With the call on speaker phone, my dad attempted to chat with his brother, who is younger by six years. My uncle stayed silent on the other end. My uncle's friend Henry, another priest and Franciscan monk who studied with my uncle and knew him for roughly 45 years, responded instead. He encouraged my uncle. "John, do you want to say hello to your brother?" Henry prompted to no avail.
Finally, I spoke, "Hello, Uncle John!" Henry reported that my uncle's face brightened as a broad smile spread across it.
"Do you know what Tuesday is?" I asked.
"No," Uncle John finally responded.
"It's my birthday!" I proclaimed.
"Oh!" He replied again.
Henry interjected again, "Do you want to sing "Happy Birthday?"" And, together, Uncle John and Henry sang "Happy Birthday" to me.

We decided after that conversation that a visit to Wisconsin was imperative, even if the seven hour drive had to take place in driving snow. It would be March after all, and Wisconsin winters were never as forgiving as they had become in St. Louis, Missouri.
So, last Friday, we loaded up the car and drove to Manitowoc, WI. After spending Friday night arguing with one another and going to dinner, We visited Uncle John three times: twice on Saturday and once on Sunday morning. Our time with him proved as heart wrenching as it was lovely.
To my sister's credit, we purchased some sweets for our first visit which took place on Saturday morning after Henry took Uncle John to church. While Alzheimer's has stolen my uncle's ability to communicate, it has not yet confiscated his sweet tooth. We ate donuts and laughed at silly things for probably far too long. And then my uncle went down for an afternoon snooze.

Finally, on Sunday morning, we popped in for one last visit. There were no words on Sunday beyond a "yes" or an "uh huh" but there were plenty of smiles and lots of laughter which seemed like a good note upon which to end our visit.
Alzheimer's wages a cruel battle upon its victims and the families who love them. The endless unanswered questions are unbearable. Accepting that nobody really knows what is going on in the mind of someone afflicted with torturous disease does not make enduring it any easier. If only they could communicate. If only they could tell us what is going on in there. If only they could articulate their pain or sadness and even their moments of joy.
The call that came three weeks ago forced our whole family into a new phase of life, not just a new phase of Alzheimer's. And, I, for one, am not ready.
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