Deepika Padukone drives while Amitabh Bachchan naps in a scene from Shoojit Sarkar’s Piku |
My father
lives in a flat near where I stay. Anna, as we affectionately call him, suffers
from Parkinson’s disease and mild dementia. He cannot run his own home, manage
his finances, or take care of medical and personal needs.
When I moved
him to stay near to us, I had a full time job. So I addressed managing three
elderly people and two homes like a project and used all my stakeholder,
project and resource management skills, not to mention patience and sense of
humour. Just as I imagine working parents of young children do, I set up a
schedule for my father – when to wake up, when and what to eat, when to go for
a walk/exercise, take a nap, shower, take medicines etc.
This
schedule register is updated almost on an hourly basis by one of his two
attendants. It also has details of water intake, urine output, bowel movements,
whether there are episodes of disorientation and how long they lasted and the
like. So it is something like the logbook of KVS Murthi “star date” today!
Every
morning and evening when I visit my father, I spend precious minutes reviewing
what has happened over the past 12 hours.
The three
big, big things I monitor are:
Travelling Potty Chair A scene from Shoojit Sarkar’s Piku |
- Bowel Movement (some years ago, I would have thought this was too “gross” a topic to talk about!). With age it seems that bowel movement determines happiness. Anna has severe constipation. For a man who pooped first thing in the morning with no help from hot coffee or water, to a man whose bowels do not evacuate naturally for as long as five days, is very, very hard.
- Nightmares: Each morning, ask Anna two questions. First, ‘Did you sleep well, Anna?’ Followed by ‘Did you have any nightmares?’ His neurologist has told us that nightmares can lead to hallucinations. So most evenings, I try to leave him in a good mood, wish him good night and tell him to dream of pleasant things – Hema Malini (he was a huge fan), swimming, eating davangere dosai, laughing with his brothers, travelling with his family (Paris, Vienna, Amsterdam, Athens), etc.
- Exercise: The more Anna exercises, the better it is; for it keeps his joints flexible. His schedule has walking/exercising two times a day. Often he misses one of the two sessions, sometimes both. When I learn of the misses, I wag my finger under his nose and mock admonish him. Or hold the top of his ear and playfully pull it (play-acting twisting his ear), and ask why he did not walk/exercise today. He takes me seriously though and responds with “OK. I’ll walk tomorrow, ‘ma”.
I also have
to think up of meals that are nutritious and appealing. Outings that are
interesting and stimulating. Conversations that recall past joys and present
foibles.
But, above
all else is structure and schedule. Both bring me and him a sense of being in
control, though there is really no control over Parkinson’s. It will ply the
course it wants to. We will manage the best we can – with as much playfulness,
fun and laughter as we fit into each day.
Watch the Piku trailer here:
First
published: 8th May 2015 by The Quint
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