Dementia took my mother in small, irreversible pieces. Eventually, I could no longer keep her safe at home. She wandered, forgot the stove, and moved without awareness of danger. Placing her in Willow Creek Nursing Suite was a decision I resisted for as long as I could. On her first night, she held my hand and asked me not to leave. I left anyway, then sat in the parking lot for a long time before driving away.
Over time, my visits grew less frequent. Work, distance, and the emotional weight of walking into that space all played a part. Each visit was heavy. She would cling to me when I stood to leave, confused but unwilling to let go. I kept promising I would come more often, and in those moments, I meant it. But intentions do not always become action.
One morning, a nurse called to tell me my mother had passed during the night. The words were calm, direct. I understood them—and assumed she had died alone.
When I arrived, I discovered her room was not empty. A caregiver named Sarah sat beside the bed, still holding my mother’s hand. She apologized for being there, though she didn’t need to. She had stayed after her shift because she didn’t want my mother to be alone. All night, she had brushed her hair, read from a book of Tennyson, and spoken to her softly.
Nothing dramatic—just steady care. It was the kind of presence that doesn’t ask to be noticed.
Later, while sorting my mother’s belongings, I found a small notebook in her nightstand. Inside were entries written by Sarah: brief notes about moments I had missed. My mother humming along to a song. Smiling after her hair was brushed. Little signs that something of her remained.
In the final entry, she had spoken of me—not clearly, but enough to say I was still there for her.
The notebook didn’t erase my regrets, but it shifted something. It showed that even in a place I struggled to accept, she had been seen, cared for, and accompanied when I couldn’t be.