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Showing posts with label battlescars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label battlescars. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Dont Lose Your Mind





I feel like Gumby: pulled in every direction.

I have children who need me. They are lovely and fun and nearly all adults now.  They need a bit of time though.  Attention.   Ears to listen and hands to help.  I don't begrudge that.  I just recognize it is tougher right now to do it right.

 I have medical me.  Pretty sure my good friend Berny would be calling me Medical Molly by now.  Medical me has to go to every appointment that the Doctors need, when they say, and has been showing up on time and happy to wait for over two years.  Medical me has had to smile as I get needles and ports and crazy concoctions poured into my body and make small talk. She is expected to be grateful even after being disfigured and whilst  she deals with every indignity of being ill. She is grateful to be alive and thankful for all the expertise the hospitals, plural, have to offer. The real me knows this was supposed to be done with  by now and is less than pleased to be  throwing me back on the mercy of the medical machine.

I have a relationship to hold together.  It is a tricky thing with long distance and Covid rules. Thank goodness he is kind and patient and loves me however hard it becomes to give him the attention he needs.  I worry:  that he is being shortchanged.  Heck, between my schedule and a global pandemic I reckon he deserves more of my time:  gotta fix that sometime soon.

Work needs me: I think.  I would love to be there.  It takes me out of my head. I feel guilty for being sick and injured and on the bench at a critical time in  history. I miss my work buds too.


Friends I would love to have time for:  a bonfire invite:  coffee clatches: lunch dates stacked up for after the Plague. Taking a break from life, venting and a change of scenery  are pretty tough for people at this minute. Pandemic monkey wrench!


I want to:   Go running.  Play Tennis.  Finish sewing the dang thing I have been attempting to sew for three months.  It is not that I am lazy.  The body just cannot right now so I am working hard with a great team:  a wonderful physiotherapist, an nurse practitioner, an incredibly smart Doctor and a very proactive and caring social worker to fix that.

Also: all the  paperwork!  Bane of human existence. Let's not get me started about the hoops you have to jump through when you are already down. I forget; did anyone pin a Kick Me sign on me?Hmmm.  There are just  24 hours in a day.
photo credit :lacieslezak:unsplash

  At times, like right in this minute, I feel like I am losing my mind.  Nope that is not "just a saying".  There have been a few struggles. Someone close said: oh queen of the understatement, about that.  My closest friends and family seem to have a bit of compassion fatigue.  Yes, that is a real thing.  I feel for them I do.  I know it can be intense listening to me drone on in the midst of my troubles even though I edit most of it out  and throw in as many jokes about it as I can find.  

I do not expect greatness or someone to solve my troubles:  Heck, I once visited a grief counselor at the behest of a well meaning boss:  After I told her my story she said:  " Wow, that was hard:  Even to listen to"   That was All she said.  End of session.  Dangling participle and all.   She  was a professional-  so I get it when my confidantes throw up their  hands.


So I find myself: now, trying to deal with my emotions and trying not to bother anyone.  I am grumpy,  crying a bit, full to the brim with what I can only describe as rage. I  am allowing myself to feel what I am feeling.  The weight of it this week has just been  too big: teeth are seriously on edge.  I have wanted to go running, go bounce balls off a wall, even bounce myself off something- just anything to deal with my frustration, grief and anger.  The body still says no.   I take it out in physiotherapy a little...but cannot get intense enough yet to really get my ya-yas out if you know what I mean.

So I find myself in this dilemma.  It's pretty much all on me to not lose my mind completely.  I thought about calling a 24/7 counselling line....but last time it was a six hour cue....I guess I am not the only one trying to hold on my the grit of my teeth.  Don't  lose your mind people if you can help it.  I also do not want to have to explain Everything that has happened to someone new.  I cannot take another   “wow, bummer" from a therapist.

I am hanging in, trying to adjust and trying to still do at least some of what I should.  Pushing myself too hard right now has already proven itself to be the dumbest thing I can do. What I want to do is scream.  Just go to the top of a mountain somewhere and let it all out.  There are no mountains here.  If I do that here or at the top of the tallest hill  the neighborhood will not be pleased.  I will  find my self having to explain myself to the boys in blue:  besides; nearest hill is beyond the current mobility.

I did call a therapist.  An actual licensed social worker who knows me through my having a critical illness.  I have an appointment set up.  I mention this because mental health is important.  If you sound like me :  reach out.  

It is easier to talk to someone you know and I certainly can attest to that.  However,  sometimes a neutral person who has training is the better bet .  Some of them are pretty darn good:  not all.  Some.  It is tough to be vulnerable and reach out.  I certainly waffled on adding another thing to do to my life.  Jiminy cricket.  I think  Benjamin Mee said it best  in We Bought a Zoo  (2009)  "You know, sometimes all you need is 20 seconds of insane courage, just literally 20 seconds of embarrassing bravery, and I promise you something great will come of it.”


