Part of my problem as a writer is that I often feel like a minor player in someone else’s drama. Even if they don’t write their own story, I feel like I’m stealing if I write about it.
In searching for reasons why he was diagnosed with Lew Body Dementia just weeks after his retirement, the husband has wondered if he is supposed to share his experience with others. Could it be he is meant to encourage others in some way, even though he is pretty sick about this whole thing? He actually says he might start a blog, or write stuff down as he thinks of it. For several reasons, I think the chances of him writing anything are slim.
For one, he has a history of brilliant ideas that never see action. I don’t see his diagnosis changing that.
Reason two – he doesn’t have experience expressing feelings. He has them, but they don’t usually bother him or beg to be shared. He would like to share things now, but they end up coming out in long, convoluted histories of his life journey accompanied by tears, and a tone of desperation and sadness. He’s doing it a little better now, but the first couple of weeks were tough and any compassionate person who had time to listen patiently ended up crying with him and giving him a hug.
Reason three is simply that writing is work and work isn’t something he’s looking for. Too much mental work makes his head spin.
It’s true that my story has a lot to do with his story but, of course, I tell it from a very different perspective. He reads what I write. I wonder if I will be able to write what I really think or will I change the narrative because of the effect it might have on him?
Interestingly, the two things that have helped the husband and I know each other better in the last few years are our “together” prayers and my blog/journal. I guess in each instance I tend to be more open, truthful and informative. In each instance he feels less threatened by my words because they aren’t spoken to him – they are conversations with God or my readers. He listens better. And the same goes for him when it comes to telling God his thoughts and concerns – one might as well be honest. I learn things about him that he doesn’t think to tell me.
It certainly isn’t that I don’t want him to write his own story, from his own perspective. I do. But not writing about this part of my own life has been hard. The vague feeling that I couldn’t write about this big thing happening to us, has made me not write much at all. Somehow, when there is “an elephant” in the room, so to speak, writing about anything else takes second place to wondering about the elephant and what it’s going to do next.
That elephant is on my mind most all the time. I might as well write about it. Probably have to. Just sayin’…
If you need to go have coffee or would like someone else to talk at, just call.
Thanks. I’m likely to do that sometime, mostly because I think you’re an interesting gal and talking would be a nice break.
I understand your dilemma. My husband has been on a slow and painful journey with osteoarthritis that is collapsing his spine hips knees. Hes not the man I had married but that is marriage. I had tried to get him to write to journal but it’s not his thing. He does however constantly talk about his plight, the unfairness, the constant adjustments of priorities. Therapy has not helped much. I don’t write his story, I am too close and affected by his perspectives. He has been angry and depressed and seems to like complaining pushing away suggestiond, making it hard to find a learning moment. For now our elephant stays inside. I believe we will find a light in this mess. In the meantime the stories I write remain my POV.
Yes, sounds like you understand a lot, and thanks for your response. We will have an interesting time navigating this with our men. I’ll be keeping you in mind…