My gray matter might be waning. Then again, it might not be. But I swear that I can feel memories â" as Iâm making them â" slide off a neuron and into a tangle of plaque. I steel myself for those moments to come when I wonât remember what just went into my head.
Iâm not losing track of my car keys, which is pretty standard in aging minds. Nor have I ever forgotten to turn off the oven after use, common in menopausal women. I can always find my car in the parking lot, although lots of ânormalâ folk canât.
Rather, I suddenly canât remember the name of someone with whom Iâve worked for years. I cover by saying âsirâ or âmadamâ like the Southerner I am, even though I live in Vermont and grown people here donât use such terms. Better to think Iâm quirky than losing my faculties. Sometimes Iâll send myself an e-mail to-do reminder and then, seconds later, find myself thri lled to see a new entry pop into my inbox. Oops, itâs from me. Worse yet, a massage therapist kicked me out of her practice for missing three appointments. I didnât recall making any of them. There must another Nancy.
Am I losing track of me?
Equally worrisome are the memories increasingly coming to the fore. Magically, these random recollections manage to circumnavigate my imagined build-up of beta-amyloid en route to delivering vivid images of my fatherâs first steps down his path of forgetting. He was the same age I am now, which is 46.
âHow old are you?â I recall him asking me back then. Some years later, he began calling me every Dec. 28 to say, âHappy birthday,â instead of on the correct date, Dec. 27. The 28th had been his grandmotherâs birthday.
The chasms were small at first. Explainable. Dismissible. When he crossed the street without looking both ways, we chalked it up to his well-cultivated, absent-minded professor persona. But the chasms grew into sinkholes, and eventually quicksand. When we took him to get new pants one day, he kept trying on the same ones he wore to the store.
âI like these slacks,â heâd say, over and over again, as he repeatedly pulled his pair up and down.
My dad died of Alzheimerâs last April at age 73 â" the same age at which his father succumbed to the same disease. My dad ended up choosing neurology as his profession after witnessing the very beginning of his own dadâs forgetting.
Decades later, grandfatherâs atrophied brain found its way into a jar on my fatherâs office desk. Was it meant to be an ever-present reminder of Alzheimerâs effect? Or was it a crystal ball sent to warn of genetic fate? My father the doctor never said, nor did he ever mention, that it was his fatherâs gray matter floating in that pool of formaldehyde.
Using the jarred brain as a teaching tool, my dad showed my 8-year-old self the difference between frontal and temporal lobes. He also pointed out how brains with Alzheimerâs disease become smaller, and how wide grooves develop in the cerebral cortex. But only after his death â" and my motherâs confession about whose brain occupied that jar â" did I figure out that my father was quite literally demonstrating how this disease runs through our heads.
Has my forgetting begun?
I called my dadâs neurologist. To find out if I was in the earliest stages of Alzheimerâs, he would have to look for proteins in my blood or spinal fluid and employ expensive neuroimaging tests. If he found any indication of onset, the only option would be experimental trials.
But documented confirmation of a diseased brain would break my still hopeful heart. Iâd walk around with the scarlet letter âAâ etched on the inside of my forehead â" obstructing how I view every situation instead of the intermittent clouding I currently experience.
âYouâre still grievi ng your father,â the doctor said at the end of our call. âSadness and depression affect the memory, too. Letâs wait and see.â
It certainly didnât help matters that two people at my fatherâs funeral made some insensitive remarks.
âNancy, you must be scared to death.â
âIs it hard knowing the same thing probably will happen to you?â
Maybe the real question is what to do when the forgetting begins. My dad started taking 70 supplements a day in hopes of saving his mind. He begged me to kill him if he wound up like his father. He retired from his practice and spent all day in a chair doing puzzles. He stopped making new memories in an all-out effort to preserve the ones he already had.
Maybe his approach wasnât the answer.
Just before his death â" his brain a fraction of its former self â" my father managed to offer up a final lesson. I was visiting him in the memory-care center when he got a strange look on his face. I figured it was gas. But then his eyes lit up and a big grin overtook him, and he looked right at me and said, âFunny how things turn out.â
An unforgettable moment?
I can only hope.
Nancy Stearns Bercaw is a writer in Vermont. Her book, âBrain in a Jar: A Daughterâs Journey Through Her Fatherâs Memory,â will be published in April 2013 by Broadstone.
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