Ma Chronicles: Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s (part 4): Grief

Anjali Sunita
2 min readApr 20, 2024
Photo by Marcus Ganahl on Unsplash

Grief feels like the year 2001, when dozens of people smoked cigarettes in a dimly lit divebar. My lungs are heavy, eyes burning hot, and each strand of hair and pore of skin is soaked in the smell of it.

I’m choking, but everyone wants me to smile. It’s so loud in here, no one can hear me speak, so I field the second half of their comments with nods and control the muscles of my face to look interested.

I’d like to slink off to a safer haven, anywhere, a bathroom would do, where a row of women are fixing their lips and their tops and no one is looking anywhere except at themselves in the mirror. But the lights are too shocking and bright; they reveal the rings on my forehead, rough red skin below my nostrils, and that blue vein newly appearing on my temple.

It is 2024, and I have been losing my mom day by day to Alzheimer’s, for the past nine years probably, but officially and rapidly, for the past four. She does not know who I am or where I was born. She only remembers our dogs in our childhood home. I am like a cardboard cutout in a family photograph, but she asks for her daughter, they say.

Somedays, reality sounds like the deadening ring of tinnitis, like I can hear the still air hanging above me, in the interim between breaths, but days like…

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Anjali Sunita

As a writer, yoga teacher, and Ayurvedic consultant, Anjali shares globally with focus on tradition & accessibility. www.villlagelifewellness.com