Photograph by Frans Marais |
In about two weeks
time we are having a high school reunion. I’ve been told that even class mates now living
and working in the USA have indicated that they are coming.
I, on this side of the
Atlantic, am standing on a Sunday afternoon in the door of the bathroom. I’m
about to take my dad back to the retirement village after a visit over the
weekend here on Barrowfield. There is tension between us. He blames me for the
farm in Gauteng being sold and him being in the retirement village. We just
cannot agree on his frailty and the adjustments we have to make when we get
older. As if totally oblivious to our struggles with Oupa Frans and the
sleepless night we had while he visited, he is upset because we did not spend
any time in the workshop.
I’m tired of trying to
explain and having the same conversations over and over. I am not proud of the
manner in which I often cope with his
fears. I am constantly confronted with my own demons and the buttons that he pushes.
I feel aggrieved because of his apparent inability to appreciate what we are
trying to do to make this phase of his life easier for him.
So there I am standing
in the door of the bathroom about to say good bye to Matilda before leaving for
Wakkerstroom. She is sitting in the armchair we’ve put in the huge old bathroom
when we moved in a few months ago. At the time it seemed strange to have it
there but in the past few weeks it came in very handy. It is a comfortable seat
in the dead of night while guiding and encouraging Oupa Frans on the commode.
The latter was handy in its own right the last few days when we struggled to
fix the blocked sewage system. With that now up and running again we kept the
commode as the handy companion it proved to be where Oupa Frans is concerned.
As a last contribution
on my way out I join the regular pep talk in this situation. “Very good. It is
going very well. Look, the catheter is out and you are so regular. No, don’t
worry about the wet nappy. Your bladder became lazy with the catheter. It will
adjust and you’ll go in your own time again.”
Matilda interrupts the
motivation talk and nods in the direction of the toilet. “We have a visitor.” Those
words in that context immediately put me on guard. Her sitting quite relaxed in
the armchair is somewhat of a comfort, but I nevertheless approach very
carefully and look slowly over the rim. A large frog fills the whole bottom
where it is floating in the water. Somehow, with the incessant rains we had for
days on end and the open drain pipes it made its way up the system into the
bathroom. No mean feat. With a sense of admiration I look down on him.
With the gloves on
that I have quickly fetched from the store room I reach into the toilet. The
frog slips back from where it came and disappears into the drain pipe. I feel
disappointed and sad but have to leave.
On the way to
Wakkerstroom my father and I continue the argument but mostly drive in silence.
At his room I set up his television for the umpteenth time after he had
unplugged the decoder earlier the week. That despite all the masking tape I’ve
taped all over and writing onto it in huge letters: “Do not switch off or
remove.” And the hand drawn diagrams I’ve left him of the buttons he must use
on the remote controls. “I haven’t touched anything” he informs me. “In any case, the
root of the problem is in all probability here at this row of switches I’ve
discovered on the back of the television. Putting the aerial cable into the different
sockets has no effect either.” I do not
argue, fix the television, say good bye and leave. Looking in the rear view
mirror I see his lonely figure walking back to the main entrance of the
building. I am upset and angry and sad, all rolled into one.
I think you should say that you are living and caring and being a very entertaining George.
ReplyDeleteThank you Elmi! I also think it is easier than to learn to do a triple bypass operation or develop some enormously successful internet feature that I can sell for millions of dollars to Google or Microsoft in two weeks' time.
ReplyDelete