Gimme a Break: Please

 

Gimme a Break - Capture - Aug 4, 2016

Gimme a Break: Please

Gimme a break is a common call from those suffering fatigue, from whatever cause.
Recommended reading style is light and sorta hillbilly or a la We’ve Got a Convoy, surging relentlessly ahead. Inspiration for this piece was an anguished plea for time out from a care giver in the UK. Perhaps you’ve been besieged by duty and interference. Have a go. It might be a stress breaker if you read it like a rant.

I’m tired now and so worn down,
I’ve been workin’ round the clock.
It’s just like running ’round the block
And never sitting down—
Gimme a break!

My duty calls and I must go
To keep things flowing on a flow–
But duty lies right here right now,
So it’s on and on that I must plow
Gimme a break!

Gimme a break, gimme a break,
My body ache, my head explode,
My duties all on overload,
Why can’t I knock off now for pity sake?
Oh God please, just gimme a break!

Your demands are put on me–
You say you’re sorry to bother me,
You promise not to once again,
You never see the ache and pain.
Gimme a break!

I never moan, I don’t complain,
Yet here you are, it’s once again
Another favour you have to ask,
Another job another task—
Gimme a break!

Gimme a break, gimme a break,
My body ache, my head explode,
My duties all on overload,
Why can’t I knock off now for pity sake?
Oh please God, just gimme a break!

At Stake

I always give, I never take,
No matter what it is at stake;
The more I give the more you take,
The balance sheet about to break!
Gimme a break!

I always turn the other cheek,
It seems you slap it every week,
It’s this a-way or that a-way
You find a way to hassle me—
Gimme a break!

Gimme a break, gimme a break,
My body ache, my head explode,
My duties all on overload,
Why can’t I knock off now for pity sake?
Oh please God, just gimme a break!

I’ve given all I have to give
Energy is leaking like a sieve
The gas tank’s running outta gas,
I’m going to have to give it a pass
Gimme a break!

Leave me alone a little while,
This life I’m living has no style,
I’m wearied out, I have no clout,
I have no strength to even shout
Please, just gimme a break!

Gimme a break; gimme a break,
My body ache, my head explode,
My duties all on overload
Why can’t I knock off now for pity sake?
Oh please God, just gimme a break!

Time is precious

I have no time for taking time,
No longer is my time my time,
I cannot tear myself away,
I have no time to even stay—
Gimme a break!

Time is such a precious thing.
If only I could grow a wing
To fly me to where time is from—
I wish, I crave, to have me some.]
Gimme a break!

Gimme a break; gimme a break,
My body ache, my head explode,
My duties all on overload
Why can’t I knock off now for pity sake?
Oh please God, just gimme a break!

CREDIT: From Clip Art, labelled Epitome: Praying the Worry Away. Traced to:
http://epitemnein-epitomic.blogspot.ca/2012/06/praying-worry-away.html
A
rtist or photographer search dead-ended.

 

Posted in Advocacy, Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Humor, Memories, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

You’re Doing Very Well: As far as I can tell

 

You're Doing Very Well - Capture - July 30, 2016

You’re Doing Very Well:

As Far As I Can Tell

You’re doing very well as far as I can tell,
You’ve taken all your lumps and you’re moving right along,
You’ve learned your lessons well and you’ve grown very strong;
You’re doing very well, as far as I can tell.

You’re poised, you’re calm, you come across as cool,
Your steps look confident, your smile is very sweet,
You temperament is even, it’s something you should keep,
Anyone can see that you’re anything but Fool.

As far as I can see, you’re showing off the truth.
Sometimes there’s a quaver at the corner of your lips
And sometimes your voice quivers and sometimes it slips,
But you’re doing very well, as far as I can tell.

Your grace is something else for people to behold,
They all admire you the way you know your mind,
They all see you as loving and being very kind,
Every action that you take is taken clear and bold.

You’re doing very well as far as I can tell,
You’re a fine example of how life is done,
Tales of glory are already being spun;
Yes you’re doing very well, as far as I can tell.

Some people are great pretenders: They can present themselves with grace while they are melting inside. That is a social thing. A matter of pride.Or vanity. Others may be covering up something more serious and they are fighting to appear normal. It’s a case of pride and dignity, of personhood. Nobody wants to reveal that they are being robbed of their personhood.

CREDIT: http://jackraz.deviantart.com/art/Rubensesque-Sadness-183493200

 

Posted in Advocacy, Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Memories, Poetry, Warning signs | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Grey Day: Watch us Stumble

 

Grey Day - Capture - July 29, 2016

Grey Day: Watch us Stumble

Watch us Trip

A grey day brings a grey mood
When we sit around and brood
And feel sorry for ourselves.
It shrinks us from our giant selves
And we feel like sad little elves.

