Chapter 15: “I’m Trying”

[TIMELINE: DECEMBER 2020–FEBRUARY 2021]

The rest of December was no better. Peggy’s confusion really started to get ahold of her.

Conversations like this were typical:

Me: Where were you when you lost your mask?
Peggy: I was on my way up in the air.
Me:  What do you mean?
Peggy: I didn’t mean that. I meant that I was in the living room.

Or this exchange, after she had lost the dinosaur mask that she really liked:

Me: What were you doing when you lost your mask?
Peggy: I had my mask on, and it was there, and then there were none.
Me: Have you looked in the closet for it?
Peggy: Where’s the closet?

A cloth face mask made from beige fabric that is printed with colorful drawings of various dinosaurs. It sports black ear loops and a purple chainmail chain.
This was Peggy’s dinosaur mask from Electrothreads. I made the chain for her in hopes that she’d be less likely to lose her mask.

I resisted the urge to snap, “three feet from your bed,” and told her calmly how to find the closet, which she was able to do, but there was no mask. So I just ordered her another one.

A lot of other developments also started to appear on my radar, none of them good.

First, Peggy started having trouble taking care of her two cats. She either overfed them, or didn’t feed them enough. She also wasn’t cleaning her apartment at all, although she was often going through the motions. In some cases, she was making more of a mess. For example, she would take the time to “sweep” the floor, but in reality she just moved dust and debris from one place to another. She was also starting to have trouble navigating her apartment, like when she couldn’t find the closet. It was all harbingers right now. Quiescence, but for how much longer?

A calico cat (white, tan, and black) lounges on top of a bed.
Cricket was a sweet rescue cat, and was one of Peggy’s favorites. Peggy always, always took great care of her cats.

Now that Covid lockdowns were over and I was allowed to spend time with my sister indoors, my therapist Katy encouraged me to visit Peggy more often. And I did, whenever I could.

January 2021 was the start of a difficult year. Looking back, I can see now that it marked the beginning of the end. Prior to that point, we could all kid ourselves that Peggy’s Alzheimer’s maybe wasn’t that bad. We were marking the progression of her disease in small, incremental changes. But the pace of those changes began speeding up, and her deficits were growing.

In mid-January Peggy began to obsess over her little black cat, Jezebel, her former biohazard kitty and her absolute favorite. For some reason, Peggy was positive that Jezebel was dying, and there was no way to convince her otherwise. In reality, Jezebel still had some chronic health issues, but they were all treatable, and were being managed. Her health was actually fine, more or less, for an older cat. In hindsight, though, I think I know what was driving her anxiety about this.

The cover of Greg O'Brien's book On Pluto features a blue background, white lettering, and close-up image of a fluffy dandelion seed head.
Greg O’Brien’s book on living with Alzheimer’s is the best description I’ve found, and gave me a lot of insight about what Peggy went through.

Recently, after Peggy confided again to me that sometimes she just “can’t do anything,” she also told me that she feared that one day she wouldn’t be able to take care of her cats at all. Of course that was true, but I saw no reason to tell her she was right and cause her to worry about the whole situation even more. Instead, I told her we’d have to see what happens if and when we got there, but for now she was doing a great job caring for them.

Around this time I brought back Lizwho had taken care of Peggy back when she was still living at homeand I also hired Liz’s niece Desiree. Again, I felt lucky to know this family that had so many wonderful professional caregivers! Peggy liked both women, and I was grateful to have them provide companionship for her. Peggy was taking part regularly in activities at her assisted living facility, which was great, but for keeping her truly busy and content, I thought more assistance was definitely better. (I’m a “more is better” kind of girl.)

A blonde woman in glasses, a blue patterned shirt, and a white sweater poses, at sunset, against the rail of a ship.
We’re on our way to Malta in this photo, in the fall of 2019. Peggy always enjoyed looking out at the ocean, especially at sunset. She was still fairly together at this point.

And it all seemed to go well. My therapist Katy reminded me to just take things day by day, and she fully supported Liz and Desiree being back on board to help Peggy.

But February brought a new unpleasant situation: problems with Peggy’s iPhone usage. For as long as I could remember, my sister had always been glued to her phone; she was always calling, texting, and playing Words With Friends and other games. However, at this point, she could no longer remember when she had called me (or others). So she would keep callingand calling, and calling, and calling. It wasn’t her fault that she couldn’t remember, but it was hell for those of us receiving multiple calls a day, every day. Stressful, too!

By the end of the month, I was getting as many as 16 calls in a day from Peggy. After a while, I stopped picking up all of them. It was just too much. Even though I began feeling l like I was a horrible person, I just didn’t have time to be on the phone with her for so many hours! At least when I did pick up, I’d manage to always be cheerful, and I’d always act like this was the first time I’d heard from her that day, no matter how many times we had already spoken.

A view looking out at the blue sky and blue ocean from the Big Island of Hawaii. In the foreground are grassy green grounds leading to a luxurious pool with loungers, white shade umbrellas, and many tall palm trees.
There’s nothing like relaxing on the Big Island of Hawaii. When I got really stressed, sometimes looking at photos of the ocean and remembering good trips like this would help alleviate it.

I tried to keep in mind that all of us on “Team Peggy” were her lifeline. My sister was trying her best to manage her life, couldn’t do it, and needed people she trusted in her corner. She often told me, “I’m trying!” She never elaborated much more beyond that same phrase, but I realized that was because she just didn’t have access to the vocabulary anymore to explain any further how she felt. She just didn’t have the words. I think she meant that she was trying to hold everything together—and obviously, it was getting increasingly difficult for her to do that.

At least I had my go-to secret weapon to help me cope: humor. I turned to Monty Python’s Flying Circus (yes, I’m old) quite a bit. In the sketch I watched most often, one of the Pythons becomes increasingly confused trying to pronounce the phrase “no time to lose” with the proper emphasis. Each time he ponders aloud how to say it, he stresses a different word—“NO time to lose,” “no TIME to lose,” “no time to LOSE,” the last of which then inspires a cutaway to a cartoon depiction of painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, set to French can-can music!

A screenshot of the Internet Movie Database's entry for Monty Python's Flying Circus.
This hilarious show helped to keep me sane during Peggy’s illness. [Photo credit: IMDB.]
This ridiculous sketch was playing in the back of my mind when Peggy began her calling streak, and it inspired me to try something new. The next time she phoned and asked me questions—and then phoned again, and again, and again to discuss the same things—I had a strategy. I would respond with the exact same sentences as I had before, but I’d emphasize different words each time. The farce really amused me, but also it kept me from pulling my hair out and ever raising my voice to her. That was the most important thing to me.

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