by JO ABI
Nothing pulls the rug out from under you more than when your parents start getting old and sick. What begins is a battle of wills, of me trying to care for them without them realising what I am doing and of them denying that they are sick at all.
“I’m fine, now, how about some coffee.” And the whole time I am with them I am trying to hide my fear. I’m trying to swallow my dread. Because it happens to all of us. It’s unavoidable. It’s part of the circle of life and it’s cruel. It’s so cruel.
Aging and sick parents often don’t want to admit they need our help. It becomes a game of turning up to visit, popping up to the shops to buy medicine because you were going shopping anyway and begging your parents to contact you if they get sick.
The only time my dad has ever actually enthusiastically let me care for him is when his prostate became so enlarged he couldn’t use the bathroom. He was so sick and desperate for relief he called me and asked me for help. I got him to hospital, took him to the doctor and cared for him as much as he needed. Every other time I’ve tried to help him he’s become upset and teary, saying things like, “I don’t want you to see me like this” or “I should be the one looking after you”. He’s begged my mum not to ring me and my siblings and I have demanded that she does.
Doesn’t he know we love him? Doesn’t he realise that it’s our pleasure? Doesn’t he understand that after creating us and raising us that it is our turn to look after him and we want to do it?