Tuesday, 6 September 2022

A Celebration of Life Service for My Beloved Mother






I love my mom! The following was what I shared with family and friends at a celebration of life service a few weeks ago:


My mom was born in China in 1926.  Her father came to Canada looking for a better life in 1918. But due to the Chinese Exclusion Act between 1923 to 1947 Chinese were forbidden to come to Canada.

If you were lucky enough to land in Canada, a Chinese person was required by law to pay a HeadTax of $500.00 .  How much was $500.00 at the time? You could buy 2 houses in Vancouver with $500 in the early 19  century.


My mom’s biggest dream was always to come to Canada and be united with her father.  Mom’s father tried very hard and paid a lot to lawyers for our many immigration applications .Finally our application was approved in 1971


Unfortunately, luck was not on my mother’s side. Our grandfather died just a few month before we landed in Canada in early 1970's. That was heart breaking news for our mom; her lifelong dream was shattered.  My mom’s biggest regret in life was not able to see and get to know her father; not once had she seen her dad.

Due to the long separation for Chinese families under Canada’s Chinese exclusion act, Mom was the only child. But she was blessed with many children with our father.

Our whole family immigrated and landed in Thunder Bay in the early 1970's. Thunder Bay’s population was suddenly increased by a new Chinese's family's arrival. Everybody in town knew that there were more than half of dozen Chinese teens just fresh off the boat from HK.

Though not knowing much English, Mom was determined to find a job. She started working in a garment factory, and along with our dad supported her big growing family. Our parents lived in Thunder Bay for more than a decade. 

Then They bought a house in Toronto.  Mom, and Dad and along with my brother  moved to Toronto in the early 1980's.



After settling in Toronto, besides being busy with church life, Mom dedicated her time looking after the family and taking care of her grandchildren full time. 







From early 1980's to  2008, Our parents lived in Scarborough and she looked after her grandchildren and the house well. 

Mom also helped me out a lot when our children were sick. 

However, Dad died suddenly in 2008.  

In 2011, Mom moved into a senior's apartment in her own unit. For the first time in her life, she was living alone. However, my mom was  independent, energetic, and hardworking as ever living a busy life by herself.

I remember many things about my mom, but the following stand out for me:          

Mom was smart,  hardworking, and had a lot of perseverance.

My mom didn’t need to tell us to work hard. We worked hard in school and at work because Mom was the model of a hard worker.  It  cost a lot to feed her big fat growing family and a lot of work preparing lunches for half a dozen teenagers daily.

 Before we were even awoke, we could smell bacon, ham and eggs. Mom had to go to work but she was up early at 6am each morning preparing our lunches.  She faithfully packed lunches for us every morning in brown lunch bags with fruit and drinks.

While my classmates  had peanut butter or cheese sandwiches for lunch, I feel pretty special because I had  fresh ham and egg sandwiches  made with love by my mom.! Looking back,  Mom spoiled us with her delicious lunches made with love every day! I didn't even prepare such good lunches for my own children!

Not only did my mom work hard all her life, she persevered through challenging situations.   It was difficult for her not knowing the language and working in front of a sewing machine the whole day for minimum wages to support all of us along with Dad. 

I admire my mother a lot because of how hard she worked and how much she persevered. For many new immigrants, there could be many complaints regarding their new lives in Canada. The language barrier, social and cultural isolation from your own ethnic group and the unforgiving cold weather in Thunder Bay. It is so cold there in the winter that if you forget to plug in your car overnight ,  your car wouldn’t start the next morning. Life is not easy for many newcomers to Canada. In fact I personally know many new immigrants who could not adjust their new lives in Canada and returned to their homeland.


Our mother was a fighter with a great deal of  perseverance.  Not once, did my mom ever complain about the conditions in Canada or wanting to move back to HK.   She endured all the hardships and challenges because she wanted a better life for each one of her children. We are who we are today because of Mom and we are grateful to her for that.

  


Besides family life, Mom loved church and the church life. It was in Toronto when my parents started going to church and heard the gospel about Jesus. My mother was the first one to get baptized in a Toronto Christian church.







Mom was a practicing Christian and had attended Sunday Services every Sunday for the past four decades without any interruptions. When COVID hit, it prevented her from going to church but she still attended church online every week.

Not only was our mother a hard working person, she was like a scout master. She was always well prepared and good with details.

She was excellent in cooking and was asked to prepare refreshments for the church meetings. She took this volunteer work seriously. She would prepare weeks in advance for the refreshments. She read cookbooks, talked to her friends, copied down recipes from newspaper and sometimes even called me for some ideas.




