something   only    old people  get?
How could   she have    it, and at  this    age?
Grandma is  ninety-four and she’s   fine.
Why is  mom acting  so  calm?   Does    she understand  what
this    means?  Do  I?
How  long    does    she     have    before  .   .   .   whatever    comes
next?
What    does    come    next?
The neurologist had mentioned   “Parkinson’s    Plus.”  Plus
what?    “Plus”  had     sounded     like    a   bonus.  Economy     Plus
means   more    legroom—usually a   good    thing.  Pert    Plus    was
shampoo plus    conditioner,    also    a   good    thing.  No. My  mom
was  prescribed  medicines   for     Parkinson’s     disease    plus
Alzheimer’s disease.    Her “bonus  feature”    was the symptoms
of  a   bonus   disease.
As   I   read    about   the     pills   I   was     still   holding,    repeating
phrases stuck   out to  me.
“No disease-modifying   ability.”
“Limited    efficacy.”
“Like   a   Band-Aid.”
Even    the doctor  had seemed  resigned.   (I  later   learned a
cold     joke    circulated  among   med     school  students    about
neurology:   “Neurologists   don’t   treat   disease,    they    admire
it.”)
That    night   I   was sitting alone   in  our Holiday Inn suite,  a
couple   of  blocks  from    the     hospital.   My  mom     was     in  the
other   room,   and I   was at  my  computer,   manically   reading
anything    I   could   find    on  both    Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s
disease,    even    though  my  mom’s   symptoms    did not fit neatly
into     either  diagnosis.  Confused,   uninformed,     and     feeling
                    
                      john hannent
                      (John Hannent)
                      
                    
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