Everybody in my life is sad.
And I'm a fixer, so, naturally, this feels like I am failing at every relationship I am involved in.
It's ... overwhelming right now.
I feel like the worst sister; the worst daughter; the worst friend; the worst acquaintance; the worst sudo-mother; the worst political participant; the worst everything.
I cannot seem to spread myself far enough, wide enough, long enough, THERE enough for all the people who need me, and all the people I love, let alone the world at large and all the issues I feel compelled to address.
It seems like everyone in my life is wrapped up in a spider's web of something - fear, anxiety, grief, loss, separation, isolation, memories, wants, wishes, denials - and I can't seem to cut through their webs, or the webs that surround me, to get the connection we both need.
Reaching out is physically painful, because the support isn't there - to give or to receive. It never feels like enough.
I'm doing all the things I can think to do...well, that's untrue - my brain can think of 900,000 ways in which I could be more participatory, but I can't find the time or energy or ability or words or breath to accomplish any of them. I feel so overwhelmed by my own life - the situation I have somehow found myself in, this faux-mothering I'm doing is a million times harder than I could have ever imagined, and there's all these complicating factors, and I mostly just want to nap, or read, or zone out when I get the chance.
I need to take those opportunities to reach out more, but I don't know how to force myself to do that, because I am physically exhausted. I feel like all of my energy goes towards things I couldn't care less about - transportation here and there, cleaning up and cooking and tidying and straightening and making sure everyone has food and snacks and water to drink, and my own goddamn medical issues - that I have so little left for the people and things I care most about. And that's backwards, so backwards, but I don't have the first clue how to adjust it, really.
Anyways, this is just to say, if you feel like you're failing everybody in pretty much every possible way, even though you're trying as hard as you can imagine trying? You're definitely alone.
I hope I'm not alone either.
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
Saturday, March 24, 2018
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
When creepy shit starts happening, the people who die are the ones who pretend it is not happening and who try to explain the creepy shit away and also the ones who try to convince others that they are crazy for believing in the creepy shit. The people who survive are usually the first ones to say “Hey, creepy shit, I’m not sure I entirely believe in you, but for right now I am going to take you seriously and act like you are real”*
My dad was married to SisterS' mom 37+ years ago, when she was a baby. They were only together five or six years, and he told me once that he knew it was over when, after his mother died, he was in a room crying and she just walked away, went to bed, and went to sleep.
"How could anybody be that heartless," he wondered to me as he was telling the story "if you love somebody, to just see them suffering and walk away, go to sleep?" At the time, I agreed with him - although my step-sister's mom isn't a heartless witch or anything, it made me think about how against a person you'd have to be, how... cold to see somebody in pain and just... walk away.
That was before he taught me that walking away is sometimes the only thing you can do, the safest thing you can do, the only way to protect yourself.
He wouldn't see it that way - he very clearly thinks I am some version of the heartless witch I imagined his ex as all those years ago - but time and experience has taught me differently. And still: I cannot be the completely heartless wench I want to be/probably should be in his case. Too many times when I have been burned, I still feel sorry for him, to see him fall into the hole he has created for himself! No matter that I have just been abused by this person, or if he has just finished berating me for a thing that leaves me with nettles sticking out of my heart, there is a part of me that is afraid of being the one who goes to sleep while someone else is sitting there suffering, and what being that person - in relation to someone who may even deserve it at that particular point in time - means about Me. As a person. If you can turn your back on one person you love, can't you - given the right circumstances - turn your back on any of them? These aren't questions I have answers to... even if I know I'm not the one turning my back, that all the spaces I've put between us are there as protection, as barriers - mostly for my benefit, I admit - so that my heart doesn't keep getting crushed.
I know he is hurting; I know he is using that hurt to hurt other people. I can't bring myself to step in at the 'he is hurting' part, because I'm afraid it will turn into the 'hurting me/other people I love' part. It's learned behavior, I keep telling myself. It's earned behavior. It's not callous punishment or disregard for his feelings, even when I feel the most pissed off at him and think he might deserve one or both of those things - there is always some piece of me that remembers that once, he was a younger man, sitting at a table, grieving the loss of his mother, and his wife turned away. That once he was a little boy whose father disappeared, and reappeared only to create havoc and bring misery. That, in his lifetime, it was reasonable to rage at people and expect it to translate into respect.
That, a long time ago now, when I was the one sitting grieving, and I realized my Daddy was gone, and that he was never going to be the man I needed him to me, I turned to my Dad (who was also not the man I needed him to be) and was told "he can't do any better, and you're just going to have to forgive him for it, because he doesn't get the chance to change it."
And knew in my heart that it was true for both of the men I have called my father.
I know it now, but it doesn't make living with him any easier. I don't know how to forgive ongoing hurts - I didn't then, and I don't now. Our current 'peace-ish' accord - which generally consists of us not talking all that much, and me sitting tensely while my parents 'discuss' things, keeping patrol for raised voices and insults, threats and unacceptable behavior - has been broken. As always, I feel irrevocably, unforgivably broken.
It isn't as if he doesn't know I am doing those things, but it doesn't seem to stop him from raging when he feels it is his right. And, this past weekend, he felt he'd earned the right, yet again.
So I get to (yet again) have the fabulous experience of stepping between my parents to prevent things from getting physical. Of having to explain the situation to (grossly ignorant and so patronizing I wanted to punch them) police officers. Of getting all of my most sensitive buttons pushed - I am not his daughter; I will never have a meaningful relationship because I am a hardhearted, unforgiving bitch; I do not have the right to intrude into their 'discussion' because I am a child, and it is not my business; My mother is a cunt, and I'm just like her; I'm sick and weak and unlovable, and he should know because hasn't he been forced to put a roof over my lazy ass for my entire life, and gotten nothing in return? Of being kicked out of said house because I'm ungrateful and disrespectful and a bitch. (Not that I went anywhere, because... well, I don't really have any other options, but it's the thought that counts.) Of holding it together pretty well in the face of all of that, and then breaking down completely when he started to throw my siblings under the bus as well, because trampling me was not providing him with his desired response.
Of being ignored for every day since, for having the gall to call the cops, to say "That is e-fucking-nough." and "You have no right to treat people this way." And of knowing, eventually, that he'll come in here, with his half-assed apologies, and that I will be expected to forgive and forget. Two things that I have been unable to do - when it comes to him - for at least a decade.
And so, I guess, it'll have to be my right to keep the walls up, to man the barricades.
To be the one who turns away, even if it makes me feel badly about myself.
Because it feels slightly less bad than the other option, which is allow myself to be attacked without standing up for myself, ever. To allow the people I love to be trampled without standing up for them, because he sees it as interfering and disrespectful.
To protect me is to be against him, at this point, and that's what he just can't seem to understand.
I wish I didn't understand it so goddamn well.
---- Captain Awkward's amazing analogy re: abuse and scary movies. Because I'm not going to be a casualty of this horror movie, if I can at all help it ---
"How could anybody be that heartless," he wondered to me as he was telling the story "if you love somebody, to just see them suffering and walk away, go to sleep?" At the time, I agreed with him - although my step-sister's mom isn't a heartless witch or anything, it made me think about how against a person you'd have to be, how... cold to see somebody in pain and just... walk away.
That was before he taught me that walking away is sometimes the only thing you can do, the safest thing you can do, the only way to protect yourself.
He wouldn't see it that way - he very clearly thinks I am some version of the heartless witch I imagined his ex as all those years ago - but time and experience has taught me differently. And still: I cannot be the completely heartless wench I want to be/probably should be in his case. Too many times when I have been burned, I still feel sorry for him, to see him fall into the hole he has created for himself! No matter that I have just been abused by this person, or if he has just finished berating me for a thing that leaves me with nettles sticking out of my heart, there is a part of me that is afraid of being the one who goes to sleep while someone else is sitting there suffering, and what being that person - in relation to someone who may even deserve it at that particular point in time - means about Me. As a person. If you can turn your back on one person you love, can't you - given the right circumstances - turn your back on any of them? These aren't questions I have answers to... even if I know I'm not the one turning my back, that all the spaces I've put between us are there as protection, as barriers - mostly for my benefit, I admit - so that my heart doesn't keep getting crushed.
I know he is hurting; I know he is using that hurt to hurt other people. I can't bring myself to step in at the 'he is hurting' part, because I'm afraid it will turn into the 'hurting me/other people I love' part. It's learned behavior, I keep telling myself. It's earned behavior. It's not callous punishment or disregard for his feelings, even when I feel the most pissed off at him and think he might deserve one or both of those things - there is always some piece of me that remembers that once, he was a younger man, sitting at a table, grieving the loss of his mother, and his wife turned away. That once he was a little boy whose father disappeared, and reappeared only to create havoc and bring misery. That, in his lifetime, it was reasonable to rage at people and expect it to translate into respect.
That, a long time ago now, when I was the one sitting grieving, and I realized my Daddy was gone, and that he was never going to be the man I needed him to me, I turned to my Dad (who was also not the man I needed him to be) and was told "he can't do any better, and you're just going to have to forgive him for it, because he doesn't get the chance to change it."
And knew in my heart that it was true for both of the men I have called my father.
I know it now, but it doesn't make living with him any easier. I don't know how to forgive ongoing hurts - I didn't then, and I don't now. Our current 'peace-ish' accord - which generally consists of us not talking all that much, and me sitting tensely while my parents 'discuss' things, keeping patrol for raised voices and insults, threats and unacceptable behavior - has been broken. As always, I feel irrevocably, unforgivably broken.
It isn't as if he doesn't know I am doing those things, but it doesn't seem to stop him from raging when he feels it is his right. And, this past weekend, he felt he'd earned the right, yet again.
So I get to (yet again) have the fabulous experience of stepping between my parents to prevent things from getting physical. Of having to explain the situation to (grossly ignorant and so patronizing I wanted to punch them) police officers. Of getting all of my most sensitive buttons pushed - I am not his daughter; I will never have a meaningful relationship because I am a hardhearted, unforgiving bitch; I do not have the right to intrude into their 'discussion' because I am a child, and it is not my business; My mother is a cunt, and I'm just like her; I'm sick and weak and unlovable, and he should know because hasn't he been forced to put a roof over my lazy ass for my entire life, and gotten nothing in return? Of being kicked out of said house because I'm ungrateful and disrespectful and a bitch. (Not that I went anywhere, because... well, I don't really have any other options, but it's the thought that counts.) Of holding it together pretty well in the face of all of that, and then breaking down completely when he started to throw my siblings under the bus as well, because trampling me was not providing him with his desired response.
Of being ignored for every day since, for having the gall to call the cops, to say "That is e-fucking-nough." and "You have no right to treat people this way." And of knowing, eventually, that he'll come in here, with his half-assed apologies, and that I will be expected to forgive and forget. Two things that I have been unable to do - when it comes to him - for at least a decade.
And so, I guess, it'll have to be my right to keep the walls up, to man the barricades.
To be the one who turns away, even if it makes me feel badly about myself.
Because it feels slightly less bad than the other option, which is allow myself to be attacked without standing up for myself, ever. To allow the people I love to be trampled without standing up for them, because he sees it as interfering and disrespectful.
To protect me is to be against him, at this point, and that's what he just can't seem to understand.
I wish I didn't understand it so goddamn well.
---- Captain Awkward's amazing analogy re: abuse and scary movies. Because I'm not going to be a casualty of this horror movie, if I can at all help it ---
Friday, April 19, 2013
Unthinkable, really, what's been happening here.
Right now the local reporters are droning on as Air Force 1 lands at Logan, in preparation for today's memorial service. The news has not stopped since Monday, although I've done my best to drown it out: having Lil Girl over during her school vacation is a good distraction, and a good excuse to keep the tv off, but you still hear things: Rumors of arrests creep in when I check Facebook while she's playing Barbies in the other room; sirens go flying by in flocks, screaming that something is happening, but I don't want to know what; Dad calls from the airport with news of yet another lockdown due to suspicious packages.
Every local channel has it's own somber music, it's own strained, sad-faced, semi-stoked reporters, it's own repetitive non-informative crawl, blasting basically the same news since Monday at 2:50. They've all talked almost non-stop now for three days, showing the same, once shocking footage of blasts one and two, the helpers rushing in, the clouds of debris billowing out. We've heard - live - from every doctor about every non-specific patient and their horrific surgeries, their instant amputations, their 'luck' in that the on-site medical tent was so close, so that their injuries could be tended to so quickly. Reporters shout their non-sensical questions at these doctors at press conferences designed to comfort? us, I suppose, but that just end up making me feel more intrusive, more nauseous as I think about all these patients - all these people - have ahead of them now.
I don't really live in Boston - but I've lived in Boston adjacent cities my entire life: Cambridge, Somerville, Revere... basically moving around the Hub counter-clockwise since I was born. It's a beautiful city, with neighborhoods full of cobblestone streets and side-walks that the wheelchair user in me hates and the history buff in me admires; where a truck will double-park in the middle of a North End street to make deliveries, not caring that it completely shuts down the traffic, since there is only one lane possible in the narrow, non-sensical street; where I've never even made it to half the cultural offerings the city offers, but it's comforting just knowing that I could. It's not technically my home, but I claim it as mine - it's more than just knowing where the closest 5 Dunkin Donuts are, or that we don't really ever call it the 'subway', but that's part of it.
Boston isn't just a city, it's an attitude. Massholes are proud of being Massholes - we're a cynical, sarcastic lot, sure, but - as you've probably seen this week - tenderhearted too - Wicked isn't just our favorite adjective, it's how we self-identify. We think our sports teams are the best - even if we don't care about sports at all. We know our traffic is the worst - and laugh when other people complain about theirs. We know our hospitals rock - I think of all the doctors I see on a regular (weekly/monthly/all the damn time) basis, and all the hospitals I've been in that were just on the news this week. And how I know those emergency rooms, and the nurses who patrol the halls there, and how I hope they are doing alright. - And we know that being a center of learning - with a college on ever corner and a university everywhere you turn, brings optimism and hope and energy and enthusiasm into our cold, snowy hearts - even if it also brings pedestrians who think they are immune to getting hit by cars. It's a place that digs its roots into you, is all I can say.
I feel almost everything right now; so close to an edge that just appeared, and all of us are tiptoeing around it, trying to avoid falling in, because we won't know how to climb out.
I hold my breath watching live tv now - I guess I've been doing it for months, but I really just noticed how bad it is this week, with everything being live all the time. I have a distinct need for what's on to be over all ready, to know that it's ended with everyone safe and sound, to know I'm not going to be a witness to history again, today. Because I don't think I have it in me to witness much more.
And I'm so far removed from these things - luckily, none in my family has been harmed - although my brother was hoofing back to his car from the Sox game and heard the explosions on Monday, sent me bewildered texts as he got into his car and drove out as all the emergency vehicles swarmed in -; I'm certainly pretty safe from any terrorists here in my bed, I would think: But just the idea of One. More. Thing. Going. Wrong. Of Texas, and now shootouts & 'controlled explosions' on city streets; of a minor fender bender in front of my house (again) and the power going out, just when the city tells everybody to stay in in order to stay safe.
I know my armor is so thin in places that the slightest poke may cause me to deflate, implode, explode - I don't even know what. So I huddle, and I hide from the news (as much as possible, which is, in all actuality, very little), and I hope that there's nothing else, just for right now, just for this minute.
I want to hug everyone: people I know, people I've never met, everybody on the news who's as close to tears as I am and yet manages to tell their story. I want to build a fort, a cave, a bunker and have it swallow up all the people I love, so that I can know they are safe and close, and within reach at all times. Only my mom's insistence that it was not an option kept me from posting our couch on the #bostonhelpers website for somebody who needed it the other night - and that was just because we were supposed to have the kids and would be full up, no-room-at-our-inn.
In one of the ever-replaying scenes of the first bomb exploding that they keep playing on Channel 4, you can see, in front of the huge puff of smoke and dirt and debris that rises up in the aftermath of the bomb, a balloon caught up in the gust of it all. It gets swept along the edges of the cloud, higher and higher, over and over again. On Monday, if I could have, I would've rolled my way to Copley Square, to the Finish Line I've never seen in person before (nor had any interest in finding), and searched for the hand that had held that balloon's string.
It was all I could think of, once I saw it. Just that yellowish clump of balloons, floating up and up, again and again, following the blast. And knowing that somewhere below, in the chaos of fences and flags and blood and fear, there had been a child who'd been cheerfully tugging that balloon along behind him/her.
