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This blog is about coping with the strains of chronic illness whilst bringing up two beautiful children; it's also about the stresses of bringing up two children on your own while suffering with a chronic ongoing health problem which is at times very severe.... you can look at it either way. It's about being a single mum; it's about raising awareness of Interstitial Cystitis; it's about helping me cope. Writing this blog is beginning to bring me back to who I really am, who I really always was, before the single motherhood took over full time, before the illness set in.... a writer. I've always written, from essays to stories to journalism. This is the first thing I've written in years. It's helping me regain my confidence. PLEASE DO LEAVE ME COMMENTS AFTER MY POSTS! I'd genuinely love to hear your views on my (sometimes controversial) opinions. Thank you for taking the time to read. It would be great if you could comment so I know that you've been here and what you think.

Thursday 23 October 2014

what will it take for you to understand????

You don't read my blog, although one day you might, and you might stumble on this, in which case, #sorrynotsorry , as they say on Instagram, which, by the way, I still love.

You don't read my blog because you say that although you are glad I am writing again , as it might 'lead to something' (what? self-realisation? not jumping off a cliff? or perhaps making some money?!), you do not want to read anything which might upset you further, given that I already make your life a total hell on earth and make you wish you had never been born.

Never mind that I have given you two beautiful grandchildren, never mind that I tried my hardest to impress you through the years with my straight A grades and my Oxford scholarships but whatever I did was always wrong because I never fitted into your expectations or filled the holes in your incomplete and unhappy life. I had my children too early, out of wedlock. I never made a proper stable career. I leant too much on my father. I am a good scapegoat, that's for sure. Good for kicking.

So as you don't read my blog, allow me to explain how I FEEL here. It's about the only space I have got. I have just got back from three days with you by the sea, which I was looking forward to; you said you would do all the cooking and it would be a chance for us to relax as a family.

Let me explain the reality to you in simple terms, even though you will probably never read this. The reality was that I was in severe bladder pain ALL THE TIME, and had horrible IBS (stress related, no doubt) on top of that. As a result I doubled my painkiller dose, already quite high, just to get through the supposedly relaxing days, and I took a strong sleeping pill at night, so it was hard to jump out of bed at 8am and 'plan the day'. I took the sleeping pill to avoid waking you all three or four times in the night, which is what happens when I DON'T take one. I did this as we were in a cottage together and to be honest it is hard to pee when you feel everyone is listening, specially when your muscles are in spasm as mine are frequently these days. So I was groggy in the morning. So shoot me.

In fact all I wanted to do was just rest in the morning until ten or eleven and then go for a stroll on the beach before having a bit of lunch and then relaxing with the children. The first day I was so ill I couldn't get out of bed until the evening, and did I pay for that? I did. The guilt, the guilt; seeping in. The sin, the sin. The second day the children made me go to the beach twice and it almost killed me. I did it, because how could I say no to their enthusiasm for rock pools and sea urchins and crab races and jumping over crazy autumn waves, but I felt as if I was going to collapse, and my bladder was burning, and I couldn't find a rock to pee behind as the beach was full (a sunny October Sunday, at high tide; I ended up in a field full of sheep, who didn't seem to care as I lowered my jeans and sat waiting for my tight tight muscles to oblige)... Then I would have liked to come back to a fire, and a cup of tea, and some TV (we did maage the x factor, but the accompanying guilt was just crazily disproportionate. I know it's crap, but it's escapism!) and cuddles with the children, and go to bed to read and listen to the radio.

