Another Mother Story


This is Baroness Von Budberg-Bonningshausen. 
That slightly breathless haughty expression. That imperious " suffer no fools" icy stare. That lived in face, moulded by gin and cigs .
I was in fact,  looking at my mother in the latter part of her life


My mother died in a residential home which she hated. The " care" staff were generally inflexible and ill trained but the home was one of the few that would accommodate her smoking, so beggars could not be choosers. She had her own neat room and use of a shabby " staff room" where she could puff away at her cigarettes by the open fire door , so she and we, her family, were grateful , but like all institutions , she was placed on a " care plan" which limited her smoking periods to times the staff felt it appropriate that they could supervise safely.

My mother resented this control bitterly, and fought every rule with the tenacity of a St Trinian Schoolgirl.
( I must note here that one of her biggest allies in the home was the cook, a woman that would often bend the rules to wheel my mother outside where she could puff away at her full tars under a spotty umbrella....strangely that cook eventually came to live in Trelawnyd and is now our Flower Show cookery judge!) 

I remember driving over to Wales from Sheffield one morning and when I arrived I was greeted by the home manager ( a woman I detested because she was rather common and somewhat physically sloppy). She told me that mother had been somewhat " buzzer happy" when requesting her morning fagtime and due to staffing issues, the staff had not been able to " organise" her break by the fire door for hours.
I told her firmly that I would now do the supervising.
I dressed my mother and helped her into her wheelchair without a wash or even a hair brush and as she puffed away at the first cig of the day, her nerves subsided and she became more herself even though she looked like the wreck of the Hesperus.

The manager appeared at he door, obviously guilty at leaving my mother cigless for so long and started to talk to my mother in a patronising " we've had our little chats about these cigarettes before haven't we Joan?" kind of way. The manager standing at the door with all the power and my mother sitting in a shabby staff room on an incontinence pad with non...........I found myself starting to build myself up for a sharp little conversation about courtesy.

But I need not have worried. With fag in hand and with her hair looking like a bird's nest, my mother smiled her best hostess smile and trilled to the manager " This is my son, he's a charge nurse on a busy spinal ward in Sheffield and he would love a cup of tea if you would be kind enough to get him one..he's just driven 100 miles to see me"

The manager hesitated and my mother added with icy charm " Thank you soooooo much" .
The cups of tea duly arrived, served by a support worker who gave my mother a wink and as we sat in clouds of smoke drinking our drinks the manager appeared again to ask us if everything was ok
With her face the colour of putty my mother nodded graciously in victory and as the manager walked away, but not out of earshot, my mother turned to me , fag ash all splattered down her front , and said in a loud Maggie Smith stage voice " That woman is a real BITCH,"

83 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:35 pm

    Jesus John , your mother was a real old broad
    As we would say a “sassy Queen”

    Lee

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  2. Traveller8:38 pm

    What a great story. I think I have read all your posts and this is the one that, I suspect, I will remember for the longest.

    Bloody honest

    And another bloody chapter in that book…but I have forgotten the perfect title from a post a few weeks back.

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  3. One of the joys of ageing (and there aren't many) is that you don't give a toss what people think of you and can speak your mind. I'm getting there slowly! xx

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  4. Ohhhh
    She sounds fabulous and absolutely scary!
    I love how you remember her. She was a CHARACTER!

    XOXO

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    1. I learned to tell a story from her , but she wasn’t a easy character

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  5. Anonymous9:22 pm

    Yippee for your mom! I know exactly what you mean. Your mom completely understood the irritating situation.and I love that she described the inept manager perfectly. Sending big hugs!❤️ Carol in Atlanta

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    1. She was brittle but could look after herself

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    2. Anonymous4:45 pm

      Same!!! It still shocked my brothers and I each time she said exactly what she was thinking. Ouch! Carol in Atl

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    3. No filter x 👀👀👀👀👀👀

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  6. Anonymous9:38 pm

    Why do so many care home people like to show their bossy side! I know some lovely carers who really do go the extra mile but others! We visited an elderly neighbour ( she will be 100 in January) and both came away so depressed at the situation in the home 😢😢 Then we watched ‘Play for the day’ on channel 5 on catch up and it cheered us up no end! Feisty older people - we don’t all become senile & incompetent at 70!!

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    1. It’s all about self image and power

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  7. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  8. When your mother said "Thank you soooo much!" I immediately saw Prunella Scales as Sybil Fawlty talking on the phone to a friend saying "I knoooow!" Love your description.

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  9. I saw this on FB earlier.

    My first thought was why is there a picture of my Granny on his page?

    Then I read it. My Granny's tipple was whisky

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  10. Blimey! My relatives have all been gentle in their dotage, compared to your mother.

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    Replies
    1. She was a pussycat then , earlier years she was tougher

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  11. Barbara Anne9:53 pm

    What a wonderful and true story. It's a marvel when the elderly speak their minds. Don't you know the staff at that facility who overheard the exchange with your mother are no doubt still telling that story. Still laughing here! And then there was "Waiting for God".

    Hugs!

    Hugs!

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  12. She was a tough old bird. I think you need to be if you become dependent on others to care for you.

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  13. I wouldn't want to cross your Mom!

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    Replies
    1. I didn’t, a fact that caused me much heartache

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  14. You were a good son and treated your mother well, in spite of her not being an easy person.

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    1. My sisters were the real hero’s Andrew x

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  15. You were brave to drink the tea manager provided, if you know what I mean.

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  16. Anonymous12:09 am

    The last time I saw my mother she was sitting in the smoking room at her old folks home. I asked her to come out and talk to me as I could hardly see her through the clouds of smoke and my watering eyes. She refused so I left and drove the 25 or so miles home. We left for Grenada the next week and she passed away before we came home 5 months later. I was pretty sure I would never see her again. She was starting to lose it at that time. My mother would have loved your mom, she had similar friends with very strong personalities. Gigi

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    Replies
    1. You saw her in her natural habitat xx

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  17. Your mother sounds like quite a character. Now we know where you get it from!

