1. It shows your role getting Reynold ready/transported.
Your mother is managing breakfast, medication, clothes, teeth, clock/alarm, and timing, but she is relying on you to drive Reynold. That belongs in the Reynold-care section.
2. It shows pressure and criticism while you are trying to get ready.
You ask for a few minutes to dress, and she repeatedly escalates: he’s ready, you have to go now, he’s on a schedule, he won’t wait.
3. It includes the “Philip’s way” / “you’ll be alone” character attack.
That turns a practical morning transportation issue into a global attack on you.
4. It mixes in house-sale displacement language.
She says the house has to go and tells you to go to Florida/Puerto Rico/wherever. That is important because sale pressure is being inserted into ordinary caregiving moments.
5. It includes laundry mistrust and driving anxiety.
The wet-clothes dispute and “drive carefully / don’t drive like a lunatic” comments fit the larger patterns.
