These days, before I leave the house, I make my bed and straighten up things in the kitchen, in case I don’t come home. I’m 84 years old, and end of life issues are on my mind. I worry I might drop dead while away from home, or end up in hospital. I don’t want whoever goes into my house to find a mess.
I’m not the neatest person. My desk at work was not neat, and neither is the desk in my home office. Every now and then I go into a frenzy of cleaning and straightening out and throwing things away. I don’t want my kids to kill me when I die. “Why did Mom leave such a mess? Did she really have to keep all those files? And all these books?” When my mother died she left very little for my brother and me to clear up and throw away. It was a gift she left us. I want to do the same, but I’ll have to live a while longer to accomplish that.
My mother died at 84, the age I am now. Long ago I did one of those surveys that tells you how long you are going to live. It said I’d live to be 85. I didn’t like that answer and have decided I will live to at least 90. Will I?
I’ve been a widow for four years. My husband always thought he’d live to be 96, like his mother. But he died at 89. Last year a dear friend died at 84. She thought she’d live a long life, since her parents did. And another dear friend died recently at 82. So, you can see why all of this is on my mind.
Every day I wake up glad nothing hurts, except for my arthritic shoulders. People think I am doing well, which I am, except I don’t like to bend down too often because I dread the getting up.
A few friends are using canes. Glasses, hearing aids, canes — they all make life livable. But even so, some are having trouble coming up my front steps. A couple have even said they won’t come to my house anymore. “Those are the stairs from hell!” said one. And when I measured them against my inside steps I saw they were a bit higher and narrower. Now even I am not enjoying getting up to my front door, but I can still do it. A condo beckons, but I don’t want to move. I love my neighbours.
It worries me that other friends are losing their cognition. Mine is apparently not too bad. I tried my driver’s test recently. You have to do it every two years once you reach 80, and now they only test your vision and ask you to draw a clock with the arms at ten after eleven. I can still do that.
I’m not shy about telling people my age. They often say, “You don’t look that old.” I’ll stop telling people how old I am when they stop saying that. But I am keenly aware of my age, and keenly grateful for the friends who are still alive, especially the ones from nursery school and kindergarten. I have newer friends from my work days, and others from the acting and writing classes I pursued when I retired. As I age, friendships are even more precious. My friends feel the same way; they tell me so. I don’t want to lose any more of them.
Human beings are social animals. The research says loneliness is dangerous to your health, and it’s good for you to interact in one way or another with seven people a day. I now live on my own, so I have to make an effort to stave off the scourge of loneliness.
Although I like people, I also like to be alone when it is my choice. But it’s reassuring to know my calendar is mostly full with plans to be with other people, enjoy plays and the opera, to travel. I believe that when you step out the front door, even if you have to make your way down steep steps, good things happen.
My kids and grandkids will lose me one day. But I’ll do my best to stay around for a few years more. So, excuse me, I have to tidy up my bedroom and put the dishes in the dishwasher. I’m going out soon, to a concert, with a friend. I am confident I’ll return. But you never know.
As a friend of Ruth, I assure you all that she is beautiful and vigorous, accomplishing more daily than many far younger, off to the opera, theatre, concerts, museums, cinema, up on the latest books and TV shows, as well as a mother, grandmother, hostess, friend, and writer. May we all age with half the dynamism and grace of Ruth Miller.
I too can identify with Ruth’s insightful story. Although a few years younger, the end of life is coming although not wanted. I revered my grandmother who, by the time she died had given away all her worldly possessions except a Kleenex box which held memories like cards and letters she had received from friends and loved ones.
I can hear my mother telling me to never leave the house in a mess and to always make sure I was wearing clean clothes-especially underwear in case I had an accident and ended up in the hospital!
Ruth’s story was reassuring to know that these are common thoughts as we approach the end of life.
Thank you Ruth for sharing and enjoy every day