Friday, June 17, 2011

World's Worst Blogger

The previous June 17, 2011 post was really written some time in late September, 2010.  I think I scared myself with what I wrote.  What would somebody think if they read it?  It was a bit too honest for my taste.  Too revealing of who I really am.  Looking back now, I realize how much I hide from the world.  I used the word hide not hid because I'm still doing it.  Nobody ever knows what is really going on in my head, I guess.  I keep that tucked away.

I've gone through the motions of life these past 10 months.  Today is the 10 month anniversary of my husband's death. Life has moved on much to my dismay.  The feelings that were initially squelched have finally begun to surface.  I think I spent so much time locking my feelings away while Scott was ill in order to function that I didn't know how to start feeling again.  Or maybe it was just denial.  I'm not sure, but I bet a psychologist would be willing to pose a theory or two.

So I finally decided to post the previous post.  So far I have remained readerless so I might as well say what I have to say, right?  I've told nobody that I started a blog.  I'm probably afraid it will actually be read if I do.  So hence the title of this post is "World's Worst Blogger."  In ten months I have written only 3 posts now, and I haven't told anyone about so I remain readerless.  These strategies do not create a successful blog.  But that is fine because this is more for me than for anyone else.  Maybe some day I will get brave and share what I have written.

The Many Faces of Grief

Really, I thought I knew what to expect when it came to grief.  When my mom died, I had this acute, pervasive grief.  It followed me every minute of the day, and the tears flowed until I thought it impossible to cry anymore.  I finally gave up trying to control the tears and just carried on the daily activities of life while weeping.

When my dad passed, it was more this sense of sadness because I felt he was never a very happy man.  Never comfortable in his own skin.  Top that off with his life ending in a slow decline into dementia where he was overwhelmed with confusion about what was going on around him.  He lost his ability to make decisions. He could not remember his immediate family members.  Nothing was familiar to him.  He had no sense of control for his own life.  I felt grief that his memories and the essense of his life was stolen from him by this hideous disease.  This time it was a more peaceful grief because I wanted his suffering, both mentally and physically, to end.

When my husband was diagnosed with aggressive brain cancer at age 45, we pretty much knew from the start that we were looking at the end of his life.  We had already lost his father to brain cancer twelve years earlier.  Very few people survive a significant period of time, and the time they do have if often filled with ups and downs so extreme it is beyond my ability to describe.  Anyhow, at the time, I assumed the grief process would pretty much mirror what I went through with my mother.  I know many of the days while his illness progressed pretty much reflected what I felt with my mother.  I experienced emotional pain that was so severe I couldn't tell where the pain in my heart ended and physical pain began.  Somebody along the way told me it is called chronic grief when you are dealing with a terminally ill loved one.  The grief starts when the diagnosis is given, not when they die.  Along the way we experienced small victories against the cancer and then had our elation would be smashed into tiny shards again when the cancer took more of his mental and physical abilities or caused him pain that was unquenchable with medication.

I was braced for the emotional maelstrom I was facing.  His last three months were a nightmare of endless surgeries and hospital admissions.  As his physical strength declined, we had no choice but to face the fact there was nothing else the doctors could do to save him...to give him more time.  The life of the person I loved most in the world was quickly coming to an end, and there was nothing I could do to stop it.  It was like being frozen in terror as a freight train came barreling towards me, and I couldn't move myself to get out of the way of the inevitable conclusion.  The end came at home on August 17, 2010 at 8:21 pm.

I thought I knew what to expect.  I had been through it before.  I'd been preparing myself for three and a half years.  And then, nothing.  I felt nothing.  Blankness.  People told me I should not feel guilty for feeling relieved.  I didn't feel relieved.  I felt nothing.  It was like somebody had applied Novocaine, maybe anesthesia, to my brain.  To my heart. There was nothing.  This man, my husband, whom I loved so fiercely was gone, and I had no emotions left to feel.  The first real emotion I felt after the fact was horror at my own self for my inability to feel anything.  I went to bed and slept through the night.  I got up in the morning and went about catching up on all the things that had been left undone while he was most critically ill. I made lists of the things I needed to accomplish and checked them off as they were completed.  I made plans for a celebration of life party to be held in his honor.  He didn't want a funeral.  Instead, he wanted people to have a good time.  To remember him as he was when he was well.

All this time, I went through the motions.  I accepted condolences and well-wishes for the future.  Occassionally, I would get a little glimmer of feeling, like when you catch a glimpse of something out of the corner of your eye.  Then, when you look, its gone.  It happened so many times that I started to watch for that glimmer.  What was that elusive feeling hiding just out of my line of sight?  It has been just a bit over six weeks since he passed.  Slowly, the emotions are seeping back in.  The void his passing has left is starting to make itself apparent.  The feeling is an absence of joy. Of laughter.  Of having a purpose in my life.  I can't put a name to the feelings.  It as if somebody took all the cans of paint off the shelf in my basement and mixed them all together.  The color is hideous and undefined.  It is just a hodge-podge combined together.  That's how I feel right now.  My emotions are hideous and undefined.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

How It All Began

On January 9, 2007, our world tilted off its axis.  I received an alarming call from my husband while I was at work.  He was agitated, confused, and frightened.  He had temporarily lost the use of his left side, his vision became blurred, and he lost consciousness for a short time.  Despite my efforts to have him get his co-workers to call an ambulance, he refused.  I hopped in the car and made the 30 minute drive in record time convinced he'd had a stroke.  He was able to walk out of work and get in the car.  He seemed stressed, but otherwise fine.  Of course, once I had him in my clutches, he was going to the hospital.  They put him through a million tests, and the entire time I was still convinced he'd had a stroke--bad, but not impossible to deal with.  It wasn't until early the next day that they lowered the boom on us.  It hadn't been a stroke.  He'd had a seizure, and it was caused by a mass in his brain.  Most likely cancer.  We needed to see a neuro-surgeon immediately.  That day our world tilted off its axis and has never returned to its correct orbit again.

Even though this blog is about my journey as newly created single spouse, I chose to share this story to give everyone, hopefully anyone, reading this some background about how I got where I am today.  Sitting in my living room, typing away on a newly created blog on a beautiful September day, and wondering about where my life is going to take me from here.