She Brought His Mother To The Mistress’s Apartment And Ended The Lie-Lian

The first thing I learned about caregiving was that it does not feel heroic while you are doing it.

It feels like wet sheets at 3:00 a.m.

It feels like the smell of lavender wipes under your fingernails.

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It feels like reheated coffee, a sore back, and the quiet panic of realizing you forgot to call in a refill before the pharmacy closed.

For seven years, that was my life with Carmen.

She was Miguel’s mother, but she lived in the back bedroom of our house after her stroke, in the room that got the morning sun through the blinds.

The bed had rails.

The closet held extra pads, folded sheets, clean nightgowns, and a plastic bin full of hospital papers that Miguel never opened.

Every Monday, I checked her pills.

Every Wednesday, I washed her hair.

Every night, I set my alarm twice because one missed dose could mean pain, confusion, or a call to the hospital intake desk before sunrise.

Miguel called himself a good son because he paid the rent on time.

That was the sentence he hid behind.

He would come home, drop his keys by the front door, step over the grocery bags if I had not put them away yet, and sit on the couch like the entire day had been invented just to exhaust him.

If I asked him to help lift his own mother from the bed to the chair, he sighed.

If I asked him to sit with her while I showered, he glanced at his phone.

If I asked him to learn the medication schedule, he said, “You do it better than I do.”

Then he would add the part that always made him sound gentle.

“If I help, I’ll only upset her.”

For a long time, I let that excuse stand in the middle of our marriage like furniture.

I walked around it.

I cleaned around it.

I pretended not to see how much space it took.

Carmen was not easy to care for.

She had opinions about everything, and most of them landed on me.

The soup was too salty.

The towels were folded wrong.

The blinds were too bright.

The hallway light was too dim.

I walked too loudly when she had a headache and too quietly when she wanted to know someone was nearby.

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