Monday, June 10, 2013

We Are Soldiers (a serious note)


For those of you who have had an experience with someone with Alzheimer’s, you are fully aware of the toll it can take on you. I recently saw pictures of soldiers that had been in Afghanistan; they were before and after pictures. It was obvious that the constant worry and stress of their situations as well as the loneliness of missing their loved ones back home, had taken its toll on them. It reminded me a bit of what I see in the mirror every day. I know I haven’t had to go through the horrors of what our soldiers have gone through and I haven’t had the stress of literally fearing for my own life on a daily basis, but in the mirror, I can see what a long drawn out battle has done to me and the toll it has taken.

I can see it in the faces of people who are taking care of their parents and their spouses.  We are at war; we are in a battle. We are fighting something bigger than ourselves that we cannot defeat. Our days are long and drawn out and we are forced to do things we never thought we could do mentally or physically. We are fighting a disease that knows no enemies and has never been defeated. We fight to keep our loved ones safe from harming themselves, wandering off, or simply from falling down. We fight to keep them involved while fighting to protect their dignity. We fight our frustrations in them not knowing who we are. We fight the urge to argue when they want to go home even though they are already in their own home. We fight to convince them to do the basics of daily life like changing their clothes when they have been wearing the same clothes day after day. We fight to keep it together when they tell us the same thing every five minutes. We fight to not break down each time they go into the hospital to battle some other illness that could end their lives. We fight to not give up when we are at our wits end and the day has just begun.

We struggle daily with the guilt of our bad decisions and letting someone else help to take care of our loved ones. We worry when we leave them alone with caretakers that they will be watched after and cared for and that no one will show them their own anger and frustration. At night we lie awake and worry about the day we just had and how we will handle the next one. We worry that we are not doing the right thing, or doing enough, or that we might just snap under the pressure. But each day, we gear up and face the battle. We do it to protect our loved ones. We do it because we have to and we want to and we are scared to death not to. The toll it takes on us is great. We can see it in the mirror. We can feel it on the inside. We know we are isolated from many of the people we love as our lives are immersed and focused on making the best of fighting a losing battle. As hard as we try, our minds never really wander away from our task at hand.

 

Just like a soldier that comes back from war, when our loved ones have passed away, we need time. We need time to re-adjust when it is all over. We need time to heal, time to learn how to let go of our experience and time to enter back into the normal thoughts of a day. We are soldiers who have fought the good fight, to defend what we love and believe in. We are battered, shell-shocked and tired, but in time, we will pick up the pieces and find the good to remember and take pride in knowing that we made a difference; we did our best, and even though probably never expressed, it was appreciated. No one can really understand unless they have been through it. We can’t expect them too. What we must do is continue to pursue a happy life that we know our loved ones would so desperately want us to have. We  continue to fight this disease so that future generations do not have to fight this same war for us all over again. We are soldiers, and we have our battle scars both inside and out.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Don't You Hate it When: Smartphone


Don’t you hate it when you interject  yourself into someone else’s conversation only to find that you are in way over your head and that you have no idea what anyone is talking about but you try to keep up anyway and while you are rambling out of control like a train wreck  you start having flashbacks from your childhood when you went down a hill on your bike that went from a steep slope to a ninety degree angle and you were no longer riding your bike but hanging on for dear life which then reminds you of the time that you hopped on the wrong ski slope and you were going so fast that you had no idea how you were ever going to stop and that the most you could hope for was to  fall and not break anything or get run over by the experts but you didn’t want to go ahead and fall and cut your losses because you were  too scared to do it because you knew it was going to be ugly and as you remember all these things you realize that your mouth is still running and that the left side of your  brain has no idea what the ride side of your  brain is talking about and suddenly you hear someone say “Let me see your phone and I can probably figure it out” and as you hand it to them you snap an instant replay tape into your head and recall that everyone was talking about the glitches in their smartphones and that you were also trying to complain but couldn’t answer what you thought the problem was because you didn’t understand any of the lingo so you tried to “wing it” and before you knew it you were heading down that steep hill/ski slope/runaway train and your brain was spinning out of control until everything came to a quick, sudden stop because the person who was holding your cheap phone announced “This isn’t a smartphone” and everyone is silent and you can hear the clock  ticking on the wall and it hits you that you actually have no idea what makes a smartphone a smartpone and that yours isn’t actually smart at all and may only be average at best,  and that phrase you have heard a million times about “It is better to remain silent and have everyone think  you are an idiot than to open your mouth and confirm it” ,or something like that, starts running through your head and it bothers you that you can never remember  exactly how that phrase goes  which probably is a reflection on how badly you should not ever try to use that phrase as you are only acting out the words as you speak them offering up yourself as a  personal example for the phrase and all you want to do is find a computer so that you can Google “what makes a smartphone a smartphone”  and you try to end the conversation by shaking your phone to make it work better and all you can think about is that it would be a perfect time for somebody to break out into a flash mob to “All You Single Ladies” but it is not happening so you just shake your phone harder while the people you were talking to watch  and that tingling part of your brain is thinking all by itself wondering how you could make everyone within earshot forget the last five minutes or why there isn’t something like “rapture on demand” or how cool it would be if Harry Potter’s cloaking device was real and the next thing you know you realize that your mouth is still running while your brain is having its own internal audit…? Yeah, I hate it when that happens.


 

Cutting Back


Cutting back

 


 

I had to go to the doctor yesterday just for a routine check up and he informed me that it was that magic time of my life when I needed to get a physical. Yeah, I don’t see that happening any time soon.  Anyway, at the end of the appointment he said those six little words that I have never heard from a doctor before, “You need to lose 20 lbs”……………how could he tell? I had on my “hide-a-fat” clothes the whole time and he never grabbed my love handles….oh yeah, the scales…those darn scales! He went on to add, “Do you remember where you were 10-15 years ago?  You were 35lbs lighter. Let’s start with 20lbs.”  I felt  horrified and insulted...I was horrisulted.

 

I couldn’t believe it. It seems that pretending I am in shape while overeating isn’t doing the trick. So last night, while watching TV,  I was thinking about all this and what I was going to have to do . I heard the timer go off in the kitchen so I sat down my bowl of chocolate peanut butter ice cream (with an extra spoonful of peanut butter for flavor) and went into the kitchen to check on my blackberry/blueberry/raspberry cobbler (it needed ten more minutes) and gave my crockzilla full of cabbage/bean/Italian sausage soup a stir and then went back into the den, sat back down and picked up my bowl of ice cream. I thought about it all and realized that it was time, time to make a change. I consider myself to be health conscious and it was time to make a difficult yet important decision about cutting unnecessary things out of my life. It was time to find a new doctor…Bon appétit !