Monday, 4 March 2013

roses


during the last months of my mum’s life we spent many hours together ‘getting stuff done’. there was no order in mum’s body, no rhyme or reason for why she, and not someone else, was living through what she was...so we coped by finding order and reason where we could; rearranging cupboards, dusting parts of the house which, to my knowledge, hadn’t been dusted in 30 years, sorting old photos which had previously lived happily in boxes in the garage, and we ‘got stuff done’ in the garden.

lisa (housemate and adopted daughter) and dad painted pots and there was a frenzy of weeding and watering. from what i could see there were about 3000 pots in the courtyard of our small townhouse...but lynnie wanted more. she loved her garden.

for days, mum and i were on a mission to find new pots for some of her plants. we put her wheelchair and oxygen tank into my car and drove off to explore the world of gardening shops. one day, we drove for about an hour to a big gardening shop in the middle of nowhere. i got mum’s wheelchair ready and loaded her up. what followed was a 2 hour lesson i’m going to call ‘places you should never, under any circumstances, try to wheel a wheelchair.’

the place was huge. it was on the side of a hill and every single walking path was made of quicksand or deep, chunky gravel. after about a minute mum said “don’t worry kato, let’s just go.” but i could see her looking longingly at the ocean of coloured pots stretched out before us and didn’t have the heart to pack her up just yet. i was covered in sweat within a matter of minutes. we must have looked ridiculous navigating the least user friendly walking paths i have ever seen. a combination of wheeling backwards and pushing her forwards while holding her in the position of a wheelie seemed to do the trick, but it was hard work. eventually we found the pot she wanted. beautiful blue. mission accomplished. we laughed and smiled at the stupidity of it all as we loaded up the car and headed for home.

a little way down the road we saw a sign for a rose farm. “would you mind if we stopped just for a minute so i can go and smell them?” stopping to literally smell the roses. it’s not actually possible to say no to that. so we unpacked again and i stood back and watched in amazement as my mum smelt roses with a look of pure joy on her face.

we eventually made it home and i went to have a shower...i was an absolute mess. as i removed my pants i was delighted to discover a hole in the back of them about the same size as a cannonball. i may as well have been wearing butt-less chaps. i have no idea when it happened. all i could picture was the hours i had spent bending over, pushing a wheelchair uphill...WITH MY BUM PROUDLY ON DISPLAY FOR THE WHOLE WORLD TO SEE. i laughed. lots.

here’s the moral of the story. whatever struggles you may face today, smile and thank God that you’re facing them without showing your bum to the whole world. unless, of course, you get home and find that you too have a hole in your pants. in which case, welcome to my world., it’s nice to have some company.

and also...don’t forget to smell the roses.


7 comments:

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  2. another example of a wallis story that made me cry with both sadness, joy and laughter in the 90 seconds it took to read! Gotta love it!

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  3. Replies
    1. thanks fred...means heaps to me that you take the time to read :-)

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