I was playing Words With Friends—an online Scrabble version—last
night. I got the most points in one play, 96, I ever have. Well, I ever have on
my own.
When I was 11, we were visiting Dad’s parents in Scottsdale,
AZ. Grandmother loved playing Scrabble. She had a vocabulary that was
amazing, far above what most people do. She also didn’t believe in letting
children win games. Even her firstborn grandchild. Who was only in middle
school. And so adored her grandmother.
We were playing one afternoon, and she was way ahead near the end of the game. Daddy
came into the living room, looked at the score, looked at the board, looked at
her letters, and looked at my letters. He checked the board again, moved a few
of my letters around on the stand, pointed to a spot on the board, and said,
“Play this, here.” I don’t remember the word, but I do remember I had no idea
what it meant. However, I did what he said.
I had a couple of high-point letters. The word used several
of the bonus squares. It also used all
seven letters. Between those letters, the bonus squares, and the 50 extra
points for going out, I had well over 100 points. Daddy walked off. He was probably
smiling. Grandmother didn’t say much. I don’t remember her smiling. We finished
the game. She was a gracious loser, as she was gracious in everything, but we
never played Scrabble again. (That’s probably where Dad got it from. We never
played Monopoly again after I won. Something about his railroads, but that’s
another story.)
Other Games
She still played Scrabble with others. When we learned about
“speed Scrabble,” she loved that and would play it with Mom and Dad and even me
on occasion. She did the big crossword puzzles in the newspaper. In ink. Grandmother
also liked the Jumble puzzles, where the letters are mixed up in four sets and
the solutions to that provide the letters for the final puzzle that relates to
the comic panel. Dad did too. Not a problem when they were separate. Not a
problem when they were together either. Grandmother did them first. In her
head. When she was done, she’d hand the still-blank puzzle to Dad for him to
do.
By the time I was in college, our game had become gin rummy.
She won most games. I started teasing her, telling her she cheated. I knew she
hadn’t. She was a true lady and never would have. It was hilarious to watch her
protest that she most certainly had not cheated! I’d grin. One of us would
shuffle the cards, and we’d play another hand. Which she would win.
Another Challenge
Also by the time I was in college, she was suffering from
congestive heart failure. Doctors told her she’d make it a few months when they
first diagnosed her. They lived only blocks from Memorial Southwest Hospital so
she could get there fast when it got worse. I don’t know how many times we
gathered there, but she lived about six years after her diagnosis. That was
also the kind of lady she was. Always the lady, but you did not tell her what
she would or would not do.
She had been a quiet, graceful fighter all her life from
what I understand. She raised four sons and a daughter, and grieved the loss of
another daughter at a time when losing a baby was far too common. She followed
Granddad around the country—Texas, Louisiana, Colorado, Georgia, Utah, Arizona,
back to Texas. I think that’s all, but I might have missed some. Uncle Don
described the little white cabin they lived in on the ranch in Colorado. Let’s
just say she gets a multitude of brownie points for staying there more than one
night. They had rough spots like that and reusing Bounce dryer sheets because
they had so little money, and highs of the huge home on the mountainside in
Ogden, UT, and the property in Scottsdale with its pool and guest house. Wherever
she was, she made she not only made the best of it, but she made it good for
everyone around her.
Sometimes I would pick up Kentucky Fried Chicken or James
Coney Island and bring it to the house for her and Granddad. She needed a
wheelchair to go out because her breathing was so strained that she couldn’t
walk more than a few feet without needing to rest. However, she liked to go to
cafeterias, and we met them at Luby’s regularly. That gave me another chance to
tease her because ever one to use proper table manners, she laid the cloth
napkin in her lap. When we were done, we would wheel her out the door. One
problem. Because she didn’t walk away from the table, we also took the napkin.
Repeatedly. She was mortified. I still hassled her about having enough Luby’s
napkins for everyone at Sunday dinner.
Driving Miss Madlyn
I was fortunate to have lots of one-on-one time with her,
especially in her last few years. She couldn’t stay by herself because of her
health, so when Granddad went to Utah for Uncle Tim’s wedding, I stayed with
her. We had a lovely girls’ weekend.
When Driving Miss
Daisy came out, she wanted to see it. Granddad wasn’t big on going to
movies, especially something like that, so she asked if I would take her. I was
quite happy to oblige. When I picked her up, I reached for the wheelchair to
take it to the car, but she told me we were not
taking it. I gave her a look, asked if she was sure, and stopped talking. Teasing her was one thing. Crossing her was another. We
went to Westwood Mall, the best nearby location. The theater wasn’t too far,
but she was still going to have to walk some. I should not have doubted her.
I helped her out at the curb, escorted her to a bench nearby
and parked in a handicapped space using her tag. There were plenty available,
and I did not want to leave her alone any longer than I had to. She took my
arm, and we started the journey to the doors. We paused a couple of times with
her just holding my arm; she sat down on another bench, but we made it inside,
where after a couple more stops to sit and rest to catch her breath, we reached
the theater.
The walk would have taken me maybe five minutes from a
parking spot farther away. I don’t remember how long it took, but I’d guess
20-30 minutes. She never let on the physical
stress she felt other than a change in pressure on my arm when she needed to
stop. If she was ever unsure about making it in, she didn’t let on about that
either. I think she had just decided she was going to do this with me and that
was that. As with most everything else she did, she set her sights on where she
was going and never changed her focus. After she died, it was quite a while
before I could watch the movie again. When I tried it, I had new eyes with age
and experience. It was bittersweet and still is—I watched it a few weeks ago—but
I also smile as I see some of Grandmother in Miss Daisy, and I think about what
a great day she and I had together.
Just Like Her
When Driving Miss
Daisy was on recently, I told the story about Grandmother to my Words With
Friends friend. He said, “So that’s where you get it from.” No idea what he’s talking about; however, there’s
something to be said for her approach to life as we deal with Dad. We have no
choice about where we are, only how we react to it and work within it. We can
do it with grace or pitch conniption fits anytime something goes wrong, which
will do nothing to improve the situation and wear us out. We can adapt to his
changes with determination or give up. Neither will change the outcome itself.
He will not get better, and I know where the worse is going, but maybe it will lessen
some of the bumps. I don’t have an exact focus, and I’m not sure what it should
be or how to find it. However, as we care for him, we can come together, work
together, ask for and accept help, find some humor, and make some memories for
us. Hopefully, none of that will include
pilfering napkins (or anything else).
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