We’ve all heard about the Five Stages of Grief. You know, Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance. This model is applied to many different situations in life that involve some form of loss. Death, Divorce or Illness fall among the most popular, but there are of course many more situations in which one is forced to rally through the 5 stages. I am seeing my good friend go through this with her recent separation from her husband. Right now, she is fighting it out somewhere between Anger and Acceptance. I watched my mother in law go through all of these stages when my father in law finally succumbed to cancer. I, myself, have gone through these stages. I spent the most time on both Anger and Acceptance.
Which is where I find myself now. On the final stage, only, I wonder, why there aren’t varying degrees of Acceptance, like what happens afterward?
So, let’s recap my 5 stages: Denial, wasn’t one I spent too much time on, I was more in shock than anything else. I did have some moments of ‘this can’t be happening to me’ but they were fleeting because Anger is one dominant bitch that insists on riding ‘shotgun’ to no one. I was angry for being in the hospital, I was angry over the flip-floping diagnosis that encouraged the repeating of the first 2 steps an inhumane amount of times, I was angry because I was in the hospital missing out on Grace, Steve and my career, my students. I was angry that this was the hand I was dealt. I never Bargained, not for my life when I thought it was cancer, and not for my life when I knew it was MS. Who does an agnostic bargain with anyway? Depression, well, that’s a tough one. Of course I was down. I was stuck in the world’s, or at least this country’s, most disgusting hospital, who wouldn’t be depressed? I really feel though that the most time at any stage was spent on Acceptance. Because, there just isn’t any other way to live.
Adapt or Die right?
But, to say, ‘ok, alright, I have MS’ is totally different to saying ‘ok, alright, I have MS’ and actually living with MS. Excuse me, I mean, saying ‘ok, alright, I have MS’ and living in spite of MS. Yes, spite should be a stage of Grief for all of us that go on living to show life who really is in charge here. To show that although life may have handed us a crappy hand that we still go on to win the pot, still go on and all the while we’re flipping life the bird.
Because we have not only accepted our fate, but we’re going to rock it out while we do it.
I have only recently entered this ‘off the beaten path’ to Acceptance. Up until now, I accepted my life as a life that included MS. But I was very conscious of how exactly others would accept me with MS.
While in the Rehabilitation hospital I refused visitors other than Steve, Grace and my parents. I didn’t want anyone, under any circumstances, seeing me in a wheelchair, or trying, struggling to try, to walk. I also didn’t want anyone seeing me in that place because I’m sure that there would have been a few of my friends and family that would have not known better than to blow up on some unassuming nurse about why that place is not condemned. And that would have just been embarrassing. For everyone.
The first time I saw anyone during that period of time was at Chris and Emma’s wedding. I was still wearing the hospital bracelet and was out on a weekend pass. Wearing an AFO leg brace and using a cane with a wheelchair on backup, I allowed the world to see the MS me. I was terrified. At a pre-wedding get together I heard Emma tell Chris how at first she didn’t even know I was there until she heard me talk, and how I sounded so normal. I cried to myself hard that night in bed. And although I know that Emma was reacting as anyone would react to being shut out of a person’s life while they recover from paralysis brought on by a mystifying MS attack that left me almost senseless and in need of a brain biopsy. Without any contact with me there was no way she wouldn’t have thought otherwise. I get it. But it made me realize that people had an expectation. An expectation for the unexpected. There is no manual on how to prepare for that.
So I avoided it. Or tried hard to ignore it because sometimes it was unavoidable. Like when I still didn’t have my license back and relied on neighbours Lenna and Jenna to take me to physiotherapy appointments or for blood work. BBQ’s were tough because almost every deck has stairs to get to the dining area, so you have to go through the house and people you don’t know or haven’t seen in a very long time ask you what happened to you leg? Did you break it? Sprain it? MS? Wow, really? And then I’m MS chick for an hour and it’s hard to hide it while you explain the entire Journey Through Hell. And then you hear all the stories about the so and so’s they know who have or had MS and how they are either so normal you can’t tell or they died. I’m serious. And then of course there is the discussions focused on whether or not I’m going to Bulgaria for the ‘cure’. And then the ensuing explanation about CCSVI and my stance on the topic etc etc etc.
My saving grace was when I graduated from AFO and cane, to just cane, to nothing. And then it was super easy to hide it. And thus another stage of Acceptance: Pretending everything is normal.
Pretending everything is normal and denial are very different. I had accepted the diagnosis, the pain, the fatigue, the needles, the pills, the B.S. But I hid it because I didn’t want the focus of my life to be this disease. I wanted desperately to be able to seem normal just like them so that no one had to know about the MS thing. So I avoided the MS community completely for months because when you are part of a community you can’t get away with pretending you are not what you are that made you part of that community. I avoided eye contact with anyone in a wheelchair or with a cane. I was not like them. I had been like them, but I wasn’t anymore.
Then, I had a relapse.
I was scared, petrified actually, that the jig was up and my cover was blown and that the entire world saw me as a fraud. And then, through all the stages I went through that particular time while recovering from that flare up, I realized that I was kidding myself.
I threw myself out there. And, I screamed to the world that I HAVE MS. I have it, and this is what I’m doing in spite of it all: I’m living!
To live with MS, to be a wife with MS, to be a mum with MS means pretty much the same to me as to anyone else, you live within the confines of your limitations until they are no longer limitations or you move the hell on. Oh, as life goes on and the disease progresses, I’ll still worry about being the mum with the cane and what Grace’s friends may or may not think of me or her. Oh, I’ll still worry about being able to dance at her wedding. I’ll still worry that Steve does way too much around here and I’ll let guilt take over from time to time about not being the household-keeper-upper that I want to be. But I won’t exclude an entire group of people from my world because they too were handed a crappy hand in life and to see them is just too painful for me.
No, because I have too much to offer their world and vice versa.
Oh, it’s on.
Acceptance is a great stage, but allowing yourself to see the possibilities that acceptance brings you are even better.
And the possibilities are endless.
Rock on. MS or not. Happy Hump Day!
0 comments:
Post a Comment