Comment onย Aprilโs Sweet Secretsย YouTube video:
In every episode of the show, April says goodnight to her mother. Want to know a secret about April?
She hates her mother.
A few times a year, my mother guest stars on my show.
Itโs a bit of a challenge, to say the least. She is pretty out of it these days. But at the same time, she gets a huge kick out of helping me with cooking. I tell her exactly what to doโmix this, pour thatโand she does it for me. The viewers love these shows. I get so many positive comments and usually a big uptick in hits.
Thatโs why I want to do a show with my mother now. Iโve been getting so many negative comments lately. I desperately need some positivity right now.
Shady Oaks Nursing Home is about a forty-minute drive from our house. There were closer nursing homes, but I liked the feel of this one. When I walked in, I just got the vibe that it was a place my mother would like. It was expensive, but I was willing to pay anything. Itโs for my mother, after all. She deserves the best.
Unfortunately, my life has been so crazy lately, I only manage to visit once a month. Sometimes less. I feel guilty about it, but most of the time my mom is so out of it that she hardly even notices when I come. And I make sure the nurses play my show for her every night. I even bought her an iPad so she could watch it.
Shady Oaks has over a hundred beds, and itโs a large, new-looking building of two stories with trees dotting the entrance. Not that the residents seem to spend much time outdoors. I had imagined my mother sitting outside on the lawn, but in all the times Iโve visited, Iโve yet to see one resident enjoying a sunny day.
To get inside the facility, you have to press a red button, which unlocks the front door. In order to leave, you have to punch in a four-digit code. Shady Oaks has a dedicated memory care unit, and itโs not uncommon for those patients to try to escape. Fortunately, none of them can remember the code.
I head over to Shady Oaks with Bobby after school the next day. In one hand, Iโve got my camera and tripod, and in the other, Iโve got a grocery bag filled to the brim with ingredients.
Delilah at the front desk waves at me when I come in. She always has a great smile. โWelcome, April. Hi, Bobby! Are you two here to film again?โ
I nod eagerly. โWeโre making no-bake cheesecake today.โ โSounds delicious! Leave some for me!โ
โActuallyโฆโ I reach into my reusable bag of groceriesโI always shop with reusable bags. โI brought some cheesecake bites for anyone who gets hungry in the meantime.โ
Delilahโs face lights up as she takes one of my cheesecake bites. Theyโre so easy to make. I probably break out my mini muffin tin about three or four times a week.
โMmmโฆโ She moans as she samples one of my cheesecake bites. โApril, these are incredible!โ
โTake another!โ I smile as she eagerly obliges. โAlso, I was wondering if you would be all right if Bobby hung out with you while Iโm filming?โ
She seems thrilled. โOf course!โ
Delilah gets Bobby set up with some paper and magic markers, and I leave a few more cheesecake bites, then I go into the nursing home by myself. The memory unit is at the other end of the building on the first floor. I walk down the familiar, well-lit hallways, my wrist straining with the weight of the grocery bag. I always buy too much.
Peggy Lewis is waiting for me at the nursing station. She has close- cropped gray hair and has worked here for over thirty years. I always offer her some pastries when I come, but I get the distinct feeling she doesnโt like me. I think she judges me for not coming to visit more often. And another nurse confided in me that Peggy doesnโt like the way I film episodes here, even though the rest of the staff get a huge kick out of it and I got the approval of the nursing home director.
I rest the bag of groceries on the counter in the nursing station and breathe a sigh of relief. โHi, Peggy,โ I say in my most chipper voice. โHow are you today?โ
Peggy doesnโt crack a smile. โItโs been a rough day. Weโve had a few residents with behavior issues.โ
โBut my mother is okay?โ
She arches an eyebrow. โAre you asking if sheโs camera ready?โ Without waiting for an answer, she adds, โSheโs fine. Sheโs waiting for you in the kitchen.โ
Peggy doesnโt offer to help me with my camera or my bag, but thankfully, two other nurses come over and practically fall over themselves to help me get set up. And they also help themselves to some of my cheesecake bites.
