It's a big year Chez Cusp...lots of anniversaries and big birthdays. I don't really like big occasions...too much pressure and I believe the stress of that is leading to all the dreams I've been having: bizarre, twisted dreams. Dreams about the past, the future, what I've lost, what might happen in the future. Last week, decent sleep was especially precious as each night I closed my eyes and off I went into another technicolour drama-roller-coaster of old memories all mixed up....like some demon had decided to remind me of all the things I used to do but put it through a blender first.
I feel like there's a lot of reassessing going on under the surface. Landmarks have been reached and its time to move forward but I'm unsure about how or what.
In the normal scheme of things I'd have drawn up a plan with bullet points and worked through it. I was always good at that:..'this is the plan' was a joke in our house because that was how I worked...dreams, goals and plans. But nothing is normal Chez Cusp....especially inside Cusp where I'm never sure how I'll feel physically or, at the moment, emotionally. Its not that I'm sad. I just feel sort of pressured that time is marching on, I've been living with serious M.E. for ten years and not much has changed for me ...and I want it to.
Recently, a very good blogging chum was writing about loss of independence due to ill health and how that can affect self-confidence, relationships, self-image. J is a real fighter....gets knocked down and gets back up. I get knocked down, lie there stewing ad thinking and then get up again. I know that being ill enough to keep me at home for 10 years has knocked my confidence. I get little glimpses of the old me...the confident in-charge me, the gung-ho me...and instead of helping me to think 'oh that part's still there' it undermines me because I know its not sustainable: I can only keep it up for so long.
The threat of being assessed for my ability to return to work terrifies me. I just don't know how I would manage going to work. I know that most days I can put on the face...especially in interview/meetings type scenarios and probably come across as confident, personable and capable (unless its a day where I cant find the words and barely remember my own name) but I have lost so much. The skills I had are still there but the whole art scene and funding scene has changed. The people I networked with have moved on. The contacts are lost...and most of all I can only do all that for a short period of time. I'm like a old clockwork toy that runs out of 'wind up not long after you've set me down on the floor
At home things are in flux. We have had the threat of my partner's job ending for months. Now it seems like it might be OK except there'll be more working at home (because office space is scarce so they'll all be gievn a laptop and work at home). To be honest that feels like another piece of my independence lost: for all the company and help I get I need a few days alone in the house, to move about at my own pace ( i.e slowly, amblingly) to not have to worry about other people because, to be honest, even after all this time, I still don't really go at MY pace when other people are at home with me: I kind of try to keep up with the flow and then cover up my 'failings'. It's because I still feel embarassed, ashamed of the fact that I'm not the person I was and because I hate the feeling of lost independence; I need someone else to do a pick up of kids or drive to the supermarket but if I can do it myself (even if its too much) I will because I dont want to give in, be dependent, be frail.
Some of this stuff comes from habit: I spent so long covering up my illness at work for so many years that it's kind of second nature. Some of it is much much deeper stuff from childhood..from being seen as weak and vulnerable and being determined that I wouldn't be perceived like that anymore. I remember an incident in A&E a few years back when I'd had a nasty fall and ripped out three fingernails. The nurse took one look at me and said 'We must get you in a wheelchair. You look so pale and we dont want you falling over in here.' She was saying it because she was concerned, caring.....and I was livid, furious at being 'put' in a wheelchair. I felt like it was a punishment for being so stupid as to fall over in the first place ....so everyone could look at me and point the finger in the waiting room 'Look at that goon..can't even buy 5 things in Tesco without falling over'
So many losses and such frustration. So much I want to do and so hard to do them. So sick of still being in thrall to that dark shadow and sick of being incapable of drawing up a plan and working through it: 'This is the plan'......what's the point ?

13 comments:
So glad you have posted this, obviously you need to get it out but also you have just helped me to pinpoint something that has been simmering below the surface in my own existence ... I too have always had a plan and followed through with it usually to great success ... I still fight to do that everyday, each night when I go to bed I plan what I want to achieve the following day, simple things like - have a shower or chop up carrots so I have afternoon snacks for a few days ... but the plan usually goes out the window and I feel defeated again.
The landmark anniversaries can really do your head in can't they !! But you know that even well people struggle with turning 40 or 50 or whatever the case may be ... you look at who you used to be and think about the promise of who you should have become and weigh it again who you actually are and it's sad ... maybe instead of looking at the things you never got the chance to be you could focus on all the brilliant things you are everyday that you never planned on ... such as a super mum who has always been there for her kids despite being chronically ill ....
Sometime I think life would be so much easier to just be dumb ... I suspect being self reflective and analytical is the curse of intelligence!!! xoxo
sorry about all that cusp, I sure know what you mean by time marching on, by speeding up to suit the pace of others, futility of making plans ...
I can hardly bear to think of all I have lost - a simple few holes of golf maybe - and now I am 72, what am I going to get back? very little I think.
So I do understand and empathise as well as sympathise, wish I could do more. But I do think of you and your chirpy comments/posts ...
Alone time is good too. You must ensure you continue to have some.
Take care
Adam
It's SO damn hard! Most don't understand the courage needed to tough out the days after days after weeks, etc. It's the kind of courage that goes unapplauded, but I mention it whenever I can; to give folks something to think abt.
Good to vent.
Well good news that your husband's work situation is looking positive but I do understand your concern about how him being around will impact on you.
Maybe you'll both benefit from him having a set space/room where he works which will give you both the space you need - him not worrying about you and you not worrying about changing all your normal routine. Plus he might have a bit of flexibility and want to do things like errands that will free you up - to share the load rather than pick up the slack.
Like J had a sudden insight into how that relationship change might be from her partners perspective perhaps your husband too is also somewhat apprehensive about the flux. He may be well aware of your need to not show weakness and be anxious about how his working from home might contribute to that - without having a lot of choice about working from home.