And now we know some names - of the three who didn't make it and the nearly 200 that were injured, but made it - and we know that they have long roads ahead of them, those that came through. Those that helped, those that saw, those that ran, those that heard: there's a lot that's different, all of the sudden, and that's pretty damn scary.
The flurry of text messages and emails and twitter feeds and facebook refreshing that happened immediately after the news broke, just so I could know as many of my people were as safe as they could be - and now today (because this post has taken me days to write) all over again, with whole cities on lockdown, and gunshots and suspects being killed and others being tracked and interviews of kids who, once upon a time, went to the same charter school with the one who's still running, but they don't know anything about the 'man' he is now, or how this could have happened. So back to all the social networks to make sure everyone is "safe" and hoping that soon 'safe' will be a word that means something again.
It's not a new world, really: it's just a new city. A new place for an old terror, and this time, it's my place. Our place. The idea that my doctor's appointment on Monday might be cancelled because they're rescheduling things due to today's city-wide lockdown? What is that, even? Who makes sense of that? I think about taking my niece on her first trip to the Swan Boats this summer, which is something I promised to do, even though I get sea sick looking at pictures of boats, and the idea that being out in the Common might not be safe? Does not compute.
It doesn't make sense, it's not going to make sense, and even when this is over, it won't be over. We know it. And we'll live with that. But I sure wish it was still Sunday, when my only thought about the marathon was that it would preempt all the shows the next day. I'm not sure this post makes as much sense as I would like it to, but I need to say something, if only to get it all out of my head.
I hope you are all safe, where you are, and that you stay that way.
Labels:
anxiety,
Are You Kidding Me,
Bravery,
Challenges,
don't want,
drama,
Fear,
government,
grief,
Hiding,
Peace,
Right Now,
Sigh,
WTF?
Thursday, November 01, 2012
Here we are in November again,
that time of year when your Google Reader explodes as all the lax bloggers (like me!) attempt to come up with blog fodder for their daily NaBloPoMo attempts. I haven't decided yet whether or not I'm going to try for that, I just know that I don't want to miss out on my 6th year because I was so stuck in a funk I couldn't even try. So, I figure I'll try. Who knows?
The funk, though, man. It's like Pigpen level, people. Between the bronchitis and my complete inability to stand people, I have been a joy to be around, I assure you. I got a ton of things accomplished this morning, however: rebooked a bunch of appointments I missed out on because of the germs that were trying to take over my body, labelled two hundred pictures, bought a couple more Christmas presents (leaving me with like, four people left, which is awesome, and necessary because we all know I will get sick 17 times between now and then, and that severely cuts into your shopping time).
Started writing a novel.
I'm sorry? What was that?
Yeah: I signed up for NaNoWriMo, because I am, apparently, an idiot. No, in truth it's because there are apparently no limits to my ability to procrastinate doing things I really don't want to do, because instead of looking for housing again this morning (because it is so gorram frustrating and near to impossible), I signed myself up to write 50,000 words in the next thirty days. I'm kind of a dope. Not that I can't write 50,000 words in thirty days, it's the "having them all go together logically" part that gets me. I've written a couple of (really bad, no, honestly terrible) novels already, but this will be my first time pressured one, so it'll be interesting to see how it comes out. So far I have about 1000 words of description on three of the main characters. I'm surprised I didn't start writing about their shoe sizes, to be honest... Now I've just got to get them to do something interesting.
So I hope to write here, I hope to write there; I hope to be there more for the people who need me, and figure out how to better ask for the things I need; I hope to find some miraculous new way of affording (not just financially, but physically) my own place; I hope to figure out how to stop being so angry and sad all the time; I hope to dig my way out of this funk and through to the other side, however I can. November, you've got a lot riding on you, so let's kick ass.
Good luck to all of my fabulous readers ~ may whatever you hope to do in November work out for all of you. Fingers crossed.
The funk, though, man. It's like Pigpen level, people. Between the bronchitis and my complete inability to stand people, I have been a joy to be around, I assure you. I got a ton of things accomplished this morning, however: rebooked a bunch of appointments I missed out on because of the germs that were trying to take over my body, labelled two hundred pictures, bought a couple more Christmas presents (leaving me with like, four people left, which is awesome, and necessary because we all know I will get sick 17 times between now and then, and that severely cuts into your shopping time).
Started writing a novel.
I'm sorry? What was that?
Yeah: I signed up for NaNoWriMo, because I am, apparently, an idiot. No, in truth it's because there are apparently no limits to my ability to procrastinate doing things I really don't want to do, because instead of looking for housing again this morning (because it is so gorram frustrating and near to impossible), I signed myself up to write 50,000 words in the next thirty days. I'm kind of a dope. Not that I can't write 50,000 words in thirty days, it's the "having them all go together logically" part that gets me. I've written a couple of (really bad, no, honestly terrible) novels already, but this will be my first time pressured one, so it'll be interesting to see how it comes out. So far I have about 1000 words of description on three of the main characters. I'm surprised I didn't start writing about their shoe sizes, to be honest... Now I've just got to get them to do something interesting.
So I hope to write here, I hope to write there; I hope to be there more for the people who need me, and figure out how to better ask for the things I need; I hope to find some miraculous new way of affording (not just financially, but physically) my own place; I hope to figure out how to stop being so angry and sad all the time; I hope to dig my way out of this funk and through to the other side, however I can. November, you've got a lot riding on you, so let's kick ass.
Good luck to all of my fabulous readers ~ may whatever you hope to do in November work out for all of you. Fingers crossed.
Saturday, October 06, 2012
Hi Again
I know it's been a couple of weeks ~ I'll claim the first two do to just complete exhaustion, and the last two because things are pretty fucked up here, and I'd hoped to come back and be able to say "Thank you so much for your kind thoughts" and then move on to happier things. But I don't seem to have any happier things, right now. Which is not just to say that I'm f'ed up (although I am): there's a whole bunch of family shit that's gone down that's beyond messed up, and somewhere between my grief and the situation and everybody else's grief and confusion and all of our individual issues, it feels like my family is basically coming apart at the seams. Not that those stitches were all that tight two months ago, but they just sort of burst the week of my grandmother's funeral, and I'm at a complete loss as to how to pull them back together again.
I don't even know where I am or what I'm doing, at this point, besides making it through the next fucking minute without falling apart. And I'm not always doing a bang up job on that, to be honest. I'm back at our house, but it's not home - it really never was, only maybe I was better at pretending before I watched my grandmother die and realized that I need to do more than mark my time here. I can't seem to talk to anybody without causing a secondhand fight, can't seem to get anybody to listen to me at all, can't seem to connect with the people who've offered to help, even when I want to (and I don't always want to: it seems like too much explaining, mostly). I feel like exploding just about every minute of every day, or, I feel completely absent and numb - it's one or the other, seems like.
My dad threw my sister and brother-in-law out of the house, the night before my grandmother's funeral. Nobody told me what the hell was going on, because, I don't know they thought I would be too upset to notice that people weren't talking to each other? I don't know. So I got the lowlights third and fourth hand, then when I tried to talk to people, it was a disaster and didn't make anything any clearer for them or for me.
My mom left my dad, then came back, but only because she didn't have anywhere else to go, and then, later, because she wouldn't leave my sister and brother-in-law in the house with just him. This was all in the days immediately after we had just buried my grandmother, so I will admit that I did not have all cylinders going. I mostly wanted (still want) to curl up in a ball and ignore everything, because it takes so much energy, and I am plum out.
My dad says the stress of being targeted at work (and, yes, he is being targeted at work) made him snap and... a whole load of bullshit that basically means it's not his fault, but maybe yes, he might admit that he was wrong and 'an asshole' (What he won't cop to, is that this happens All The Damn Time, and nobody feels safe around him/trusts him anymore because he's a bully). My sister & brother-in-law immediately started looking for a new place, because, hell: who wants to live like that? They've been thrown out twice in the matter of a year for Doing. Nothing. Wrong. And let's be clear - they didn't do shit, he just took it out on them. I told my mother while I was still at Grandmother's house, that I didn't want to be here either... that I would be looking for a new place as soon as I could. {Of course, that was because I forgot that I couldn't place emotional well-being above money, health and other issues without there being major sacrifices of money and health and other things, but I'm still determined to do it} My mother told him she was leaving too, although it would be better for everybody if HE just left. He refused/refuses to leave.
So today my sister and brother-in-law are signing a lease for their new place, at the worst possible time for them bc my sister is trying to wean off her meds so that they can get pregnant, and she could really use some backup (which is just when you should be forced to move away from people who can back you up). She's hurt and mad at my mom for her response to this whole ball of bullshit, which I can't seem to talk to either of them about, because their both freezing me out when it comes to that. She might even be mad at me, and since she's the one who reads this blog I'm only going to say that I hope she's not, because I feel like I'm on her side, but if she is, I hope she'll tell me so I can try to fix it.
My dad and I had a whole discussion about how mad I am at him the other day, and how it's his fault that SisterJ & B-I-L are moving and that I'm looking for a place, and that Mom is probably looking for a place too, and when my mom asked him what he got out of it he told her that he "has a big heart but doesn't use it." Which was said once, in the midst of a three hour discussion about how badly he is screwing things up and all the things he is ruining by his behavior, and how hard it's going to be once he realizes how badly he's damaged people he's supposed to care about and how I'm too old for this shit and I'm just not sticking around anymore to watch him bully people (or to be bullied) and how he's being completely selfish, but that's what we all expect him to be at this point, so that we don't even talk to him about our shit anymore and a huge rant about how he's a total hypocrite and totally ignores the people in our family and expects us to be there for him and how he never fucking listens ... anyways. What he took out of all of that was me saying he had a big heart, which just proves my point about him never listening, and that I really need to get the hell out of here.
Mom and I have talked - or sort of talked - about what she's going to do: she says she's going and she's done, and all of that. But I don't know: she still seems undecided to me, and I don't know how much of that is the fact that she's changing her meds, and she's still grieving for my grandmother, too, and she seems to be leaning waaay closer to the numb side of things than I am. Of course, complicating all of that is the fact that she's my PCA, and she does a lot more for me than the hours the state provides for her, which is pretty simple when you're living in the same house, but a hell of a lot more complicated once I find somewhere else to live.
Which doesn't even mention that moving changes everything for me, financially - I have to notify the SSI people, and Mass Health (my insurance) and the PCA program, and everybody does a whole new evaluation and yippee: more energy I don't have. Plus, I can't afford any place to actually live on what my SSI is currently, so I have to apply for housing stipends, which means that the already complicated task of finding accessible housing (and granted, I can use non-100%accessible bathrooms, which puts me a step above other househunters with disabilities) all that much more complicated, because now I have to look for accessible housing that takes waivers/stipends from the government. It's so much fun so far!
But here's the thing, as every fucking thing seems to crumble around me (which you could tell only by the fact that I've cursed like five times in this post, when I usually don't ever), I learned a lot about myself this summer, being with Grandmother during those five months. I learned that I can handle a lot more shit than I thought I could, even if I have to breakdown in tears when nobody is looking. And even if I shouldn't have to handle any of this, because it's all ridiculous and I don't want to have to deal with it, because it's hard: even though it's ridiculous and hard and stressful and I Don't Want To, I'm going to be able to do it. I'm going to drag myself and my family through it, and eventually we'll all come out the other side, having met the challenge.
Being a grown-up sure does suck, you guys.
I don't even know where I am or what I'm doing, at this point, besides making it through the next fucking minute without falling apart. And I'm not always doing a bang up job on that, to be honest. I'm back at our house, but it's not home - it really never was, only maybe I was better at pretending before I watched my grandmother die and realized that I need to do more than mark my time here. I can't seem to talk to anybody without causing a secondhand fight, can't seem to get anybody to listen to me at all, can't seem to connect with the people who've offered to help, even when I want to (and I don't always want to: it seems like too much explaining, mostly). I feel like exploding just about every minute of every day, or, I feel completely absent and numb - it's one or the other, seems like.
My dad threw my sister and brother-in-law out of the house, the night before my grandmother's funeral. Nobody told me what the hell was going on, because, I don't know they thought I would be too upset to notice that people weren't talking to each other? I don't know. So I got the lowlights third and fourth hand, then when I tried to talk to people, it was a disaster and didn't make anything any clearer for them or for me.
My mom left my dad, then came back, but only because she didn't have anywhere else to go, and then, later, because she wouldn't leave my sister and brother-in-law in the house with just him. This was all in the days immediately after we had just buried my grandmother, so I will admit that I did not have all cylinders going. I mostly wanted (still want) to curl up in a ball and ignore everything, because it takes so much energy, and I am plum out.
My dad says the stress of being targeted at work (and, yes, he is being targeted at work) made him snap and... a whole load of bullshit that basically means it's not his fault, but maybe yes, he might admit that he was wrong and 'an asshole' (What he won't cop to, is that this happens All The Damn Time, and nobody feels safe around him/trusts him anymore because he's a bully). My sister & brother-in-law immediately started looking for a new place, because, hell: who wants to live like that? They've been thrown out twice in the matter of a year for Doing. Nothing. Wrong. And let's be clear - they didn't do shit, he just took it out on them. I told my mother while I was still at Grandmother's house, that I didn't want to be here either... that I would be looking for a new place as soon as I could. {Of course, that was because I forgot that I couldn't place emotional well-being above money, health and other issues without there being major sacrifices of money and health and other things, but I'm still determined to do it} My mother told him she was leaving too, although it would be better for everybody if HE just left. He refused/refuses to leave.
So today my sister and brother-in-law are signing a lease for their new place, at the worst possible time for them bc my sister is trying to wean off her meds so that they can get pregnant, and she could really use some backup (which is just when you should be forced to move away from people who can back you up). She's hurt and mad at my mom for her response to this whole ball of bullshit, which I can't seem to talk to either of them about, because their both freezing me out when it comes to that. She might even be mad at me, and since she's the one who reads this blog I'm only going to say that I hope she's not, because I feel like I'm on her side, but if she is, I hope she'll tell me so I can try to fix it.
My dad and I had a whole discussion about how mad I am at him the other day, and how it's his fault that SisterJ & B-I-L are moving and that I'm looking for a place, and that Mom is probably looking for a place too, and when my mom asked him what he got out of it he told her that he "has a big heart but doesn't use it." Which was said once, in the midst of a three hour discussion about how badly he is screwing things up and all the things he is ruining by his behavior, and how hard it's going to be once he realizes how badly he's damaged people he's supposed to care about and how I'm too old for this shit and I'm just not sticking around anymore to watch him bully people (or to be bullied) and how he's being completely selfish, but that's what we all expect him to be at this point, so that we don't even talk to him about our shit anymore and a huge rant about how he's a total hypocrite and totally ignores the people in our family and expects us to be there for him and how he never fucking listens ... anyways. What he took out of all of that was me saying he had a big heart, which just proves my point about him never listening, and that I really need to get the hell out of here.
Mom and I have talked - or sort of talked - about what she's going to do: she says she's going and she's done, and all of that. But I don't know: she still seems undecided to me, and I don't know how much of that is the fact that she's changing her meds, and she's still grieving for my grandmother, too, and she seems to be leaning waaay closer to the numb side of things than I am. Of course, complicating all of that is the fact that she's my PCA, and she does a lot more for me than the hours the state provides for her, which is pretty simple when you're living in the same house, but a hell of a lot more complicated once I find somewhere else to live.
Which doesn't even mention that moving changes everything for me, financially - I have to notify the SSI people, and Mass Health (my insurance) and the PCA program, and everybody does a whole new evaluation and yippee: more energy I don't have. Plus, I can't afford any place to actually live on what my SSI is currently, so I have to apply for housing stipends, which means that the already complicated task of finding accessible housing (and granted, I can use non-100%accessible bathrooms, which puts me a step above other househunters with disabilities) all that much more complicated, because now I have to look for accessible housing that takes waivers/stipends from the government. It's so much fun so far!
But here's the thing, as every fucking thing seems to crumble around me (which you could tell only by the fact that I've cursed like five times in this post, when I usually don't ever), I learned a lot about myself this summer, being with Grandmother during those five months. I learned that I can handle a lot more shit than I thought I could, even if I have to breakdown in tears when nobody is looking. And even if I shouldn't have to handle any of this, because it's all ridiculous and I don't want to have to deal with it, because it's hard: even though it's ridiculous and hard and stressful and I Don't Want To, I'm going to be able to do it. I'm going to drag myself and my family through it, and eventually we'll all come out the other side, having met the challenge.
