She’ll be coming round the mountain”. It’s a lot better than the old alarm.

I laughed, and he followed suit.

It was a good visit.


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2 thoughts on “You’ve got to do more planning if you don’t have a car

  1. chuck smith

    Wow your Dad not only has a good head of hair still, it’s still dark-brown! He has terrific genes (and so do you you, by extension). Glad your Dad is letting go of the car. For guys especially that is a strong redoubt to overcome. Same with my Dad before he passed last year.

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