Sunday, 28 June 2015
Dorset Diary or How a Fall Broke the Spell
4:30pm Father’s Day today.
Cards and Game of Thrones
tee-shirt from the kids.
Swim today with Kate. 30 minutes in the pool, practising our strokes. Really loving the exercise. She looks like a mermaid in the water –all that lovely long red hair. What a beauty our girl is.
Yes, it was all going so well before the Fall. We are restricting transfers to short distances only – no wheeling him around in the hoist. Two people on the job and on high alert during transfers. Glancing through my diary entries, I think I am guilty of complacency. His condition has seemed relatively stable for so long and we have had no disasters. I was clearly uneasy about the hoist from Day One but I managed to convince myself that it would be ok.
Wednesday, 17 June 2015
The Will to Write
“Get it down. Take chances. It may be bad, but it’s the only way you can do anything really good- William Faulkner
I blogged the other day about how my mind-set has changed,
how I no longer regard Roch as a dying man. When I began this blog on 24th
March 2010 I wrote:
“Ok so now I've started. I'm a blogger! I've decided to blog about my life, specifically since my husband was diagnosed with MND last June. For those of you who don't know, MND stands for Motor Neurone Disease. It's a progressive degenerative neurological condition (what a mouthful) and at present he is 'living with it' but we all know it'll get him in the end. He calls it 'The monkey on his back'. If anyone ever asks me 'Which living person do you most admire?' I will tell them 'My husband, Roch.' He knows this. I've told him. He is the bravest person I know.”
Well, he’s still the bravest person I know, so that hasn’t changed, and it’s going to get him in the end, all right. But that was six years ago and we went into this thing thinking we had very little time left together. You know what? We were wrong. I don’t want to get complacent but I realise that I need to stop telling myself that my stuff can wait. In my head there’s a date, a time I call ‘l-a-R’ time. That’s ‘life after Roch’ time. I told myself that when the worst happened, I would be able to concentrate on my writing, that it would be my consolation, something all my own to hang onto for dear life. Now I realise that I can’t put it off and use Roch’s illness as an excuse any more. I need to get on with it, rejoice that he is still here, very much alive and accept that I must weave my writing through and around our life with MND with purpose and intent. After all, as my mother once told me, “Cheer up, you might die before him, and then you wouldn’t have to worry about it.” Ah, there’s nothing like a mother’s comfort.
The Will to Write
There are days when I wake early and Roch doesn’t need me yet. I lie in bed and allow inertia to take over. I feel exhausted but sometimes I do get up early. Sometimes on those days I stare at the blank page, bleary eyed and with an aching head. The pages of my notebook are full of self-pitying entries, negative thoughts where I berate myself, interspersed with attempts at self-encouragement:
March 24th 2015 Five years from First post
"Feeling low today. I never dream about flying anymore. I feel like I have little direction, just emptiness and sadness. I feel like I could be more to him. The worse he gets, the more distant I feel from him. I wish I could get down to more writing. Wishing isn’t doing, I guess. Same old, same old. What changes do people see in him? Neck brace, struggling for breath at times when speaking. I feel like I don’t help when he lacks motivation. I’m busy, busy, busy all the time. I need to sit quietly with him more. Ah well, at least I can say I bring him to football. And meanwhile where is my life going?"
May 13th 2015
"Desperate to write
something good, something successful. I long for those sessions of writing
clarity, when the words flow and you know what you’re doing! I cast around for
ideas. I spend more time reading about writing than I do writing. I keep
telling myself to stick to a schedule. Do a few hours every morning. In the
meantime I write horrendous poetry (but is it horrendous? Is it?) and FAFF
ABOUT!Fact: I have had
SUCCESSES!!Fact: People like my
writing!Fact: Spending too
much time on twitter and Facebook.Note to self: Put
phone away when writing."
June 4th 2015
"No writing, that’s right, begin with a negative. Hospice Nurse came today. I miss D. Felt under pressure to respond as the dutiful wife (Inside I’m screaming). So, not possible to be completely honest. Note to self: explore this with Monika. Where is he to die? Hospice or Home? His use of the word “burden”. Do I make him feel like a burden? Shifting the mind-set…I am very much in my own version of MND world today."
Here’s a good one:
21st January 2015
"I’m excited that after my entry here yesterday, I opened up the laptop and wrote a story for a competition. It feels good. It made me cry (how very self-indulgent of me). It was C---- at the door which was just as well, as he wouldn’t have noticed a thing! I sent him away as Roch was still sleeping. My story is about a quilt. It has elements of truth all wrapped up in some pretty strong fiction. I’m very happy with it.”