Being a grown-up sure does suck, you guys.
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Thursday, September 06, 2012
I would be a horrible circus performer (although I am quite flexible)
I didn't realize that my being here would change so many things: I mean, when I first wormed my way into an invitation to stay on the couch, I obviously didn't realize that nearly five months later I'd still be here, unshowered and mid-flare, keeping constant watch on a woman so close to death. I signed up for that, for the most part, because I had to: nobody seems to get that, really, that I feel compelled to be here, not just because I am capable of it (and, honestly, physically? I'm not capable, I'm just faking it the best I can), but because it's where I need to be. I suppose I could have made a different choice, but every other option just felt worse than this one, so here I remain, camped out on a couch with a (probably permanent) me-shaped dent in it, edging the furniture over until it gives me just the right view of her on her sickbed.
While I could not have predicted the ways that being here has altered my relationship with Grandmother - both negatively (particularly through her attacks during her dementia rants or just witnessing little character flaws that she'd previously kept hidden from me) and positively (there have been moments of extreme joy for both of us) - I'm more surprised by how being here has effected my relationships with the rest of my family, the rest of the world.
Example: I've got an aunt who lives less than an hour away, and who I generally have a good opinion of. But her lack of visits (once every three weeks, maybe) and phone calls (I know Uncle Jack is a bear on the phone, but suck it up), especially since her mother's latest downturn in health bother me. What could be more important than this? What enables you to go sit at a racetrack all day on your day off, as opposed to sitting by your mother's side? Granted, Grandmother would probably have no clue who you are, and granted you have a right to your life outside of the fact that your mother is dying, but ... it still bothers me, and I know it's put space between us.
I try not to let it hurt me that people haven't come to see her, but sometimes I resent it a whole damn lot. Cousins who send me messages about how much they care, but don't show up on the doorstep with a screwdriver and a willing hand when it's needed. I'm conflicted about it because it seems wrong and hurtful and false, but also because.... I totally get it.
I keep hearing "I don't want to see her like that" or "I don't think I could handle it if she looked at me and didn't remember me", and I understand that desire so much. I guess I'm jealous that they feel like they have the option to not come, whereas I feel like there's no choices to be made - she needs me, so I am here, even though it is one of the hardest things I will ever do. To have her look at me, with that blank stare, or worse her evil stare, when she's pissed off about something, is an experience I would love to have opted out of; it's something I wish I could forget, and something which, no matter how many times I remind myself that it's not her but the dementia that's driving it, I know has put smudges on our relationship. Deep, dark smudges I would give anything to erase.
So I understand the sentiment, and I understand not being able to face what's going on here - but I'm still disappointed that so few people have turned up, that so many of us are able to just send their warm wishes, but not put any actual effort into it. I'm jealous that they can do that, I'm confused at how they do that, and I am surprisingly more than a little hurt by how many of them can do it. I think that's part of it: that I used to be so firmly a part of the "us" of cousins, and now I feel like there's this line, a "me" and a "them", because I've done this and been here, and none of them can truly understand. They write their e-mails about how strong she is, and how much she's been through, but they don't know the half of it. They say how they hope the end comes quickly and how she doesn't suffer, and I stuff the words back into my mouth: 'She's already suffering, she's been suffering for months, maybe years, and none of you have noticed!'
It's not fair of me to think those things: I know that they are all doing what they can, and that they all do really love her: it's just that right now - living through the worry of each and every breath, each consistently lower pulse reading and oxygen level, each english muffin I put in front of her that she doesn't eat, each 4 hour battle to get her to use the Depends because she's not strong enough to get out of bed - right now, everything they say seems like a platitude, a cliche, as disconnected from her and me and our actual situation as if they were talking about how many sheep there were at this year's state fair.
It's just another barrier between me and the people I love, and it somehow grew while I wasn't looking.
Which is another thing: I've been nearly myopically focused on our situation here. I think that's understandable: death trumps pretty much everything. But there's a lot of other things going on - a lot of other things - and I'm barely on the periphery of stuff that I normally would wade right into. People are worried about losing their jobs, having their first panic attack, looking for new places to live, buying cars, getting fired, losing weight, gaining weight, dealing with depression, having birthdays, trying to embrace happiness after hardship, going back to school, moving across the country, ending longterm relationships, starting new relationships. Two of my sisters have changed life directions and are actively trying to conceive - or are moving down the path towards having children.
Two of my younger sisters. Are trying to have babies right now. Which is so exciting and awesome and terrifying, and also like an arrow straight into my chest. Because there's that baby thing again, which I have been actively avoiding (with little luck) and just do not have the mental energy to deal with right now, but there it is, everywhere I look. College Roommate/Best Friend had her third baby yesterday, after a difficult pregnancy. One of the (young stupid intern) doctors who saw her in the Emergency Room wrote the words 'advanced maternal age' on her chart. We are the same age, and while I know that 33 is not technically considered advanced maternal age, I know it's also not considered to be a time when you've got plenty of fertile years ahead of you. So there are all my own issues with TTC, and then there's all of their issues with TTC (which are varied and complicated, as they seemingly always are) and how best to support them (because I do want to support them) through their own insecurities and doubts and troubles. And how to do that effectively with the 5% of my brain that isn't focused on Grandmother and her medication schedules, stuck here in my little corner of the living room couch, while at the same time not letting the fact that I am not actively TTC be a gaping wound that grows between us.
Life is going on all around me - everywhere but in this house, in this time, in this space that I can't leave - and I don't know how to participate in any of it. Everything else seems unreal to me, everything beyond this door, everything outside the range of the Darth Vadar sounds coming out of her oxygen machine seems as if it's happening to somebody else, like I'm watching it on television, maybe. And it's interesting, and it's something I want to be involved with, but my brain just can't seem to make the leap from Here (and all that implies) to There (and all that implies).
There's a big gulf between me and the rest of the world - the part of the world that isn't changing their grandmother's diaper (and sheets - why don't those goddamn Depends do what they're supposed to do more than 1/4 of the time?) at three in the morning, or watching an old woman's chest to make sure it's still rising and falling - and I don't know how to bridge it. Phone calls and text messages seem like communiques from far off lands - someone shows me a picture of a fancy new car, someone else just says hello, there's a Facebook message from a far-away cousin, a phone call from someone I didn't even know had my number - I want to grab onto those things as if they were life preservers, use them to help keep me afloat when I feel like there's so much here that it will drag me under. And I can't decide if this is the Real World, or that is (even though I know they both are): I just know that they don't seem to exist within the same atmosphere, in the same time zones, on the same planet.
This disconnection is even harder when I do get a break, when I'm sitting face to face with someone, and there's all these awkward pauses, all these spaces and cracks in our conversation that there never used to be. I feel like I am rusty at speaking to people, even those I talk to everyday: It's as if my conversational skills have deserted me in favor of the ability to withstand the tears of a ninety-five year old woman when you tell her she can no longer walk - and there's no ease to any of my relationships right now, no settled in feeling of comfort and compatablitly, even with those that I am the closest.
Example: Mum will come over to help - most days she comes over to help - and make a misstep in her delivery - do something that pisses off Uncle Jack (which isn't hard) or say something to Grandmother that confuses her and sets off the panic train (which also isn't hard) and instead of relieved, I wind up feeling exhausted to be dealing with that, that now I not only have to deal with the repercussions of her visit, but also have to somehow not hurt her feelings while I'm repairing the damage she did by trying to help. It's often awkward and uncomfortable (mostly because Uncle Jack is a stubborn ass sometimes and he's so set in his ways that even people doing nice things - like bringing over a boatload of food for us to eat - can make him angry) and I find myself having to hold back how upset I am by it in order to smooth it over on both sides, wishing the whole time that I didn't have to play referree to supposed grown-ups, that it would be nice if, once in a while, I could get some actual HELP, that was just help - no strings, no messes to clean up afterwards, no complications - just simple help.
Most of the times I can't get up the energy to feel anything besides terrified that I am going to do something wrong here, that the last memory Grandmother will have is of a frustrated woman struggling not to yell at her to 'just pee already, goddamn it!' instead of a peaceful, loving face. And I want that for her - for her to go knowing that We All love her so much, knowing that she has so many people praying* for her and thinking of her - and I'm horrified that I might not be able to provide it.
*That's a whole 'nother area where my conflicted feelings are doing battle: she's very religious so we've had a bunch of priests come by, and she's had the last rites more than once, but I also think if the hospice people tell me that "all we can do now is pray" one more time I might punch them in the throat.
When I do get beyond that feeling, I feel guilty for wishing this were over, guilty for seeing each peak and valley as just another obstacle for us to overcome -It's especially hard to know that when she does have a 'good day' or make a small improvement, instead of rejoicing for her that she's able to eat a half a turkey sandwich, there's a part of me that wishes it wasn't happening, because it's only prolonging something that is already so difficult for all of us.
I feel guilty for that, for wishing that there would just be an end to things, knowing what that means in reality.
I feel guilty for being here, when I'm needed elsewhere. For missing out on the summer adventures the kids and I had planned, for all the hand holding I haven't been around to provide, the two a.m. phone calls I couldn't answer. I know the world doesn't revolve around me - that me not being at the house for sleepovers, for example, wasn't the end of the world or a crisis for the kids - but that's a two sided-coin: I'm glad that my absence didn't wreck everything for everybody, but at the same time I'm hurt by how (seemingly) easily I was removed. Because it feels like I'm the only one who's upset by my missing out on other things - everybody else just goes about their days and sometimes remembers that, in the ordinary scheme of things, I'd probably be involved in this particular activity too, but it doesn't do more than blip on their radar before they're off for other things.
And how selfish of me is it to admit that that hurts? That not being needed or missed in those other situations is hurting me as much as the fact that I'm missing them in the first place? I obviously want it all at the same time - people who love and miss me, but make do when I'm not there; being needed and valued for what I feel I contribute, but being able to not contribute those things for a while and still be loved and valued.
Basically, my brain is a big toxic mess right now, and I've got it all as far down as I can get it - so that it's simmering somewhere in the background for now, because I have only enough energy (and barely that) to make it through each day here, and the rest of that shit is going to have to wait its turn. And there's a very large part of me that is anxious about what will happen when I'm done focusing on the immediate crisis - how I'm going to pick up all those simmering, boiling pieces of myself and glue them back together into something that resembles a human being - but for now, all I can focus on is converting Mgs to Mls (which is stupid: doctors should write the Rx in the dosage of those little droppers and not expect me to do math every time I've got to give her meds in the middle of the night) or if the sheets are too tight around her feet and could be causing bedsores. I know that the end of that type of worry is fast approaching, and I see the train full of other worries barrelling down the track towards me (and know that it will be loaded with all of the things I'm talking about here PLUS a huge drowning dollop of grief once she passes), but I can't even pretend to deal with it yet.
I'm just going to sit here and breathe, and hope that I'm doing what I can, and that any of the balls I'm not actively juggling will not be too damaged when I get around to picking them up.
While I could not have predicted the ways that being here has altered my relationship with Grandmother - both negatively (particularly through her attacks during her dementia rants or just witnessing little character flaws that she'd previously kept hidden from me) and positively (there have been moments of extreme joy for both of us) - I'm more surprised by how being here has effected my relationships with the rest of my family, the rest of the world.
Example: I've got an aunt who lives less than an hour away, and who I generally have a good opinion of. But her lack of visits (once every three weeks, maybe) and phone calls (I know Uncle Jack is a bear on the phone, but suck it up), especially since her mother's latest downturn in health bother me. What could be more important than this? What enables you to go sit at a racetrack all day on your day off, as opposed to sitting by your mother's side? Granted, Grandmother would probably have no clue who you are, and granted you have a right to your life outside of the fact that your mother is dying, but ... it still bothers me, and I know it's put space between us.
I try not to let it hurt me that people haven't come to see her, but sometimes I resent it a whole damn lot. Cousins who send me messages about how much they care, but don't show up on the doorstep with a screwdriver and a willing hand when it's needed. I'm conflicted about it because it seems wrong and hurtful and false, but also because.... I totally get it.
I keep hearing "I don't want to see her like that" or "I don't think I could handle it if she looked at me and didn't remember me", and I understand that desire so much. I guess I'm jealous that they feel like they have the option to not come, whereas I feel like there's no choices to be made - she needs me, so I am here, even though it is one of the hardest things I will ever do. To have her look at me, with that blank stare, or worse her evil stare, when she's pissed off about something, is an experience I would love to have opted out of; it's something I wish I could forget, and something which, no matter how many times I remind myself that it's not her but the dementia that's driving it, I know has put smudges on our relationship. Deep, dark smudges I would give anything to erase.
So I understand the sentiment, and I understand not being able to face what's going on here - but I'm still disappointed that so few people have turned up, that so many of us are able to just send their warm wishes, but not put any actual effort into it. I'm jealous that they can do that, I'm confused at how they do that, and I am surprisingly more than a little hurt by how many of them can do it. I think that's part of it: that I used to be so firmly a part of the "us" of cousins, and now I feel like there's this line, a "me" and a "them", because I've done this and been here, and none of them can truly understand. They write their e-mails about how strong she is, and how much she's been through, but they don't know the half of it. They say how they hope the end comes quickly and how she doesn't suffer, and I stuff the words back into my mouth: 'She's already suffering, she's been suffering for months, maybe years, and none of you have noticed!'
It's not fair of me to think those things: I know that they are all doing what they can, and that they all do really love her: it's just that right now - living through the worry of each and every breath, each consistently lower pulse reading and oxygen level, each english muffin I put in front of her that she doesn't eat, each 4 hour battle to get her to use the Depends because she's not strong enough to get out of bed - right now, everything they say seems like a platitude, a cliche, as disconnected from her and me and our actual situation as if they were talking about how many sheep there were at this year's state fair.
It's just another barrier between me and the people I love, and it somehow grew while I wasn't looking.
Which is another thing: I've been nearly myopically focused on our situation here. I think that's understandable: death trumps pretty much everything. But there's a lot of other things going on - a lot of other things - and I'm barely on the periphery of stuff that I normally would wade right into. People are worried about losing their jobs, having their first panic attack, looking for new places to live, buying cars, getting fired, losing weight, gaining weight, dealing with depression, having birthdays, trying to embrace happiness after hardship, going back to school, moving across the country, ending longterm relationships, starting new relationships. Two of my sisters have changed life directions and are actively trying to conceive - or are moving down the path towards having children.
Two of my younger sisters. Are trying to have babies right now. Which is so exciting and awesome and terrifying, and also like an arrow straight into my chest. Because there's that baby thing again, which I have been actively avoiding (with little luck) and just do not have the mental energy to deal with right now, but there it is, everywhere I look. College Roommate/Best Friend had her third baby yesterday, after a difficult pregnancy. One of the (young stupid intern) doctors who saw her in the Emergency Room wrote the words 'advanced maternal age' on her chart. We are the same age, and while I know that 33 is not technically considered advanced maternal age, I know it's also not considered to be a time when you've got plenty of fertile years ahead of you. So there are all my own issues with TTC, and then there's all of their issues with TTC (which are varied and complicated, as they seemingly always are) and how best to support them (because I do want to support them) through their own insecurities and doubts and troubles. And how to do that effectively with the 5% of my brain that isn't focused on Grandmother and her medication schedules, stuck here in my little corner of the living room couch, while at the same time not letting the fact that I am not actively TTC be a gaping wound that grows between us.
Life is going on all around me - everywhere but in this house, in this time, in this space that I can't leave - and I don't know how to participate in any of it. Everything else seems unreal to me, everything beyond this door, everything outside the range of the Darth Vadar sounds coming out of her oxygen machine seems as if it's happening to somebody else, like I'm watching it on television, maybe. And it's interesting, and it's something I want to be involved with, but my brain just can't seem to make the leap from Here (and all that implies) to There (and all that implies).
There's a big gulf between me and the rest of the world - the part of the world that isn't changing their grandmother's diaper (and sheets - why don't those goddamn Depends do what they're supposed to do more than 1/4 of the time?) at three in the morning, or watching an old woman's chest to make sure it's still rising and falling - and I don't know how to bridge it. Phone calls and text messages seem like communiques from far off lands - someone shows me a picture of a fancy new car, someone else just says hello, there's a Facebook message from a far-away cousin, a phone call from someone I didn't even know had my number - I want to grab onto those things as if they were life preservers, use them to help keep me afloat when I feel like there's so much here that it will drag me under. And I can't decide if this is the Real World, or that is (even though I know they both are): I just know that they don't seem to exist within the same atmosphere, in the same time zones, on the same planet.