Watch us trip up on our feet
We stumble,
.`!..we mumble,,
We com- – -,
p…lain and we curse- – –
But what’s even ……#@$ worse,
They think that we are
.!?!! .funny..%( .      (sic)

I’d bet you any money
That each funny feat we do
And each silly little stumble
Is worth it to go that extra mile
Just to get one silly little smile.

So we stumble and we mumble
Till all the frowns crumble;
We give it all that we are worth
Till a smile is given birth…
Even though it wears us down.

Grey Day, Clown - Capture - July 29, 2016

Here’s Why

We don’t want to be caught out
And to be thought of as weak.
We don’t want a losing streak.
So we stumble just to please her
On this good grey goddam day.

Any grey day can cloud our outlook
And we try by every hook or crook
To escape the drear life we’re in,
’Cause deep down we do believe
There is a more optimistic spin.

Perchance we’re trying much too hard,
We’re giving far too much of heart,
Too much of our own selves away
Just because we care,
And that’s why we trip and stumble.

But our hearts’ in the right place,
We’re trying to fill up the space,
’Cause we see how much stress you’re in.
We’re trying to please, we’re trying to ease
You into a place to feel peace.

So a smile we’ll take for pay
On any good goddam grey day.
— —
CREDTS: Clip Art

Posted in Advocacy, Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Humor, Memory, Play the fool, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

What’s a Mile?: Old-fashioned

 

Walk a mile with Ann - Capture

Ann

 

What’s a Mile?: Old-fashioned

I was talking a mile a minute to a kid the other day and wound up telling her a story about my “old days.” Well, she asked.

I quoted an old saw, “Walk a mile in my shoes before you judge me.” Well, maybe that’s a paraphrase or a re-wording. Anyway, the kid asked me, “What’s a mile?”

And I said, “That’s a very, v-e-r-y WIDE smile.”

Well, I thought it was amusing.

Anyway, it made me wonder how the heck old she was that she didn’t recognize the word mile. She was obviously from the Metric Age. Me? I’m from the Imperial age. You know, feet, not metres, miles not kilometres. Pounds not kilos. Kilos kill me, Bwaah-ha-ha.

Okay, not so funny.

Anyway, it makes you feel old, don’t it? Well, it did me.

So I asked her – well, I’m old enough now to get away with asking a lady her age – “So how the heck old are you?” Yeah, old enough to forget the subtlety if I need to. “Were you born yesterday?”

And she said, 1984.

Nineteen eighty-four? Holy cow. She’s practically still in diapers. Oh, excuse me; that’s in her prime. And really, she was a very charming person.

But of course I couldn’t help but think of George Orwell’s book 1984 and the dark days it depicted; nor could I shake off the, to me, obvious “similarities” of today’s people trying control others. You know, coups and killings and mass murders and all manner of human rights abuses. It’s hard not to get depressed about that.

And I just wanted to embrace this kid, this young lady, with protective arms.

 

Thirty-Three

So anyway, 1984. That made her thirty-two. Just about the age I was when I met the lady who became my wife. I was thirty-three. The same age that, stories tell us, Jesus was when he was crucified.

And I had just come from a year of travel across Portugal and Spain, North Africa and the Middle East, including the territory that Jesus trod.

I was a bag of bones, when I arrived in London, so skinny that the Red Cross-like agency in Lebanon had refused to “buy” my blood because I wasn’t “fit enough.” They feared that giving blood would drain me too much and I wouldn’t be able to carry on. Not sure if that was consideration for my welfare (no doubt it was) or whether it was fear of being sued if anything happened to me later and my case was tracked back to them.

Well, anyway, the lady who later became my wife adopted me. I guess the state I was in, and being an “exotic,” a rare Canadian in her oh-so-English life, brought out the motherly instincts in her.

She had a killer smile and oozed warmth and good will.

And the rest? Well, that was beautiful.

So, that’s what started things off and we wound up with me reminiscing.

Anyway, she – the kid — obviously hadn’t heard. She  asked me, “So how’s your wife today? Give her my regards.” She’d obviously heard something. Or perhaps she assumed I was married. Of course, it could  have been the ring.

“Oh,” I said “she passed last February.”

“Oh, I’m so sorry,” the kid said. “What happened?”

“Alzheimer’s.”

“Oh,” she said, “that’s so sad. How are you doing?”

