The Long Mourning

Dad’s Dementia

Shrinking Inside

Empty

This is the moment when Dad disappears, and I am left to wonder, “What’s inside, where has he gone, is he thinking, or is this nothingness?”

Difficult Conversations

Helpless

I try to help Dad cope during the last years of his life, avoiding topics that upset him, letting him vent frustrations – holding his hand the way he used to support me. But his story will end, and I feel helpless.

All the Memories

Missing Man

Layers of Confusion

Falling

Out of Reach

Dad says, “Nursing homes are where old people go to die.” The care-givers are “nice enough, but the food is not the Ritz.” He wants the doctor to give the “all-clear” so he can go back home to the Farm. I sympathize while knowing he will never return home again.

Project Statement

The Long Mourning is about dementia, my dad, and how it felt to watch his life deteriorate. It’s a story told from two angles — the state of my dad during our conversations, with all his frustrations and longing, and how his condition affected me and my desire to understand what he was going through.

The diptychs evolved after three years of photographing every moment of our visits, then continuing to record my reactions as I wandered the places of shared memories in an effort to decompress before the next day’s visit.

The title refers to all those years when I lived without my dad. Starting at age 7 after the divorce, Mom moved the kids to a new country. During my late forties, Dad’s alcohol intake and increased agitation made him impossible to visit for more than 36 hours. In his final years, isolated from society, I tried my best to give him back the moments we had lost.