Thingummyjigs and what’snames
I first met my future mother-in-law, Dorothy, when I was seventeen. She was a cheerful, chatty person, who had learnt to make the most of life.
Her first husband died when he was thirty-five. Her second husband, whom she married after both her sons had married and settled, died two years after the marriage. Thus, she spent sixty years of her adult life living alone, but she never complained about the hand fate had dealt her.
Her widow’s pension was small and she decided to return to work. She had expected never to have to work again, but enjoyed the challenge and the friends she made through it. Her social life was built around her working life.
She loved to talk, but conversing with her could be tricky if one hadn’t been in at the beginning of her train of thought. Sometimes, I felt like saying, ‘Give me a clue.’ However, I soon discovered that she repeated herself frequently and topics were revisited exactly word for word, with even the little laughs in the same places. She was easy to listen to, and entertaining, for she enjoyed gentle gossip, though never anything salacious.
Repetition is not just a function of old age; some young people are very repetitious. Occasionally, I think it’s my fault, and they repeat their tale because they think I haven’t heard, or perhaps I’m not responding enthusiastically or loudly enough.
Some speakers become so locked into their narrative that they cannot move on from it and must recount every detail. They remind me of people who struggle gamely through a lengthy joke long after everyone has anticipated the funny ending half-way through. The laughter they anticipated is less hearty than they felt was justified. Thinking the punchline has been misheard or misunderstood, they repeat it, maybe two or three times, while the patient audience tries to respond with the requisite amount of fervour, rictus forming on their aching jaws.
My mother-in-law didn’t tell jokes. She had a good sense of humour but I don’t recall her ever telling a gag. Thinking about her now, I suspect she thought it would not have been very ‘ladylike.’
She took enormous pride in her appearance and was always impeccably groomed. Going clothes shopping with her, which I did frequently, was an unforgettable experience. It was never a short outing, but she loved clothes and was always delighted with her purchases. Any proposed family gathering - wedding, funeral, Christmas - was an excuse to buy a new outfit, and who would blame her, after a solitary, fairly lonely life, if she indulged her passion for style and colour?
When she reached her nineties, words began to fail her. She had always had difficulty remembering names and often laughed at herself because of that, but then her conversation became peppered with ‘doings’, ‘thingummyjigs’, ‘what’snames,’ and ‘you knows.’ Some of our grandchildren’s names completely escaped her. She could not remember that our dogs were Dalmatians and called them ‘spotted dogs,’ for the bidden word would not come to her lips.
Approximations would be made – for example, ‘terrestrial television’ became the more heavenly ‘celestial television’ and ‘trolley’ was renamed ‘lorry.’ Someone else I knew of, and much younger than her, referred to ‘Swarfega’ as ‘Swastika.’ (Swarfega is a British brand of heavy-duty hand cleaner.)
There were also almost-associations – a supermarket chain called Morrison’s became William’s. (William Morris was the association, maybe?)
Later, very near the end of her life, when dementia took its cruel hold, she could no longer remember her husbands’ names and lived in the long-ago past, constantly surprised to learn that her parents had died. Ancient transgressions, such as breaking a window, or trespassing on someone’s land, came to the fore and she lived in fear of retribution. Yet, she still recognised that there was ‘something wrong in her head’ as she expressed it, as reality slipped further and further away.
For all that, when or if I reach my mother-in-law’s age, I hope I shall remain as alert, interested and independent as she was until her latter handful of years. After all, what’s in a word?
What’s in
a name? that which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.
What a kind and beautiful remembrance of your mother-in-law. Was Barry born and raised in India? The names Barry and Trevor do not sound Indian to me.
ReplyDeleteBarry went to India when he was three and returned to England when he was six. His father was in the army.
DeleteDorothy sounds like a wonderful person to have known, and she had beautiful eyes and hair. I also hope to remain mentally alert until I die.
ReplyDeletemy own mother began repeating things a few weeks before she died from cancer in her late seventies.
The thing about "must recount every detail" is something a neighbour here does, she is younger than me by quite a bit but has always felt the need to "explain it to you" in every long, long conversation in minute detail.
It's hard to remain patient with people like your neighbour. Perhaps they don't see other people much.
DeleteThe photos are lovely, the best way to honour a beloved family member. She lived to a decent age, alert and largely independent as you say.
ReplyDeleteI am forgetting relatives and friends' names already, and am only in my mid 70s ggrr
Photographs keep memories alive.
DeleteIt is my prayer that my body not outlive my brain...or vice versa. Dorothy looks to be a very determined soul. I suppose she had no choice. How old was Barry when his father died?
ReplyDeleteShe was strong-minded. Barry was ten when his father died. He stopped talking for six months.
DeleteThat was a lovely tribute to a lovely woman.
ReplyDeleteDementia is such a terrible thing, the forgetting and yet knowing you've forgotten.
The frustration must be terrible.Dorothy became quite angry at times, not like her usual self.
DeleteYour mother-in-law sounds not unlike my own dear and much loved mother-in-law, no long present with us in body but always hovering close in spirit. She raised three sons with her (also much loved) husband and sent them into the world with the admonition to always treat others as they would wish to be treated. She was a jewel of a human being. I am forever grateful to have known her.
ReplyDeleteTo treat others as you would wish to be treated is the best life lesson.
DeleteYou have brought her to life; someone I would like to have known.
ReplyDeleteShe was fun.
DeleteBeautiful tribute to what (by the photos) looks like and elegant and kind woman.
ReplyDeleteI was very fond of her.
DeleteShe sounds like a really lovely lady, and you 've written about her with love, I really enjoyed reading about her,
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteDorothy sounds like a lovely person. You were fortunate to have her as your mother in law it seems.
ReplyDeleteI was fortunate.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful tribute to Dorothy. You were lucky to have a mother in law you could get along with. I love her word relations in later life.
ReplyDeleteI was lucky.
ReplyDeleteLovely memories of a lovely lady, my mum often forgot names and words, her favourite was, 'oh you know who' I have a wonderful letter sent in a card, where she left a gap for a word she could not remember, forgot to look the word up and sent the card.
ReplyDeleteOh bless her. What a lovely post.
ReplyDeleteThat Swastika reference made me smile. 😁
Beautiful pictures of a lovely woman. Dementia is such a cruel disease. I'm glad you have fond memories of her.
ReplyDeleteYou described her well and interestingly.
ReplyDeleteMy mother had a bit of a problem with names and often resorted to Whatsaname.
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ReplyDeleteAged 70, she seemed to have a permanent wave.
ReplyDeleteAged 90, she'd had a good comb up.
I am sure you husband has absorbed her sense of style and is a well dressed man about town.
The 1936 photo is fab, with sisters dressed differently but both so well, unlike their father.
I am forgetting words, and then when I describe what I am looking for out loud to Bob, the word will pop in my head, I just did that a few minutes ago and now have no clue what it was I described. I was typing an email and lost the word.
ReplyDeletethat said, you have described the dementia symptoms bob is going through, what's her name, is the one most used since he is living in the past, he gets further in the past as time goes by. He always repeated stories from the past, for 40 years, and he is shocked when I say I have heard that before. he refuses to believe he has told me those stories for 40 years. now he watches automobile shows, all kinds of them, and each car he has had one, and tells the same story and who he bought it from and I could have bought a dozen of those for 50 dollars. I tune him out but sometimes he catches on when I don't answer and have no clue what the question was..
PS. thingamajig is one of my favorite words, often used. the first photo of your MIL the glasses she has on, the upside down ones are my mothers glasses. she was born in 1925 so close in age
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