I Don’t Remember
| March 7, 2018We laugh at ourselves and our awful memories, but inside, no one is laughing
W
hen you hit a certain age, the fear of dementia is a lot more real than say, when you’re 25 and forgot where you placed your car keys. At 25, there are myriad reasons to forget where you put your keys: You’re pregnant, just had a baby, you have lots of babies. When you turn 40, 45, 50, lapses of memory become foggier and scarier.
I arrive home and don’t remember the numbers of my door combination. I have to call up my son in yeshivah to ask him what it is. Or I’m on the phone, telling someone my phone number. In the middle, I pause. Is it 8439 or 8349? I don’t remember and so I suggest they try both variations.
For years I’ve been told, first from a neurologist and then from other getting-older folk, that this memory loss is different. It’s normal. It is not due to early-onset Alzheimer’s, it’s because we have so much on our minds that we can’t store everything, so we start forgetting here and there. I bought into that notion. It certainly beat the alternative. Especially if you can’t do anything about the alternative.
Yesterday, however, I had a particularly disturbing incident. I was babysitting for my grandchild. My married kids were at a convention, so they weren’t coming home until the early hours of the morning. I put the baby to sleep in my younger daughter Mindy’s room, but instructed her that if the baby woke up, she should call me, no matter the time. At 3 a.m., my cell phone rang, although I didn’t hear it.
The next day, my husband and Mindy told me what happened. My husband answered my phone. It was Mindy, calling from her bedroom. The baby was crying. My husband relayed the message, I said okay, and my daughter brought the baby to my bed. I held the baby and not long afterward, my married couple returned and Mindy took the baby from me. I said, “Wait a second, don’t forget his pacifier.” That was it.
This would be a boring little story, certainly not one worthy of an article, if only I would have remembered any of what had transpired. Unfortunately, I don’t. I don’t remember saying anything, I don’t remember holding a baby (truly scary!), I don’t remember handing Mindy his pacifier.
When I arrived at work this morning, I turned on the computer and entered the password. “Incorrect password entered” appeared on the screen. “Someone must have changed the code,” I muttered to myself, “and forgotten to tell me.”
I called my boss, but couldn’t get through. Meanwhile, clients were arriving and I needed access to the computer. The line was piling up and I still couldn’t reach my boss. I was getting annoyed.
After marking down everybody’s information and assuring them I would enter it into the computer as soon as I received the new password, I tried calling one more time. This time, my boss picked up. “I told you the new password on Friday, before you left,” she said.
“I don’t remember having that conversation at all,” I said.
“You told me you were going to enter it into your phone right away.”
“I don’t remember that at all,” I repeated.
“The code is 911, after 9/11, remember I told you that?”
“I remember that,” I said.
When I returned home from work, I looked in my phone. There it was — 911, new library computer password. But how does it help to have it in your phone when (a) I forget to bring my phone to work and (b) I wouldn’t even have thought to look at it anyway.
I returned home last week from shopping and listened to my messages. “Hi,” the voice on the message machine said. “Wait, who did I just call?” the voice continued. Silence. “Uh. Well, by now you know who I am anyway,” the voice went on.
Yes, I do, Debbie, I thought, smiling to myself. “Oh, Miriam!” the voice said as if in answer to my thoughts, “It’s Debbie, can you give me a call?” We got a good laugh out of that one.
We talk among ourselves, me and my peers. We are not (yet) the age for dementia, but we sure worry about it. We laugh at ourselves and our awful memories, but inside, no one is laughing. I went to speak to my son’s social worker last week. She didn’t recall a previous conversation we had. “I’m so scared of getting dementia,” she blurted out. “Do not put me in a nursing home.” Then she caught herself and laughed.
“I’m scared of the same thing,” I confided.
There are vitamins and remedies for memory strengthening. There are exercises. Friends swear by them. I haven’t done any of them. I never remember to.
The good news is that today I visited the doctor for my annual checkup. “I’m sure I have early-onset Alzheimer’s,” I announced.
She said, “If I said three words to you — sad, blue, and bed, could you repeat them back to me in five minutes?”
“Sure,” I answered.
“Do you remember the names of your children?”
“Um, I haven’t remembered the names of my children since they were born. I always call them by their siblings’ names and when I had just two of them, I’d call them by the names of my younger sister and brother.”
“Okay, forget that one. You know what I mean. Are you forgetting what the relationships are between you and significant others in your life?”
“No.”
“It’s not dementia.”
“Yes, but I forget the combination to my front door sometimes.”
“That’s because you’re not being mindful. Your brain is on a million things instead of in the present moment so you find yourself upstairs in your bedroom and don’t remember what you went there for.”
The bottom line? I’m not losing my mind, but I am mindless. Or so I hope.
(Originally featured in Family First, Issue 583)
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