Helen Mack Davies (Swayze) 1908 - 2011 |
The decision to put Grandma into a home came when just before her centennial birthday she was having hallucinations and took to wandering around the assisted living facility she had resided in for two decades. We were called one night by the supervisor to come see her when she was insisting that children were waving to her from outside her window and upsetting her dog. Grandma didn't have a dog. Grandma had a stuffed animal.
I took a picture of her with the dog that night to show her later - when she was lucid again. We took her to the doctor the next day who described her visions as a result of macular degeneration. Her lucidity decline was described as dementia and age-related decline. She could no longer be trusted to live alone, and reluctantly we moved her into a home where she died two years later.
I took a picture of her with the dog that night to show her later - when she was lucid again. We took her to the doctor the next day who described her visions as a result of macular degeneration. Her lucidity decline was described as dementia and age-related decline. She could no longer be trusted to live alone, and reluctantly we moved her into a home where she died two years later.
This post is not about her health decline. I write it both in tribute to this wonderful woman and to document the stages of development she went through as she aged.
The adult life of Helen Mack - Swayze - Davies...



Stability the parts of ourselves that are the same over time (Bjorklund, 2008) and make up a "consistent core" (p. 5).
Grandma was a feisty thing full of live and laughter. I can remember her cooking family meals and raising dachshunds. I remember music and singing, and noise. She was always a big hugger - pressing her massive chest into you for a big squeeze. She was NOT shy, and she liked to tease. Talking to my mother, it sounds like Grandma was always that way - even as a little girl. Her hardy personality - hardly ever sick - carried through as an elderly woman. She took no medication until we took her to the nursing home and she had to take pills for the dementia.
Change is what happens to us over time that makes us different from or younger selves (Bjorklund, 2008). Grandma had a very stable life even through two marriages and a house fire. The change for her came with each person she buried. As time went on, her laughter diminished into worry lines. She voiced a lot of worry over her family. This worry affected her health and jolliness. After the house fire, Grandpa Skip's Alzheimer's really flared up and he died only a few short years later. Grandma spent many years caring for him, and I believe that also took it's toll. Grandma and Grandpa Skip could no longer travel to Florida or camp in the ADK's.
Continuous is slow and gradual taking us into a predictable direction (Bjorklund, 2008). Grandma learned many things over the years. One of her hobbies was cooking. She perfected recipes and enjoyed trying them out on us. She also learned different square dancing steps. She was crafty, too. she made some new cross-stitch or ceramic object (remember the ceramic era?) for the family each year.
Stages is when the journey seems to have no progress and then suddenly an abrupt change (Bjorklund, 2008). There are four types of stages: typical, atypical, outer, and inner. For Grandma, a typical stage would be marriage to Bill and an atypical stage would be his death and her remarriage to Grandpa Skip. An inner change could be her feelings of depression due to the loss of her aging friends and the outward change would be her social decline (not attending social gatherings at the senior center).
Normative age-graded influences are those experiences linked to age and experienced by most adults as they grow older (Bjorklund, 2008). Some examples of biological influences for Grandma would be the timing of her biological clock - child bearing, menopause, physical decline. Some examples of social clock for Grandma is the timing of her marriage, work, and retirement.
Nonnormative Life Events are those aspects that are unique to you (Bjorklund, 2008). Examples of this are her death and remarriage, and her children predeceasing her.
Grandma had a full life and we all miss her. When she passed, my mom discovered a fiber optic snowman that now resides in the home that my mother and I share. We love him. He reminds us every Christmas of our past, our present, and our future. He teaches us patience (have you ever watched one go through the light cycles?), and he teaches us about beauty. Grandma (and my mother, too) used to say, "take time to stop and smell the roses". We do, Grandma, for you!