Mom's birthday flowers, 2009.

Every day is a series of questions.

Did I call in the refills?
Is this okay for a diabetic to eat?
Is she due for her PT/INR?
Did the dosage on this pill change?
Has she exercised today?
Do I have everything for her annual Medicaid review?
Can I possibly listen to her tell the same three stories over and over again without screaming?

But it’s not those questions that are the most exhausting. It’s the ones that sneak up in the middle of the night, and steal away sleep.

How do I talk about any of this without sounding like I’m complaining?
Am I a bad person for feeling frustrated sometimes, for having to give up so much of my life?
Is it selfish for me to have thoughts about who will care for me when I’m old, when I should be focused on her?

But the worst question of all is:

How do I know if I’m doing a good job?

Because when it comes to dementia, the condition is progressive. You can’t expect improvement.

But there are good questions, too. And I received one recently via text from a friend who is dealing with a similar family situation. He certainly has his hands full, but still found time to not only ask how is your mom doing? but also how are you doing?

Thank you, Dan. It’s these kinds of memories I hope dementia never takes from me when I’m old. I’m lucky to have the friends I do.

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Family and friends with Thomas Sayre’s earthworks sculptures near Oxford, NC last summer.

Hi mom!

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One of my favorite photos. Clementine and my nephew.

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My grandmother gave this to me years ago. It used to be my dad’s.
Ssshhh. Don’t tell him. He might want it back.

 

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Early morning, December
I wake, look out the window
at three horses on the hill.
Where there used to be four.

It’s raining (of course).
I drink coffee, lots.
Clean the horse stalls
drink more coffee.

I say to my father,
The farm that sells buffalo goods
down by the Maryland line.
You ever stop there?

No, he says.
I put my barn boots in a bag
then forget them when I leave.
It’s raining (did I say that?).

Six hours from here to there,
sometimes seven, mostly six.
I take a picture of the road
with my cell phone.

One second
of those six hours
(maybe seven)
I take with me.

Winding, two-lane
back roads, no shoulders.
Empty crossroads, flashing signals
I pass the buffalo farm.

Next time, I say
like I’ve said since 1990
when there was 50 lbs. less of me
and more hair.

It’s pouring in D.C.
I stop to eat in Virginia
the sky is purple in Richmond.
I take more seconds with me.

Stolen here and there
they’ll slow time, maybe stop time.
My father won’t get older.
My mother will remember things.

It’s dark now, not raining.
Black highway, red tail lights
a lit-up water tower.
Raleigh is a string of lights.

The dogs jump, bark
run down the driveway
seven times older
than they were when I left.

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This post is going to be more pictures than words. My insides are exhausted and pictures feel easier.

My father was in an accident last Sunday. I’ve spent the past week in Pennsylvania. He was driving his horse-drawn manure spreader when a speeding car struck him from behind. He suffered four broken ribs and a punctured lung.

Thankfully, he is okay.

One of the horses was not hurt. The other, Nick, had to be euthanized on Tuesday. The accident was in The York Dispatch earlier this week here.

When tragic things like this happen, the brain goes into overdrive and you see things differently. You notice things. Funny things, random things.

Like shadows on the ground.

 

 

The way the horses look as if you went up to touch them, they might not be there at all.

 

 

How complex the bare, dried-up remnants of summer are.

 

 

How when the stream overflows, it weaves the thatch on its banks like a carpet.

 

 

How the stream itself is very deep, noisy and clear.

 

 

Surrounded by autumn, I notice how rich my family is.

 

 

I’m lucky we’re related.

 

 

I am thankful that my father is recuperating.

 

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I found this sketch while cleaning out my studio last spring:

It was one of the pencil sketches I did before completing this painting, Walking the Fence, ten years ago:

I did a whole series of paintings of Celtic Springs Farm back then (they are included in my online gallery). In spite of the fact that the execution and draftsmanship of this piece is not the best (I think Pa and the Team and The Barn were more successful), this one is probably my favorite of that series. Why? Because of the story behind it.

