Life alone - only read this if you are feeling strong

3 minute read time.

It's 3 months since my lovely man died. Sometimes, it feels like yesterday & at other times, it feels like ages. The emotions swirl around and I switch from sadness to anger to guilt to misery. Some of the really gut-wrenching crucifying eviscerating pain has deadened but it wouldn't surprise me if it came swirling back like a whirling dervish and smacked me in the guts.

I know he is dead. I've visited his grave often enough, but still the tricksy little brain says, 'Perhaps he's gone away and he really is going to walk in the door at any moment and everything will be ok again.' No chance. Not one. Who are you kidding, brain? He is no more. Get a grip.

The reality of what that means is slowly starting to sink in. Think I've been numb for a long time. I see couples holding hands, reaching out and touching. I see men at the supermarket helping with the shopping. I see couples arm in arm. There are constant reminders of what it is to be a couple. And that has gone for me. 

I go home and the house is empty. The clock ticks very loudly in the kitchen.

'How are you coping? At least you have the dog." Excuse me? I have a list of totally inappropriate things people say. Yes, I know. They are trying. It's very difficult for them. Stand in my shoes and talk about difficult, though.

Anti-depressants? Chuck 'em away. There is only one way to deal with this. You just have to go through it, and work through it, take your time and GRIEVE. Nobody can do it for you. 

Friends? Well, I am learning. Some are great, worth treasuring. There are new friends too, who are prepared to bear witness, stand by me, listen, allow me to rabbit on about my man, cry etc. And I do realise, friends are the most important people to me. I need to look after them. I've noticed some of them are more careful with their partners, some are actually doing what they've promised themselves for a while, really Seizing the Day. So maybe that's my man's gift to them. Maybe they are learning too.

Family? Hmm. My kids are lovely, but other family members have disappointed me. 'Oh sorry we haven't been in touch for a while.' Yeah - like since the funeral. What do you imagine I've been doing? Having fun?

'You need to hold on to the good memories.' Well yes, but in order to get to those good memories I have a backlog of absolute s**t to work through. The diagnosis (just under a year ago), the never-ending treatment - chemotherapy, radiotherapy etc etc - with all its memories and last of all, the last 3 weeks in the hospice. And God help me, I wonder how it is possible to ever lose some of those memories. The misery, the pain, the helplessness etc

Now don't get me wrong, I have good moments. I joined a choir and actually found myself enjoying singing. I am planning for the long dark nights of winter, trying to put in place things to get me through all that. I have to try, to go through the motions, to pretend until one day, a very long way down the line, I may find I am actually living a life of my own and it's not too bad.

But the feeling of half of me being amputated is ever present. How can I be whole again when I have lost that part of me which is so entwined within my own being? My soul-mate, my best friend, the father of my kids, my mentor, my rock, my lover........

Ah but Life is cruel. And I STILL HATE CANCER.

Today I went to my doctor and they had no record of my appointment. No problem - they saw me, BUT the flipping NHS and all its inadequacies & incompetence drives me crazy. Particularly when I think of what my man went through. There are still a few people I would line up against a wall and shoot. (Tut - where is my compassion?)

So there we are. Bumbling along but still here. A crazy mixed-up old bat who is trying to stand up for herself and make her presence felt on this planet but finding it a bit of a challenge. 

Little Jen 

 

 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hello there,

    Me of course.

    As Churchill said, if you are going through hell, keep going. He's right of course and you are doing it. Along the way your heart feels as if it has been ripped out and that gut wrenching blackness that you daren't look at will be there for a while yet. But one little step at a time. Don't torture yourself with looking ahead and back and he's gone, just put one foot in front of another and keep going, step by step and step by step  and step by step like the clock in your kitchen and one day you will look up and see how far you have come.

    In the meantime, there are no words to help or ease or anything. But I am here. Walking those steps by your side and holding you up on the wobbles and dark times.

    My heart aches for you and wish I could do something, anything, to help you a tiny bit, but I can't... except send you hugs and let you know I am on the other end of a computer walking those steps with you, one by one by one.

    I bought a silver bracelet from a Canadian foundation that fundraises for cancer. On the band it say f*ck cancer in joined up writing so you can't really read it in passing, but you know its there and if people stop to look what it says they can. On the inside it says Embrace life clear as day.

