Thursday, February 21, 2019

New Normal - not all it's cracked up to be

Three years ago, life as I knew it forever changed. I can remember every text, every phone call, every hospital visit, and every FB message and comment and I am grateful for every single person and the friendship and support. I am still grateful for those who see the constant battles and challenges and still ask – even though three years have passed.

While there would be subsequent “incidents,” the most significant of which would impact my early days at USC, I suppose we are among the “lucky” for whom eventual recovery is almost complete.  Scotty is mobile and requires far less personal care than he did initially or even later as he experienced other incidents.  All-in-all it would appear to the outside world that everything is fine and life has returned to what we knew.  Well, it hasn't and to be honest, I really don’t like the new normal.

The new normal has resulted in fractured relationships – some beyond repair, and I am left to navigate them all - alone. 
There is inappropriate behavior and hurtful words - I often feel as though I am raising a toddler. 
There is anger and frustration, on both sides - and it never goes away. 
There is the constant battle of wills between his, “I’m fine” and my acknowledgment of the reality of his limitations. 
There is the constant reminding – of things misspoke, memories lost, explanations of circumstances, and people and places who are no more.
There is the burden of having to be everything for one person – caregiver, memory bank, parent, chief cook and bottle washer, role-setter, bill payer, and to try and remain a spouse.
There is the constant wishing – for different, more, and sometimes less.
There is the guilt – when anger rises, when the wishes are dark, when the desire to walk away is stronger than the knowledge of the right thing to do.

I suppose in many ways we really were "lucky" – there are many more who lose much more than “we” have.  Perhaps that is the harder burden to bear – the almost normal, but not quite.  There is just enough debilitation that my role has shifted significantly while Scott’s seems to have become easier.  I have been told I should just divorce him – both by dear friends and family.  And almost daily that thought lives in me.  But the reality is not that simple.  There are financial considerations as well as my gift/curse to do the right thing – no matter how difficult the right thing is to do.  I do know that my new normal is what it is and I’m grateful it isn’t more than it is or bigger than I can manage.  But today, the third anniversary of the first “cerebral incident” is a day that reminds me largely of all that has been lost.  I’m working on the contentment and perspective shift that comes with appreciation for all that remains – some days it’s just not as easy as it sounds.