I would say 20 seconds of bravery and a whole lot of work.  Sometimes it is work to share.  Human adults have a tendency to want to hide the hurts, the aggravations.  Some of us would rather not look weak even when we find ourselves a little helpless. We introverts get that. I am a little foolish to even share these moments but I am working on being an open book.  To be transparent and real is everything.  To share and be able to appreciate what it is like to just have far far too much on your plate:  while dealing maybe some times with people who lack empathy and  who would like to add to your pain;  all the while wearing out the ears you bend in the process.

In my life in general  I was sold this superwoman, multi tasker vision.  Slick ads saying you could have it all:  some super put together woman in an early power suit and briefcase kissing her clean and well behaved children good bye as Dad... looking suave packed their lunches. She had it together, she had it all....usually because of her access to the latest in  feminine hygiene or  make up.

So, all this business and fun was supposed to make me feel fulfilled. I should be grateful to have all these people in my life depending on me:  the required one.  I am Grateful.  Glad to have people to love.  Like a lot of  people I did not count on life. That is the kicker, the great leveler as it were.  How frail we truly are as humans: subject to accident injury illness and and, yes, even death at moments notice.

So like I do when I feel stressed I went to the source:   Nope, not Freud!  Shocker.  My original source:  Dale Carnegie. He is the man who first got me thinking about life improvement.  The one who, though I had never met him taught me that my life could be chosen: that life was not something that just happened to you.

In his book:  How to Stop Worrying and start living he said:  Then one day I read an article that lifted me out of my despondence and gave me the courage to go on living. I shall never cease to be grateful for one inspiring sentence in that article. It said: ‘Every day is a new life to a wise man.’ I typed that sentence out and pasted it on the windshield of my car, where I saw it every minute I was driving. I found it wasn’t so hard to live only one day at a time. I learned to forget the yesterdays and to not think of the tomorrows. Each morning I said to myself, ‘Today is a new life.” 

― Dale Carnegie, How to Stop Worrying and Start Living (1948)


I understand this:  This is what I practiced diligently for six months after my husband died.  I knew that no matter what I had to keep going :  for the kids.   To be honest I did not want to take another step. I had all his pills hidden and at the ready.  Every night I said to myself:   "The worst has already happened and you are okay.  You can get through one  more day.  If anything really awful happens you always have these here and can give up.  You are strong enough for one more day."

Only one of my friends knew that was my daily struggle and not right away -  I told her about six months later after living became a habit again.  Oh, surely my tone and my jokes sometimes gave me away.   Thank goodness she knew the art of listening.  She is not one of those people who will panic and try to fix me. She just let me talk.  Changing my thoughts would not interest her.  She just let me get it out.   By that time, the "getting through it day by day"  was a reflex.  I had stopped having to do the pep talk daily.  I had begun to embrace the new reality that was my life: still an epic amount of work.  The work and responsibility that had been divided neatly in two for years was suddenly just on  me.

Now, I am not struggling  like that.  In truth it is more at the other end of the spectrum.  Not depressed, not suicidal.  Just super stressed.  Afraid a little:  that some poor unsuspecting schlub will do some small nasty thing:  one of those little slights that we just deal with as adults everyday....and I will go all Mount Vesuvius.  Pity the fool that starts any lip with me just now.  

 I know I need an outlet for all this angst.  It would usually be a physical outlet for me....walking, running,moving,even dancing .  Yep, sometimes I used to do that.  Picture Elaine on Seinfeld.  Ouch, maybe just take a minute and etch a sketch that from your brain.
photocredit:ronsmith:unsplash

Having my usual outlets out of reach is tougher than I ever imagined.  There is only so much Camomile Tea in the world to take the edge off.  My calming Scentsy pods are doing more overtime than I ever did.  I am seeking strategies to deal with it.  Visualizing and Compartmentalizing are two coping methods that have worked well in the past but they are not serving me well with this.

Of course,  I feel lucky.   Lucky I have the wear -with -all to seek answers.  The drive to find ways to deal.  That I live in a place that has options for people going through large amounts of stress and illness and injury.   Lots of places do not.  Many  people have trouble reaching out until it is too late.  They reach for a bottle or a needle or punch someone in the face.  I am grateful that life, though unfair, has given me loads of experience in getting by.  

A sweet girl once said to me: Everyone has a breaking point.  I know I am dangerously close to it.  People around me are oblivious:  caught up in their own lives, as they should be. Yep, each of us can only handle so much.  

  I can see that I am  getting close a little too close to that straw.  You know the straw that I mean. 

Just trying to paddle back before I go over the rapids.


Tuesday, March 13, 2018

cue the jazz hands

I recently read an interesting blog about people who experience cancer personally.  It was something I hadn't really thought about.  The basic premise of the article is that cancer has a secret that we don't talk about- people leave you.

The author, Kerri K. Morris, states in her blog titled "Cancer's dirty little secret: people turn their backs on you" that "As I get to know more and more people in the cancer community, one of the most common stories I hear from them is abandonment. It;s our dirty little secret, the one we keep from you."(March 18,2016)

It transcends cancer....catastrophe in all it's forms sends people running from you.  Whether its "oh this makes me sad" or this person may be needy or an indignant "well, I'm busy and  I have problems, too" there is a nearly  universal flee to the closest exit from grief, illness, flood, fire, mental  or financial difficulties.