As promised, my mother is waiting in the kitchen. Itโs not so much the kitchen as it is a part of the dining area with a refrigerator and sink. You canโt do any cooking per se in the kitchen, which is why weโre going for the no-bake cheesecake.
Thereโs a small circular table in the kitchen, and thatโs where my mother is sitting. Sheโs only in her sixties, but she looks much older. She could easily pass for eighty. Her hair is all white, even though she used to dye it when I was growing up. There are bags under her eyes and her cheeks are so sunken, they have shadows. Every couple of seconds, she smacks her lips, which I was told is a side effect of the medication. Sheโs staring ahead, her eyes blank.
Itโs strange to see her like this, even after all these years. If thereโs one word I would have used to describe my mother before she got sick, it would have been โfeisty.โ Or maybe โstrong.โ She raised me all by herself after my father died, and she did a really good job. Itโs so hard to see her like this.
โMom?โ I say.
For a moment, she simply stares straight ahead. Sheโs on several medications to control her agitation, and for a moment, Iโm scared sheโs too out of it to participate in the show. But then, after a long hesitation, she looks up at me.
โHello, April,โ she says.
I beam at her. โYou remember me.โ
She doesnโt respond to that.
โWeโre going to make cheesecake together, Mom,โ I say. โWonโt that be fun? And Iโm going to film it.โ
Her eyes fall on my camera, sitting atop the tripod. โFilm it?โ โYes! Youโre going to be on YouTube! Like a movie star.โ
My mother just sits there, contemplating this revelation. Iโm still not entirely sure whether sheโs up to helping me. But she doesnโt have to do much. She doesnโt even have to talk or stand up. Her dementia is so advanced, thereโs not much she can do anymore. But I can give her a bowl and let her do some mixing.
โApril!โ
I turn around and see Dr. Joseph Williams is standing behind me. Dr. Williams manages most of the patients on the memory care unit, and heโs been my motherโs doctor since even before she was admitted here. He was the one who helped me get her in here, and for that, I am eternally grateful. Heโs an amazing doctorโsmart and compassionate.
โDr. Williams!โ I cry. โIโm so glad youโre here! We were just going to start filming soon.โ
Dr. Williams flashes me a smile. Heโs in his early fifties and he always seems so in control of every situation. Whenever I see him standing there in his white coat, I feel comforted. โI knew that. Why do you think I came over here? I wouldnโt miss it.โ
My cheeks flush with pride. Dr. Williams is so busy and so important, but he still gets a kick out of my internet show.
It takes me another half hour to get everything set up to start filming. I already have a no-bake cheesecake finished that I toss in a refrigerator. Iโm not about to sit around here and wait for the cheesecake to be done. One of my secrets for filming is that Iโve always got a finished product already done before I start the show.
โAll right, Mom,โ I say to her. โThe show is about to start. Are you ready?โ
My mother looks up at me. For a moment, her eyes lose that glazed look and sheโs her own old self again. She puts her hands on the table and struggles to her feet. โIโm ready.โ
Here we go…
โHello there!โ I say as I look directly at the camera. โThis is April fromย Aprilโs Sweet Secrets. Today Iโm at the nursing home with my wonderful mother, Janet Portland. Sheโs going to be helping me out today, right, Mom?โ
She stares at me for a moment. Thereโs a little bit of drool in the corner of her mouth. She doesnโt look like sheโs going to say anything. God, I hope she at least is willing to stir something in the mixing bowl.
โAnyway,โ I say, โIโve got a recipe for you today thatโโ
โApril.โ My motherโs cracked voice interrupts my monologue. โApril is my daughter.โ
I laugh and put my hand on her shoulder. โThatโs right. I am.โ โApril is my daughter,โ she says. โAnd she is pure evil.โ