Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

16 October

Morning Treats For Donkeys

by Jon Katz

You could do a lot worse in the world than being a donkey who lives with Maria. Every morning, we and the dogs go out together, for morning chores, for training and running, and to check on the animals.

Every morning, Maria brings a bowl – in this case a dog food bowl – out to Lulu and Fanny. The bowl is full of goodies, many of them gourmet goodies, that Maria has been saving, sometimes for days — pineapple and apple rinds, carrots, bread saved from restaurants, greens no longer quite fresh, you get the idea.

Today, the treat bowl had so many goodies we had to use Red’s dog food bowl. The donkeys, sweet and smart creatures that they are, never get pushy or grab at the food or run into Maria.

She says good morning to them, chats and sings songs to them and hands them their morning refreshment one by one, waiting patiently in between while they crunch away.

Lulu was the first to arrive this morning, Fanny was right behind. I love this ritual, it comes right out of Maria’s big heart and great love for her donkeys. The chickens get a bowl too, just not quite as big, and they get theirs dumped on the ground.

16 October

Teaching Bud To Stay: Come And See

by Jon Katz

Bud is an intelligent dog and distractible dog, I like to train him out in the pasture, where there are other dogs, sheep and donkey. If I can train him there, the training will stick.

My training is short, three to five minutes, several times a day. When he loses focus, I stop. If he doesn’t stay, I move him back to the starting point and do it again. I am careful about how many words I am speaking and how often.

We all tend to say too many words to our dogs when we train them. Bud is getting it, a little bit at a time. He sits well now, and we will keep working on that and also on the “stays.” He will never be a spit-spot dog, but his recall is generally excellent.

I want to make sure he comes quickly, with or without food, and in the face of temptations. Come and take a look.

15 October

Gratitude At The Mansion: What Time Means

by Jon Katz

During the day, I can most often find Wayne sitting at the end of the hallway outside of his room. I asked him the other day why he is there,  why he sits there by himself.

He always used to be upstairs.

He smiled and jerked his head towards the door. “There,” he said.

He says he can look out of the window of the door and watch the construction progress on the other side of the door. He sees the building coming together from the inside.

The Mansion is expanding, adding a 10-bed memory care facility right next door. We all expect Joan to live there.

Wayne spends hours looking through that door, Red and I visit him there. For  him, this is a fascinating thing to be able to see.

Before the construction, I would find Wayne upstairs in his wheel chair watching the residents go back and forth near the office, watching visitors come through the door.

He seemed to be the Mansion’s Official Greeter.

He is a watcher, a listener. He misses very little, mostly keeps to himself. Since he moved downstairs near the door, we have had longer visits, talked more.

Downstairs, it is quiet. We can hear a radio once in awhile, or the sound of a computer clicking, or Judge Judy making her rulings from the bench.

Today, I asked Wayne, the question the residents know so well and sometimes kid me about.  “Is there anything you need?” Wayne is not comfortable asking for things, as is the case with most of the residents.

But sometimes, their need overcomes their reserve.

Wayne shyly asked if I could get him a winter coat. A coat or jacket, I asked. A jacket, he said, a jacket with a hood. So he could go outside or sit on the porch.

I said of course, I ordered it this evening for him, a Carharrt farm jacket with a hood. He is getting ready for the winter. Without this coat, he could not go outside.

It is quiet and peaceful down by that door, I think that is what draws Wayne to the door. Mostly, he is just looking for peace, a peaceful way to pass the time.

I learn a lot from the Mansion residents, I have come to know and love many of them, something I never permitted myself to do in my hospice and assisted care work.

The social workers always warned me about getting too close, and for the obvious reasons. These are all people at the edge of life, they will soon sicken and die, every one of them.

I can hardly count the number of people I’ve come to know at the Mansion who have grown ill and died, sometimes over the course of months, even years.

But for me, I think the social workers were wrong.

I’ve found that sticking to one place is a profoundly moving and enriching experience. I have come to know and love many of these people, all kinds of people from all kinds of places.

A Medicaid facility like the Mansion does not draw the wealthy, the residents can’t afford the high fees of private institutions, they usually come to the Mansion when they are out of options.

I think I need to be needed, not just admitted.

This has been important for me, because the residents are needy in a way that makes my work, and the work of the Army Of Good, seem so important, even profound.

I have learned on this journey that money can be a gift or a poison, many people hate needing it, and resent the people who give it to them. It is almost always a bittersweet thing, mostly because there is never enough of it, and everyone wants it.

I’ve learned that one can never give to others with any expectation of thanks. Yet the gratitude I feel at the Mansion is powerful.

And other people, especially those far along in life, are filled with gratitude that is so powerful it is enveloping. I’m glad to have found them, they do so much more for me, than I could ever do for them.

At the Mansion, there are thanks every day for me, for you, they are so heartfelt. Everyone takes the time to ask me to say thank you, for every card, every sweater, every letter, every party, picnic, CD or art kit or box of cookies or soap.

I am overwhelmed sometimes by the deep appreciation the elderly residents of the Mansion feel for Maria, for Red.  For me. They often struggle to remember yesterday, but they always remember you, they always remember to say thank you, and wonder who you are and where you live.

Every day they come up to us, hug us, tell me they love me, tell Maria how wonderful she is, and they can never say enough about Red.

You always come, they say, over and over again. Thank you, Jon, we love you, Jon. And now, I can love them back.

What matters to them is not how much money one raises, or what gifts they are given. What matters is that somebody shows up, somebody cares. That you understand the challenges of time, and respect its passage.