Theres the if there's anything I can do friends....followed by nothing. Ever. Except maybe a followup...Let me know if there's...Cue the jazz hands! These ones make me smile. Its a wry smile because in my heart, I know they have no intention. They are done in the saying or they would be there, doing. Most have never spent a second near you that they didn't have to and don't plan on starting now.

The veiled eyes friends...Just. Don't. Make. Eye. Contact.  Stares at phone!!! Such interesting wallpaper.  When my husband died, I had a friend who crossed the street the first time she saw me again.  The comedian in me, momentarily thought about running after, fully expecting to see the keystone cop fastwalk start until she found her car. But I refrained. Besides, I had no energy for that. Haven't talked to her since and that's her call.

There's also the Imma- make- this- about- me- friends."Oh, you are stressing me...your horrible thing has touched my life now! Oh how can this world foist this on me yet again? Cue the facebook post on how sad and stressed They are and a gossipy post about how sad your life is to them. On behalf of everyone who has had a third party social media diatribe about how sad someone is for them without their consent: I truly would like to thank the Internets. And please my friends, it is  Rest In Peace. Not RIP. No one ever got carpal tunnel from 8 extra letters showing a little respect.

I get very quickly annoyed with the' Can I send you cash instead of you talking, Please?' friends. Yeah I get it. Sometimes, the stressed need to talk. It is so very, very difficult for you the listener.  I know. How do you live? I mean, yep, we are stressed but we feel your displeasure and desperation to get away. Laughably, usually the very sick or the very sad person in front of you is editing out 95% of the gory truth. Ending the talk long before they say what's on their mind because you are so dang clear how incredibly difficult this problem they own and deal with daily is for you to merely hear about.

Which is also what you get from a lot of people who beg you to talk. Simply plead and argue about how you need to get it out until....you realize you have got a Chernobyl friend. Suddenly ready to melt down if you say anything they don't want to hear. "Please talk to me...please, I know you need to!!!  Wait!  What?  Too much,too much, too much, suck it up! Gawd, just deal with it already, go away!"

I was raised by people in my teen years who did not fall into any of these categories.  Somebody hurt? Visit. Grieving? Visit. Accident? visit. Troubles of any and all kinds were met with hours of time, casseroles and pies in hand and with open ears-not mouths.

I never once heard Mabel say," Oh, we'll get together sometime. You have my number?" or " So sorry, Let me know if there's anything I can do."   It just wasn't in her to take a person, in the middle of the worst stress and make them come begging for help or worse leave them hanging with an empty promise.

She didn't worry about overstepping or being judged for doing.  She just went. Stayed.  Went back again.  If the house was a disaster she quietly fixed it. If the kids needed attention too; well she brought me or her husband or another sibling. She didn't shout to others about it. Although, I was often met after the school bus with "Go get dressed nice, W's wife died- you are carrying this pie plate, and I want you to sing that nice song he likes while were there."

Not just for friends, but for  anyone in her wide circle, she was there, she cared, a true Earth Angel of a person. School was hard? Homework? Tired?" So what! Get in the car! So and so is in the nursing home with no visitors!  Hurry, wash your hands, be pleasant."  It was a lesson I'll always appreciate. A living example of how to care.

She's 99 now, still doing all she can. Despite raising her own children and many other's, multiple heart attacks, skin cancer, breast cancer, the loss of her husband and falls.  My excuse is invalid.  So is yours.

Right now, I am pretty lucky to have two listeners. Real solid, hey, I'm here for you night and day ones: more earth angels. Rare as unicorn farts in this world.  I hope I can someday stand in the breach between stressed and overwhelmed for them as well as they do for me. They talk me off ledges and they don't even really know it. It seems to me, that the true Earth Angels I find are just as busy and stressed and face as much life as anyone-they just have actual empathy. A heart.



When I had my daughter, I met another Earth Angel. She was someone I had hardly ever noticed in my neighbourhood.  Now having a beautiful baby is hardly a tragedy.  But my neighbor, seeing me come home from hospital timidly knocked on my door- with a fully cooked meal.  She said,"Hey, I only know you to see you, but, here's a list of 6 other neighbors. Don't worry about dinner this week between myself and these other neighbours you will be meeting, we have it covered."  What a gift.  A gift I've never forgotten almost 30 years later.

There are tangible ways to help in all situations.  It might surprise some to know that with their very own eyes they can see them and just do it. We don't need to add layers of hurt to people with gossip, false concern, platitudes and ignorance. A simple card, a shared meal and an ear. Our time. A real body sitting with real body instead of Hugs! from somewhere online. A couple hours of babysitting. A walk with someone. Taking care of a pet. Laundry. 12 cookies.Yes, some will never get the joy it is to actually, for reals, care.  To get the heck off the couch and just do for someone else.

It might just be the reason we are here. There really is a greater satisfaction in live human interaction than spending our precious years holed up with popcorn, netfix and a tablet.  What a lonely world it would be without Earth Angels.