When I got myself together and went to the dining room, I saw Mother sitting straight up but with her eyes closed. My sister asked me to hold her because, according to my sis, she was feeling really dizzy, and she wasn't responding. While my sister called the clinic at which she got her surgery, I started to hold her in case she fell over. Mother continued to close her eyes, but all she could do was mumble.
Father thought she was just tired and needed to go back to sleep. But after getting only the clinic's voicemail, my sister decided to call 911. That's when, I think, Mother's mumbling started to get worrisome, like she was trying to tell us she was scared, but couldn't say the words. Suffice it to say, I have never seen her like this before in my life.
The paramedics came. They saw that her blood pressure was very low, caused by a combination of dehydration, constipation, and the pills she was taking. But this wasn't a case where they give her some medicine and she'd be OK; they decided they had to take her to the ER.
Then, I saw something I'd really never seen before ... and something from Mother I had never seen before. The paramedics needed her to get on this hammock they laid on the floor; from there, they would carry her into the ambulance parked outside. We reminded them that she had just gotten her knee fixed; they knew, but this had to be done.
So, like ripping off a bandage, the only way to get her to lie on this hammock was to do it right in one straight shot, even though it would hurt like hell for Mother. And it did. Finally, Mother was able to speak, and loudly; in Chinese, she screamed, "Ow! It hurts!" (All this time she didn't speak English. She must have been in some pain so deep that it made her revert to the long-term memory spots in her brain where she only knew Chinese.) And she was really, really screaming, as if she was a little girl, howling for her suffering to stop. I have known My Mother all her life as a domineering and even mean woman, oftentimes indifferent to other people's feelings. But her she was, begging, even pleading for help, almost to the point of tears. I've never seen her sound so ... well, helpless before.
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We met Mother at the ER about an hour later. Her eyes were open, she seemed awake and lucid, and she could even speak English again. She was released several hours later with advice that she should drink water and electrolytes a lot more.
Mother hasn't been in that dire straits since, thank Buddha. But the memories of that day are flooding back now that our family friend passed away unexpectedly. While I was seeing her act like a little girl, I was thinking, "No, this can't be serious. She can't be in real danger, can she?" And while I don't know all the details about our family friend's death, I wonder if her relatives thought the same thing. Maybe I haven't appreciated how close Mother was to the end. But maybe her cries for help are something I have to heed if ... no, when the time really comes. And that scares the hell out of me. Because I am not ready for that, at all, and I don't think I ever will be.
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