There’s an electricity sub-station opposite
Alice’s bungalow. A low, bare industrial spread, cones of ceramic insulators,
fans revolving behind grids, pylons running cables. A low
thrum, accentuated by the cold, clear blue of the sky. It feels like the whole
morning is being powered by this place.
We find Alice lying in her hallway, the top
of her body covered by a brown fleece she’s pulled over herself. It’s difficult
to figure out exactly what’s happened. She doesn’t appear to have hurt herself.
She doesn’t have any major health problems. She’s sixty, and in reasonable
shape. Gradually it seems as if this is more a mental health issue than
anything else. As gently as we can we help her up and into the sitting room,
where she curls up on her side in a voluminous electric recliner, covers her
face in her hands, and sobs.
Alice’s bungalow is scrupulously tidy, with
the rubbed, almost scorched smell of cheap carpet vacuumed every day to the
corner. I go into the kitchen for her care folder and find it on top of a free-standing
cupboard, a retro, glass-fronted affair. Inside is a tin of salmon, three
packets of Angel Delight and a month’s supply of instant porridge.
I take the folder back into the lounge,
where Rae is finishing off the obs.
‘I can’t tell you,’ says Alice. ‘I just can’t.
It’s too shameful. It’s a secret.’
‘It’d really help if you could tell us,’ says Rae. ‘Is it
something you’ve done to yourself?’
‘No. I’m not saying. You’ll call the police
and I’ll be carted off. My daughter has enough troubles of her own without
that.’
I flick through the folder. Alice was
assessed by the community mental health team a year ago, but refused all help
and was signed off as low-risk.
‘What medications do you take?’ Rae asks.
‘Not much,’ says Alice, suddenly sitting
upright, conversational. ‘Something for blood pressure. Pain pills for my back.
They’re in the bedroom. Excuse the mess.’
I go to fetch them.
Alice’s medication is in a plastic toilet
bag on the dresser. I half expect to see a scattering of empty packets, and glance
at the rubbish bin to see if she’s tossed any there. But like the rest of the
bungalow, everything is tidy and unremarkable. The only jarring detail is the
number of handwritten notes Alice has placed about the room – all in shaky
block caps, all describing various ailments, how she was feeling and when, what
the doctor did or didn’t say, who did or didn’t come. It’s like a paper chase,
except all the clues are on display, and don’t lead anywhere.
I go back to join Rae and Alice in the
sitting room.
‘My gentleman friend has got a mobile phone
but he never has it switched on,’ says Alice. ‘ He won’t be home because he
likes to get out early, and I don’t know when he’ll be back. His sister might
be home, though. I could give her a call.’
‘Would you like me to speak to her first?’
‘Could you?’
Rae makes the call. I can hear the woman answer
on the other end – a warm, confident voice, immediately concerned. Rae explains
what’s happened, then hands the phone to Alice.
‘Hello? Vera?’
says Alice, but then chokes up, and simply presses the phone to her ear whilst
she cries, as if really that was the essence of the whole affair, the simple truth
she needed to transmit down the wire.
3 comments:
Sometimes a good cry is what it takes in order to move forward... I don't know, Spence, I just, on some level, can relate to crying so heart-brokenly that words cannot get past one's throat.
I know it's easier said than done Spence,but I'm sure Alice would be (and feel) so much better if she could just let go.The stiff upper lip approach really doesn't work,whatever it is that's wrong is eating the poor old thing up.
Hi Lynda
I think you're right - there's definitely something cleansing about a good ol' cry like that. I know it's probably not the only thing going on with Alice (these things are often complicated & long-term), but the effect loneliness has is truly dreadful.
Morning Jack
It was interesting that there'd been a move towards help / intervention about a year ago, but Alice had decided not to participate. Maybe now she's reached the point where she can see how helpful it might be.
Cheers for the comments! Hope all's good with you & yours today.
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