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I’m Grieving For My Mother — But She Isn’t Dead Yet

Everybody tells me I should write my mother’s obituary now, while she’s still alive because it will be more difficult after she’s gone.

So, I attempt to excavate the juicy stories from her life.

“When you went to Italy as a young woman, was that the happiest time of your life,” I ask her.

“No,” she says. “The Italian men were charming, but…” Something invisible competes with me for her attention.

She stretches her arm out in front of her and stares at a spot on the wall above her.

“What do the colored lights mean?” she says more to herself than me. 

11:45 a.m. and it’s time for her hallucinations.

My mother has been dying for a while now, but a couple of weeks ago it seemed dire. She wasn’t eating, was depressed, and slept a lot.

It was especially concerning when her caregivers described her as being “serene.”

My mother has been angry for the last few years — her rage has been what energized her.

Serene is a bad sign.

I texted people to come and visit her, saying, “My mother isn’t doing great.” 

I couldn’t say she was dying and this was their chance to say goodbye. I couldn’t make that call.

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