This disconnection is even harder when I do get a break, when I'm sitting face to face with someone, and there's all these awkward pauses, all these spaces and cracks in our conversation that there never used to be. I feel like I am rusty at speaking to people, even those I talk to everyday: It's as if my conversational skills have deserted me in favor of the ability to withstand the tears of a ninety-five year old woman when you tell her she can no longer walk - and there's no ease to any of my relationships right now, no settled in feeling of comfort and compatablitly, even with those that I am the closest.
Example: Mum will come over to help - most days she comes over to help - and make a misstep in her delivery - do something that pisses off Uncle Jack (which isn't hard) or say something to Grandmother that confuses her and sets off the panic train (which also isn't hard) and instead of relieved, I wind up feeling exhausted to be dealing with that, that now I not only have to deal with the repercussions of her visit, but also have to somehow not hurt her feelings while I'm repairing the damage she did by trying to help. It's often awkward and uncomfortable (mostly because Uncle Jack is a stubborn ass sometimes and he's so set in his ways that even people doing nice things - like bringing over a boatload of food for us to eat - can make him angry) and I find myself having to hold back how upset I am by it in order to smooth it over on both sides, wishing the whole time that I didn't have to play referree to supposed grown-ups, that it would be nice if, once in a while, I could get some actual HELP, that was just help - no strings, no messes to clean up afterwards, no complications - just simple help.
Most of the times I can't get up the energy to feel anything besides terrified that I am going to do something wrong here, that the last memory Grandmother will have is of a frustrated woman struggling not to yell at her to 'just pee already, goddamn it!' instead of a peaceful, loving face. And I want that for her - for her to go knowing that We All love her so much, knowing that she has so many people praying* for her and thinking of her - and I'm horrified that I might not be able to provide it.
*That's a whole 'nother area where my conflicted feelings are doing battle: she's very religious so we've had a bunch of priests come by, and she's had the last rites more than once, but I also think if the hospice people tell me that "all we can do now is pray" one more time I might punch them in the throat.
When I do get beyond that feeling, I feel guilty for wishing this were over, guilty for seeing each peak and valley as just another obstacle for us to overcome -It's especially hard to know that when she does have a 'good day' or make a small improvement, instead of rejoicing for her that she's able to eat a half a turkey sandwich, there's a part of me that wishes it wasn't happening, because it's only prolonging something that is already so difficult for all of us.
I feel guilty for that, for wishing that there would just be an end to things, knowing what that means in reality.
I feel guilty for being here, when I'm needed elsewhere. For missing out on the summer adventures the kids and I had planned, for all the hand holding I haven't been around to provide, the two a.m. phone calls I couldn't answer. I know the world doesn't revolve around me - that me not being at the house for sleepovers, for example, wasn't the end of the world or a crisis for the kids - but that's a two sided-coin: I'm glad that my absence didn't wreck everything for everybody, but at the same time I'm hurt by how (seemingly) easily I was removed. Because it feels like I'm the only one who's upset by my missing out on other things - everybody else just goes about their days and sometimes remembers that, in the ordinary scheme of things, I'd probably be involved in this particular activity too, but it doesn't do more than blip on their radar before they're off for other things.
And how selfish of me is it to admit that that hurts? That not being needed or missed in those other situations is hurting me as much as the fact that I'm missing them in the first place? I obviously want it all at the same time - people who love and miss me, but make do when I'm not there; being needed and valued for what I feel I contribute, but being able to not contribute those things for a while and still be loved and valued.
Basically, my brain is a big toxic mess right now, and I've got it all as far down as I can get it - so that it's simmering somewhere in the background for now, because I have only enough energy (and barely that) to make it through each day here, and the rest of that shit is going to have to wait its turn. And there's a very large part of me that is anxious about what will happen when I'm done focusing on the immediate crisis - how I'm going to pick up all those simmering, boiling pieces of myself and glue them back together into something that resembles a human being - but for now, all I can focus on is converting Mgs to Mls (which is stupid: doctors should write the Rx in the dosage of those little droppers and not expect me to do math every time I've got to give her meds in the middle of the night) or if the sheets are too tight around her feet and could be causing bedsores. I know that the end of that type of worry is fast approaching, and I see the train full of other worries barrelling down the track towards me (and know that it will be loaded with all of the things I'm talking about here PLUS a huge drowning dollop of grief once she passes), but I can't even pretend to deal with it yet.
I'm just going to sit here and breathe, and hope that I'm doing what I can, and that any of the balls I'm not actively juggling will not be too damaged when I get around to picking them up.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Where am I right now? How is that possible?
I have to remind myself that this is where I am, and this is what I am doing. I am at Grandmother's house, and I am (probably) watching her die. It feels weird to write that, or think that, because, in all honesty, what I am doing is checking my Google Reader for the 1000th time, or blowing things up in a Facebook game, or doing the laundry again, but those things are all part of the larger thing, the filling in time thing. The escaping because it's been three days and all she's eaten is 1/2 a peach and 1/4 of a piece of banana bread. The putting out of your mind that she's been asleep/out of it completely since early Friday morning, and now it is Sunday night and you are listening to her snore from the other room. That "I am deliberately not looking at the bottom right hand corner of my screen to see how long it's been since she's had anything to drink" time needs filling, and thank god for the internet.
Right now, we're in post-crisis, what-the-hell-is-going-to-happen-now mode. On Thursday night, Grandmother ate two helpings of potato salad, and went to bed. Three hours later, she was writhing in pain, a pain in her gut that she couldn't pinpoint, but also couldn't tolerate. After a few more hours of trying in vain to fix it somehow!, I finally convinced her that we should call the hospice people, and the nurse set out from his home, over an hour away: told us which drugs to fish out of her 'comfort kit' and how much to give, and then came to check her out. The drugs did a pretty good job of ending her pain, within an hour, she was resting calmly, sleeping soundly.
That pain: it could be anything, they say. Gas, constipation, just a kink along the way. But they don't think that - you can see that in their faces. "Things could be shutting down", our regular nurse (who is, of course on vacation now, but came in the day before she left to check on Grandmother) gently informs us: "Our job is just to make sure she's as comfortable as possible."
Which feels right, keep her comfortable; but also feels wrong - does that mean keep her drugged? We stopped the pain meds yesterday morning, almost 48 hours ago, because she seemed ok without them: no more moaning or grabbing her abdomen in pain, doubling over. She seemed much improved. But her anxiety level went through the roof, for some reason: she couldn't stop scratching, or flipping from one end of the bed to the other, or yelling at hallucinations of people who were daring to smoke in her room. So we keep giving her the anti-anxiety/delusion meds, because when she gets upset, her breathing, her pulse, her oxygen levels, all of those go crazy (and trying to get her to wear the oxygen is ridiculous when she's like that).
She gets the meds, half of the prescribed dose, really, every 6-8 hours: we've tried twice not to give them, but the result is an hour of her totally freaking out before we give it to her and then an hour afterwards of more freaking out as she starts to wind down.
I can tell Uncle Jack is freaking out - because she was 'fine' (fine for her, fine for her this summer, these past few weeks) just a few days ago, and now she's not eating or drinking, or talking to us with any coherency: did the meds do this? Did we make things worse by trying to help her? The docs say no, that this is what happens sometimes - whatever caused that pain, it's moved beyond that now.
But there's no knowing, and we are both bad with that, with the anxiety that we could be screwing this up so completely. I see Uncle Jack attempting to wake her up again, see if she'll take some Ensure, some Jello, some, something. But she opens her eyes but doesn't really see us, starts talking about getting to graduation and where is her cap?
The hospice people say "you can't do anything wrong, at this point: everything you're doing is the best you can do" but the hospice people are people who know all their patients are dying.
They know about 'making the patient comfortable' and 'keeping the patient calm,' but what do they know about 'my grandmother, who ate 7 meals on Wednesday now won't even take some sips of water'?
Everything we do feels wrong - give her the meds, like the doctor ordered keep her calm, but non-responsive/don't give her the meds to wake her up, watch as her oxygen level falls below 82%, she starts yelling at invisible people and she still won't eat a single thing.
We're trying for the lesser of two evils, I suppose. We're trying.
But there's no right answers here, no cheat sheet: we just want her not to be hurting. We think we've accomplished that, because she's slept through the last three days pretty completely.
We want her to be herself, but can't seem to accomplish that.
We want her to bounce back, for this to be just another example of a time the doctors were wrong about who she is and how strong she fights.
But I want her to be at peace, too, and I know how afraid she is of the forgetting things, how much emotional turmoil she lives through when she thinks about her boys being lost, being little and alone without her.
And, in all honestly, it doesn't matter at all what we want: we just do what we/they/all of us think is best, cross our fingers, and hope it works out.
Only I don't know what to hope for here, and that's a harsh feeling to live with.
So sometimes, sitting here doing the TV Guide crossword puzzle and frowning over the fact that Uncle Jack and I both forgot to eat lunch today, I hear her snort, or see her sit up and reposition herself, and I think: How is it possible that I am sitting here, doing this?
What am I doing exactly?
I'm doing a lot of hand holding and whispering reassuring words, of coaxing her awake, or humming her quietly to sleep*. There's sitting with your hand under her head for the 35 minutes until she's totally asleep, so that your whole arm is asleep and numb as well, and you have to dig it out with your other hand. There's changing her, and the sheets, after an accident, and realizing it's so not a big deal (except for the lifting: god help me, I can't lift her, and I don't know why I keep trying - core muscles are so mad at me, and the fibro flare is ridiculous!). There's letting her sit on your lap when she attempts to get to the bathroom, but runs out of energy along the way, knowing full well that an accident could happen, and not caring in the slightest. There's a lot of sitting around and waiting, measuring meds, looking at the clock, listening for any sounds of alertness or agitation or... anything.
Right now, she's still snoring. And I'm still avoiding the clock, keeping my fingers crossed that when the 6 hour med mark is crossed, this time she'll be ok, and she won't need that next dose. She'll ask for corn on the cob, and we'll give it to her, fresh-picked yesterday morning, from the farmer's market.
Until then, I guess I just wait.
*When the kids were babies I made the each a "quiet music" CD (No-Longer-Youngest Nephew is old enough that his was a cassette tape) that we listened to when it was nap time. Lil Girl's CD has been running through my mind on repeat all weekend, so Grandmother has been treated to some weird versions of "Hushabye Mountain", "Two Sleepy People" and "When She Loved Me".
Right now, we're in post-crisis, what-the-hell-is-going-to-happen-now mode. On Thursday night, Grandmother ate two helpings of potato salad, and went to bed. Three hours later, she was writhing in pain, a pain in her gut that she couldn't pinpoint, but also couldn't tolerate. After a few more hours of trying in vain to fix it somehow!, I finally convinced her that we should call the hospice people, and the nurse set out from his home, over an hour away: told us which drugs to fish out of her 'comfort kit' and how much to give, and then came to check her out. The drugs did a pretty good job of ending her pain, within an hour, she was resting calmly, sleeping soundly.
That pain: it could be anything, they say. Gas, constipation, just a kink along the way. But they don't think that - you can see that in their faces. "Things could be shutting down", our regular nurse (who is, of course on vacation now, but came in the day before she left to check on Grandmother) gently informs us: "Our job is just to make sure she's as comfortable as possible."
Which feels right, keep her comfortable; but also feels wrong - does that mean keep her drugged? We stopped the pain meds yesterday morning, almost 48 hours ago, because she seemed ok without them: no more moaning or grabbing her abdomen in pain, doubling over. She seemed much improved. But her anxiety level went through the roof, for some reason: she couldn't stop scratching, or flipping from one end of the bed to the other, or yelling at hallucinations of people who were daring to smoke in her room. So we keep giving her the anti-anxiety/delusion meds, because when she gets upset, her breathing, her pulse, her oxygen levels, all of those go crazy (and trying to get her to wear the oxygen is ridiculous when she's like that).
She gets the meds, half of the prescribed dose, really, every 6-8 hours: we've tried twice not to give them, but the result is an hour of her totally freaking out before we give it to her and then an hour afterwards of more freaking out as she starts to wind down.
I can tell Uncle Jack is freaking out - because she was 'fine' (fine for her, fine for her this summer, these past few weeks) just a few days ago, and now she's not eating or drinking, or talking to us with any coherency: did the meds do this? Did we make things worse by trying to help her? The docs say no, that this is what happens sometimes - whatever caused that pain, it's moved beyond that now.
But there's no knowing, and we are both bad with that, with the anxiety that we could be screwing this up so completely. I see Uncle Jack attempting to wake her up again, see if she'll take some Ensure, some Jello, some, something. But she opens her eyes but doesn't really see us, starts talking about getting to graduation and where is her cap?
The hospice people say "you can't do anything wrong, at this point: everything you're doing is the best you can do" but the hospice people are people who know all their patients are dying.
They know about 'making the patient comfortable' and 'keeping the patient calm,' but what do they know about 'my grandmother, who ate 7 meals on Wednesday now won't even take some sips of water'?
Everything we do feels wrong - give her the meds, like the doctor ordered keep her calm, but non-responsive/don't give her the meds to wake her up, watch as her oxygen level falls below 82%, she starts yelling at invisible people and she still won't eat a single thing.
We're trying for the lesser of two evils, I suppose. We're trying.
But there's no right answers here, no cheat sheet: we just want her not to be hurting. We think we've accomplished that, because she's slept through the last three days pretty completely.
We want her to be herself, but can't seem to accomplish that.
We want her to bounce back, for this to be just another example of a time the doctors were wrong about who she is and how strong she fights.
But I want her to be at peace, too, and I know how afraid she is of the forgetting things, how much emotional turmoil she lives through when she thinks about her boys being lost, being little and alone without her.
And, in all honestly, it doesn't matter at all what we want: we just do what we/they/all of us think is best, cross our fingers, and hope it works out.
Only I don't know what to hope for here, and that's a harsh feeling to live with.
So sometimes, sitting here doing the TV Guide crossword puzzle and frowning over the fact that Uncle Jack and I both forgot to eat lunch today, I hear her snort, or see her sit up and reposition herself, and I think: How is it possible that I am sitting here, doing this?
What am I doing exactly?
I'm doing a lot of hand holding and whispering reassuring words, of coaxing her awake, or humming her quietly to sleep*. There's sitting with your hand under her head for the 35 minutes until she's totally asleep, so that your whole arm is asleep and numb as well, and you have to dig it out with your other hand. There's changing her, and the sheets, after an accident, and realizing it's so not a big deal (except for the lifting: god help me, I can't lift her, and I don't know why I keep trying - core muscles are so mad at me, and the fibro flare is ridiculous!). There's letting her sit on your lap when she attempts to get to the bathroom, but runs out of energy along the way, knowing full well that an accident could happen, and not caring in the slightest. There's a lot of sitting around and waiting, measuring meds, looking at the clock, listening for any sounds of alertness or agitation or... anything.
Right now, she's still snoring. And I'm still avoiding the clock, keeping my fingers crossed that when the 6 hour med mark is crossed, this time she'll be ok, and she won't need that next dose. She'll ask for corn on the cob, and we'll give it to her, fresh-picked yesterday morning, from the farmer's market.
Until then, I guess I just wait.
*When the kids were babies I made the each a "quiet music" CD (No-Longer-Youngest Nephew is old enough that his was a cassette tape) that we listened to when it was nap time. Lil Girl's CD has been running through my mind on repeat all weekend, so Grandmother has been treated to some weird versions of "Hushabye Mountain", "Two Sleepy People" and "When She Loved Me".
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Damn, this is hard.
Things are so much better - and so much worse - than I expected. I don't know what I expected, really: all of the literature the hospice people give you sort of makes it seem like there's a straight line of decline to follow right through their showing up until she passes away. But that's not the way it's going at all, which is excellent, of course, because she's still here, and not excellent, of course, because sometimes she suffers so much.
The hospice people say (over and over again) that their goal is to ease her suffering and to support us. I know they are trying, but I'm not always sure they're meeting those goals. Of major import to me is her suffering - if it were from physical pain (and they warn us that that is likely still to come), it'd be easy to address*, as they've given us all sorts of happy drugs and the lessons on how to administer them should she want them.** But it's a mental sort of suffering that's affecting her, and all of us, the most.
