hi marion,
good to hear i'm not alone after all!!! hahaha i also drink tea so have to share that tea plantation with me i'm afraid!! although mine is caffeine free! lol I wish i could just switch off and not keep thinking all these thoughts but they never seem to go away. I'm trying to stay positive and keep thinking maybe there will be a cure for darryl before it's too late, and then i keep thinking am i living on false hope??? This is so hard and my brain never switches off. I keep thinking is enough being done for darryl and would he get a better prognosis if we went abroad, would they offer him better treatment than here? Then i feel guilty as we couldn't afford treatment abroad any way so just going round in circles at the mo!!I wanted to grow ols with darryl and that seems to be getting taken away from us and i can't bear the thought of being a widow!! I'm not wishing Darryls life away because i love him so much but i have these crazy thoughts then feel so flipping guilty for feeling that!!! wish this never happened to us, and everyone who knows darryl find him such a lovely man that he doesn't desrve this at all. Just wanted to thank you for your support you take care and i'll read your other thread love and hugs mel xx
hello charles,
thank you again for replying. I am not too bad thank you and am trying to stay strong for darryl my husband, even though it is very hard sometimes. I'm glad you find comfort in the church and wish you well. It's a bit chilly here too today so you make sure you wrap up well before you go out! Well i hope you have a good rest of the day thank you for being so kind. Take care my friend love and hugs mel xx
Dear MellyMoo,
That's a really good handle. I am notorious for bad spelling and overly long postings. Well you'll be spared the long post because I've got to take my eldest son out Right Now.... I saw your post as I was browsing around and it struck a chord because I suffer from your problem from time to time and when i do, I spend hours listening to my family breathing in the dark. There is a place in our house when I can here all three of them and i sit there thinking about them while drinking. Not recommended but maybe you already know that. See I'm woffling already!
Anyway the point of the posting is that I'm basically in a similar situation to you and I have found that (this is going to sound boring), it's really important to exersice (told you it was boring). I don't know anything about you (sorry if we've talked before and I've forgotton) so you might be an olympic swimmer or something but assuming that you're not, I want to recommend boring old exersice. What's more, I want to recommend that you join a cheap gym if you can afford it. You're going to say that you've not got time but I just want to tell you how I do it and the benificial impact it has on me....
There is a council gym attached the school that my boys go to so after I've dropped them off I go there. It costs £350 for 18 months I think and they open early on a Mon, Wed & Fri. So basically I get exersice three times a week and it's all over by 09:30 including a shower.
The reason why I recommend intensive exersice to you is that the mental strain of being a carer is generally high; it consumes most of my waking hours and many when I am asleep... Without some form of physical exersice, this strain has no outlet; going to bed mentally drained but physically active is not a recipe for rest. Just taking a walk might work for you but it does not work for me (I do walk a lot but this is to sort my head out, I can post you on that if you want). So anyway walking just does not wear me out enough. It's got to be an hour of hard work three times a week.
I know it sounds boring, but it works for me. I do sleep well when I exersice and badly when I don't. If I'd just said that right at the start, you'd not have had to read all this would you?!?!?
Anyway, must go. Scooter needs to be taken to his GIRLFRIEND'S house right now. True love!
Best of luck to you and your man by the way.
David
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