A question ........

 My question today was going to begin with the words 'Do you ever  .......' but the minute I started to type I realised that was the most stupid thing in the world to ask.  Stupid because those words were to be followed by '...........wish you were in a normal relationship?' and I may be wrong here but I can't imagine anyone in this situation not wishing that, at least every so often.  So my question instead is 'how often do you wish you were in a normal relationship?'  Is it every day, once a week, once a month or have you been doing this so long that you've forgotten what a normal relationship looks and feels like so you barely give it a thought?

I ask because I've had an odd sort of day.  Sundays quite often grab me like that because Sundays always seem to be family days and we're not quite a family nowadays but neither am I on my own so not free to do exactly what I want.

I had a lovely morning with friends at the 1940s event.  We wandered around, had coffee, gazed in awe at the outfits and flawless makeup, marvelled at all the equipment on display, watched the dancing, listened to the singing and generally had a lovely time in the sunshine.  All was well in fact until I saw something that Ash would have found fascinating once upon a time, I thought of telling him about it when I got home and then realised instantly that there was no point.  Not only would he not want to know the detail but the fact that I'd had fun would have unsettled him and so was not worth the effort involved in the telling.

That was the point today then when I wished I was in a normal relationship.  One where I could talk with enthusiasm about something I'd done, one where my other half would have loved seeing me so happy, one where I could share an experience and talk about the detail.  I find I don't wish this quite as often as I once did just because life isn't dreadful and the vast majority of the time I accept the situation as it is but every so often I wish I was in a normal relationship.  How about you?

Don't forget you can sign up to have this delivered straight into your inbox, just remember to click on the validation email (which may be in your junk mail/trash box).  You can share specific posts with others by clicking on the 3 dots at the top right hand corner of the page, you can share the blog by copying and pasting the web address www.memoryfortwo.com or you can email me at memoryfortwo@gmail.com if you have anything you want to say privately.  You can also now follow me on twitter, just search for Memory For Two, and you can find me on facebook https://www.facebook.com/Memory-for-Two-287197572048864.

Comments

Lorraine said…
Not just every day, but several times a day!I just miss that 'normal' conversation and companionship that we once had SO much. I have wonderful friends and family but what I hate so much about how this awful disease has changed our lives irrevocably is that home is no longer the sanctuary it once was where I could share and say whatever I wished to my best friend and he would always be supportive even if he didn't wholeheartedly agree with what I was saying! I think the main difference between us Jane is that I haven't, and I'm not sure that I ever will, 'accept the situation as it is'!
Jane said…
I think Lorraine that we just all deal with the situation in our own way. I recognise all that you've described and used to say when work was stressful that the only thing which kept me sane was coming home to this house and to Ash. That was such a long time ago though that I've almost forgotten the feeling. Not only that but I think I bury those feeling deep inside because if I let them out and allow myself to think that way I'm fairly sure I'll fall apart. So it's not that I've really accepted the situation but more that I can't think of it any other way.
Carol S. said…
I agree that those thoughts arise all the time and are really natural. I’ve found that the meditation I have done over the years has really helped. In meditation we learn to simply observe thoughts as they arise but not follow them, not dwell on them. Then they drift away - just like clouds in the sky. It’s the thoughts about the thoughts that lead us to a very dark place - the ‘what ifs’ or ‘ if only’. For anyone who doesn’t care for meditation I guess a distraction helps - something that you really need to focus on - just like knitting really helped Tom Daley in the Olympics stop his thoughts from straying into unhelpful areas. I guess the first step is recognising which thoughts just make us sad and finding our own way to stop them in their tracks.