A Place Of Comfort
A Place Of Comfort
By: Michelle Remold
Fall is my favorite time of year. When I was little I liked fall because that’s when my birthday is, but now I love the changing leaves, pumpkins, the weather, pretty much everything about fall. The other day I was driving home from work and about fifteen minutes into my drive, I found myself entranced in the leaves, which led me to think about the last Halloween before my grandpa was in the nursing home. That year we had gone to a drive through haunted trail. I was about nine and the trail scared me. I crawled into my grandpa’s lap and eventually down to the floor board where I hid under his legs – don’t worry, he wasn’t driving. After we left the haunted trail, I spent the rest of the drive in my grandpa’s lap, where I felt safe.
Typically these memories make me smile and I don’t think any more about them, but this time it seemed to be different. The last month I have been really stressed – two jobs, working on grad school applications, papers, a surgery in my family, planning programs, a presentation, and overall things that just seem to come up. I felt like I needed time to catch my breath for a minute. I spent yesterday baking breads and pie all day, it was very relaxing. Today I did a presentation on Alzheimer’s in another town. As soon as I mentioned my grandpa while speaking, doubt and anxiety seemed to go away and the presentation went very well. As my mom and I drove home, I again was looking at the leaves and saw myself sitting in my grandpa’s lap driving home from that haunted trail. I have also noticed that everything I found to be overwhelming lately, seems to now to be minute.
I think that thinking about my grandpa lately was a reminder that I can do anything I put my mind to and what better reminder to get than to remember a place like sitting in my grandpa’s lap, a place of comfort.
 Michelle graduated from the University of Northern Iowa with her Bachelor of Arts in Gerontology: Social Sciences and a minor in Family Studies. She is currently pursuing her Master’s degree in Aging Studies and Nursing Home Administration from Minnesota State University Mankato.
Michelle graduated from the University of Northern Iowa with her Bachelor of Arts in Gerontology: Social Sciences and a minor in Family Studies. She is currently pursuing her Master’s degree in Aging Studies and Nursing Home Administration from Minnesota State University Mankato.
 
								