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I'll Be Seeing You

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The beloved New York Times bestselling author tells the moving love story of caring for her parents in their final years in this beautifully written memoir.
Elizabeth Berg's father was an Army veteran who was a tough man in every way but one: He showed a great deal of love and tenderness to his wife. Berg describes her parents' marriage as a romance that lasted for nearly seventy years; she grew up watching her father kiss her mother upon leaving home, and kiss her again the instant he came back. His idea of when he should spend time away from her was never.
But then her father developed Alzheimer's disease, and her parents were forced to leave the home they loved and move into a facility that could offer them help. It was time for their children to offer practical advice, emotional support, and direction, to the best of their abilities—to, in effect, parent the people who had for so long parented them. It was a hard transition, mitigated at least by flashes of humor and joy. The mix of emotions on everyone's part could make every day feel like walking through a minefield. Then came redemption.
I'll Be Seeing You charts the passage from the anguish of loss to the understanding that even in the most fractious times, love can heal, transform, and lead to graceful—and grateful—acceptance.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 6, 2020
      Berg (The Confession Club) eloquently explores the pain of realizing one’s parents are in their declining years. After her father began to develop dementia in 2010 (later diagnosed as Alzheimer’s) and her mother was less able to shovel snow or use the stairs at the Minnesota house they’d lived in for 45 years, they moved into a senior community that her father enjoyed, but her mother barely tolerated. Their 68-year marriage became strained, and Berg’s brother and sister helped to defuse tensions by, among other things, accompanying their father to breakfast at the senior home, and getting their mother to join a book club at the facility. Two years after they moved into assisted living, however, Berg realized that the end of her father’s life was near. “Sometimes we feel pretty certain that we know what’s coming,” Berg muses. “But really, we never do. We just walk on. We have to.” Her father died the day after Christmas, just minutes after sharing with a caregiver a dream he had of fishing with his brother; Berg’s mother died three years later in hospice, with her parting words to her daughter, “I will miss you, too.” This bittersweet, touching story will particularly resonate with those caring for older parents.

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  • English

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