Wednesday, December 31, 2014

CHAPTER TWENTY: CLOUDS

CLOUDS
Sometimes they
Obscure the light,
Or filter it in streaks of white
But whether dark, or
Weather fair
The sun and stars
Are always there.

CHAPTER TWENTY.
MAY 29, 2001. 11 AM.

            My journal has gone missing. I suspect that I left it at church Sunday morning. Since it has my name scrawled all over it, I will more than likely get it back, but for the moment I feel totally lost without it. In the last two years, my journal has been my safe haven. I have often bled onto its pages, pouring out all the wicked, horrible things I dare not utter to a living soul. It holds my hopes, my dreams, my fears, and my dark, dark secret: I am not always a nice person. In my journal I have chronicled Ron’s accident and illness and my attempt to hold the world together. My journal, unlike a novel, has no neat and happy ending. That is because this is real life—my real life, I sometimes need to remind myself. There is little about it that has turned out as I planned. My life keeps on changing, no matter how much I might want to slam the covers of my journal together and stop it in time. But I am not able to stop writing; it is the only thing that helps me maintain my sanity. For now, then, loose pages of notebook paper will have to do.
            I left a message for a Christian counselor this morning. A long conversation with a friend last night helped me to see that it is really me, not my kids, which need help. The kids are fine. They are fine, my friend contends, because of me. While I was busy saving everyone else, no one was saving me. No one ever has. All the help and counseling we have ever had—and the list is astoundingly long!—has always been for Ron. No wonder I am so frazzled!
            I have been compartmentalizing my life for years, tucking parts of it into neat little containers that seldom seep into one another. I can sit in a graduate class at West Chester with my cell phone set to vibrate, just in case there is an emergency call from one hospital or another. Separate little suitcases are stowed out of sight while I go about my many duties, but now the contents seem to be leaking out and muddying things, making my life a bit of a mess. I seem to always be on the verge of tears. Is this normal? How would I know? What about my life these last few years has resembled “normal”?
            There are moments when I just cannot hold the floodgates closed any longer. Last Friday, I laid my head on my desk during a free period and burst into tears. I could not give a name to the cause—just the same old feelings of stress and anxiety—but my heart felt as if it would break. I cried out to God: Send someone! I need help! Quick!
            God, I believe, heard the agony of my soul. Bonnie—bless her!—walked into my room just at that moment, on her way home from her class at college. She did not ask a single question, just gathered me into her arms and let me cry. I am sure she is worried. It is not often that she sees her invincible mother reduced to tears. She told me that it was “okay to cry. Sometimes it makes you feel better.” What an incredibly sensitive girl I have raised! I do not know why I spend so many days and nights worrying about her. I worry that she will end up with Nick, who is still hovering around the fringes of her life. I worry that she will not end up with Nick. I worry that I have stolen much of her youth away from her with Ron’s illnesses. I worry that the world will take advantage of her and her kind and loving nature. I worry that I might not always be there to protect her, that she spends too much time with me and not enough with people her own age. I can become so consumed with worry that my stomach cramps up and I cannot eat or drink.
            I worry about Ron and his increasing weight, such a problem that he cannot stand for more than a few minutes at a time. I am angry about this, I guess. I put so much energy into getting him well again, yet he has ignored all of Dr. Huffman’s advice and allowed himself to become heavy again. I am tired—so tired!—of dealing with Ron and his issues. I would really like to escape to the beach for a few days after school is out, but I dread dealing with the aftermath. My escape plans are always thwarted, anyway, just as the beginning of the school year always sees Ron is one crisis or another. He has become a gigantic burden and I no longer worry about hurting him with my shrewish tongue. I, too, was injured in the accident. He claims he doesn't know how to be any different than he is, but he will make promises to try. All of his promises are of the Mary Poppins pie-crust variety, “easily made and easily broken.” If I can maintain an attitude of anger towards him, he will get his butt in gear for a week or so, clean the house and do the laundry and start supper. But the energy required to maintain my anger is draining.