With my dad’s help of driving her around to shop, Mom was determined to create and serve the best refreshments to her friends at church. 







She even practiced her treats first before preparing them for the church meetings. Her friends all loved the treats she created because she was asked year after year to prepare the refreshments.

Mom took every task seriously. She was asked sometimes to do opening prayers for her cell group in church. Instead of just mumbling a few words or following her nose, she would write every word of her prayer down.  I heard her discussing it with my dad. And later on I found many written prayers kept neatly in her room.


My mom made many friends at church. 


In fact she had four very good friends and they pledged to each other that they become sisters and look after each other. They were known as the Four Golden flowers at her church.


That was the happiest I had seen my mother because from having no siblings since birth for the past five decades, she had three good sisters!!!  Not only did the four sisters got along very well, so did the four husbands. 

 They went to church services together, and enjoyed dim sum lunch every week after Sunday Service. They even went on long trips together. Mom could not stop giggling when  talking about the four sisters' trip to Canada's East Coast and how they even brought their own min rice cooker and made rice and Chinese sausage on their trip. 



My mom was the glue of our big family. All of us grew up, got married and have our own children.





 Every Christmas, New Year, and Lunar New year, Mom planned the menus and spent days preparing the big fat family dinner.



She cooked for the whole day and waited for her children and grand children to come and had the family meal together. 




It happened for years and sometimes we took this dinner for granted. Mom is gone now and there will be no more big family dinners in my parents' house.

We will miss everything about our big family with Mom. 



Most important of all, we will miss our dear beloved mother.


Mom, I love you dearly! Thanks for everything and we will always remember you!

Love from your daughter,

R.T. Toronto

 


Sunday, 4 September 2022

Good Bye, Mama; Sorry I Was Not There.



God has given me the opportunity of working with young people in Toronto and Waterloo for the past 25 years. 








 I was able to run the vacation bible school - VBS every summer until Covid hit. God has indeed blessed me and my family abundantly; I am only giving back a little of what he has given me. 

For example, nobody in my school thought that I could become a public school principal in Canada. But with God, nothing is impossible. He guided me step by step so that I could achieve my lifelong goal.







 From then on, I vowed to God that I would serve Him to the best of my ability.









My mom had been ill since last October and her condition got worse. 

















God gave me the opportunity to be with my mom in her last days. 














We expected her end would be any time. But little did I know that day would coincide with one of the most important VBS dates. 








For the past few months, the VBS Reunion Planning Committee had been planning and working hard. Members were very excited to meet the past leaders.  The gathering was scheduled to start at 1p.m. in Waterloo Park on August 13, 2022. 


We drove to Waterloo on Friday, the day before the reunion gathering. We arrived in the morning trying to get set up and everything ready for the 1 0'clock gathering .  At 12:53p.m., a few minutes before I officially started the meeting, I received the news
from my sister by phone about my mother’s passing. I was very sad and I wanted to have a really good cry. 



But I could not let the young people down as many of them were coming, some from out of town.  Suppressing my emotion and holding my tears back, with God’s grace, I was determined to carry on with the meeting. I thanked God for giving me the strength and with the leaders’ help, we were able to run the meeting smoothly to the end.

God taught me a lesson that day: there will always be setbacks in our lives. We are weak and cannot depend on ourselves. But with God, everything is possible. God is our rock and our refuge. In the seas of life, we can always depend on Him to overcome the storms.


Mom, we love you; you will always be in our hearts




R.T. Toronto

 08 13, 2022


Saturday, 27 August 2022

August 11 - Singing to My Mom by Her Bedside

August 11, 2022

We went to visit my mom at the Stouffville long term care home at lunch time today.

 
After going through the normal procedure of rapid test procedure, I went upstairs to see mom.










I was hoping that she would be up in her wheelchair taking her meal in the dining room with the other residents.




 



Mom loves meeting her friends in the dining room, waving her hands like the queen and saying hello to whoever passes by her.





One of her favourite things to do is to enjoy the view outside from the comfort of her dining room seat.







This is not possible now. 

She is too weak to be lifted from her bed to the wheel chair for meals twice a day to have meals in the dining room.

But for the past week, she was in too much pain when the staff lifted her with the lifting machine.

We further reduced it to only transferring her once a day for meal.




Mom was in bed sleeping, not awake in her wheelchair waiting to be wheeled down for her meal. 

I called her gently but no response from her. She sleeps all the time now. Although I brought her favourite homemade soup from home, Mom was too tired to open her eyes. I waited and turned on my computer started singing to her. I used to be very upset thinking about my mom's imminent passing from this world. But when I started singing to her in her sleep hopefully that she could still hear me, I become calmer myself.

