I cradle my ninety-nine-year-old mother’s head in one hand while I massage shampoo through her sparse hair. She floats in the water; her feet do not touch the end of the tub. Always a small woman, now she is barely there. I offer spoons of coffee ice cream. Of all the pleasures she still manages to eke out of her vastly diminished life, eating ice cream in a warm tub ranks high. Should one of the cats sit on the rim of the tub . . . . Well, that is perfection.
Thanks to the support of an extraordinary palliative care team, I can hold this comforting memory. It could have been different.
She was nearing the conclusion of ten decades of life. A life that started in Germany. She escaped the Holocaust to restart her life in Mexico, only to uproot again and settle in New York City. Into her eighties she remained healthy in body and mind. She climbed (in sandals!) a pyramid in Mexico, took her grandson ice skating and lived independently. She had no desire to die.
Then, a broken hip. Then, another.
During those days of morphine, in hospital and rehab she screamed that fire was engulfing her and the Nazis had come for her. To escape, she vaulted over bed guard rails, re-breaking her hip. She was in a constant state of terror, and turned against her family, who had morphed into monsters. Overworked aides left her naked and diapered.
After hospital and rehab she came home once, twice, three times. Two days before Christmas she had unmanageable stomach pain. Her physician was not available, and we could not stomach the stress of an emergency room. I called Visiting Nurse Service.
A nurse arrived with the care and wisdom we needed. She recommended home hospice.
For two years, the hospice physician, nurse, social worker and aides assured my mother’s comfort and supported the family’s emotional well being. Their guidance was the greatest gift. We were a team. The goal: Ruth would stay home.
At home the inner demons did not scream. Instead, she often believed she was in a beautiful hotel visiting with her dead brother. Her grandson married in her living room, and she wore her favorite dress. She had purpose: feeding the cats. And, pleasure: the warm tub and ice cream.
In the final month, we were twice told to expect “imminent death.” Braced for the inevitable, I would enter her apartment not to find a corpse, but my mother eating breakfast and greeting me with “How are you, mein hertz?”
I cannot be certain that hospice extended my mother’s life, but I am certain it allowed her a good death. She lived until the evening she lay in her own bed, cats nestled beside her, holding familiar hands.
Linda Koebner
Roslindale, Massachusetts
4 thoughts on “A Warm Tub and Ice Cream”
Such a moving, beautifully written account. I wish I could say I had a similar experience with hospice in the Bay Area. Instead, the hospice workers who came to “assist” with my husband’s terminal cancer care at home were often rushed, erratic, and unreliable. Although a few individuals were warm and caring, there was no consistency in the personnel who showed up. I wonder if there’s any oversight of hospice agencies so that everyone could have the kind of care that Linda describes so beautifully.
Such a beautiful testimony to your dear mother, Linda. I knew her and inherited the caregivers who helped her when my own mother needed hospice. I would never have understood nor sought hospice if it hadn’t been for you, your mom and the beautiful ladies who helped. With the support of their care, our immediate family had the emotional and physical ability to give love to the end. Thank you.
Breathtakingly beautiful. Yasher koach.
Beautiful piece.
I had similar experiences with hospice in Cape Cod with my mother who died of cancer at the age of 79. Being at home meant everything, and instead of the 4 months she was given when she stopped her treatments, she lived nine more months. The lovely hospice nurse helped us all navigate the important decisions about whether to resort to hospitalization for a systemic infection; she advocated for my Mom’s wish, which Mom couldn’t bring herself to confide to her beloved family, to stay home and let nature take its course. We each had time to say goodbye separately and together.