How my dads dementia changed my idea of death and life Beth Malone

I’ve been doing some thinking.

I’m going to kill my dad.

I called my sister.

“Listen,

I’ve been doing some thinking.

I’m going to kill Dad.

I’m going to take him to Oregon,

find some heroin,

and give it to him.”

My dad has frontotemporal lobe dementia,

or FTD.

It’s a confusing disease
that hits people in their 50s or 60s.

It can completely change
someone’s personality,

making them paranoid and even violent.

My dad’s been sick for a decade,

but three years ago he got really sick,

and we had to move him out of his house –

the house that I grew up in,

the house that he built
with his own hands.

My strapping, cool dad
with the falsetto singing voice

had to move into a facility
for round-the-clock care

when he was just 65.

At first my mom and sisters
and I made the mistake

of putting him in a regular nursing home.

It was really pretty;

it had plush carpet
and afternoon art classes

and a dog named Diane.

But then I got a phone call.

“Ms. Malone, we’ve arrested your father.”

“What?”

“Well, he threatened
everybody with cutlery.

And then he yanked
the curtains off the wall,

and then he tried
to throw plants out the window.

And then, well, he pulled all
the old ladies out of their wheelchairs.”

“All the old ladies?”

(Laughter)

“What a cowboy.”

(Laughter)

After he got kicked out of there,

we bounced him between
a bunch of state-run facilities

before finding a treatment center
specifically for people with dementia.

At first, he kind of liked it,

but over time his health declined,

and one day I walked in

and found him sitting hunched over
on the ground wearing a onesie –

those kinds of outfits
that zip in the back.

I watched him for about an hour
as he yanked at it,

trying to find a way out of this thing.

And it’s supposed to be practical,

but to me it looked like a straightjacket.

And so I ran out.

I left him there.

I sat in my truck – his old truck –

hunched over,

this really deep guttural cry
coming out of the pit of my belly.

I just couldn’t believe that my father,

the Adonis of my youth,

my really dear friend,

would think that this kind of life
was worth living anymore.

We’re programmed
to prioritize productivity.

So when a person –
an Adonis in this case –

is no longer productive
in the way we expect him to be,

the way that he expects himself to be,

what value does that life have left?

That day in the truck,

all I could imagine
was that my dad was being tortured

and his body was
the vessel of that torture.

I’ve got to get him out of that body.

I’ve got to get him out of that body;
I’m going to kill Dad.

I call my sister.

“Beth,” she said.

“You don’t want
to live the rest of your life

knowing that you killed your father.

And you’d be arrested I think,

because he can’t condone it.

And you don’t even know
how to buy heroin.”

(Laughter)

It’s true, I don’t.

(Laughter)

The truth is we talk
about his death a lot.

When will it happen? What will it be like?

But I wish that we would have talked
about death when we were all healthy.

What does my best death look like?

What does your best death look like?

But my family didn’t know to do that.

And my sister was right.

I shouldn’t murder Dad with heroin,

but I’ve got to get him out of that body.

So I went to a psychic.

And then a priest,
and then a support group,

and they all said the same thing:

sometimes people hang on
when they’re worried about loved ones.

Just tell them you’re safe,
and it’s OK to go when you’re ready.

So I went to see Dad.

I found him hunched over
on the ground in the onesie.

He was staring past me
and just kind of looking at the ground.

I gave him a ginger ale

and just started talking
about nothing in particular,

but as I was talking,
he sneezed from the ginger ale.

And the sneeze –
it jerked his body upright,

sparking him back to life a little bit.

And he just kept drinking and sneezing
and sparking, over and over and over again

until it stopped.

And I heard,

“Heheheheheh,

heheheheheh …

this is so fabulous.

This is so fabulous.”

His eyes were open
and he was looking at me,

and I said, “Hi, Dad!”

and he said, “Hiya, Beth.”

And I opened my mouth to tell him, right?

“Dad, if you want to die, you can die.

We’re all OK.”

But as I opened my mouth to tell him,

all I could say was, “Dad!

I miss you.”

And then he said, “Well, I miss you, too.”

And then I just fell over
because I’m just a mess.

So I fell over and I sat there with him

because for the first time in a long time
he seemed kind of OK.

And I memorized his hands,

feeling so grateful that his spirit
was still attached to his body.

And in that moment I realized

I’m not responsible for this person.

I’m not his doctor,

I’m not his mother,

I’m certainly not his God,

and maybe the best way to help him and me

is to resume our roles
as father and daughter.

And so we just sat there,

calm and quiet like we’ve always done.

Nobody was productive.

Both of us are still strong.

“OK, Dad. I’m going to go,

but I’ll see you tomorrow.”

“OK,” he said.

“Hey,

this is a pretty nice hacienda.”

Thank you.

(Applause)