It was not like that. It was not like that at all. By 8.15am the implication was that I was deliberately giving myself severe anaemia by not eating porridge with the family; by 8.30 I must have an eating disorder, it was deemed. By 9am my pain and understandable lethargy was interpreted as laziness and the door of my bedroom would burst open with you stating 'facts about the day'. Then, even if I did stay in bed resting, I lay there with guilt. By 10am it would be hopeless. The door would open again, asking me for my 'plans'. When you are chronically ill, the plan is just to get through the next 5 minutes. By lunchtime, I felt as if I had committed a seriously insane crime, and was being held under house arrest. The food thing. Crazy. I had to eat what you cooked, or nothing at all. I had no access to procure my own food, and cold dahl and rice or white bread or Coco Pops for three days in a row, when you have a bad stomach, is not appealing.

There was shouting. There was crying. There was whispering behind closed doors. There were my dear children, who had been expecting fun with a capital F, creeping up the stairs, to whisper things their grandparents had said about me behind my back.

Then there was my poor father, caught in the middle, desperately trying to hold his fleet of ships together when we are about as together as the Spanish Armada in their worse days... I am one ship; she is another. I don't think he has a favourite. I feel really sorry for him, as he grows older. I watched him out of the window on the beach. He stoops a little when he walks now. I want to make it all better for him and I can't, I just can't, and when he dies, which he probably will first, you will blame me and say I killed him. I love him more deeply than you will ever understand. He loves me no matter what I do and no matter what illnesses I have and no matter how many times I have fallen over, he had picked me up. You probably would have called the police and had me carted off by the men in white coats.

The climax came when we were leaving. I had found it hard to pack all my things and my son's things and get downstairs in one piece, and when I did, I found you shaking with anger. The kids were on the beach with Dad having a blissfully innocent game of 'houses'. I told you I was pretty upset at your attitude, at your lack of compassion when I am obviously in so much pain. You lost it. Sure enough you told me that I was killing you and killing my father and when you both ended up dead it would be my fault. You told me I was callous, selfish, lazy, a disgrace. Now look at this rationally, mother. You are neither of you young. One of you will die in the next ten, twenty, thirty (stretching it, but Grandpa has made it to 95) years. When you do, you cannot lay your death at my door as 'murder' because of the stress of my chronic bladder disease. 'If you leave this house without eating anything, I will be prosecuting you for murder when you kill my grandson on the m5 after you have both died in a car crash'. This was her parting shot. Bearing in mind it is hard to prosecute someone  after they have already died, it was still a cutting insult. I made it through lunch (bacon, egg and tons of baked beans) and then burst into tears on my daughter's shoulder upstairs . This was the third day. My son was not well by this point, with a cough, so hadn't gone back that day for school, but had to go the next day so we really did have to leave (my daughter has a two week half term). She didn't want to stay there with the atmosphere how it was but in the end decided to stay and 'fight my corner'.

I was psyching myself up for the 150 mile journey, planning where I might stop to pee/rest, when once again the pressure : ' you are wasting our whole day; when are you going; all you have to do is get in the car; we KNEW you wouldn't leave'.

People: this was at 1.30pm. Why was an imaginary clock ticking? I wasn't causing any harm. It was like being in a cross between a truly awful Big Brother House filled with your own family, and a really bad version of the Crystal Maze, if anyone still remembers that. Next challenge? Quick? You have three minutes to complete the task of reaching the car and driving away.

I managed to get into the car, hug my daughter and father, and drive away. I managed the journey, though it was long and at times painful; my son was good as gold; we got home by 5ish. I unpacked the car alone and fed us dinner alone and we watched a film and had the much-needed cuddles. By 9pm we were both asleep and he was in school the next day.

What will it take for you to take my illness seriously?

Shall I buy you a book on Interstitial Cystitis? Another one? Shall I take you to my next consultant appointment (oh no, you're away on a holiday, and anyway you would just yell at the consultant (though she may be a match for you, she is pretty fierce) that your daughter is a crazy attention seeker and you would not hear her words that I have a SERIOUS DEBILITATING BLADDER CONDITION.). If you listened to her, you would learn. IC is real. It makes you tired. It makes you ratty. It takes your energy. It takes your patience. It sucks the life out of you. You are no longer the person you were before. Your bladder hurts you. All the time. Fun has gone from life. All that is left is endurance.