She forgets who I am now. Just a few weeks ago that would have been unthinkable. Now I am my mother, my 2nd cousin, her sister, my sister, her daughter, the nurse, the hotel concierge, a random office worker, the social worker, the hair dresser, the lady who comes to give her a bath. Some of these are quite reasonable - I have a similar look/manner as my mom, I have given her a bath in the past, etc - but if you're telling the woman in front of you (who is sitting in a wheelchair) about your granddaughter who is in a wheelchair, and who visits you sometimes, then all is not well.
Worse than the forgetting though, is the paranoia. The feeling that we're teaming up against her, and the repercussions of that. This morning she woke with the idea that we were going to her mother's funeral. Her mother has been buried for 90 years, and while they say to agree as much as possible, I couldn't very well take her to New Jersey for a funeral that occurred 6 decades before I was born. I can see now, with hindsight, that I should have just kept going with it, for as long as possible, but sometimes that comes back to bite me in the ass too, so I don't know where to put my feet, most of the time. (Also, in my defense, it was 4:30 in the morning. And I had gotten less than 1 hour total of sleep since 4:30 the previous morning.)
Usually, I will just play along until it is either time for her to nap (which is every hour or two, most often) - in which case she may forget what her previous plan for the day was - or distract her enough that we can move on to other things. But this morning, distraction accomplished nothing - she wanted to clean the house for the post-funeral visitors (at 4:30 am), not eat breakfast or have coffee. After having to tell her no for numerous activities that she claimed to want to do next - stuff she or I can not physically accomplish, like climbing the stairs or hanging tablecloths out on the line - I could tell I was getting into trouble. Worse, she showed no signs of slowing down or needing a nap, and now there were only two hours for her to get to her actual plan for the day - a necessary doctor's appointment. (And it takes that long, with breaks built in, for her to get ready for things.)
So now I have to tell her that she's got to get dressed, and that she has to go to the doctor's.
"Do you think I'd choose a doctor over my own mother??"
"No Ma'am, but that mass isn't this morning - we don't have any mass this morning to go to."
Cue horrified look, as if I have just personally, stripped her dead mother bare for the world to see. "She's in the coffin two rooms away, and I'm supposed to just leave her there?"
"But she's not in the coffin, Grandmother, at least not in the house, right now. She died a long time ago, and was buried then. She's not here right now, so we're not disrespecting her."
"Do you take pleasure in reminding me that I've been motherless for most of my life. Do you think I don't know that? "
"No, ma'am. I'm just saying that it's ok to get ready for your appointment, because... that's what we're doing today."
"Well, it's not what I'm doing."
This back and forth only got worse, as every sentence was another foot in my mouth. Eventually she was sitting and (quite pathetically) trying to straighten out her bed with her one injured arm and her other hand full with her cane, on a footstool next to the bed.
"Here, Grandmother, let me help you up from there: it's too low to work from."
"That's not the only thing that's low today."
That's the thing: my Grandmother has a viper's tongue, when provoked. And I've only done it twice in my life, really, and both of those times have been in the past week, and have occurred when I was trying to be helpful.
The other night's episode had me fleeing to the front porch so I could burst in to tears, call my mother, and burst into tears again. She was upset with my uncle (who is her main caretaker, and thus, her main target when paranoia or delusions strike), and was convinced that he had sold her two youngest children away.
This is a common theme when she's delusional - the hospice people told us that usually, people see their departed loved ones and it's all "hooray and glorious and sweetly sentimental". Not for my grandmother. For her, it's people who've been dead for 70 years showing up and standing in the corner, refusing to speak to her. It's little boys (she had seven) disappearing and nobody helping her find them. It's wondering over and over and over again why you can't find this one or that one, or why they would walk through the house without saying anything to you.
So heartfelt reunions, she's had a few, but mostly, her hallucinations are upsetting to her, and leave her stressed and confused. As happened the other night, when her delusions and viperous tongue reached out and spit at me for the first time.
She was against my uncle, which means he can't even go in the room to give her her meds without raising her blood pressure (which, since she has congestive heart failure, is not optimal). So I went in to get her dinner dishes, and she starts telling me that I need to tell her the truth. (Here's the thing: telling her the truth is actually the WORST thing to do, all the professionals warn me.) And when I say that I don't know what she's talking about, I am all of the sudden 'picking sides' and 'making living here unbearable.'
'Grandmother: I don't know what you need, tell me how to help you.'
'I just hope your conscience is clear, NTE, because if you think about it, there are some horrible things happening here, and I hope you're not a party to them.'
'No, ma'am. I'm not a party to anything I'm ashamed of. I'm only here to help you, if I can.'
'I hope that's true.'
20 minutes later, as I'm giving her a kiss goodnight... 'You know Judas kissed Jesus before he betrayed him, right?'
So her memory may not be up to snuff, but her pointed tongue is still as finely sharpened as ever. (And all my aunts and uncles, and the sister who lived here as a teenager, are feeling just the teensiest bit justified by my experiences: not that they want her to hurt my feelings, but "I told you she wasn't always so sweet" has been spoken more than once.)
Hospice doesn't prepare you for decapitation or slow bleeding, however. They just say things like "try to play along, if you can", and "she shouldn't be upset, if possible" without realizing that those are two contradictory pieces of advice. And while I know she doesn't really, in the scheme of things and our relationship and lifespan together, believe that I am a Judas who won't let her go to her own mother's funeral... she believes it right then, and it's hard for me not to take that personally. The only thing that kept me from running home the other day after the Judas comment was that I knew she wouldn't remember it when she woke up, which was less than an hour later, which I was completely right about, but I must have suffered as much as Judas waiting for the cock to crow, knowing I was hurting someone I loved, even if I didn't mean to.
Damn this is hard.
*and what an irony that is to me, the chronic pain patient: if you're dying, we can ease your physical pain; if you're not, you're pretty much out of luck. Good system, everybody!
**Irony part 2: she hates taking medicine, and will not take it at the first sign of pain. Or the second. Or until a part of her anatomy is in danger of falling off.
The hospice people say (over and over again) that their goal is to ease her suffering and to support us. I know they are trying, but I'm not always sure they're meeting those goals. Of major import to me is her suffering - if it were from physical pain (and they warn us that that is likely still to come), it'd be easy to address*, as they've given us all sorts of happy drugs and the lessons on how to administer them should she want them.** But it's a mental sort of suffering that's affecting her, and all of us, the most.
She forgets who I am now. Just a few weeks ago that would have been unthinkable. Now I am my mother, my 2nd cousin, her sister, my sister, her daughter, the nurse, the hotel concierge, a random office worker, the social worker, the hair dresser, the lady who comes to give her a bath. Some of these are quite reasonable - I have a similar look/manner as my mom, I have given her a bath in the past, etc - but if you're telling the woman in front of you (who is sitting in a wheelchair) about your granddaughter who is in a wheelchair, and who visits you sometimes, then all is not well.
Worse than the forgetting though, is the paranoia. The feeling that we're teaming up against her, and the repercussions of that. This morning she woke with the idea that we were going to her mother's funeral. Her mother has been buried for 90 years, and while they say to agree as much as possible, I couldn't very well take her to New Jersey for a funeral that occurred 6 decades before I was born. I can see now, with hindsight, that I should have just kept going with it, for as long as possible, but sometimes that comes back to bite me in the ass too, so I don't know where to put my feet, most of the time. (Also, in my defense, it was 4:30 in the morning. And I had gotten less than 1 hour total of sleep since 4:30 the previous morning.)
Usually, I will just play along until it is either time for her to nap (which is every hour or two, most often) - in which case she may forget what her previous plan for the day was - or distract her enough that we can move on to other things. But this morning, distraction accomplished nothing - she wanted to clean the house for the post-funeral visitors (at 4:30 am), not eat breakfast or have coffee. After having to tell her no for numerous activities that she claimed to want to do next - stuff she or I can not physically accomplish, like climbing the stairs or hanging tablecloths out on the line - I could tell I was getting into trouble. Worse, she showed no signs of slowing down or needing a nap, and now there were only two hours for her to get to her actual plan for the day - a necessary doctor's appointment. (And it takes that long, with breaks built in, for her to get ready for things.)
So now I have to tell her that she's got to get dressed, and that she has to go to the doctor's.
"Do you think I'd choose a doctor over my own mother??"
"No Ma'am, but that mass isn't this morning - we don't have any mass this morning to go to."
Cue horrified look, as if I have just personally, stripped her dead mother bare for the world to see. "She's in the coffin two rooms away, and I'm supposed to just leave her there?"
"But she's not in the coffin, Grandmother, at least not in the house, right now. She died a long time ago, and was buried then. She's not here right now, so we're not disrespecting her."
"Do you take pleasure in reminding me that I've been motherless for most of my life. Do you think I don't know that? "
"No, ma'am. I'm just saying that it's ok to get ready for your appointment, because... that's what we're doing today."
"Well, it's not what I'm doing."
This back and forth only got worse, as every sentence was another foot in my mouth. Eventually she was sitting and (quite pathetically) trying to straighten out her bed with her one injured arm and her other hand full with her cane, on a footstool next to the bed.
"Here, Grandmother, let me help you up from there: it's too low to work from."
"That's not the only thing that's low today."
That's the thing: my Grandmother has a viper's tongue, when provoked. And I've only done it twice in my life, really, and both of those times have been in the past week, and have occurred when I was trying to be helpful.
The other night's episode had me fleeing to the front porch so I could burst in to tears, call my mother, and burst into tears again. She was upset with my uncle (who is her main caretaker, and thus, her main target when paranoia or delusions strike), and was convinced that he had sold her two youngest children away.
This is a common theme when she's delusional - the hospice people told us that usually, people see their departed loved ones and it's all "hooray and glorious and sweetly sentimental". Not for my grandmother. For her, it's people who've been dead for 70 years showing up and standing in the corner, refusing to speak to her. It's little boys (she had seven) disappearing and nobody helping her find them. It's wondering over and over and over again why you can't find this one or that one, or why they would walk through the house without saying anything to you.
So heartfelt reunions, she's had a few, but mostly, her hallucinations are upsetting to her, and leave her stressed and confused. As happened the other night, when her delusions and viperous tongue reached out and spit at me for the first time.
She was against my uncle, which means he can't even go in the room to give her her meds without raising her blood pressure (which, since she has congestive heart failure, is not optimal). So I went in to get her dinner dishes, and she starts telling me that I need to tell her the truth. (Here's the thing: telling her the truth is actually the WORST thing to do, all the professionals warn me.) And when I say that I don't know what she's talking about, I am all of the sudden 'picking sides' and 'making living here unbearable.'
'Grandmother: I don't know what you need, tell me how to help you.'
'I just hope your conscience is clear, NTE, because if you think about it, there are some horrible things happening here, and I hope you're not a party to them.'
'No, ma'am. I'm not a party to anything I'm ashamed of. I'm only here to help you, if I can.'
'I hope that's true.'
20 minutes later, as I'm giving her a kiss goodnight... 'You know Judas kissed Jesus before he betrayed him, right?'
So her memory may not be up to snuff, but her pointed tongue is still as finely sharpened as ever. (And all my aunts and uncles, and the sister who lived here as a teenager, are feeling just the teensiest bit justified by my experiences: not that they want her to hurt my feelings, but "I told you she wasn't always so sweet" has been spoken more than once.)
Hospice doesn't prepare you for decapitation or slow bleeding, however. They just say things like "try to play along, if you can", and "she shouldn't be upset, if possible" without realizing that those are two contradictory pieces of advice. And while I know she doesn't really, in the scheme of things and our relationship and lifespan together, believe that I am a Judas who won't let her go to her own mother's funeral... she believes it right then, and it's hard for me not to take that personally. The only thing that kept me from running home the other day after the Judas comment was that I knew she wouldn't remember it when she woke up, which was less than an hour later, which I was completely right about, but I must have suffered as much as Judas waiting for the cock to crow, knowing I was hurting someone I loved, even if I didn't mean to.
Damn this is hard.
*and what an irony that is to me, the chronic pain patient: if you're dying, we can ease your physical pain; if you're not, you're pretty much out of luck. Good system, everybody!
**Irony part 2: she hates taking medicine, and will not take it at the first sign of pain. Or the second. Or until a part of her anatomy is in danger of falling off.
Wednesday, July 04, 2012
She always liked the Snoopy one
I've been trying for weeks to write coherently about where I am and what I'm doing. And all I keep coming back to is this: I am living on my grandmother's couch, from which I can see my grandmother's hospital bed at all times. I am making three breakfasts a day, when necessary, and sleeping in 10- 25 minute bursts (finally, a practical use for my painsomnia!) and talking about what happened 75 years ago as if it were happening right now. And I am doing all of those things because my grandmother is dying.
Or she's not. (It depends on the day, really.)
And it's happening both too quickly and too slowly; too tenderly and too angrily; too neatly and too messily. And the rest of my life right now makes about as much sense as that previous sentence.
---
About two months ago, I started to get more worried than usual about my grandmother, because during our weekly visits and phone calls, she was saying things that made very little sense, her voice would get whispery or slurred, she'd go off on tangents about subjects we'd not been discussing, and, eventually she stopped being up for visits, and was ending our phone calls rather abruptly ~ sometimes in the middle of a sentence, she'd say "Well, give my love to everyone: talk to you next week", and hang up the phone. Now she's never been particularly skilled at using the phone (especially the newfangled cordless 'doohickey' my uncle installed for her a few years back), so this was strange, but not completely out of character. When I'd ask my uncle how she was, he'd say things that sort of glossed over my concerns - not addressing them so much as giving me a blanket "oh, it's been a bad day/week" and moving past it.
But enough things were happening that I was majorly concerned, so when he started ignoring my calls 3 times out of 5, and she stopped being available for even the slightest phone call, I decided it was serendipitous that the upstairs bathroom needed re-tiling at the exact moment that I needed to get into the house, and asked my uncle for refuge from the smells, hoping it would get my foot in the door here. I got that far in, and - aside from Tuesdays with the kids and a shower at home, and my own doctor's appointments - I haven't left since.
Because she wasn't just not feeling well: she was decidedly different. Failing. Stumbling over sharp edges and corners in conversations that should have gone smoothly. Sleeping all hours of the day, and getting her days and nights confused. Asking for dinner at 6:45 in the morning, demanding to know why we were starving her, even though she'd just eaten at midnight.
Her confusion is a live wire of a thing: you never know which Grandmother is going to wake up. The one who remembers who you are and how she used to lay you down to sleep on a quilt in the den while your mother went to school, or the one who thinks this place, the house she's lived in for 50 years and raised 9 children in, is a hotel or a hospital that you work in and that she'd like to check out of thank you very much. She could take a nap at noon and wake up around three, ready to sweep the porch and sit out in her rocker. Or she could stay awake till 4 in the morning, moaning because you've just told her that four of her sons are dead and she thinks it just happened right now.
"Humor her as much as possible" the hospice people say: If she tells you she sees her dead sister bustling around in her socks and assigning chores, play along if you can. If she thinks she's the charge nurse and is waiting for doctor's orders, let her wait till she gets tired and moves on. That's all good in theory, but in practice, it's having her call you a traitor because you knew that her brothers weren't really dead and you've been letting them hide here all this time and now won't bring them out to her. It's her giving you a dead-eyed stare for 30 minutes because she's sure that you've allowed her "little boys" to be sent away without her consent. It's handing her her purse 4 times in an hour, and helping her count and recount the same $197 dollars in cash she's had in there since May. It's eating steak and baked potatoes at 11:30 a m because she insists it's time for dinner.
Some of those things are doable, and others - because even in her confusion, she's no dope - are not. If she tells you she say a dog in the kitchen last night, and you play along, she wants to know who is feeding the dog, and where it is staying right now, and who allowed a dog in her kitchen in the first place, and aren't you allergic to dogs? And here is where my poor lying skills are put to the test, and where she sees through all my attempts to talk around the subject, and where, inevitably, one of us will wind up upset.