That story didn’t get anywhere in that competition, so I’ve recently entered it into another. It would be lovely if it was longlisted, shortlisted – won! But even if it doesn’t appear on a list anywhere, I love it and I loved writing it.I ask myself the question: What do I need to be happier in this life? I know the answer to my question. Set time aside to write.
“Folks are usually about as happy as they make their minds up to be.” - Abraham Lincoln
I do find the 'twittersphere' great for picking up motivational quotes. But time to put the phone away now...
Monday, 15 June 2015
Six years since diagnosis: Tennyson, Assisted Dying and Living Life
Six Years of MND
Coming up to the sixth anniversary since Roch’s diagnosis, it feels like a time for reflection. Neither of us thought that he would last this long and to my surprise I’m finding that reaching this stage requires a change of mind-set on my part. In fact, our reactions to the reality of his survival well beyond initial prognosis appear to me to be quite different and I find this interesting. On my part I realise that I no longer view my husband as someone with a terminal illness. It’s true - his deterioration has been so slow and I am so used to his level of disability that although I find it trying at times and struggle with the limitations it imposes on both our lives, I don’t see him as a dying person. To me, he’s just Roch. I have ceased thinking about his death and this means I need to focus more on acceptance of Life as it is now and for the foreseeable future. It means living in the moment not just as a couple, but for me as an individual, too and not postponing life until some future uncertain l-a-r* date. But this is for a separate blogpost.
A Young Man's Fancy
I think Roch’s feelings are different. Alfred, Lord Tennyson once wrote:“In the Spring, a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.”This quote shot into my mind as I began this post, but I amend it here to match our circumstances:
“In the Spring, a brave man’s fancy grimly turns to thoughts of death.”
Doesn’t have the same ring to it, does it? And yet, it’s true. I have no doubt that thoughts of death are often in his mind, but June is a special time for us. This June especially, death is very much in our thoughts, as an old and dear friend is dying, not from MND but from cancer. Roch feels it acutely. Six years ago he expected to be dead long before anyone else of our acquaintance. Once again, I know his thoughts are occupied with questions about how his own end will come. What form will it take? How ‘decrepit’ will be be? (His word, not mine.) The internet is a wonderful thing and yet it can also be a frightening thing. We read about other men and women living with MND as they and their loved ones document their experience. Some of what we read scares us. He dreads a long and lingering death, immobile, unable to communicate freely. He often speaks of suffocating, choking etc. His doctors cannot tell him how the end will be for him, because they don’t know. They can’t answer his question because everyone with MND is different. Of course not everyone with MND will die a lingering and distressing death, but the best I can say to him when we read of someone else’s struggle and misery, as they battle against distressing symptoms at the end of life is:
“It may not be like that for you.” It’s little comfort. How do we know?
So Roch ponders the manner of his death and worries, feeling that he has no control and not enough information. Aware that Assisted Dying is illegal in the UK, Roch feels his options are limited. He would like to choose the manner and time of his death but presently feels that to exercise control he may decide to refuse food and drink. What would the physical symptoms be? What would the level of pain/discomfort be? If he didn’t accept nutrition, but was kept hydrated – how long then before the end?
The hospice nurse is unable to answer these questions and as the law currently stands, we can’t expect that he will. He really cannot discuss issues around end of life in any context which might be construed, however tenuously, with Assisted Dying and so tries valiantly instead to offer reassurance to Roch; that his death is not imminent, that the palliative care at the hospice is excellent, that his family are more than willing to continue to care for him as long as it takes. We know these things, Roch knows these things, but knowing them doesn’t help him. Roch remains in a state of constant anxiety and will continue to wake at night on occasion, with ‘the horrors’ as he describes it, facing an uncertainty about his end with no control over the outcome. He doesn’t want to die. We don’t want him to die, but if he is to enjoy the rest of his life at all, he needs to have control over the end of it.
Assisted Dying Legislation in the House of Commons
So earlier this month we were delighted to learn that MPs are to debate Assisted Dying legislation on 11th September. Labour MP Rob Marris, who is introducing the bill, said,
“Alongside the vast majority of the public, I am in favour of terminally ill people who are of sound mind having choice at the end of life. It is a choice that I would want for myself and I do not think we should be denying this to people who are facing imminent death.”
This will be an opportunity for Members of Parliament to debate the best law which will not only give dying people choice but also protect the vulnerable.
So here we are, on the eve of 16th June, six years since diagnosis and we are still making plans and trying to enjoy as much as we can together, as a couple and as a family. Wouldn’t it be nice if Roch could relax and make the most of what’s left to him, untroubled by thoughts of his death, knowing he would have some control at the end? 82% of the public would agree. Do you?
https://www.yesuntiltheend.co.uk/
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