            I am eager for the end of school—witness the counting off of days on my chalkboard—but I am sure the summer will offer no respite. Historically, our summers have been difficult these last few years. Last summer we spent dealing with Ron’s recovery issues and the summer before he was at Friends’. So I end the year with no hope. How sad!
            I need help. I am sinking fast. I need to become healthier so I can keep my kids healthy. I am tired of always being so damn strong and positive about life. I just want all this to end.
JUNE 1, 2001. 8PM.
            I went to see the Christian counselor for the first time today. Gary seems to be a good person to talk to. We spoke briefly of Ron’s depression and disabilities, but most of our conversation revolved around me. That has never happened before; everything always comes back to Ron. I feel guilty about spending the money on myself—this is not covered by my insurance—but Ron has had more than his share of counseling and therapy. So I am going to try and not feel guilty about spending the money on me.
            Gary commented that I am a “woman of incredible strength.” This has always been part of the problem, because I think I am strong enough to handle it all. He thinks a lot of what I have been feeling is stress from having so much to deal with for so long. I like his spirituality. He said his goal in counseling is always to have “God increase and self decrease.” Still, it will take me a while to get used to the idea that I am not able to do this for myself.
            I slept well last night until about 4PM, then prayed until I fell back to sleep. I awoke feeling as if I had had a good night’s sleep for once. Bonnie went with two friends to a modeling try-out. None of them expects to get called, but it was fun to see her fussing with her hair and make-up. I am really trying to put her in God’s hands.
            On the way to bed last night, the kids stopped by for a group hug. Ron had already gone up to bed and Bonnie and Allen mentioned that they really do not like being alone with their dad. I am quite certain Ron heard; maybe he needed to. In some way, he seems to think I stole their affection from him due to my consistent care while he was hospitalized. “It cost me,” he says. Of course it did. It cost all of us. But since he has been home, he has done precious little to win them over.
            Gary asked me yesterday where I see myself in ten years. As a published writer, I hope. A reading specialist. Maybe a visiting author. It did not occur to me until this morning that none of my hazy plans include Ron. He is the unknown quantity; his actions have become unpredictable.
            I am feeling better, a little stronger. I am NOT going crazy, and that in itself is reassuring. I have had to make difficult choices and I have done the best that I could.
            Maybe, just maybe, everything will turn out okay. I guess Hope is still inside Pandora’s Box.
JUNE 5, 2001. 3 PM.
            I have gotten my journal back and stapled in the loose-leaf pages. As expected, I had left it at church. I hope that no one read it and now thinks I am one whacked out woman. Still, I am grateful that I keep a journal and that God has given me the ability to write. I can track my progress and see that I am a little further along the road today. I still worry about Bonnie and Nick and their odd relationship but I am no longer suffering physical pangs or feelings of guilt. I keep telling myself this: they are both right where they need to be. They are “sort of friends” but are trying to move on with their lives.
            Bonnie still occupies so much of my thoughts, far more than she ought. I have other children, other concerns in my life. Allen needs my attention, too, my oft-neglected child. He wants to try out for basketball or track next year and he wants me to help him write a science-fiction novel over the summer. He still is not good with new situations. The Sunday School class frightens him and he says he often feels like he is going to cry. Part of this is Allen’s learning disability; he does not handle new things well, but needs to be eased into them. How could I possibly have eased him into the events of the last few years?
            I have thought about this logically, trying to remove my emotions from the equation. I have been trying to save my husband, myself, and my children. Perhaps I cannot save them all. Perhaps I can only save my children and myself.
            I sometimes wonder why I let Ron remain at the house. Do I lack the strength to ask him to leave or am I afraid of what he would do without me? I try and tell myself this: if I could let go of Ron, perhaps Bonnie could let go of Nick and what I think may be her codependency on him. I so want to solve this problem! I have been solving problems for years. Why should this be any different? Aren't I in charge of the world? I blame myself—probably more than I deserve—for the demise of her relationship with Nick. I am so obsessed with my daughter! This cannot be healthy, but I am incapable of stopping it or changing it. I need to keep looking for the sun.



  

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