In Love: A Memoir of Love and Loss(10)



After admiring his hip-replacement handiwork at the post-op checkup, Brian’s excellent surgeon, Dr. Hipandknee, said, That does happen—memory loss, post-operative cognitive decline, reaction to anesthesia. He said he didn’t think that Brian was the kind of patient to whom it would happen: healthy and with no heart problems. But faced with Brian’s nonstop complaints threatening to dampen our post-surgery walk-across-the-room celebration, Dr. Hipandknee added that he had had a few patients who got foggy and memory-impaired after that kind of anesthesia and he said, in the confident manner of excellent surgeons who know that the operation has been a slam-dunk success, It’ll pass, give it six weeks.

In those six weeks, Brian’s short-term memory got a little better but he retreated in other ways. A gregarious man, he didn’t want to see friends, except to fish. He now talked only about the past, his childhood and football. I could not steer him to any other subjects. In the evenings, I said—because I didn’t know any better—that maybe we could talk about our life now, as it’s going on, him and me and his retirement and the kids and the grandchildren and our friends, and he said, Sure, but we didn’t, and the evenings were hours of television.

One spring morning, I’d been weeping because Brian seemed so distant and, in that moment, weeping the harder because, although I could see that he was concerned and truly sorry he had upset me, I could also see that he didn’t really know why I was upset, and reminding him of our long, pointless fight the day before wasn’t helping. We still had the occasional Sunday-morning conversations that we’d always had and cherished: Somebody hurt somebody’s feelings and somebody is owed an apology, which will be forthcoming sooner from me, later from him, but delivered by dinnertime. Brian was not immune to the lure of the I-didn’t-say-it or if-I-said-it-I-didn’t-mean-it approach, but one of the things I loved was his willingness to own up. There’d be a burst of anger, the black cloud would pass, and my husband would dig a little deeper and usually come up with a genuine apology (my favorite: “I’m sorry I was such a knucklehead”). The cloud didn’t pass now; the apology was thin or weary or cold.

I could feel him through a glass and I was banging on it, screaming at him: Why is there a glass between us? Where did it come from? Take it down! And Brian looked at me with puzzled, irritated concern and said, in effect, What glass? And, Please, please stop complaining about this thing that isn’t even there.

I called the neurologist and made an appointment. By the time we did get to see a neurologist, the urgent short-term memory-loss problem had receded, Brian was still talking only about the past, and we were left with the glass between us, and problems that were intractable, and multiplying.





Messages Not Received





By late 2016, I knew something was wrong. I began reading the Alzheimer’s information and research websites and the caregiver blogs obsessively for a while, then not at all. I stopped reading them because I could not bear to know what it was that was wrong. Every page of every Alzheimer’s website emphasizes what must be done to deal with the loss of cognitive function (the appointments, the cellphone, the driving, and later the names, the hygiene, the missing chunks of personal history plus a highlights reel of the very distant past), but many of them focus, especially in the early, post-diagnosis days, on the way in which the person is still there, despite the losses. (Not all doom and gloom, as one says.) And some medical sites do tell you how it is when the person begins to fade away, as the neurons stop functioning, lose connections with other neurons, and die. Neurons connect, communicate, and repair, and that’s what Alzheimer’s destroys, connection within and without, first in the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus (the part of the brain devoted to memory) and then in the cerebral cortex (language, processing, and social behavior).

Those neurons, the brain’s soldiers, march for years, from the time we’re born, through the byways of the brain, setting actions into motion, rolling away boulders of all kinds, and then, with Alzheimer’s, they’re blocked by trees down at one end of the road, dangling wires at another. Over the years, the brain’s soldiers—this well-trained and reliable army, which has done so much, on so many different terrains, gone high and low, swum, climbed, strolled, and marched to all the different destinations of the mind—begin to falter, long before outsiders can see the troubles. Eventually (five years on for some, three for others, ten for some), the obstacles cannot be overcome. Messages cannot be received. The soldiers cannot break through to new ground. Retreat is the only possible path and you’d be a fool to try to lure someone out, amid the heavy artillery. Alzheimer’s for me is 1914, and a good day with Brian now is that famous Christmas truce, which was quite short and quite beautiful (German boys caroling to the English, calling out, “Merry Christmas, Englishmen,” as they climbed out of the trenches; tobacco shared, souvenirs exchanged, rations shared, and prisoners swapped) and never repeated. Retreat makes sense, and it is agony for me and, I think, not much of anything now for Brian.

That steady loss, that steady unraveling, is sometimes paused but never stopped. The shape of the self is held together as well as can be, with the use of alternative pathways in the brain (Brian began addressing each of the granddaughters as “darling” or “little girl,” and he referred to his book club only as “those guys”) by the person suffering and with backup from the person helping, until none of it’s enough and the vessel, some beautiful Egyptian jug of Nile clay and jute, begins to soften and drop its walls, but not sharply, only as if the straw is pulled out, stalk by stalk, and then it’s not the jug it was, it can’t hold a thing. It’s a pile of clay and straw in the palm of your own hand.

Amy Bloom's Books