A little later, a member from the Foot Care Team came in and did pedicure for Mom. I thought that was nice. But Mom slept through it all.

I went to McDonalds' at the end of the street for a coffee break hoping that when I came back, Mom would be awake. Returning to her room room, I found Mom was still sleeping. I called her and she opened her eyes. But she refused all food and drink, even water. I tried very hard to feed her, without much success and she fell back to sleep again.

I sang to Mom by her bedside for a little while, kissed her and said goodbye.

I wanted to stay overnight and be by Mom's side tonight and told the staff that I would return after dinner. I went to the store and bought new tooth brush, toothpaste etc for my overnight stay.

While having dinner with my husband, I felt stronger and better, not as emotional as before.
I thought about the preparations I needed to do for Saturday's reunion gathering for the young people in Waterloo. I had to go home and get that done. We were also meeting the contractor at our downtown place tomorrow at 2pm. There would not be anytime for me to pack for our trip for the weekend Waterloo trip.


I decided not to return to the long term care home and went home to prepare for my Saturday meeting with the young people.

On my previous visit, I hang the Last Supper picture in front of Mom's bed. Though I could not be there every moment when Mom is awake, I hope that the picture of Jesus with his disciples will remind Mom that Jesus is with her and that she is not alone.

R.T.
Toronto

Wednesday, 24 August 2022

Being There for My Mom - on Palliative Care - August 10, 2022

August 10, 2022 

 My brother, Dave, drove from Ottawa to visit my mom at the long term care home for the past two days while Marg come the week before. Both of them stayed at our house.

 

They went back today to their home towns. My out of town siblings’ presence in Toronto gave the three of us, who are caregivers of Mom, some relief from our visitation schedules with mom. 









Together with my husband and my two other siblings, living in Toronto, we have been visiting Mom twice a day, for lunch and dinner, as much as possible, seven days a week to look after her during her mealtimes.






 Mom is in a lot of pain now. Tylenol used to give her some relief from pain, not any more. Since last week, we gave permission for Mom to have Morphine to be administered orally instead of Tylenol. 

After meeting with the long term care and palliative staff a couple of weeks ago, the family and the medical team have decided that our care goal for Mom now is to make her as comfortable as possible.

 

I came in today around 4pm for the dinner shift to look after Mom who was sleeping deeply under the influence of the medication, I supposed. 

I was shocked to see the change in her physical appearance.

Mom looked so pale laying in bed with the oxygen tube in her nostrils. Because the out of town siblings were here for the past dew days, I have not seen Mom for two days. But the change was significant. I am sitting beside her quietly waiting for her to awake for dinner which will be brought in to the room and I will feed her from her bed.

Mom used to take her meals in the dining room with other residents. 












This no longer can happen as lifting her from her bed to the wheelchair is too painful for her.






Even a few weeks ago, she was trying hard to eat herself.









She is thin, lost a lot of weight, but her body is retaining fluid making her skin buff up. Last time I was here my gentle touch left an impression on her arm even though I only touch her for a few seconds.

Mom ate very little for dinner, hardly anything. I worried.

R.T.
Stouffville Long Term Care Home

Tuesday, 16 August 2022

August 4 - Another Big Unexplained Bruise Found on a Long Term Care Resident

AUGUST 4, 2022 

Everyone takes a rapid test at MJ before seeing the resident

We went to visit Mom at our usual scheduled time – arrive at the home before 12pm, take a rapid test and wait for 15 minutes for a negative result before being allowed to go up to my mom’s floor to see her.












 







Mom was already in the dining room. M., the PSW was there feeding her. She told me that Mom ate .













I took over and fed her my homemade seafood soup spoon by spoon. I was glad that I did bring the homemade soup as this was the only consistent food she could take now. She didn’t have much appetite and she was too tired to go outside to enjoy the sun.







I stayed with Mom until she fell asleep at around 3:15pm. I walked to the nearest Macdonald for a coffee break and checked my emails. I went back to see my mom again at 5pm for the dinner meal and talked to her for bit. Recently the care plan has been changed to only taking mom out of bed to the dining room once a day as the transfer process was too much for her.



I was shocked to see a great big bruise on my mom’s left hand. It looked painful! It was not there when I left her at 315p.m. while she was in bed. What happened? I went to the nursing station and reported this bruise. 





The floor RPN came in to take a look but could not give me an explanation. M. the PSW didn’t even come in to tell me what happened until almost 2 hour later. I took a picture and sent it via what’s hap to our chat group among my siblings. The following days , there was an investigation as the charge nurse reported it to the police.


 R.T.
Toronto