Talking to My Mother
Feb. 26th, 2026 08:15 pmI caught up with my mom today about my retirement. Yes, it took days to talk to her about it. Though she might have heard it a few days ago from my sister.
My mom's not the most in-touch person anymore. She lives with my youngest sister, which is probably also the only reason, short of moving to a managed care home, she doesn't perish of self-neglect. She keeps odd hours and doesn't like to answer the phone.
Nobody else in the house answers the phone, either. The landline phone, that is. Everyone else has a mobile phone and views the landline as a laughable anachronism. The landline's there for my mom, who doesn't have a mobile phone and doesn't want one. And despite being the only person in the house who'll use it, she almost never answer it when it rings.
Getting in touch with my mom often involves several steps:
So, we finally chatted today. She's happy for me but also feels old that her kids are now retiring. I get that. I suggested she look at the positive side of it: she's lived long enough to see the first of her kids retire. My dad didn't live that long. He was older than her, but she's now 2 years old than his age at death. I didn't remind her of that. But I did I remind her she's lived long enough to see her first great-grandchild. Of course, that great-grandchild's grandma is my sister. My younger sister.
My mom's not the most in-touch person anymore. She lives with my youngest sister, which is probably also the only reason, short of moving to a managed care home, she doesn't perish of self-neglect. She keeps odd hours and doesn't like to answer the phone.
Nobody else in the house answers the phone, either. The landline phone, that is. Everyone else has a mobile phone and views the landline as a laughable anachronism. The landline's there for my mom, who doesn't have a mobile phone and doesn't want one. And despite being the only person in the house who'll use it, she almost never answer it when it rings.
Getting in touch with my mom often involves several steps:
- Call the landline phone. Nobody answers.
- Often try step #1 again a few hours later, or earlier the next day, with the same result.
- Text my sister to ask if they're at home and when mom's even up. Ask her to tell mom to answer the phone.
- Sister texts me back a few days later to say mom has tried calling me but keeps getting a busy signal. NOTE: my phone is a cell phone with call-waiting and digital voicemail. Aside from when a system wide failure occurs, callers will not get a busy signal. Mom's dialing the wrong number.
- Sister writes my number on a piece of paper for Mom and makes sure she can read it. It's the same number I've had since 2005. It is not one of the older numbers Mom might still have in her address book.
- We finally get in touch.
So, we finally chatted today. She's happy for me but also feels old that her kids are now retiring. I get that. I suggested she look at the positive side of it: she's lived long enough to see the first of her kids retire. My dad didn't live that long. He was older than her, but she's now 2 years old than his age at death. I didn't remind her of that. But I did I remind her she's lived long enough to see her first great-grandchild. Of course, that great-grandchild's grandma is my sister. My younger sister.
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Date: 2026-02-27 10:43 pm (UTC)My mom has the beginnings (or middlings) of dementia and my dad takes care of her. What an endless, tiring job. My mom has fun with the phone too. She does have a smart phone and wants to do Wordle on it but she can't understand it, so she calls every day to ask me how to play it. Or she calls me and says hi, then has to leave to go to the bathroom. Maybe it's good your mom doesn't have a smart phone! ;)
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Date: 2026-02-28 05:08 am (UTC)One of my sisters confided in me last year, "I think Mom's getting dementia."
"You think it's dementia, now?" I shot back. "She's been living increasingly in a world of make-believe since 1985."
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Date: 2026-03-13 05:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-03-14 04:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-03-16 03:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-03-16 10:06 pm (UTC)On the positive side, it gives a person who otherwise might struggle with aimlessness being an empty nester/widower/etc. a sense of purpose. I saw that with my dad, who actually did it twice, and with one of my grandparents.
On the downside, where I see caring for an adult "taking away 5 years" is that it consumes your younger, more productive years. You don't get that time back. For example, your later 50s are when you might still be guiding your younger kids through school, seeing your older kids start families of their own, and/or launch your own retirement. You miss those things, or short-shrift them, or delay them until you're older, less energetic, and less able. What you missed, you missed.
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Date: 2026-03-17 03:01 pm (UTC)As far as my friend, I think she cherishes that she is able to give, but it just takes so much form her. Unfortunately (or fortunately- I don't know which way to go with that) her mom is in her 70's and healthy as a horse, whereas my mom is declining quickly. So hopefully Esther will have tine left to go and do with her husband. Also, they do have some assistance to give her time to breathe a little.
Funny how this time, returning to journaling, my subject matter has so drastically changes. It ued to be all about my children's antics, playdates, parenting advice and socializing, and now we are down to...this.
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Date: 2026-03-17 04:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-03-17 07:45 pm (UTC)