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  18. Your mother read people well. She certainly put the home manager in her place with that: "Thank you very much!"

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  19. Jackie1:53 am

    My Mother was very similar until her last decade. Then she became so sweet and kind. It was rather strange. She could be very embarrassing yet incredibly funny. When she became so kind and sweet I actually missed the old version! My sister and I often reminisce about the funny/embarrassing times.

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    1. My family never reminisce about our mother, that’s why I do it here

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  20. At least your mother wasn't a suspected double agent, as was the lookalike in the photo.

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    Replies
    1. She would have made a wonderful Nazi

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  21. I loved working in extended care, as we call it here. So many characters from borderline pure evil to absolute darlings. Just one story of many I could tell-the dietitian had ordered a fortified milk drink, something like bengers if that still exists, for one of our fiesty residents. It was an awful drink, the powder would never dissolve completely so it was always lumpy and tasted like pulped cardboard. One evening I heard a scream and then peals of laughter coming from her four bed room. The window close to the resident's bed was covered in the disgusting drink which was making its lumpy way down the glass. A regular visitor told me he had watched the resident toss the drink out of the window all summer but unfortunately the weather had turned and the window had been closed without her noticing. It was enough for me to overlook the standing order and concot something more palatable from then on. As for the smoking room, I absolutely refused to enter it unless life or limb was at risk. "Come in" the occupants would chorus when I cracked the door to talk to someone and cackle with laughter when I yelled back "NEVER".

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  22. There's a huge difference between a 'firm hand', and being an overbearing bitch.

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    Replies
    1. And a huge difference between a good manager and a disaster

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  23. Your story brought back memories of visiting my mother in law and then, later on, my father, in nursing homes. That heart wrenching feeling when occasionally, because of staff being busy, your relative had been waiting and buzzing for ages and was upset. I'm a non smoker but I have great sympathy for those who have always done so and are having to adjust. When I visited my mother in law in the home I would have to sit on a stool by her feet in a small crowded smoke filled room simply to be with her. She never wanted to be wheeled into the garden. My heart would break for them all. Including the staff who did their best there. Your mother was such a strong character.

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    1. I hope I die at home, under my own diuvet

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  24. Shelly Williams7:47 am

    My 93 yr Mum is a similar ‘ character’ as your Mum . She is in a residential home and remains fiercely independent despite her declining health and mobility. It’s interesting to my 2 sisters and me that the very personality traits that made our lives so difficult when growing up with her are the very same that are keeping her afloat in the home. Despite her age she can manipulate and charm and induce anxiety in the staff as much as she did with us .

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    1. Patterns patterns patterns of behaviours

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  25. Your last blogpost title was "Telling A Good Story" But this one really was a good story John. Not just the subject matter but the way you conveyed it. On a different note, I am reminded of how horrible the habit of smoking cigarettes is and how so many people have found themselves trapped by the unhealthy addiction.

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  26. The manager would have been smart to indulge the addiction and then get on with her day in peace.

    My mum doesn't bother with stage whispers, she just has a tantrum whenever she wants. Mostly with me but also with any staff member who doesn't do what she wants or doesn't do it fast enough

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    1. It’s a power thing
      Aregression into childhood

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  27. The hair, beads and imperious look, I would believe it’s the Baroness Von Budberg-Bonningshausen!

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  28. The art of speaking to people - of any age - without being patronising is a difficult one. Some know it naturally. Others don't.

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    1. That’s why I referred to her as sloppy

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  29. Yet another perfectly perfect picture of something (someone) from your life. I think we all now know your mother, and our lives are the richer for it. Your writing is getting better and better, John Gray.

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    1. Thank you dearHeart, perhaps my writing was better fifteen years or so ago, when I wrote this xx

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  30. Anonymous1:34 pm

    Care homes.......I dread ending up in one although I'd better add that I know there are some good ones!
    A great story and told so well.
    Alison in Devon x

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  31. Another page for your biography. I do hope to be as strong when it is my time.

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    1. I hope I don’t go through what she did …she was too big a handful for any of her children to cope with in later life…the residential home was the only answer

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  32. I love this story, and for once I love your Mother. Mums are not always the easiest to get on with, but every now and then they show their pride in their offspring and their strength of character.

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  33. Anonymous5:31 pm

    What does "rather common" mean when describing the manager?

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    1. “Rough And uncouth” that’s how I would describe her…..and don’t forget I also described her as “physically sloppy” which she was….she smoked on duty and looked scruffy ( which as a manager is not the impression you should give

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    2. Anonymous9:34 pm

      John , anon was troublemaking

      Keith

      Xx

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    3. Anonymous10:38 pm

      What was troublemaking about asking what it meant? I also didn't know what the phrase meant and googled it. It means occurring frequently.
      How that relates to a person I don't know!

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    5. I reckon "Anonymous" knows full well that John's usage of "common" is a bit snobbish in a rather dated way.

      Just reading this story makes me want a cup of tea and a cigarette NOW! John was of course totally right to get his mother nicotinised and caffeinated without further ado.

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  34. Anonymous7:17 pm

    Your mother was a character… and quite a handful! Tough lady! Nice to have these memories. Cali

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  35. For months and months I don’t think of her, then like waves on a beach , the memories stack up and roll forth

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  36. Sylvia9:11 pm

    Love your stories John.

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    1. Anonymous9:27 pm

      You seem to have your mother’s sense of humour

      Lee

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    2. I think I have, my father wasn’t known for his humour although my siblings are all very humorous

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