    I am wearing it every day.  It suits me better than a ribbon. I wear it for you too.

    Go well, my fellow little person and bumbling along is just fine....  and take heart from your fellow living beyonders... they are learning and slowly getting there and one day so will you. I wish you peace of soul to get there.

    Little My xxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Oh Little Jen,

    Yes, I had to look.

    Your description of all the things couples do together rings a great big bell with me since I went through the same 25 years ago. Yes I have the good memories, but I have the bad ones too. Yes I still miss my wife and that is after 25 years.

    But the black moments do get less as we pick up the pieces of our lives again; I made a concious effort to go out and lose myself in other activities and of course my work.

    It seems to me that you are doing just fine. I don't mean that you are out the other side, no, you are going through the dark passages we all go through until eventually life seems a little less dark. You will always miss him, but you will remember him with affection because that love you shared will never die.

    Friends and family Bah! Most of our friends couldn.t handle a single man amongst couples and most of my wife's family have never been in touch to this day. But I now have new friends from the many activities I joined - real friends with whom I can do things.

    And there are our mac friends, who all support each other" as it says on the tin, and we are all here for you when you need us.

    The biggest of hugs to you little person with a big heart,

    Colin xxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi there LM and Paddyman

    Bless you both. How can I ever forget my Mac friends, who stand by me through all the tough bits and encourage me. 

    LM, you are always such a great support and manage to say the right things whatever I throw into the ether. Thank you so much. Where did you find your Canadian bracelet by the way? I like the idea of that.

    Paddyman, thanks for what you said, too. I kind of imagined that I would always miss my old man no matter how many years pass by. When you've had a good partnership, how could you ever expect it to just slide away and not be part of you. But thanks, too, for telling me that it will get easier. I have to believe that. We all need to remember that, because that hope is what keeps us going. I was really interested what you said about being a single in couple land. It's so true. 

    My blog looks a lot darker than I intended, but I was just writing down how it is. And if you saw the less negative bits, I hoped you would understand that some of the pain is easing. And that I am discovering, little by little, that I do have good friends  - some are old friends but equally, some are people I'm getting to know better because they weren't particularly close before but are proving themselves caring and supportive folks I want to treasure in the future. 

    So, I am trying to square up to my grief (in true warrior fashion, LM) and not shy away from it, but also trying to put one foot in front of the other and try new things however scared I am (and believe me, I am scared.) I guess it is all part of trying to make a new life.

    But the bottom line is, and always will be in part, that I have lost someone so very precious. Perhaps writing the blog is my way of telling the world that I lived with a man who was so beautiful, so brave and such fun and I loved him very very much. Just that.

    Huge hugs to you both,

    Little Jen  

     

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Little Jen,

    I hear you and understand every flipping word you say, I don't post much these days, but your blog, well I jst wanted to reply.

    I am a long way off the 25 years of Colin, but at just 11 months I can tell you that I am out of that big black hole with the express train running through, constantly hitting me. I didn't believe anyone when they told me the pain, the hurt , the lonliness would ease, but it has and slowly with the help of my friend's the ones that did what they said they would and were there for me,( the rest of them well pfft...who needs em!) my family and my new firends I am starting to live again and laugh. I still miss Tony like mad, long for him sometimes, but I can look at photo's and smile now, not break down into a snivelling wreck.

    I still have that milestone of the one year anniversary, coupled with our wedding anniversay on the same day, but I'm sure I will survive. It can't be as bad as last year at this time....surely.

    Big hugs to you

    Jackie xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    You'll make me cry again Jen! How lucky you were to have such a wonderful man in your life...

    Good friends are like gold dust so hang on to them. I discovered the same when I got cancer. The ones who stayed and the ones who disappeared and the new ones who appeared and helped more than any... odd how they shift eh?

    Anyway, I think you might like the bracelet. They are very expensive but a good cause and a nice thing to wear... it helps me a lot as well as feeling a little bit naughty especially when I wear it to school ;)

    They come from F cancer www.fcancerembracelife.com  They do copper ones cheaper. I saved up for about 3 months to get mine and don't regret it for a second. Look them up. if you are on facebook they are there under F cancer....

    Big hugs and so pleased you are singing... its good for the soul :)

    LM xxxxx