At first, my uncle assumed that this was a complication of one of the medications she was given for her fall down the stairs - she is particularly sensitive to pain meds, and the oxycodone made her hallucinate enough that the doctor took her off it immediately - but now she's been off those meds for months, and she is not improving. And we're remembering little things: like that fall down the stairs - what was she doing up, getting ready for church at 3:30 in the morning in the first place? Like all the conversations we've had to repeat because she didn't remember what we were talking about at all. Like how she seemed to forget that her son and nephew had both died last year, and we'd all assumed that it was just how she was grieving this time - that, having so much heaviness to bear, her brain had decided to remember it only when necessary, and to spare her most of the time. How even last year, maybe two years ago, our visits were getting shorter, and she was going less places, and sleeping more, and participating less, and all of the little things that seemed like just "oh my goodness she's going to be 95 years old, if she wants to go slower, cut her a break!" and now seem like "how did we miss that?"
I think he still assumes that the "confusion" will clear up, at least some - I'm the only one using the word dementia, and when I brought it up the first time, I might as well have punched myself in the face, for the look he gave me. But we both know - this is not normal, this is not getting better, this is not going away.
The hospice people were called in when her aftercare for the fall ran out: she still wasn't able to shower by herself or even get up the stairs very much, and her congestive heart failure was progressing to the point where she needed oxygen some of the time. So the hospice people came in, and keep coming in to help us, but they aren't here to stop anything from happening - just to make it easier on her - and us, I suppose - as it happens.
Her bed's been in the downstairs dining room since the fall (and by fall I mean both the tumble down the stairs and the season which it occurred), but now it's a hospital bed, and the room still has the look of a temporary, make-do space. Her clothes - the housecoats she wears everyday - are stacked on chairs and on the buffet, she doesn't have even a drawer down here she can call her own. I want to have things brought down, things she can recognize as part of her room, pictures or a bedside table, or something, but she still thinks she'll make it back upstairs, and my uncle sides with her (and is the only one of the three of us who can climb the stairs), so I am outnumbered.
I know I'm making some progress with him - he's started telling his brothers and sisters more of the truth when they call. Grandmother is good at pretending - on the phone or when the doctor/nurse/hospice person is here - that she's holding it together pretty well. And sometimes she is. But those times are getting fewer, and the times when she is not are getting more severe, and to say anything else at this point is straight out lying.
I've been avoiding cousins calls for weeks now, knowing that I have to say the truth, and not wanting the words to have to come out of my mouth. My brother knows now, my sisters: telling them was impossible - what do I say? She is not doing well, except for when she is fine. She needs the oxygen every day now, but sometimes it makes things so much better you wonder if it isn't fairy dust. Other times the cannula might as well be blocked, for all the good it does as you sit and watch her chest heave, hoping she catches the next breath. How do you explain that things are routine and desperate all at the same time? How do you get them to see that it is urgent, but not critical today, and that that may change by the time we finish our conversation?
I put such a look of fear on my brother's face, and I know that I feel it as well - The end is coming, and I can't stop it but at the same time, it's just an ordinary Tuesday here, with Grandmother lamenting the state of her curtains ("they never got washed for Christmas, and here it's Easter all ready" "No Grandmother: it's the 4th of July" "That's what I said: didn't I?" "Yes ma'am") and hoping that mail might be interesting. Nothing out of the ordinary, really, except for everything.
When I say that it's happening "too quickly and too slowly", I mean she would hate this, if she knew. She does hate it, when she realizes. Sometimes she has clarity, and those times are the worst, because she knows that she isn't clear the rest of the times - that her days are blanks and holes and that during those blanks and holes she may say things she doesn't mean.
"I hope you know how much I love you," she'll say when she's clear, as if to make up for all the times she'll forget who I am tomorrow, all the misunderstandings we'll have before she's clear again. She was never one to say that, not really: we all knew she loved us, but it wasn't her way to come out and say it. So it means all the more that she does it now. And I do know, I do.
But I don't know what to do, because most of the time I'm just sitting here. Doing the laundry and talking about the time her uncle was killed on the ferry to Staten Island, marking time. We make it through another day, and I write a big X on the calendar, because she's sure to ask me 17 times tomorrow what the date is, and if it's not marked off we'll have to argue about it, and above all, I'm trying to keep the peace. When she gets upset, her breathing gets worse, and she gets more confused, and it certainly isn't worth that worry, to remember the date.
I can watch her heart beat in her neck - the vein there bulges some, and it makes the skin expand like a bullfrog's sometimes when she's breathing too hard. Sometimes her whole chest caves in on a breath, and I hold mine while I wait for it to re inflate. Enough beats, enough bulges, and we make it through to another X, and I wonder what I'm doing here, when she seems OK, really: tired, sure & confused, but maybe I'm making too much of it. Maybe I'm worrying everybody and throwing off our whole summer plans and lives and she'll just keep ticking, just keep making it through the days.
It's not a waste, me being here, because I'm spending time with her, which has always been one of my favorite things, but is now also a strain at times; and I sit and listen to her worries - and oh boy does she have worries, she might be 89% worries at this point; and I make sure she doesn't tangle herself up in the sheets when she gets up to go to the bathroom 16 times during the night, but sometimes it feels like I've put everything on hold until the next horrible thing happens, and that's a terrible feeling.
Like I'm waiting for her to get worse, because I know she's not going to get better, and I wonder if she thinks that's why I'm here, because she can feel how worried I am sometimes, can read it on my face.
"Why are you so sad?" She'll ask me. When she asks me with my name, I can smile, and say "not sad, just tired", and have it be the truth. But sometimes she'll ask as if my being sad is part of some plot against her, or just another sign that she's dead and nobody told her, or yet another example of how we are all hiding things from her, and then I don't have the poker face to pull it off. And I hope I'm not making it worse, feeling sad, when she needs me to bring peace, so I suck it back in, and hope it doesn't leak out so much.
I feel like a float in the Macy's parade, I've got so much sucked in. Because today is Wednesday, July fourth and it's only 9:30 in the morning, and so far she's had a sandwich at 2:30, cookies and milk at 6:00, heard the doorbell ringing at 6:15. And we've talked about a non-existent trip to New York that nobody is making, the time in the 70s that she walked down to listen to the Pops with my two oldest cousins and they all danced in the street on the way home, and at least twice she's told me how to wash the windows when we take the curtains down today.
You know, at the end of those parades, a long time ago, they used to just cut the strings and let the floats drift away. I'm not sure I want to be around when the time comes to let all the sadness out, and floating away sounds heavenly right about now. But I'm here. And I'm sticking. And it sucks, and I wish I could write about it in a way that made logical sense, but it doesn't make logical sense, so we're stuck with this, pouring a little bit of the sadness and worry and stress out onto this page, so I can face going back in there and talking about the goddamn curtains again while I try not to count her pulse or monitor her breathing.
Or she's not. (It depends on the day, really.)
And it's happening both too quickly and too slowly; too tenderly and too angrily; too neatly and too messily. And the rest of my life right now makes about as much sense as that previous sentence.
---
About two months ago, I started to get more worried than usual about my grandmother, because during our weekly visits and phone calls, she was saying things that made very little sense, her voice would get whispery or slurred, she'd go off on tangents about subjects we'd not been discussing, and, eventually she stopped being up for visits, and was ending our phone calls rather abruptly ~ sometimes in the middle of a sentence, she'd say "Well, give my love to everyone: talk to you next week", and hang up the phone. Now she's never been particularly skilled at using the phone (especially the newfangled cordless 'doohickey' my uncle installed for her a few years back), so this was strange, but not completely out of character. When I'd ask my uncle how she was, he'd say things that sort of glossed over my concerns - not addressing them so much as giving me a blanket "oh, it's been a bad day/week" and moving past it.
But enough things were happening that I was majorly concerned, so when he started ignoring my calls 3 times out of 5, and she stopped being available for even the slightest phone call, I decided it was serendipitous that the upstairs bathroom needed re-tiling at the exact moment that I needed to get into the house, and asked my uncle for refuge from the smells, hoping it would get my foot in the door here. I got that far in, and - aside from Tuesdays with the kids and a shower at home, and my own doctor's appointments - I haven't left since.
Because she wasn't just not feeling well: she was decidedly different. Failing. Stumbling over sharp edges and corners in conversations that should have gone smoothly. Sleeping all hours of the day, and getting her days and nights confused. Asking for dinner at 6:45 in the morning, demanding to know why we were starving her, even though she'd just eaten at midnight.
Her confusion is a live wire of a thing: you never know which Grandmother is going to wake up. The one who remembers who you are and how she used to lay you down to sleep on a quilt in the den while your mother went to school, or the one who thinks this place, the house she's lived in for 50 years and raised 9 children in, is a hotel or a hospital that you work in and that she'd like to check out of thank you very much. She could take a nap at noon and wake up around three, ready to sweep the porch and sit out in her rocker. Or she could stay awake till 4 in the morning, moaning because you've just told her that four of her sons are dead and she thinks it just happened right now.
"Humor her as much as possible" the hospice people say: If she tells you she sees her dead sister bustling around in her socks and assigning chores, play along if you can. If she thinks she's the charge nurse and is waiting for doctor's orders, let her wait till she gets tired and moves on. That's all good in theory, but in practice, it's having her call you a traitor because you knew that her brothers weren't really dead and you've been letting them hide here all this time and now won't bring them out to her. It's her giving you a dead-eyed stare for 30 minutes because she's sure that you've allowed her "little boys" to be sent away without her consent. It's handing her her purse 4 times in an hour, and helping her count and recount the same $197 dollars in cash she's had in there since May. It's eating steak and baked potatoes at 11:30 a m because she insists it's time for dinner.
Some of those things are doable, and others - because even in her confusion, she's no dope - are not. If she tells you she say a dog in the kitchen last night, and you play along, she wants to know who is feeding the dog, and where it is staying right now, and who allowed a dog in her kitchen in the first place, and aren't you allergic to dogs? And here is where my poor lying skills are put to the test, and where she sees through all my attempts to talk around the subject, and where, inevitably, one of us will wind up upset.
At first, my uncle assumed that this was a complication of one of the medications she was given for her fall down the stairs - she is particularly sensitive to pain meds, and the oxycodone made her hallucinate enough that the doctor took her off it immediately - but now she's been off those meds for months, and she is not improving. And we're remembering little things: like that fall down the stairs - what was she doing up, getting ready for church at 3:30 in the morning in the first place? Like all the conversations we've had to repeat because she didn't remember what we were talking about at all. Like how she seemed to forget that her son and nephew had both died last year, and we'd all assumed that it was just how she was grieving this time - that, having so much heaviness to bear, her brain had decided to remember it only when necessary, and to spare her most of the time. How even last year, maybe two years ago, our visits were getting shorter, and she was going less places, and sleeping more, and participating less, and all of the little things that seemed like just "oh my goodness she's going to be 95 years old, if she wants to go slower, cut her a break!" and now seem like "how did we miss that?"
I think he still assumes that the "confusion" will clear up, at least some - I'm the only one using the word dementia, and when I brought it up the first time, I might as well have punched myself in the face, for the look he gave me. But we both know - this is not normal, this is not getting better, this is not going away.
The hospice people were called in when her aftercare for the fall ran out: she still wasn't able to shower by herself or even get up the stairs very much, and her congestive heart failure was progressing to the point where she needed oxygen some of the time. So the hospice people came in, and keep coming in to help us, but they aren't here to stop anything from happening - just to make it easier on her - and us, I suppose - as it happens.
Her bed's been in the downstairs dining room since the fall (and by fall I mean both the tumble down the stairs and the season which it occurred), but now it's a hospital bed, and the room still has the look of a temporary, make-do space. Her clothes - the housecoats she wears everyday - are stacked on chairs and on the buffet, she doesn't have even a drawer down here she can call her own. I want to have things brought down, things she can recognize as part of her room, pictures or a bedside table, or something, but she still thinks she'll make it back upstairs, and my uncle sides with her (and is the only one of the three of us who can climb the stairs), so I am outnumbered.
I know I'm making some progress with him - he's started telling his brothers and sisters more of the truth when they call. Grandmother is good at pretending - on the phone or when the doctor/nurse/hospice person is here - that she's holding it together pretty well. And sometimes she is. But those times are getting fewer, and the times when she is not are getting more severe, and to say anything else at this point is straight out lying.
I've been avoiding cousins calls for weeks now, knowing that I have to say the truth, and not wanting the words to have to come out of my mouth. My brother knows now, my sisters: telling them was impossible - what do I say? She is not doing well, except for when she is fine. She needs the oxygen every day now, but sometimes it makes things so much better you wonder if it isn't fairy dust. Other times the cannula might as well be blocked, for all the good it does as you sit and watch her chest heave, hoping she catches the next breath. How do you explain that things are routine and desperate all at the same time? How do you get them to see that it is urgent, but not critical today, and that that may change by the time we finish our conversation?
I put such a look of fear on my brother's face, and I know that I feel it as well - The end is coming, and I can't stop it but at the same time, it's just an ordinary Tuesday here, with Grandmother lamenting the state of her curtains ("they never got washed for Christmas, and here it's Easter all ready" "No Grandmother: it's the 4th of July" "That's what I said: didn't I?" "Yes ma'am") and hoping that mail might be interesting. Nothing out of the ordinary, really, except for everything.
When I say that it's happening "too quickly and too slowly", I mean she would hate this, if she knew. She does hate it, when she realizes. Sometimes she has clarity, and those times are the worst, because she knows that she isn't clear the rest of the times - that her days are blanks and holes and that during those blanks and holes she may say things she doesn't mean.
"I hope you know how much I love you," she'll say when she's clear, as if to make up for all the times she'll forget who I am tomorrow, all the misunderstandings we'll have before she's clear again. She was never one to say that, not really: we all knew she loved us, but it wasn't her way to come out and say it. So it means all the more that she does it now. And I do know, I do.
But I don't know what to do, because most of the time I'm just sitting here. Doing the laundry and talking about the time her uncle was killed on the ferry to Staten Island, marking time. We make it through another day, and I write a big X on the calendar, because she's sure to ask me 17 times tomorrow what the date is, and if it's not marked off we'll have to argue about it, and above all, I'm trying to keep the peace. When she gets upset, her breathing gets worse, and she gets more confused, and it certainly isn't worth that worry, to remember the date.
I can watch her heart beat in her neck - the vein there bulges some, and it makes the skin expand like a bullfrog's sometimes when she's breathing too hard. Sometimes her whole chest caves in on a breath, and I hold mine while I wait for it to re inflate. Enough beats, enough bulges, and we make it through to another X, and I wonder what I'm doing here, when she seems OK, really: tired, sure & confused, but maybe I'm making too much of it. Maybe I'm worrying everybody and throwing off our whole summer plans and lives and she'll just keep ticking, just keep making it through the days.
It's not a waste, me being here, because I'm spending time with her, which has always been one of my favorite things, but is now also a strain at times; and I sit and listen to her worries - and oh boy does she have worries, she might be 89% worries at this point; and I make sure she doesn't tangle herself up in the sheets when she gets up to go to the bathroom 16 times during the night, but sometimes it feels like I've put everything on hold until the next horrible thing happens, and that's a terrible feeling.
Like I'm waiting for her to get worse, because I know she's not going to get better, and I wonder if she thinks that's why I'm here, because she can feel how worried I am sometimes, can read it on my face.
"Why are you so sad?" She'll ask me. When she asks me with my name, I can smile, and say "not sad, just tired", and have it be the truth. But sometimes she'll ask as if my being sad is part of some plot against her, or just another sign that she's dead and nobody told her, or yet another example of how we are all hiding things from her, and then I don't have the poker face to pull it off. And I hope I'm not making it worse, feeling sad, when she needs me to bring peace, so I suck it back in, and hope it doesn't leak out so much.
I feel like a float in the Macy's parade, I've got so much sucked in. Because today is Wednesday, July fourth and it's only 9:30 in the morning, and so far she's had a sandwich at 2:30, cookies and milk at 6:00, heard the doorbell ringing at 6:15. And we've talked about a non-existent trip to New York that nobody is making, the time in the 70s that she walked down to listen to the Pops with my two oldest cousins and they all danced in the street on the way home, and at least twice she's told me how to wash the windows when we take the curtains down today.
You know, at the end of those parades, a long time ago, they used to just cut the strings and let the floats drift away. I'm not sure I want to be around when the time comes to let all the sadness out, and floating away sounds heavenly right about now. But I'm here. And I'm sticking. And it sucks, and I wish I could write about it in a way that made logical sense, but it doesn't make logical sense, so we're stuck with this, pouring a little bit of the sadness and worry and stress out onto this page, so I can face going back in there and talking about the goddamn curtains again while I try not to count her pulse or monitor her breathing.