Well, in either Metric or Imperial, I’m doing fine. I’m finding that the day we met, my late wife and I, lives so vividly in my memory these days.

It makes me feel happy.

— —

Inspired by CK Love ’s fb lament that she could not write just now as she grieves for the world and it’s killings reported on the news. She posted July 23/16.  She asked “Who will cry for the ones who are hated for no reason. They haunt me.”

CREDIT: Photo by H. W. Bryce

Posted in Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Humor, Memories, Reminiscing, Travel | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

I Am No Friend of Dementia

 

I am no friend of dementia - Capture - July 22, 2016

I Am No Friend of Dementia

H. W. bryce

I am no friend of dementia,
I won’t give it a capital d,
In fact I am his sworn enemy
For what he’s done to my family.

He has always gone back on his word
And he’s never been true to me;
He’s cancelled everything that was fun,
That’s no way for a friend to be.

It is an unforgivable sin,
And a crime how he seems so sublime
How he seduces the innocent,
How he mistreats people all of the time

I am no friend of dementia,
For dementia’s been mean to me,
He’s broken all of his promises,
Which means there’s no faith in him to see.

He Says

He says he’ll lead you to safety
And that he’ll take good care of you,
But when you go down that path with him
He pulls a cruel Hallowe’en boo.

And he’s taken his big eraser
And he’s rubbed out my breakfast time,
And then when I thought it was dinner,
He up and turned around on a dime.

There on my big slate of mem-o-ries,
He has changed everything all around;
He’s rubbed out all the important dates,
And he’s left me feeling tied and bound.

So I am no friend of Dementia
He’s a double-dare, twofaced cad—
He even fools the intelligentsia—
And he’s made everyone think I’m mad

The trouble is

The trouble with dementia I tell you
Is dementia is quite demented
And I wish he’d get out of my head,
But I fear his presence is cemented.

Don’t trust him he’s just a big bully
In the very worst possible way,
He scatters your life to the wind,
And he’s no longer welcome to stay.

I want to have some peace now,
I sorely need to get me some sleep.
If I could recall where the bed is,
I’d fall into it in a big heap.

So I am no friend of Dementia
Every time I want to go somewhere,
He deliberately fails to show up.
It’s really quite too much to bear.

And when I need to remember a name,
He fiddles around with my brain;
And all of his dang’rous suggestions
Are totally, altogether in vain.

Every time I get an idea,
He scatters the pieces away,
And he blocks my way when I chase them,
So the idea can’t form and stay.

He’s a miserable thief and a cad,
Incapable of being a friend;
He’s stolen the fun out of my life
And oh how I wish it would all end.

He’s seduced all of my friends from me,
And turned my family all against me,
And you say make friends with Dementia,
While I feel like I’m in a storm at sea.

Well I am no friend of Dementia,
Dementia can go straight on to Hell,
For he’s turned my life inside out now,
And now I live my life all pell-mell.

How Come?

What prompted this tirade was an invitation on the internet to join the Friends of Dementia. Rebellious thoughts popped straight into my head. Nobody can be a FRIEND of dementia; it’s a destructive force. Hence the poem.

I also thought immediately about the use of, the terminology of, the phrase. Friend of dementia. Surely the organizers using this as their group name don’t mean it literally. They mean, of course, “Friends Fighting Dementia.” And, of course, we understand that, at once.

That’s the way I describe My Author Site and Blog: “A Voice Against Alzheimer’s.”

And, of course, I mean no offence to the good people at Friends of Dementia; they’re doing good work. One man’s opinion.

CREDIT: Clip Art: Leads to http://www.spring.org.uk/2014/08/10-ways-to-prevent-alzheimers-disease.php
I found this illustration on Clip Art, which led me to the above address, which did not credit the picture. If the artist wishes to contact me…

Posted in Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Dementia, Memory, Poetry, Satire | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Harry’s Haircut

 

Old Lady shocked - Capture - July 17, 2016

Harry’s Haircut

“What happened to you?” Mary asked in alarm.
“I cut my hair.” Harry replied. “Don’t I look neat?”
“Shaggy at best, like a tornado struck the farm.”
“Saved you some bucks and that can’t be beat.”

“But you have tufts sticking out and bald patches there.”
“Your scissors are dull, it couldn’t be helped.”
“You’ve got hair down your shirt, and hair everywhere.
“So tell me my dear, is that why you yelped?”

“Well it tickled my ears and itchied my neck.”
“I see,” Mary replied, “so you scalped yourself.”
“Yes but now I look neat so whatever the heck?”
“I suppose it’ll grow back, so suit yourself.”