For them, they live with a differently reality.

Any day can bring them to a nursing home, or rehab center, any day may bring death or heart attack or seizure or stroke.  Any day could be their last day in the Mansion or in the world. That changes perspective and teaches what matters.

What matters is that someone – me, people far a way, people who send letters and cards and party favors and help  – know they are here and care about them. Time is precious at the Mansion, but nothing is more precious than people who care.

No one there has very much, and  it matters how every moment is spent. There is a sense of relief at the Mansion, of relief. They are done worrying about ambition, envy, how they look, how they are seen.

Mostly, like Wayne, they find a peace in just being themselves. Almost all of them find time to be alone.

Before the Mansion, I would make quick visits to hospice wards and assisted care facilities, not wishing to bother people, perhaps not wanting to get to know them too well, since there could only be one possible outcome.

Yet the Mansion has changed me, deepened me, opened me, touched my heart because I do get to know them, because they do get to know me.

I asked Wayne, sitting in his hallway, about the things we share, the time we spent together. I asked  him, as I have often asked others, if these visits help him.

He looked startled, and smiled.

“Thank you,” he said.

Every day, Julie at the Mansion comes up with all kinds of tasks – art, exercise, prayer, story-telling, poetry – to occupy the residents, yet time has quite another meaning for everyone, and certainly for me.

There is nothing more precious than time.

 

15 October

Peggie’s Necklace: Ready To Dance

by Jon Katz

In a thrift shop in Bennington, I saw this vintage necklace on sale for $8 and decided to buy it for Peggie, a resident of the Mansion Assisted Care Facility. She is heading to Cuba tomorrow, thanks to a miracle gift from an anonymous angel.

The very kind person working at Second Hand Rose, a thrift store in Bennington, donated the necklace, she wouldn’t accept payment.

I told this lovely person that I can just picture Peggie dancing on some dance floor in Cuba, I had no doubt she would be doing that, and Peggie nearly wept with joy at the necklace, she couldn’t wait to try it on.

She said she would be the first one up to do the cha-cha. She loves to dance.

She will, too.  She is ready to go. Have a great trip, Peggie, we love you. Dance your heart out.

The spirit lives in her, strong and loud. Peggie never gives up on live, she lives it to the fullest every day.

15 October

Down To The Wire: Peggie Is Heading For Cuba!

by Jon Katz

It was high pressure do-gooding, an intense afternoon.

Three days ago, Peggie was offered a trip to Cuba with her daughter by an Angel with a big heart. She accepted, and Brittany and Kelly and Tia and the Mansion staff have been scrambling to get her ready – she needed clothes, luggage, doctor’s notes, medicine for travel, instructions.

I learned over the weekend that she didn’t  have a windbreaker jacket, she had no carrying bag or shoulder bag, she told me during Bingo that she had no suitcase with wheels, and she had to have one or she couldn’t go.

This was frightening her, as it was the weekend, and it could be hard to find the suitcase she needed.

When I asked her now much money she had for a trip to Cuba,  she told me shyly, and I said “Peggie, that is not enough.”

Her money, which had to last at the Mansion for the rest of the month as well as the weekend cruise, for the week-long cruise, wouldn’t have gotten her lunch in Cuba or in an airport.

I know the staff were dipping into their own pockets to help her, as they often do.

She was in a panic over finding a suitcase with wheels on short notice. She begged me to help.

The Mansion staff scrambled to take care of the medical stuff, I took up the rest. It was a defining moment for me and the Army Of Good. We were ready for a challenge, or not?

You know the answer, I live for this, as do you many of you.

A friend – Susan –  immediately donated  her suitcase with wheels, and I went online and quickly learned there was no time for me to shop at the usual places, even with short delivery times.

So I activated my network of thrift shops in Saratoga Springs, Bennington,  Schuylerville, N.Y, and Manchester, Vt. They have never failed me, and didn’t this time. The Second Hand Rose seemed the best bet.

First, I asked Maria to come and help, and she graciously did, and we tried Wal-Mart, which had none of the things we needed.

I knew Peggie would need a wind-breaker for an ocean cruise, she has plenty of T-shirts and summer clothes.

At Second Hand Rose in Bennington, we found a windbreaker big enough and in good shape. We also found a pink travel/shoulder bag that Peggie could use for documents, medicine and souvenirs.

I had the idea that we ought to get Peggie a colorful necklace, she loves to dance (I have seen her dance on our boat cruises, she is a maniac) , and  she will surely be dancing in Cuba, knowing Peggie.

Sue, working at the Second Hand Rose, donated great old necklace, she wouldn’t take any money for it.

I’m proud of Peggie for going, many of the Mansion residents understandably turn down even the shortest outings, it isn’t laziness, it’s fear of falling or getting sick. Peggie has a long list of serious health problems, but she never lets them interfere with life.

The clothes for Peggie cost $27, there is a lot to be said for Thrift Stores, and we got some great stuff.

This afternoon, we brought it over to Peggie and she tried everything on.

Her suitcase is packed, she has a good jacket, and all of her medical documents. She is ready to go. She’s being picked up in the morning early, driven to Albany, she’ll fly to Miami and get on a big boat to Cuba.

This is the thrill of a lifetime for Peggie, she talks all the time about going on cruises, but they don’t seem to materialize. This one is for real. It was a thrill and gift to help her take this trip, I can’t wait to hear her stories when she returns.

And this is what it is about, filling the holes in the lives of people, small acts of great kindness. Thanks for making it possible.

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