My Mother’s Long, Difficult, and Unbecoming Passing: Her Eyes Grew Darker as the End Drew Near. On t…

My mother passed away slowly, painfully, and without dignity… Only her eyes remained unchangedthe closer the end drew, the darker they became. In those final days, her eyes seemed fathomless, wise, and all-seeing… Or perhaps her face just grew paler with every passing hour.

Late one summer, I brought her back to her small London flat after a stint at our familys cottage in the countryside. It was late, and she asked me to stay the night. In the small hours, on her way to the loo, she fell. We found out later that shed broken her hip. For elderly people, its almost like a sentence handed down, a quiet verdict.

After that, everything unfolded quickly: the ambulance, hospital, surgery, and ten days under the fluorescent lights of a ward. On our way to hospital, I found myself thinking of when Id stayed with my old nursery school caretaker, Mrs. Barnes, years ago. That was when my father had died in a crash on his battered motorbikecaught under a lorry on a night road. My mother was twenty-eight, I was only three, and she tried to protect me from the truth. She took me away during the funeral and told me Dad was just away for work She never remarried, afraid a new husband would never be a true father to me.

After her discharge, I had to leave my job to care for her. We couldnt afford someone to look after her, especially as my youngest son was buying his first flat at the time.

So I moved into my mothers little one-bedroom flat for good. Three to six times a day, I changed her pads, washed her, and tried to feed her proper food. She never complained. She only flinched, childlike, when I moved her too carelessly and then whispered, Its all right, darling, its all right everythings fine

I hadnt realised before how squeamish and weak I could be. At night, lying on the old sofa next to her bed, Id quietly cry from exhaustion and despair. I wish I could say I was only crying for her, but honestly, it was myself I felt sorriest for.

No one else could really help. Both my sons were caught up with work and their families. My wifeher words haunted meWell, shes your mother, but to me, shes just another woman

At times like these I remembered the day Id first brought Jane, my future wife, home to meet Mum. Mum was warm and welcoming that whole evening. When Jane had gone and I caught my mother’s eye, she only shrugged and said, I dont know, something feels off But thats for you, sonnot for me to decide. Youre the one marrying her, not me.

Oddly enough, my mother and Jane always got along wonderfully over the years.

Now, so many decades later, it was just the two of us again, like at the very start. At night, after the lights were out, wed lie there and talk for hours. She would tell me stories of my grandparents, life during the Warwhen the Germans came through their village, and she and her older sister hid behind the garden fence, watching the strangers laugh and play music on harmonicas. She spoke of Father, tooa shadow in my memorya big man with scratchy cheeks and the smell of tobacco clinging to his clothes, whod lift me up and kiss me when he came home from work: My son, my boy, my lad!

But as Mums health faded, our nightly chats grew fewer and further between. I blamed it on the boring food I made for her, so I started ordering meals from a nearby restaurantwarm, carefully packed dinners delivered to the door. When I asked if she liked them, shed give a tired, distant smile and say, Youve become quite the chef, you know. Yet she barely touched her plate.

On her last night at home, she remembered the day ballpoint pens first appeared in our town. I was in Year Three, and everyone talked about them. My friend Emilys father got her one, and she showed it off in class. The pen was so marvellous that I Well, that night, I brought it home and showed it to Mum, beaming with pride. When she learned how Id got it, she spanked mehardwith a belt, and then marched me and the pen back to Emilys house so we could return what wasnt mine. Until she brought it up, Id barely remembered it. But Mum felt compelled to apologise, saying shed only been so harsh because she dreaded I might grow up to steal.

I gently stroked her cheek and felt a deep shame, not for becoming a thiefI never didbut for ever disappointing her.

When dawn came and she was at her weakest, the paramedics arrived to take her away for the last time. She opened her eyes, clutched my hand, and said, Oh darling, how ever will you manage… here, without me Youre still so young still so lost

Mum passed away just six weeks before her eighty-ninth birthday. The next day, I turned sixty-four.

Reflecting back, I seethere is a time in life when we must care for those who once cared for us. Its neither easy nor graceful, but it binds us to them and teaches us humility. In the end, love asks us for patience, sacrifice, and, most of all, kindnessespecially when the roles reverse, and we must become the carers for those who first loved us.

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