I can no longer remember the year I became paralyzed; the year I went
to bed with a severe backache, then awakened to the realization my
legs no longer worked. I tried so hard to forget. It must be some
twenty years now.
After the hospital
stay, the disbelief, the mourning and finally the acceptance, I truly
tried to make the best of my life’s awful turn. I re-qualified for
my profession and finished my career.
I joined a gym to
strengthen my abilities. It helped but the gym began to change out
old equipment for new whose configuration now prevented my access. I
left with a torn tendon in each shoulder which the osteopathic
surgeon claims he cannot repair. A painful nightly reminder when I
attempt to sleep with my arms under my pillow.
Circumstances
favoured my move back to my hometown. Previous posts outline my
search for a family doctor. Four doctors in five years to be
precise. Does no one remain in family practice for long? The
profession has a revolving door.
Sent for a
colonoscopy, I was already on the gurney with a line in my arm when
the clinic declined to continue; they discovered I had cardiac
fibrillation. That was news to me. Numerous tests followed that
summer. Beta-blocker increased; blood thinner added. I was sent
home.
Covid followed but I
dodged that viral bullet.
April 6-7, 2022:
Massive excruciatingly painful spasms for two full nights. My right
leg repeatedly tried to tear itself from my hip joint. I screamed in
the night. Doctors yawned and sent me home for rest. I no longer
had the tautness, the stability to climb into our family vehicle.
Additional independence was lost and has not returned. I’m now
housebound.
I had the foresight
to sign onto our local disability transport provider prior to April
2022. A ride can be booked no earlier than one week prior to its
requirement, however, when I try, I usually find no rides are
available. They are booked up. I have only used them for medical
appointments. To date I’ve not missed any appointment but only
because I sat on a wait-list praying for cancellations, begged, or
agreed to arrive two hours prior to and/or get picked up four hours
post appointment. Bring a book.
Childhood friends
have died, moved or have problems of their own. This loner can no
longer get out to meet new people. It’s a quiet existence.
Solitude, which isn’t too bad for a healthy introvert, but not for
one who’s a cripple.
So much of what I
want to do I find too high, too low, too far, too late, too soon,
too, too, too... Help when offered usually comes with a caveat:
later. Need usually leaves before later ever
arrives. My ability shackled by disability at first taunts, then
destroys my self-worth. (see tale of two ceilings)
I love my wife
dearly. Thirty-eight years of marriage, yet loneliness persists.
All men desirous of physical intimacy with the opposite sex. Most
men long for more than they receive. We men are sexual creatures;
it’s not a conspiracy but a biological imperative; I won’t
apologize. Thirty-eight years of marriage and I estimate all intimacy
ended within the first seven years. I can only recall about seven
such intimate encounters in those early years and perhaps only two
remain vividly in my mind. Aside from post-injury sciatic pain, my
injury is from my knees and below. I otherwise still function
normally. Yet I will not ask for what is not offered and I won’t
take what is not freely given. Touching now involves bumping into
each other while passing in the hallway; an apology follows. We have
become housemates. I never expected a celibate marriage.
To paraphrase Henry
David Thoreau, Most men live their lives in quiet desperation.
Yes David, I know.
That intimacy issue
aside, my wife and I have taken separate bedrooms for no other than
reason than the sequelae to my injury. Nightly spasms cause one leg
or the other to repeatedly kick, often for hours. Turning over in
bed is challenging, often a necessitating grasp of the mattress edge,
headboard or end-table for leverage. Insomnia is a frequent
intruder. Sleep comes only after spasms subside; remaining asleep is
the challenge. In the early morning, pre-dawn hours, I have no
recourse but to turn to my books, laptop or ughh, that dreadful
late-night programming on sell-evision to occupy my mind when sleep
evades.
Tic
-an idiosyncratic
and habitual feature of a person's behaviour.
And that’s where
the tic comes in. Years ago—I don’t recall precisely when, I
heard someone hurl the most foul language at me. I then realized I
was alone in the room. That tic grew over the years. I need no
reason to lash out at myself with the most obscene, filthy language.
Immersed in some task, I suddenly, spontaneously, hear that familiar
voice break the silence as it berates me. I tell it to shut up but
it doesn’t listen. I turn over in bed at night and curse myself
mid-roll. When dawn arrives I wake and sit up, then immediately
curse myself. This is not normal behaviour. That tic is now
entrenched. Permanent.
Is my current
existence like that of Schrödinger’s cat? Do I now exist between
two states, neither dead nor alive—or in both states
simultaneously. Am I suspended in my own state of superposition
waiting for some event to initiate a collapse to one outcome or the
other? Life requires energy input; death total energy loss. I can
never be whole again so death is destined to be the eventual outcome.
I curse myself. Schrödinger’s cat has developed a tic.
Nothing more can be
done to alleviate my varied physical pains. I told my doctor that
I’m in a poor state of mind; he smiled at me. Should I seek out
some “professional” about my declining mental attitude? No, I
can’t imagine any able-bodied psychiatrist being able to blow a ray
of sunshine up my pant-leg. Relentless pain and spasms for twenty
years have worn me down—they’ve broken me. They’ve won.
Am I suicidal? No.
When that angry voice that shouts obscene expletives at you and you
realize that you and the voice are one and the same, well, you also
realize you can never outrun that voice. You are inseparable. Your
tic would follow you into the hereafter and lambaste you there as
well. If already dead, can one commit suicide in the hereafter to
take you away to some further plane or realm? And yet I believe that
voice would still tag along.
I have no children.
I have no relatives (that I have met). My wife and I celebrate
holidays across the dining room table from each other. Table for
two. I am also an only child; I have no siblings. Growing up in the
country, friends, peers, were at a distance. You either make friends
with yourself or an enemy; I have always teetered on that
knife-edge. I have access to four rooms in our house, two of which
are the kitchen and bathroom; I try not to spend more time in the
latter two than necessary. Housebound. Isolated. It’s not
living. It’s a bleak, depressing existence. What is there that I
can look forward to? I can enumerate all the joys experienced in my
lifetime on the digits of both hands and feet. My worst fear is that
I’ll live as long as my parents. Pain and that damn voice torment
me without restraint.
And so it goes...
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