Saturdays Will Never Be The Same

3 minute read time.

There’s a song I love called “Sundays Will Never Be The Same”.  No I haven’t posted in the wrong blog today.  My music blog is for positive days where we don’t talk about cancer and entries are happily shown to family and friends.   That blog does not do negative thoughts.  This blog is sadly the true story......

I am not in a happy mood today.  People keep telling me that it will be possible to get something resembling my old life back eventually.  I don’t agree.  Let me try to explain.  I met my wonderful husband nearly 21 years ago.  We’ve both been lucky to escape ill health so far until I let us down by getting one of the worst illnesses I can think of.  We have no children so we have never experienced any sort of event that changes your way of life forever.  We did manage to escape the rat race a few years ago so we enjoy a less stressful and slightly slower pace of life than we had before.  But up until my cancer we have more or less enjoyed the same lifestyle all throughout those 21 happy years. 

So I am angry because Saturdays in particular will never be the same again.  A typical Saturday might go like this.  Nice lay in listening to “Sounds Of The Sixties” on Radio 2 whilst enjoying breakfast in bed.  Then off to the shops.  On foot as we prefer minimum use of the car.  We will then potter round the shops for a few hours acquiring several bags of shopping.  On the way home we will stop at a nice pub and enjoy a leisurely lunch.  With our food I will have a glass of wine and my husband will enjoy a bottle of real ale.   We will then continue home the scenic way.  This involves firstly having a rest in the park where I will feed the ducks and my husband will take photos.  Then along the beach.  Perhaps another sit down and watch the world go by for a while.  Finally home several hours later.  We may be a little tired and the feet and the arm muscles might ache a little but we have had a lovely time.  We will then have a good rest as Saturday night we are off to the theatre. 

We will be walking to and from the theatre.  It’s only a mile away.  We could take the car and spend an outrageous amount of money in the long stay car park.  But we won’t be because unfortunately the local car thieves have identified this car park as easy pickings and we’ll be lucky to have a car to return to.  We could get a taxi.  To the venue would be no problem.  Coming home is a different matter.   Due to the reputation of the car park we will probably get trampled underfoot in the stampede for the taxi rank.  We will have walked home and be tucked up in bed before half the people get home. 

So how will Saturdays be until I regain the stamina to walk several miles a day?  Probably like they are now.   Husband goes down town on bike for essential shopping whilst I order up everything else online.  In the evening he will be downstairs watching a DVD or listening to his music.  I will be upstairs where I will either be watching tennis on the laptop or reading a book.   Not exactly what I would call spending quality time with husband.  We don’t seem to be able to do that anymore.

What is even worse is that I am now trying to sort out the dilemma of our future finances.   Every day when the postman arrives I am expecting the letter from my employer that says sorry if you don’t get back here soon we’ll have to put you onto SSP.  I’m surprised it hasn’t come yet, I’ve already gone way past my contractual entitlement to full pay.  So economies will have to be made.  Frivolous shopping, meals out and trips to the theatre would be an obvious starting point.  But that alone won’t do it.  I am also going to have to find some alternative means of earning income.   I’ve made a start already and it’s looking encouraging.   But it will include working on Saturdays.

So I’m sorry but I don’t think I will ever get anything like my old life back.  And what hurts me most is that my husband won’t ever get his old life back either.  On days like this I am so angry at how cancer has ****** up my life and more importantly that of the person I love most. 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Now I really have to take issue with you here. You never let anybody down with having cancer. I didn’t feel that about Laing at all. I was just bloody furious that the way the cards were deal buggered up things a bit. If you ask me, that’s probably the way your husband feels.

    Also you wrote you were not in a happy mood. You brought a smile to my face when talking about the car park and taxi and the stampede. You might not feel happy, but you can still write with humour, intended or otherwise.

    Right now I can understand how you miss the pleasure of the old Saturdays, but you only alluded to returning to the old ways and old days. As you know I am a believer in the New Normal™ ©, and it is something I have always believed in, it’s only now I had to define it and give it a name and a life of its own. Your life was never the same after meeting your husband, which is a good New Normal. So it isn’t all bad. Here I am, dangerously close to turning into Pollyanna again!

    The worst thing is one bad thought can lead to another and all becomes gloomy, but life isn’t all bad. I just made a comment about Bake Off on another blog. Somebody’s disaster, like putting in salt instead of sugar, is a moment of despair for them, but we watch and empathise. Those bakers must have been good enough to have been shortlisted, but put them into extraordinary circumstances and look at how they cope. I think that with the previous series, Laing and I watched it willing on the gay contestants (the pink flag had to be waved) over the others. Although we knew we had no much of a future to look forward to, we were so pleased for all those who had new lives coming out of it as they found their talent was able to provide pleasure for others.

    I’ll let you into a secret. You provide pleasure for others with your blogging. Pleasure to know another human being who, in extraordinary circumstances, is showing us how she is coping. We are uplifted on the good days, brought down by the not so good and empathising with you, and yet when things aren’t at their best, we are sitting back willing everything to get better, faster for you.  At least I am. 

    As for cancer having ****** up the life of the person you love most. Don’t you believe that for one minute. Initially I thought that’s what happened when Laing told me of his diagnosis, but as each day went by I found out it hadn’t. It made our bond much stronger. I’m prepared to put down good money and bet that’s what’s happening with you guys. Even on a crummy day like this one you described, there is something good about, it’s just not necessarily there at the time or you can’t see it.

    Pollyanna has been cast to one side now, and here’s giving you a hug to remind you you are a special person to more than one, even though we have never met, apart from the screen of the Macmillan blog zone.

    Tim