Friday, May 25, 2012
"Some heavy ammunition on your side..."
Just before Christmas, when everything was going
berserk with Grandmother (again) and me (as usual) and Mom (which was new) and all the usual
December craziness (birthdays and shopping and Christmas and doctors, oh my), something happened that hasn't happened to me in a long time, and I've been trying to write about it since, but the words didn't come till now.
I hope getting it out there will stop making it so important in my mind. I write about everything here, so (even though it feels raw still) it'll be worth saying it 'out loud', as it were.
----
Mom & I were driving out to see Grandmother at the rehab (like we were doing every day at that point), and I'd spent the morning chopping up all the ingredients for beef stew and thrown them in the crock pot and turned it on low before we left. And I'm sitting in the car and mom makes some random comment about leaving things on and fires, and blah blah blah, and instead of just being a piece of our normal everyday conversation, it was like SPARK! and that tiny little off-hand remark managed to ignite an instant fire in my brain.
Immediately I started to worry about the crock pot, to reanalyze ever step I'd taken in making the stew - had I really turned it on low, or had I set it to high and it would burn the meat so quickly that it would catch fire? Was it safe to turn it on and leave the house at any setting? Have we ever done this before, even though I read about it all the time on the internet, that people make crock pot stuff and then go to work with it cooking, have we ever personally tried it before? Are we too far from the house to go back and turn it off? Just a constant stampede of 'could I be setting the house of fire' thoughts tumbling around in my brain, while I'm attempting to still chat with mom and seem like everything is ok.
Meanwhile, I know that what I'm worrying about is stupid: We leave all sorts of things - computers, cable boxes, the fridge, the dryer - on at home by themselves all the time. Nothing has ever happened, nothing is going to happen. House fires are rare, and I was careful and made sure the crock pot wasn't near anything and was on low, and I know all of this, and yet, I can't stop worrying. Some fifteen minutes later, it's still in my brain, still rolling around in there, maybe even picking up speed, because it's loud enough now that I've said it out loud, trying to make it seem casual, trying to act like we're still joking. Ha ha! we laugh, as I say "but that wouldn't really happen, right?" Big laughs all around.
Still, 25 minutes into the ride, and now I've been muttering about it and obsessing about it for our entire ride, and my next deliberately casual "It's not dangerous to have left that cooking, right?" pops out of my mouth and Mom says sharply "Oh my god: just let it go already!" Which is the normal response, if a person is just being stupid about something, and it's driving you crazy. But this wasn't just normal "oh, gee: random thought - let's giggle about this some more!" comment.
Nope, by this point I was full steam ahead into my first real anxiety attack in years.
I've had minor ones here and there - during other people's drunken fights, mostly, when I would swear some sort of PTSD part of my brain kicks in and I have to excuse myself from the tension of the current screaming match to go throw up before I can wade into things (either as peacekeeper or firebrand). Sometimes just the sound of the cork popping out of the wine bottle in the kitchen is enough to have my shoulders creeping upwards with tension. But for the most part, I've managed them, and managed to avoid them (which is even better). I wouldn't even say that anxiety is one of my top 20 CFIDS symptoms, probably because I was never not a slightly apprehensive person: it's just part of my genetic make up, I'm afraid.
But these huge panic attacks - of which I've (thankfully) only had about 6 - these huge, really full blown, tornado brain of worry, hold your shit together or you'll lose it monstrosities. When those mothers come, it's so frightening, because you know you don't have to be worrying about the thing, or that worrying about it won't help the situation at all, but you just can't stop yourself. Your brain is a runaway worry train, and you're just along for the ride.
So she snaps at me, semi-facetiously, and I burst into tears. 'It doesn't help,' I tell her 'to tell me that the thing I'm worrying about is stupid. I KNOW IT'S STUPID. Now I just feel even more anxious because I'm ashamed that I'm freaking out over something so dumb."
But here's the thing that people who don't have anxiety don't get. To people without panic attacks (those lucky bastards), it's just like regular worry: "Oh I feel like maybe that wasn't the best choice," but it's not a big deal, because Oh well, shrug. People will worry. It happens. I'm a champion worrier, and that's not what a panic attack is - for me at least. Worry is one thing, panic attack is a whole 'nother level of worry, combined with an astronomical confidence level - confidence in the truth of the fear, that is.
A panic attack is not just dread, but certainty. It is an absolute conviction of doom. I may know full well that whatever has set this off is a ridiculous thing to be worried about, but I am still 1000% sure in my gut that it doesn't matter that the odds are astronomical that something could go wrong: something is telling me that it's not right, so it must be so. Something is warning me to fix the situation, and I'm not heeding the warning, and that goes against every instinct you have. In this case, all the signs are all pointing to the idea that the house will have burned down by the time we get home, and I'm supposed to blithely ignore that and continue on with our day as if nothing is wrong? Impossible: it feels WRONG.
That's when the logical part of my brain shrinks down to nothing, and instead I remember all those news stories about people who 'listened to their gut' and saved their families. Or I replay all the times my feeling that something wasn't right was an accurate representation of the situation, and try to convince myself that this time it's ok to ignore all the DANGERDANGERDANGER signals my brain is trying to send me.
I dripped tears for the remainder of our ride, playing the tapes in my head that I know work to calm me: 'This is just a panic attack, it will pass. This is SO not about the beef stew chica: you're life is feeling more than a little bit out of control right now, don't ya think? Let's just ride this one out, and things will get better. You are not psychic, and the house is not burning down while you ignore all the warning signs - this is not a real threat.' But because it feels like a real threat, it takes me the whole ride to calm down.
I'm not shaking by the time we get to the rehab, but I'm still so ashamed - of the panic attack; of the tears, of not handling things like a grown up and instead breaking down into something useless; of the fact that I've broken a streak of panic! attack! free! years! over something so ridiculous - that we cut short our visit and go home relatively early. I know that this is mom's way of apologizing for snapping at me (which, was nice but I'm not sure it was necessary), and reassuring me all at once.
We arrive home to stew - nothing more. Once I calmed down enough, 99% of me was sure that was all we'd find. But the whole ride home, there's that one percent, that one embarrassed, fear-soaked percent, that's trying to get me ready to deal with the fact that I've failed to save all of our worldly possessions, just because I didn't trust myself enough to say "let's go home and I'll shut that off, and then we'll go." And because of that one measly percent, I'm not reassured, because once that panic genie is out of the bottle, I don't know if I'll be able to stopper him up again.
-----
That's why it took me five months to write this post: because god forbid that I tried to tap back into that feeling enough to write about it, and it exploded all over me again. I had to be sure enough of where I was, emotionally, to write about that, and even that feels like a weakness to me: to be so scared of remembering how scared I was? Panic attacks are ridiculous.
And I was right, about the genie part - I've felt him trying to creep up on me a few times since, but I'm better at recognizing it than I used to be, so I've been cutting them off before the fear can blossom on me (for the most part). And some pretty stressful shit has gone down since then, so I'm feeling like I've got a handle on managing it right now, which is good.
Because the next time I let something out of a bottle, it better be granting wishes, not paralyzing me with fear. (Look: wish number one is all ready!)
I hope getting it out there will stop making it so important in my mind. I write about everything here, so (even though it feels raw still) it'll be worth saying it 'out loud', as it were.
----
Mom & I were driving out to see Grandmother at the rehab (like we were doing every day at that point), and I'd spent the morning chopping up all the ingredients for beef stew and thrown them in the crock pot and turned it on low before we left. And I'm sitting in the car and mom makes some random comment about leaving things on and fires, and blah blah blah, and instead of just being a piece of our normal everyday conversation, it was like SPARK! and that tiny little off-hand remark managed to ignite an instant fire in my brain.
Immediately I started to worry about the crock pot, to reanalyze ever step I'd taken in making the stew - had I really turned it on low, or had I set it to high and it would burn the meat so quickly that it would catch fire? Was it safe to turn it on and leave the house at any setting? Have we ever done this before, even though I read about it all the time on the internet, that people make crock pot stuff and then go to work with it cooking, have we ever personally tried it before? Are we too far from the house to go back and turn it off? Just a constant stampede of 'could I be setting the house of fire' thoughts tumbling around in my brain, while I'm attempting to still chat with mom and seem like everything is ok.
Meanwhile, I know that what I'm worrying about is stupid: We leave all sorts of things - computers, cable boxes, the fridge, the dryer - on at home by themselves all the time. Nothing has ever happened, nothing is going to happen. House fires are rare, and I was careful and made sure the crock pot wasn't near anything and was on low, and I know all of this, and yet, I can't stop worrying. Some fifteen minutes later, it's still in my brain, still rolling around in there, maybe even picking up speed, because it's loud enough now that I've said it out loud, trying to make it seem casual, trying to act like we're still joking. Ha ha! we laugh, as I say "but that wouldn't really happen, right?" Big laughs all around.
Still, 25 minutes into the ride, and now I've been muttering about it and obsessing about it for our entire ride, and my next deliberately casual "It's not dangerous to have left that cooking, right?" pops out of my mouth and Mom says sharply "Oh my god: just let it go already!" Which is the normal response, if a person is just being stupid about something, and it's driving you crazy. But this wasn't just normal "oh, gee: random thought - let's giggle about this some more!" comment.
Nope, by this point I was full steam ahead into my first real anxiety attack in years.
I've had minor ones here and there - during other people's drunken fights, mostly, when I would swear some sort of PTSD part of my brain kicks in and I have to excuse myself from the tension of the current screaming match to go throw up before I can wade into things (either as peacekeeper or firebrand). Sometimes just the sound of the cork popping out of the wine bottle in the kitchen is enough to have my shoulders creeping upwards with tension. But for the most part, I've managed them, and managed to avoid them (which is even better). I wouldn't even say that anxiety is one of my top 20 CFIDS symptoms, probably because I was never not a slightly apprehensive person: it's just part of my genetic make up, I'm afraid.
But these huge panic attacks - of which I've (thankfully) only had about 6 - these huge, really full blown, tornado brain of worry, hold your shit together or you'll lose it monstrosities. When those mothers come, it's so frightening, because you know you don't have to be worrying about the thing, or that worrying about it won't help the situation at all, but you just can't stop yourself. Your brain is a runaway worry train, and you're just along for the ride.
So she snaps at me, semi-facetiously, and I burst into tears. 'It doesn't help,' I tell her 'to tell me that the thing I'm worrying about is stupid. I KNOW IT'S STUPID. Now I just feel even more anxious because I'm ashamed that I'm freaking out over something so dumb."
But here's the thing that people who don't have anxiety don't get. To people without panic attacks (those lucky bastards), it's just like regular worry: "Oh I feel like maybe that wasn't the best choice," but it's not a big deal, because Oh well, shrug. People will worry. It happens. I'm a champion worrier, and that's not what a panic attack is - for me at least. Worry is one thing, panic attack is a whole 'nother level of worry, combined with an astronomical confidence level - confidence in the truth of the fear, that is.
A panic attack is not just dread, but certainty. It is an absolute conviction of doom. I may know full well that whatever has set this off is a ridiculous thing to be worried about, but I am still 1000% sure in my gut that it doesn't matter that the odds are astronomical that something could go wrong: something is telling me that it's not right, so it must be so. Something is warning me to fix the situation, and I'm not heeding the warning, and that goes against every instinct you have. In this case, all the signs are all pointing to the idea that the house will have burned down by the time we get home, and I'm supposed to blithely ignore that and continue on with our day as if nothing is wrong? Impossible: it feels WRONG.
That's when the logical part of my brain shrinks down to nothing, and instead I remember all those news stories about people who 'listened to their gut' and saved their families. Or I replay all the times my feeling that something wasn't right was an accurate representation of the situation, and try to convince myself that this time it's ok to ignore all the DANGERDANGERDANGER signals my brain is trying to send me.
I dripped tears for the remainder of our ride, playing the tapes in my head that I know work to calm me: 'This is just a panic attack, it will pass. This is SO not about the beef stew chica: you're life is feeling more than a little bit out of control right now, don't ya think? Let's just ride this one out, and things will get better. You are not psychic, and the house is not burning down while you ignore all the warning signs - this is not a real threat.' But because it feels like a real threat, it takes me the whole ride to calm down.
I'm not shaking by the time we get to the rehab, but I'm still so ashamed - of the panic attack; of the tears, of not handling things like a grown up and instead breaking down into something useless; of the fact that I've broken a streak of panic! attack! free! years! over something so ridiculous - that we cut short our visit and go home relatively early. I know that this is mom's way of apologizing for snapping at me (which, was nice but I'm not sure it was necessary), and reassuring me all at once.
We arrive home to stew - nothing more. Once I calmed down enough, 99% of me was sure that was all we'd find. But the whole ride home, there's that one percent, that one embarrassed, fear-soaked percent, that's trying to get me ready to deal with the fact that I've failed to save all of our worldly possessions, just because I didn't trust myself enough to say "let's go home and I'll shut that off, and then we'll go." And because of that one measly percent, I'm not reassured, because once that panic genie is out of the bottle, I don't know if I'll be able to stopper him up again.
-----
That's why it took me five months to write this post: because god forbid that I tried to tap back into that feeling enough to write about it, and it exploded all over me again. I had to be sure enough of where I was, emotionally, to write about that, and even that feels like a weakness to me: to be so scared of remembering how scared I was? Panic attacks are ridiculous.
And I was right, about the genie part - I've felt him trying to creep up on me a few times since, but I'm better at recognizing it than I used to be, so I've been cutting them off before the fear can blossom on me (for the most part). And some pretty stressful shit has gone down since then, so I'm feeling like I've got a handle on managing it right now, which is good.
Because the next time I let something out of a bottle, it better be granting wishes, not paralyzing me with fear. (Look: wish number one is all ready!)
Saturday, March 24, 2012
I'm sick of myself
I know I've been rather quiet of late, but I'm going through one of those periods of having SO MUCH to say, but none of it seems worth remarking upon. I'm living too much in my own head, which is a constant failure of mine, you might note. It's funny because I feel like I have so much to say, but perhaps I have already said it all, or someone else has - clearer, more convincingly, more precisely. I spend a lot of time reading things, marking things, copying things, pinning things, caught between thinking "Thank god, other people feel this way too!" and "See: Someone else has said it already, so keep your own ramblings to yourself." I am feeling both unworthy and completely worldly - as if I am learning new things every single minute of every single day, but they were things that everyone else has already known, and I am just the last to catch on.
I am going through a period of change, that much is certain, and it's quite unnerving to look at yourself and not recognize the person you are becoming. Some of the changes are positive, and purposeful and challenging - things I have been working so hard to address in myself, and am finally starting to see improvements in. Others are things I had no real concept of - I didn't even begin to think they were lurking in the corners, waiting to greet me when I finally got around to them. These are the most unwelcome, of course, the ones that spring up just when you think you've finally got something conquered... "But wait," it says, slithering out just as you're congratulating yourself on some great accomplishment, some true challenge that you have met with all your courage, "you've forgotten about me, and I am a much more formidable foe than the last fellow." It seems there are no end of corners, no end of foes.
And, again, at the same time, I find myself completely sick of how much I am thinking of myself - all of this questioning and second guessing, and erasing of mental tapes, and it begins to seem as if I do little else but sit and contemplate my own life, or read others accounts of how they contemplated their lives and strive to apply it to my own struggles. Which, while a worthy goal, does not a good friend, sister, aunt, daughter, granddaughter make.
So everyone else's worries pile in, or my worries about their worries, if I am being specific. Or my worries that I am ignoring them, being selfish, not giving them the attention they deserve. And somehow, in that muddle, I've come full circle again, and am thinking about my own faults and follies, instead of the people I was meant to be attending to.
I don't know about you, but all this introspection is giving me a headache. I'm going to do something for somebody else today: I don't care who, just so long as I'm not stuck in my own mental muddle for one more minute.
I am going through a period of change, that much is certain, and it's quite unnerving to look at yourself and not recognize the person you are becoming. Some of the changes are positive, and purposeful and challenging - things I have been working so hard to address in myself, and am finally starting to see improvements in. Others are things I had no real concept of - I didn't even begin to think they were lurking in the corners, waiting to greet me when I finally got around to them. These are the most unwelcome, of course, the ones that spring up just when you think you've finally got something conquered... "But wait," it says, slithering out just as you're congratulating yourself on some great accomplishment, some true challenge that you have met with all your courage, "you've forgotten about me, and I am a much more formidable foe than the last fellow." It seems there are no end of corners, no end of foes.
