Something to be celebrated?

 It's our Ruby wedding anniversary today and I have to tell you that it's not what I would have envisaged if I'd ever spent time thinking about it over the past forty years.

Ash, with S's help, has bought me a card and a plant but that was on Thursday so, of course, he has no memory of it now.  I on the other hand haven't bought anything.  I know it's our anniversary and I know that people will be thinking that those forty years are an achievement but, to be honest, all I feel is that I'm only just  hanging in there by my fingertips.

Our thirtieth anniversary was so different, so full of fun and laughter with no inkling of what was to come but now I'm married to a stranger.  Ash is not my husband of forty years except on paper and that makes me sad.

This morning I found something I wrote in 2019 which, if you're struggling to understand my feelings, just might help make sense of it all.  It wasn't written as a blog post and is quite long so please don't feel you have to read it but if you do you just might understand where my thoughts are right now.

The Absent Husband

My husband is missing, absent without leave, no longer in my life.  He began to fade away, gradually at first but with gathering speed until eventually the person I fell in love with over forty years ago is no longer beside me.  In his place is a stranger, someone who looks like my husband and sounds like my husband but is, in every other way, a completely different being. 

This is not a total disaster you understand, just somewhat bewildering.  The man who made me laugh every day from the minute I woke to the minute I went to bed has been replaced by a man who is frequently grumpy, often cross and seemingly at odds with the world, and me, on a daily basis.  The man who had more energy than anyone else I knew, who was never still, who was so full of life that friends and family looked on in awe has been dislodged never to return.  The joy of the world, so in evidence in the person who went before, is missing from the eyes of this new man.  Everything is a chore, chaos and confusion reign and life, since that diagnosis of dementia, will never be the same again.

There are positives to this new life in which we find ourselves.  I’ve given up work so we spend more time together; I’ve discovered the joys of gardening, I have time to walk the dog, I’m learning some aspects of DIY; all good things but, most interestingly, I find I’m turning into a nicer version of myself.  I have more time for friends, I remember birthdays, I notice more, take on board other people’s opinions and feel that I’m better company.  So definitely not all bad.

We have good days and bad days.  A good day begins with a smile, with this person beside me in bed reaching for my hand and commenting on something he can see out of the window.  A bad day starts with him lying rigid, not knowing where he is and unable to think of what’s to come without panicking so then my brain has to kick into action as I think of how I can reduce his stress and, consequently, mine. 

I’m not sure this new man is one I would have married all those years ago or be still married to if I had.  He isn’t someone I really know so it’s hard to tell but I do know that we’re not a team, that we don’t head towards a shared goal, that partnership working is missing from our relationship and that has taken some getting used to.  Sometimes I want my real husband back so badly it hurts but at other times I know I’m lucky to have had him at all.  I used to be married to a man who thought I was amazing, who always had my back, who was there to put his arm around me and tell me everything would be alright.  I keep expecting him to come up to me at any moment and tell me it was all a mistake, that he’s better now and we can go back to how we were but in my more rational moments I know that’s not an option.  The imposter is here to stay and there is no way out of this situation, only a way through.

Sometimes having a stranger around the house, someone who doesn’t understand how I think, who doesn’t know how I’m feeling makes this a lonely existence.  Friends are always there if I need them but my very best friend has moved out.  The only person I could ever cry in front of can’t cope with my tears; the one I told all my worries and fears to no longer wants to hear and my soulmate no longer exists.  I’ve discovered I can be lonely without being alone.

I’ve also discovered however that I have strengths I never knew existed.  I can make decisions without checking with anyone else; I can drive long distances without being afraid; I can work things out for myself; I can ask for help when I need it; I can produce a solution to almost every problem if I think hard enough. 

Before my husband disappeared he seemed to love everything about me.  He was proud of me and encouraging in everything I ever wanted to do.  This was excellent for my self esteem but without his open admiration I’ve had to learn to love myself, to appreciate my own strengths and work on my weaknesses. 

So, still not all bad BUT the one thing that looms is the future.  My new partner has just turned 60 which is young for dementia and perceived wisdom is that there is a general life span from diagnosis of five years which is not what I imagined when, at age 15, I met his predecessor.  I thought we would grow old together and we certainly seemed to be heading that way.  We had such plans for that future but those plans have now been assigned to the scrap heap and I’ve realised there is no point in dwelling on them.  We are where we are and the quicker I accept that the sooner I can get on with enjoying what I do have rather than wishing for what I don’t.

In summary I am without my husband, my best friend, my rock, my shoulder to lean on but within myself I have found depths I never knew existed.  I have a level of commitment, a determination and a resolve that were hidden, tucked away because they’d never before been needed.  I’ve learnt that I am the author of my own destiny, the creator of my own character and through all of this I can sink or swim.  For me, I’ve discovered, sinking isn’t an option. 

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Comments

Lisa said…
Thank you for sharing these words. You have summed up my life perfectly. My partner is 62, diagnosed in 2017 but showing signs at least 5 years before that. I feel as though no one could possibly understand how it feels but you do. It gives me some comfort. I miss my husband so much but, like yours, he's not coming back. So we just get on with it. But sometimes the sadness is overwhelming. I admire your strength and character. I hope I am emulating it.