Sounds like a lot of change and a lot of different experiences are approaching that differ to the everyday norm and I can appreciate the fear that comes with that. As fierce as you used to be (still are?) about not showing weakness to others you have to now be equally as fierce about protecting the fragile balancing act that keeps your health as best as it can be given the circumstances.
Personally I loved it when my husband worked from home. we had much more opportunity to do fun things together and be spontaneous because if I was having a good day he could shuffle his schedule and we could do something together. It's impossible to book leave in advance from the office in the hope I might be good that day.
But now he has been working full time at the office for a couple of years I do find it a bit weird when he has days working from home. I enjoy his extra assistance with things like making cups of tea but other things I find disruptive - like him wanting the telly on when I sit here in silence most of the day. If he were her regularly though these things would get sorted out and we'd adjust to each others routines and wants and needs.
I hope you can navigate your flux without too much upset or crashing.
Wow, it sounds like you're going through a rough time right now, with lots of reassessing. I think we've all been there at one time or another.
I completely understand what you mean about needing that bit of time alone in the house!! That quiet time alone during the day is an oasis! I'm terrified of how I'll cope when my husband eventually retires.
I'm a planner, too. I still make plans and lots of lists...I just rarely get through them!
You're not alone. Thinking of you...
Sue
very relatable frustrations cusp. it can truly drive us insane if we compare what should have been, what could have been.
i once had a young man who was good friends with my daughters. having little understanding of my condition he said to one of my girls "i aspire to be like your mom. she lives like she's on holiday everyday. she wears loungewear most days, eats gourmet food each meal, and lives by her own clock". as far off from reality as this kid was...somehow he gave me permission to reframe my life. although i'd give up my life of leisure for the restoration of health and meaningful work, just for now, i am a woman of leisure;)
despite your feelings of losing your identity... you come across as quite a goddess of modernity! you are extraordinarily creative in every detail. clockwork in orange just a coincidence? i think not! xx
can very much relate to the time marching on bit...keep hitting milestones that have me up in the decade plus since whatever and feeling like nothing has changed in that time. very hard at times not to think 'what's the point' about planning for an unknown future, or for anything at all.
i'm with lee lee on the lists...best tip i've had was to only expect yourself to do one thing on it, anything else that gets done is a bonus (and i often don't even get to one).
and so much empathy coming to you at the thought of losing some of your space. makes such a difference to how i cope.
hate to think of all you've lost, but i can tell you that the person i've met who i haven't known with any of the 'before' trappings is a pretty incredible being. and i suspect that more than some of that has come about as a by-product of this journey no-one would ever ever choose.
XXOO
I still don't really go at MY pace when other people are at home with me: I kind of try to keep up with the flow and then cover up my 'failings'. It's because I still feel embarassed, ashamed of the fact that I'm not the person I was and because I hate the feeling of lost independence; I need someone else to do a pick up of kids or drive to the supermarket but if I can do it myself (even if its too much) I will because I dont want to give in, be dependent, be frail.
Some of this stuff comes from habit: I spent so long covering up my illness at work for so many years that it's kind of second nature. Some of it is much much deeper stuff from childhood..from being seen as weak and vulnerable and being determined that I wouldn't be perceived like that anymore.
I can really relate to what you say here. It is exactly how I live my life and probably what keeps me from improving. Didn't quite know how to articulate it, but you said it so beautifully. Thanks for sharing. xxx
sorry to read you're going through all these tecni-colour dreams of memories, lost life and future wishes.
I'm on the home strecht to a 'big' birthday and it does make one think what has yet come and what didn't exactly materialize in the past decade (and more) of dreams, plans and hopes.
Still planning....
Thinking of you!
Lots of love
Corina
I think Lee Lee has nailed it again. Living is hard enough without CFS/ME. People struggle enormously with ageing and just coping day to day with family life without the extra challenges of chronic illness. You have a disabled child and other children to cope with (not to mention an incontinent dog). If it were me, they'd all be in care by now. I just couldn't have handled what you handle every day. That's a massive achievement. You are still awesome Cusp. The illness can't take that away.
Can you do me a favour and email your MP about your fears around the Work Capability Assessment? You could copy and paste part of this post. I've had a good response from mine about it. Will be posting at some point.
Keep processing that emotion - "better oot than in". Loads of hugs coming your way (((())))))
This is probably not going to be helpful, Cuspie, and everyone's circs are different, but: Mr. Signs works at home three days a week now and it works well enough. Important thing is to have boundaries in actual and psychic space.
Re plans - if I didn't make a few I'd go bonkers. Even if most come to nought, it's important to feel that there are possibilities. And then some do actually slip through the net, take root and flower.
But Oh, and Oh, the pity of it! For all of Us.
Do you know I sometimes think even though this type of honesty makes us feel vulnerable, it also releases something. Lets it be free and that is why afterward we feel a little silly. Because the release makes us feel a bit better.
But you articulate what we (with CFS/ME) all feel. You give voice to something that resonates with all of our suffering.
We have so much time for forced introspection that we self analyse too much and we're too hard on ourselves. So feel it. You've earned a dark day or two.
I might take a few more.
BTW it's my ten year anniversary of diagnosis on Easter weekend.
xoxoxo
I have come to this late - I did read earlier and failed to compose a comment. Just reading all the lovely comments since makes me think that you obviously do achieve a lot to have such a caring band of followers and are obviously marvellous in many ways!
I am sure that you will find a way to muckle along when both at home in the daytime and as other's have said, there may be benefits to the new circumstances. I do cherish my alone time but showing your vulnerability and slow pace at bit more may not be a bad thing for all concerned. Hope you can still feel like you have regular down time and that other life issues you talk about in the next post get a bit simpler somehow!
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