20-odd years ago, the farm was roughly 70 acres and the pastures were divided by a combination of split-rail and wire fencing. The cows would sometimes (more by accident than by design) knock down a section of the wire fence and wander free. One of the neighbors would call and alert us that the cows were in the road, or in their pasture, or peering in their windows. We would round them up and bring them home, and then “walk the fence” to find the section that was down.

70 acres can be a lot of fence to walk.

It happened in the summer, spring, fall…the cows didn’t care what time of year it was. But for some reason, when I think about walking the fence, it’s always winter. It’s winter and there is snow on the ground; it’s bitter cold and late in the day. The light is fading from the sky and my dad and I have to find the section of downed fence before dinner. I’m hungry and cursing the cows. All I can think about is the warm kitchen, the fireplace in the corner, taking off my wet boots and eating a hot dinner. Dad is carrying a flashlight because, as we both know, it will be dark by the time we make our way back to the house.

Funny. What seemed like torture back then seems so gloriously uncomplicated now.

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“Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their parents the same…”

Fuzzy photo memory: little sister and nephew come for a visit last February.

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Blackie. Celtic Springs Farm, 2010. Happy Halloween.

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Illustration from my work-in-progress. © 2011 Sean W. Byrne.

I am trapped in an era in which I’ve never lived.

It is the era in which my grandparents lived. A time when everyone wore hats. When automobiles and telephones came only in black. When letters were written with fountain pens and sealed with wax, and penmanship was important because (like a hat), it said something about its owner. In this time, letters weren’t written in haste, but composed with care.

Last Tuesday, at work: I am responding to an email. The phone rings. I stop typing and answer it. After I hang up, I manage to type two more words before a coworker sticks his head in my office and asks me a question. Ten minutes later, I return to my email. I type another two words when my cell phone beeps. I have a text message. While answering it, I receive a voice call on the very same phone. Much, much (much!) later, after many more interruptions, I finally finish the email. I notice there are over a dozen Autosave versions of it in my Drafts folder.

My grandfather worked for a company that made maps. His workspace consisted of a large room, and in the middle of the room was a shallow, rectangular reservoir filled with a developing solution. The whole place smelled of chemicals. Around the perimeter of the room were offices. My grandfather sat in one of these offices, at a big wooden desk with a wooden swivel chair. There was a high demand for road maps back then. The Interstates were new and road travel was big. The company updated their maps every couple of years. “It’s a neverending job,” my grandfather used to say.

Last spring: I am driving to a birthday celebration for a friend. We are meeting for dinner at a restaurant in a recently developed area of town. I am using my GPS. It indicates that the restaurant is straight ahead, in a strip mall on the right. I stop at the coordinates indicated. There is no restaurant there, only a newly constructed bank. I keep driving, past more strip malls, a parking lot, another bank. The GPS recalculates and gives it another shot, sending me back in the direction from which I came. Again, I arrive at the coordinates, and again…no restaurant. All the new buildings and roads have sprung up overnight like mushrooms, and nobody has bothered to tell the satellites.

My grandfather was an artist. He used to sit in his favorite easy chair with a drawing board on his lap and sketch. I would climb into his lap and ask him to draw me things: a dolphin, a monkey, a monster with a human brain. He was mysterious and exciting. He had tattoos on his arms (“Never get one,” he told me more than once, “you’ll regret it.”). One of his legs was artificial, from a motorcycle accident in his youth. I always sat on the other leg—the soft one. He had performed in vaudeville as a child and later, as a young man, earned a living as a nightclub singer. That was when he met my grandmother. They eloped to New York City in 1939. Jimmy Stewart’s New York. Katharine Hepburn’s New York. The New York of another time, when everything was magic.

I am trapped in an era in which I’ve never lived.

But “trapped” isn’t really the right word. “Trapped” implies I want to leave. And when I am done writing or drawing for the day (or more often, for the night), and it’s time to come back through the wardrobe to this world, I feel a tug in my chest akin to homesickness. I don’t want to leave the world on the other side of the keyboard, on the other side of the drawing board.

I am trapped, actually, in the era in which I live.

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© 2011 Sean W. Byrne . Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha
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