Unaware.

Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my strength, and my redeemer. – Psalm 19:14

Dad has turned the page and is living his last chapter after a tough bout of Covid right after Christmas. He was hospitalized for a week and is now navigating life in skilled nursing, but with his dementia, he doesn’t completely understand it all.

Some days, he is Delmar as we have all known him to be for the last several years. Other days, he needs help with hygiene and dressing himself.

Dad uses a walker, something he refused to do one month ago. I think he understands that walking is easier with it, now that his remaining strength is waning. He is restless all day long in his dementia and can be seen peeking out from his room, walker leading the way, anxious to walk the halls and find something or someone to watch besides his four walls.

I have noticed in the past two weeks that he has begun to mumble a little, talking to himself without realizing it. It has only happened a handful of times, but when I have questioned him about what he has just said, he looks at me with a blank face, unaware that he had just said anything. Another new sign of this condition…

He no longer reads, a favorite pastime that used to keep him busy for hours. He doesn’t attempt to understand the TV remote but watches whatever happens to be on the screen, chosen by the caregiver or visitor to his room. So on Tuesday afternoon as I sat with Dad in his room sharing a sub sandwich and his favorite potato chips, I decided to find something on TV for him to watch besides the depressing and incessant political firestorm. I chose The 700 Club, thinking Dad might enjoy some inspirational stories while I read my first day’s homework assignment on literary modernism.

I wasn’t paying much attention to the TV. Dad was eating chips. I smiled, remembering how he loves chips and passed that down to his youngest child. I have no willpower, I thought, and neither does Dad. I went back to attempting to focus on Gertrude Stein and James Joyce, when all of a sudden, Dad mumbled something.

I looked up at him, thinking he was talking to me, but he was staring at the TV. I wrote down what he said in the margin, because it was meant to be heard and remembered:

“God loves you…thank you, God.”

I immediately thought of the scripture that Josephine taught all the kids at the Friends Church in Hutchinson so many years ago that is part of my prayer life even now. “Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in Thy sight, O Lord, my Strength, and my Redeemer.” Dad speaks out loud without realizing it, but what comes out is what is in his heart.

We keep a camera in his room to monitor his movements now that he is prone to falls, and my phone notifies me when there is activity of any kind. That night, when dementia was in full bloom, Dad got up out of bed and made his way to the bathroom in the darkness. This happens many times a night, and we are certain that Dad has no recollection that he gets up a dozen times in the night. But I review the video clips each morning after, just to be sure everything is okay.

At 9:18 pm, on his way back to bed, he spoke very loudly, “Help me, Lord.”

I am so very grateful that my Dad has such a beautiful heart that the words he speaks are life giving and honoring to God, even when he is unaware. What a blessing it is to be a witness to Dad’s living testimony.

I never thought I would get here.

Today, I am 60. I can remember in my youth thinking that the Lord would return before I turned 40, or I would die in a fiery crash or something like that. But God thought otherwise, and here I am.

So much has happened in the last year, and I have not opened this page in what seems like forever. I set aside this counting of blessings, for better or worse – mostly worse. It is never a good idea to stop counting blessings. I owe my 60 years of life to God and His grace, and I must acknowledge that every day.

I am grateful for those who have stuck with me in my absence.

I am grateful for this abundance of snow.

I am grateful for two daughters and my husband who planned the best surprises beginning on New Years Eve and lasted an entire week, making me feel loved and seen.

I am grateful for soft cat fur even though it is everywhere in this house.

I am grateful for text messages, emails, phone calls, cards, social media messages from people who remember 1.11 and wish me a great day.

I am grateful for the best grandchildren.

I am grateful for a fireplace and a plethora of throws.

I am grateful for 2025, even when it starts with such trauma and drama.

I am grateful for the opportunity and privilege to take care of my Dad’s needs, grateful he is recovering, grateful he is anxious to get back to normal.

I am grateful for the friendship we have maintained with Cindy and Keith over the years, grateful for the memories I will always have of my high school best friend, grateful she is in the presence of Jesus and with her parents now.

I am grateful for the book of letters my girls gave to me for my birthday, from the ones in my life who mean the most, an incredible reminder of how blessed I am. Words are precious to me, and this was the best gift I think I could have received.

I am grateful that I have had the support of Sam to work on this college degree process, and I am grateful that I am still on track to walk across the stage at the end of this year.

I am grateful for this new freedom to be home without having to go to work any longer, although I miss not having to go to work any longer.

I am grateful that I can still help my son-in-law and husband shovel a driveway full of snow.

I am grateful for sibling group texts.

I am grateful for moments with Sam when we laugh together, when we have serious discussions, when we both sit in the fireplace room in silence, reading books and enjoying the quietness of an afternoon.

I am grateful for the privilege to sit in a classroom full of very smart students all younger than me – I am learning so much about the world, about literature that I never knew existed, about writing, about the richness of diversity, about accepting other opinions and points of view.

I am grateful for my birthday gift of a daughter who has her hands full and overflowing with God’s gifts of her own.

I am grateful for my health, my supplements, my treadmill, my tennis shoes…but not my scale. It is not my friend, yet.

2025 has just begun to be written, and I am grateful for blank pages full of possibilities and story lines.

I am learning to count my blessings all over again, acknowledging and thanking God, starting new on 1.11. No better time than the present.