Gasp

Well no wonder Mary was shocked.

Harry had been looking very shaggy of late and Mary had tried repeatedly to get him to the barber’s. But Harry had objected. Except once. Harry actually consented to go but when he saw the barbers all in a row with their scissors and buzzing clippers attacking their victims who were all shrouded in white sacrificial capes, their heads bowed in desperate prayer, he recoiled, and fled.

Harry, however, was indeed feeling shaggy. Very shaggy.

So he went a-wandering while Mary snoozed in her easy chair, exhausted from bailing him out of trouble as he went from spilling the coffee because he thought the coffee jar was the jam jar as he tried to make himself a sandwich, to missing the toilet as he tried to sit and landing on the floor, wedged between toilet and tub.

Mary eventually got Harry settled down, and he consented to lie down. Once he was asleep, she sagged into her easy chair.

She woke up when Harry bumped into a chair that knocked against the table. It took a moment to focus.

Harry's Haircut, man - Capture - July 18, 2016  Harry’s haircut looked something like this.

Then the gasp.

Harry’s self-inflicted haircut was indeed horrible.

But, in the end, Mary concluded: What should an Alzheimer’s partner care what she looks like, as long as she’s there to be looked at?

And Mary wanted Harry there to look at too, for a very long time. After all, hair really does grow back.

Well, for most people, anyway.

CREDITS: Gasping lady – Clip Art: Shock site – illogicopedia – The nonsensical
http://en.illogicopedia.org/wiki/File:OldLadyShocked.png
CategoryFair Use images  Content is available underCreative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike unless otherwise noted.
Horrible Haircut: Clip Art “continuacion te mostramos le 25 peores con…” I was unable to track this illustration further. Apologies. Not traceable

Posted in Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Horrible Haircut, Humor, Memory, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

It’s Different: When It’s Your Own

 

It's Different 2 - Capture - July 15, 2016

It’s Different

It’s different when it’s your own!
Suddenly you feel alone,
Suddenly you feel all helpless,
You cannot match this strange new tone.

Oh it’s easy to give advice, and it’s easy to share the hurt,
It’s easy to give to the needy and to handout to the poor,
It’s easy to show compassion and to commiserate with the loss,
But when it comes right down to it, it’s diff’rent when it’s your own.

And all your learning leaves you
And you feel you stand alone;
Your knowledge now deserts you,
It’s that different when it’s your own.

You can read all the books you want,
You can study till the old brain hurts,
You can practise everything you know
And you can even teach others how;
You can have it in the marrow of your bone,
But when it comes down to your own
All your learning comes undone,
And you feel naked to the bone.

When it comes right down to your own loved one,
Perspective shows another point of view;
We all work in darkness in such dark times,
But experience will teach us, and slowly we will learn.

For your loved one’s now a stranger,
And your eyes see him or her as young,
You wonder where that person’s gone,
And who this person has become.

It's Different 3 - Capture - July 15, 2016

Lost in a forest

You are too close to see the forest,
You can only see one tree,
And the tree is bending wildly
By a wind you cannot see.

That person’s lost inside a storm,
They cannot reach you from inside,
You cannot see them there within,
And both sets of arms flail helplessly.

Then it’s time to back away and start afresh,
Refocus on your life; look again and look a-wide
To see the forest green; your loved one may be inside there,
Where the forest needs a trim; find a pathway through the woods
And find your missing son; locate your poor lost daughter there
Whoever that they are and reach out with new love,
Your loved one is reaching out,
And you are reaching in.

It's Different 3 - Capture - Jul 15, 2016

Reaching Out

Reach out, reach out, your hands will join,
Your hearts will beat as one;
You have to gird your loin
And fight his fight with him until both win.

And if y our loved one is your spouse,
You are bonded throughout your life;
They may be lost and fighting for all their might
Because life is still their right.

Yes it is that diff’rent when it’s your own,
And yet you strive to help;
And still you love your loved one,
And your loved one still loves you.

Cling to that and work with that,
You’ll do the best you can,
And so will he or she as mem’ries build,
And you’ll pass on that which you’ve learned
To the great suffering human guild.

CREDITS: Tree Picture: From  http://www.rainprogram.org/?gclid=CIv3taSL8c0CFU6BfgodoUUBRA
Middle image: Colorful creature by SunnivaLee – http://sunnivalee.deviantart.com/gallery/
Bottom Picture: Reaching Out – No le abanonare estare a su lado hasta

 

Posted in Alzheimer's, Care Giving, Lost, Love, Memories, Missing, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment