It’s getting colder, time for shelter from the winter to come

By Mark A. Taylor*

On the evening last week when the weathermen were warning us about an overnight freeze, I was coping with the news I’d just heard from a caregiver friend.

He has cared for his wife persistently, heroically for six years. “I feel like I’ve been pushing a giant boulder up a steep hill all this time,” he told me. And he has shouldered the burden with grace and determination. But just a few days before, his wife had suffered a serious setback, and my friend had been told she should transition to hospice care.

Safety . . . protection

I went outside after dark to haul a few favorite container plants into a wheelbarrow for transport to the safety of the garage. And I couldn’t help thinking that I was doing for them what my friend would do for his wife: Preserving beauty, if not growth, for at least a little longer. Protecting from the loss that’s unavoidable in life’s inexorable cycle.

Actually, my plan is to keep my double-flowered, salmon-colored hibiscus inside all winter. It may stop blooming. I’ll certainly stop fertilizing it; watering will be minimal; I may prune the branches.

Such beauty is worth of receiving special care.

But the roots will remain safe inside sustaining soil. It will have enough light to keep on living. It won’t flower, but neither will it die. I will be its caregiver, unwilling to let it go, hoping that all the beauty I remember in it will not be gone forever.

Such are the tasks of all caregivers. But we who care for patients with chronic, debilitating, incurable diseases are not looking for a future spring. We’re simply standing by with the hope of prolonging autumn, and a commitment to do our duty when the chill of winter can be delayed no longer.

The last bouquet of summer. Blossoms too beautiful to leave to the frost.

And even though the vibrant beauty we remember from our loved one’s summer is fading, we may still see glimmers of the person we’re losing.

For me it’s an occasional radiant smile. An ingrained work ethic that prompts her to jump up and clear the table after almost every supper and always agree to help me fold the laundry. The determination to go to church on Sunday and through the week reading the Bible out loud while reclining on the couch. Singing along with Amazon Music in the car, especially when it’s a song of faith she’s known for 60 years. An occasional, wry comeback. Laughing at the newspaper cartoon (even when I’m not sure she really understands it). Noticing and smiling or giggling at every toddler or two-year-old we see in TV commercials or across the room at a restaurant.

Loss . . . hope

My overwintered plants may lose leaves or color; their branches may become spindly; they may only survive. But I will remember the glory I once saw in them, and I will tend them through the dark days of February and March until I can finally take them back outside into the warm sunlight of May.

My beautiful wife is likewise becoming a shell of the person we knew. If we had no hope for a future, bright, eternal summertime for her, I’m not sure how I would cope.

Provision . . . life

Bringing outside plants indoors is only one way I’m preparing for winter. This weekend I traded a stack of summer polo shirts and shorts for a pile of sweats and hoodies from the storage bin in the basement. I can see winter coming, and I’m getting ready.

I’m not so eager to think about the grey days on the horizon for my wife and me. But I’m not denying that they’re coming. Instead, I’m making provision for every shred of health we can still enjoy. We will stay warm together inside this winter, experiencing life far too precious not to protect.

* Although many of Dean’s readers are southerners not much worried about killing frost, maybe many will know or remember what October brings to the Midwest and will appreciate the analogy in this post that first appeared this week at Unchosen Journey: A Caregiver’s Walk with Alzheimer’s.

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