Ha! That's a joke. Gone is the person I was before; what a shame. Because you didn't like who I was before, either!!

Will she ever take this seriously, I asked my grandpa today? When?

'When you're in a wheelchair, darling, if it comes to that', he answered drily. 'And probably not even then.'

We need to be making contingency plans for what happens if Dad dies first, because sure as hell you are not throwing me and my children to the wolves, even if it would make you feel justified for enduring the years of hell that I have supposedly 'deliberately' put you through by contracting a painful autoimmune disease ENTIRELY WITHOUT ASKING FOR IT.

6 comments:

  1. Oh my gosh! I really don't know how I would cope with a mother like that?! Coping with IC is enough to drive a saint crazy without having to deal with such selfishness! I think you are pretty amazing :-)

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  2. Oh no that sounds so awful for you! Is there any way you could access some counselling for this x I have a screwed up relationship with my family too , and it has helped me. I understand how it is for pain to be sucking the enjoyment out of life )-: I got a call from my GP to come in because a recent blood test showed I am also anaemic - only slightly though she said, not as much as you, but I am very tired so God knows how you managed the visit. Hope you hug your children and take comfort that they love you always no matter what

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  3. Thank you both for your support. I was pretty angry when I wrote this. I have thought about taking it down but it is my truth. Sometimes this blog is the only space I have to tell it. Love and thanks again xx

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  4. Darling, I cried reading this. You are such a strong, beautiful warrior. It makes me so sad your own mum could be so cruel. It makes me even more sad and angry that despite your unimaginable pain and suffering (mentally as well as physically) you still push yourself beyond what you should or can to try and impress her. Please don't feel guilty for needing rest, you didn't ask for this, it happened to you and yet you still smile!! Your dad sounds amazing, and your babies just incredible. Their unconditional love and happiness is a credit to you.
    Thank you for sharing this raw insight into something I can tell causes you great sadness and pain!! You're an incredibly talented writer.

    Please never forget you're not alone and you're so loved!! You're a warrior, a spoonie, with such a beautiful soul!
    Thank you again ����

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  5. Hi Justine
    Thank you so so much for reading this and for your heartfelt response. I cried when reading that, so that makes two of us!! It is a very complicated relationship between the two of us as when I was a teenager we were very close and I have really let her down (in her eyes) by not pursuing all the hopes and dreams she had for me. The problem is we both wish the other were different. I hope one day we can get past that. I do continually seek her approval and I need to stop; I have tried this past month as we have not been speaking.

    This post was a real rant when I was very, very angry. My blog is my venting place however lots of posts are funny as well (so folk say?!) and if you scroll back , go down and look to the right, you will see the blog archive and can go back to the start and read my story... How I got ill and became where I am now...

    I would so love to read something of yours; do you write a blog or anything yourself? And I cant wait to get involved in the group; that will be so cool; am going to buy some nice stationery in town hopefully on Friday and get writing!
    Thank you for your kind words on my writing. I have always been a writer and identified as such; right now it is just a case of seeing how it fits in with my illness.

    I find IG a great support and have met some really, really beautiful people on there, fighting tough battles with great courage and fortitude; not least yourself.

    Lots of love sweetheart and do keep reading and pass on my blog address to anyone who might be interested. You can subscribe to email updates on here too xxx

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  6. After reading everything that you wrote here I want to say Hats Off to you lady.. you probably might have heard this.. 'What others say to you (how they say) and how they act is a projection of their thinking their own reality' what matters is 'how you react' and in your case the way you handled all of that for those days takes a LOT of Courage! You did not lose your cool and you did everything you possibly could for those who you loved and cared about.. that truly is an Inspiration itself.. continue to be the Amazingly Awesome person that you are.. and soon before you know it.. this disease we speak of would be history! I know you're gonna Win cuz you're a Winner !!

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