And, again, at the same time, I find myself completely sick of how much I am thinking of myself - all of this questioning and second guessing, and erasing of mental tapes, and it begins to seem as if I do little else but sit and contemplate my own life, or read others accounts of how they contemplated their lives and strive to apply it to my own struggles. Which, while a worthy goal, does not a good friend, sister, aunt, daughter, granddaughter make.
So everyone else's worries pile in, or my worries about their worries, if I am being specific. Or my worries that I am ignoring them, being selfish, not giving them the attention they deserve. And somehow, in that muddle, I've come full circle again, and am thinking about my own faults and follies, instead of the people I was meant to be attending to.
I don't know about you, but all this introspection is giving me a headache. I'm going to do something for somebody else today: I don't care who, just so long as I'm not stuck in my own mental muddle for one more minute.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Insomnia, Devil: same difference.
You guys? This insomnia is so massive that I'm almost impressed. I feel like this is just another example of how my chronic illnesses are combining in a manner created to drive me over the edge. It's like they all fit together just so - not interlocking and meshing like a nice puzzle, but all jagged edges and hard corners and raw spaces that rub up against one another till they bruise and bleed.
This one requires that I exercise; that one makes exercising without passing out a near impossibility.
This one says carefully plan meals & eat healthy; that one says have no energy for cooking, no brain for the math required, and a nausea so lasting you might as well be living on board a rolling ship.
This one says wow, you're super-emotional and could really use a hug; that one says a hug will cause you more pain than ripping off your own fingernails.
This one says be super exhausted for every minute of every day forever; that one says, and also don't even think about sleeping.
They just all mesh so nicely together, don't they?
What with all of the insomnia, especially since I had been making small, tiny, minute improvements in my sleep over the course of the past few months, and a pain flare up that came out of nowhere (hello, ridiculous barometer: I'm wondering if you are not a main culprit here), I am beginning to feel like I can not handle things. Easy things like getting out of bed and washing off an apple to eat it (instead I find myself sitting in the kitchen staring aimlessly into space and wondering what the hell I went out there for), harder things (go ahead and ask me when I last showered: I dare you), and impossible things (lunch tomorrow with Grandmother and some cousins I haven't seen in three years? Never going to happen!) - they're all just sort of accumulating in a little pile over here, that I'm labeling "Hell no, but thanks for asking!"
It's hard to explain what the combination of CFS & Insomnia is really like - one of those 'you have to be there' kind of things, I guess. Because everybody can't sleep sometimes - a sleepless night now and then is just a part of life - and so people think they get it. But they don't. It's like being underwater, like drowning, almost. You know you need to push up towards the surface and get air, take a breath - get more than 5 minutes of sleep at a time - but you don't have the energy too push off in the right direction and your arms and legs won't work together for some reason, and your brain says helpful things like "now is a good time to panic, only do it as slowly as possible, if you please", and you wind up just floating away again, hoping the air - the SLEEP - will come and get you on its own. Parents of newborn babies come the closest to understanding it, I think - the sheer levels of exhaustion you can reach, which you didn't even know existed until right this moment. At least, that's what they tell me.
The other day, after about 37.5 hours with no sleep, and with my FM pain level reaching "i will claw my face off now" proportions, & having tried every 'sleepytime' trick in my repertoire, I was just laying on my bed, curled up as best I could, waiting. And every minute that ticked by made me more angry, made me feel totally out of control, made me want to track down every single doctor who'd told me to 'set a sleep clock' or 'try sleeping with the windows open' or how exercise would make my pain go away and stab them somewhere vital. Not that I would, but it seemed like a good idea, just so that I could say something equally meaningless like "try not to get stabbed, because then it won't hurt so much." It's just ridiculous, the things you hear when doctors have no freaking clue what your disease is/means/feels like.
Anyways, to avoid a similar fate tonight, and because I hope some people are still reading here, even if only occasionally, here I am at 3 am typing away, hoping that my words make sense (and being eternally grateful for spell check, because holy jebus, if you could see some of these errors). I'm trying not to be angry that the rest of you are sleeping peacefully in your beds, but not angry is about all I can manage: don't be jealous is definitely asking too much of myself. But being green eyed is understandable, I think, given the circumstances. Next, I'm going to go attempt to bake cookies, because if there's anything an exhausted insomniac should do at 3 in the morning, it's play with fire, while attempting to make an edible food-type product, completely unsupervised.
Well, when I put it that way, it doesn't sound like the wisest decision I could make, so maybe I'll just open another book instead. Or order something off of the internet. Those sound like good options, right? Aw, what do you care? You're probably snoring away anyways, you lucky bastards. Well, I promise not to hate you too much, if you'll come back soon.
This one requires that I exercise; that one makes exercising without passing out a near impossibility.
This one says carefully plan meals & eat healthy; that one says have no energy for cooking, no brain for the math required, and a nausea so lasting you might as well be living on board a rolling ship.
This one says wow, you're super-emotional and could really use a hug; that one says a hug will cause you more pain than ripping off your own fingernails.
This one says be super exhausted for every minute of every day forever; that one says, and also don't even think about sleeping.
They just all mesh so nicely together, don't they?
What with all of the insomnia, especially since I had been making small, tiny, minute improvements in my sleep over the course of the past few months, and a pain flare up that came out of nowhere (hello, ridiculous barometer: I'm wondering if you are not a main culprit here), I am beginning to feel like I can not handle things. Easy things like getting out of bed and washing off an apple to eat it (instead I find myself sitting in the kitchen staring aimlessly into space and wondering what the hell I went out there for), harder things (go ahead and ask me when I last showered: I dare you), and impossible things (lunch tomorrow with Grandmother and some cousins I haven't seen in three years? Never going to happen!) - they're all just sort of accumulating in a little pile over here, that I'm labeling "Hell no, but thanks for asking!"
It's hard to explain what the combination of CFS & Insomnia is really like - one of those 'you have to be there' kind of things, I guess. Because everybody can't sleep sometimes - a sleepless night now and then is just a part of life - and so people think they get it. But they don't. It's like being underwater, like drowning, almost. You know you need to push up towards the surface and get air, take a breath - get more than 5 minutes of sleep at a time - but you don't have the energy too push off in the right direction and your arms and legs won't work together for some reason, and your brain says helpful things like "now is a good time to panic, only do it as slowly as possible, if you please", and you wind up just floating away again, hoping the air - the SLEEP - will come and get you on its own. Parents of newborn babies come the closest to understanding it, I think - the sheer levels of exhaustion you can reach, which you didn't even know existed until right this moment. At least, that's what they tell me.
The other day, after about 37.5 hours with no sleep, and with my FM pain level reaching "i will claw my face off now" proportions, & having tried every 'sleepytime' trick in my repertoire, I was just laying on my bed, curled up as best I could, waiting. And every minute that ticked by made me more angry, made me feel totally out of control, made me want to track down every single doctor who'd told me to 'set a sleep clock' or 'try sleeping with the windows open' or how exercise would make my pain go away and stab them somewhere vital. Not that I would, but it seemed like a good idea, just so that I could say something equally meaningless like "try not to get stabbed, because then it won't hurt so much." It's just ridiculous, the things you hear when doctors have no freaking clue what your disease is/means/feels like.
Anyways, to avoid a similar fate tonight, and because I hope some people are still reading here, even if only occasionally, here I am at 3 am typing away, hoping that my words make sense (and being eternally grateful for spell check, because holy jebus, if you could see some of these errors). I'm trying not to be angry that the rest of you are sleeping peacefully in your beds, but not angry is about all I can manage: don't be jealous is definitely asking too much of myself. But being green eyed is understandable, I think, given the circumstances. Next, I'm going to go attempt to bake cookies, because if there's anything an exhausted insomniac should do at 3 in the morning, it's play with fire, while attempting to make an edible food-type product, completely unsupervised.
Well, when I put it that way, it doesn't sound like the wisest decision I could make, so maybe I'll just open another book instead. Or order something off of the internet. Those sound like good options, right? Aw, what do you care? You're probably snoring away anyways, you lucky bastards. Well, I promise not to hate you too much, if you'll come back soon.
Friday, January 20, 2012
In the ball pit
I do this thing where I start thinking - really thinking - about something that's important: Have you noticed this about yourself? Is there a reason why you have to run your mouth like that/act so awkward around new people/ be unbelievably cranky for no good reason? And as soon as the truth about the thing starts rushing at me - as soon as I'm starting to get to the meat of the issue, or when it starts to sort of click in my head that this is not a unique occurrence, that I sometimes act like this and maybe it is a pattern... well, when the truth starts rushing at me, I start rushing away. Is there anybody who needs tending or talking to, or playing with? Isn't there a show on right now that I can escape into, be mindless with? Isn't there a book I could read that would take me anywhere but here, facing the truth? It's such an uncomfortable feeling, this realizing things about yourself, and I would do just about anything to avoid it, I think.
When it does come, and I have seen the whole, frustrating, ill fitting truth about myself, it sticks in my brain: a large scaly burr just big enough and irritating enough to block out anything else. I have no other qualities except this uncomfortable truth - I am no longer a good person, a caring sister, a hard worker - I am only an inveterate gossip, a gigantic fraud, a loathsome individual who feels lonely until she's with people and then wants nothing more than to be left alone. Even though I know that this is not true - that all the good things I am or do are not obliterated by some newfound/newly understood flaw in my character - it is how it feels, and sometimes how it feels is how it is.
I have recently come to quite a few uncomfortable realizations about myself, and trying to integrate those things - a certain pettiness here, a confounding inability stick to the straight facts there - into my vision of who I am is proving more difficult than I'd have guessed. I have always known that I wasn't perfect ~ contrary to what others may think, I am well aware that my goody-two shoes image is just something other people see me as - I have never seen myself as such, and wouldn't really care to. But these inconsistencies in my character - the difference between who I want myself to be and who I really am, these are things I want to fix, to change. And that means recognizing them first, figuring out how deep they run and (maybe) where they come from, and how to stop doing them. It's a lot of heavy mental lifting, and, for a person who has limited reserves of any kind of energy - physical, mental, emotional - it certainly seems Sisyphean.
So I keep looking for low energy escapes - can I ever get my Google Reader below a thousand again? Is Reddit being entertaining or insulting today? Is there any way I can get my uncle to have a conversation with people so that they don't think he's an ogre? Let me organize every photo you've ever taken in your whole life! - and then condemning myself for needing these escape routes. It feels like I'm stumbling around kicking at little pebbles, all the while trying to avoid all the heavy boulders I know I have to move if I want to move forward, but just can't even look at yet.
It feels that way about everything - about all the work I have to do to manage my illnesses (and the question of when I decided that just 'managing' is enough for me), about all the things in my own behavior that I'd like to change; about all the topics in my family that need addressing, and all the ways we find of not addressing them; about not making time for friends and then wondering why they aren't making time for me; about the world as a whole and all the things spinning out of control in it. It just feels like there's too many important things that should get looked at, poked at, lifted up and examined, fixed, and I don't want to touch a single one of them.
A perfect example in the physical world is that my space is still not undecorated from Christmas - oh, the actual decorations are down, but the furniture is still all in the wrong places for every day living. Thus making it more difficult to do things like get towels, because we moved the cart that holds the towels behind the chair, so you have to climb over the chair to get ready to take a shower. It's little ridiculous things like that, but also huge life changing things like deciding to call the PT again, and see where that takes me, or actually changing my diet enough to prevent this diabetes thing from happening - and I just don't want to face any of it at all.
And here I write the necessary caveats that "we've all been sick since Christmas! - and I mean sick sick, like the flu that won't die sick" and "I've just spent two months caring for a wonderful lady, whose head is harder than the stairs she fell down!" and "blah blah blah Chronic Illness, you idiot!" but all of that - while true and real and just so much - doesn't feel like enough of a reason to let everything else pass me by. I never feel like I am juggling half of the balls I need to juggle, there's just me, standing with maybe the three or four largest, most fragile balls, throwing them up and catching them (sometimes by the skin of my teeth, but still, catching them), and all the while, the floor around me is littered with a million other smaller balls.... It's basically me, standing up to my waist in the ball pit of Chuck E Cheese, trying to catch all these biggest balls, but knowing I've let a thousand more go. And not knowing which of those thousand was the next most important - the one that needed me now, and I won't get to it for another three weeks.
I don't know what to do about all that - how to climb out of the ball pit, or juggle better, or even begin identifying the colors of all the stupid things I'm standing in. I know this feeling will pass, or fade, because it has in the past, but it never goes away... I'm always fumbling something, and I wish I knew how to stop.
When it does come, and I have seen the whole, frustrating, ill fitting truth about myself, it sticks in my brain: a large scaly burr just big enough and irritating enough to block out anything else. I have no other qualities except this uncomfortable truth - I am no longer a good person, a caring sister, a hard worker - I am only an inveterate gossip, a gigantic fraud, a loathsome individual who feels lonely until she's with people and then wants nothing more than to be left alone. Even though I know that this is not true - that all the good things I am or do are not obliterated by some newfound/newly understood flaw in my character - it is how it feels, and sometimes how it feels is how it is.
I have recently come to quite a few uncomfortable realizations about myself, and trying to integrate those things - a certain pettiness here, a confounding inability stick to the straight facts there - into my vision of who I am is proving more difficult than I'd have guessed. I have always known that I wasn't perfect ~ contrary to what others may think, I am well aware that my goody-two shoes image is just something other people see me as - I have never seen myself as such, and wouldn't really care to. But these inconsistencies in my character - the difference between who I want myself to be and who I really am, these are things I want to fix, to change. And that means recognizing them first, figuring out how deep they run and (maybe) where they come from, and how to stop doing them. It's a lot of heavy mental lifting, and, for a person who has limited reserves of any kind of energy - physical, mental, emotional - it certainly seems Sisyphean.
So I keep looking for low energy escapes - can I ever get my Google Reader below a thousand again? Is Reddit being entertaining or insulting today? Is there any way I can get my uncle to have a conversation with people so that they don't think he's an ogre? Let me organize every photo you've ever taken in your whole life! - and then condemning myself for needing these escape routes. It feels like I'm stumbling around kicking at little pebbles, all the while trying to avoid all the heavy boulders I know I have to move if I want to move forward, but just can't even look at yet.
It feels that way about everything - about all the work I have to do to manage my illnesses (and the question of when I decided that just 'managing' is enough for me), about all the things in my own behavior that I'd like to change; about all the topics in my family that need addressing, and all the ways we find of not addressing them; about not making time for friends and then wondering why they aren't making time for me; about the world as a whole and all the things spinning out of control in it. It just feels like there's too many important things that should get looked at, poked at, lifted up and examined, fixed, and I don't want to touch a single one of them.
A perfect example in the physical world is that my space is still not undecorated from Christmas - oh, the actual decorations are down, but the furniture is still all in the wrong places for every day living. Thus making it more difficult to do things like get towels, because we moved the cart that holds the towels behind the chair, so you have to climb over the chair to get ready to take a shower. It's little ridiculous things like that, but also huge life changing things like deciding to call the PT again, and see where that takes me, or actually changing my diet enough to prevent this diabetes thing from happening - and I just don't want to face any of it at all.
And here I write the necessary caveats that "we've all been sick since Christmas! - and I mean sick sick, like the flu that won't die sick" and "I've just spent two months caring for a wonderful lady, whose head is harder than the stairs she fell down!" and "blah blah blah Chronic Illness, you idiot!" but all of that - while true and real and just so much - doesn't feel like enough of a reason to let everything else pass me by. I never feel like I am juggling half of the balls I need to juggle, there's just me, standing with maybe the three or four largest, most fragile balls, throwing them up and catching them (sometimes by the skin of my teeth, but still, catching them), and all the while, the floor around me is littered with a million other smaller balls.... It's basically me, standing up to my waist in the ball pit of Chuck E Cheese, trying to catch all these biggest balls, but knowing I've let a thousand more go. And not knowing which of those thousand was the next most important - the one that needed me now, and I won't get to it for another three weeks.
I don't know what to do about all that - how to climb out of the ball pit, or juggle better, or even begin identifying the colors of all the stupid things I'm standing in. I know this feeling will pass, or fade, because it has in the past, but it never goes away... I'm always fumbling something, and I wish I knew how to stop.
Labels:
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Issues.,
Life,
Making Me Crazy,
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unfinished thoughts
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