N’s caregiver to go to the store for a few things. I did not have to go in to work, and I wanted nothing more than to stay at home and relax with N.
N. said, “Can I go too?”
My first thought was, “Noooo,” because every part of my body ached and I was tired. But I realized Nick had not been out in a while, so I said, “Okay, we can take the van and make it a pilgrimage.”
We got Nick loaded in the van, and as usual we had to park out in no-man’s land because the one van-accessible space was taken.
K. the caregiver took the list and a cart, and I took Nick and a small plastic shopping basket. “We’ll head for the frozen foods while you get the rest of the stuff on the list,” I told K.
I pushed Nick toward the other side of the store. We stopped for some cereal, detoured down the chip aisle, where Nick got three different flvors of kettle-cooked chips. (The poor man is chip-deprived; I never buy them.)
We went to the frozen food aisle, where a Kroger worker in his late thirties or so said, “Hello, Mr. Nick.”
Nick, whose charm has not been diminished one iota by his stroke, said, “Well, hello! How are you?”
“I’m doin’ good. Saw you when you came in the door.”
“Really? I didn’t see you.”
The conversation continued for a bit, with the guy clearly wondering about Nick’s situation. I marveled as Nick’s sentences pared down to match the guy’s own short, clipped sentences and as the g’s dropped off the ends of his words. (Part of the way Nick connects with people, and totally uncalculated.)
“So how have you been doin’?” says the guy for the second time.
“See this wheelchair? She’s been pushin’ me around in it for about a year now.”
So many people have no idea what to say to Nick, but this guy was not at a loss.
“Well, you’re alive.”
“Yep.”
“Roof over your head? Food on the table?”
“Yep.”
“Wife who loves you?”
“I hope so.”
“Well, then, you are blessed.”
“You are right. I am blessed.”
As we rolled on, I asked Nick, “Do you know who that was?”
“Not a clue.”
I really loved seeing Nick in action. Here he is, acting as though he knows the guy, conversing with no apparent sign of memory loss or mental impairment. He’s a wonder.
I am glad we took that trip to the store.