Tuesday, January 9, 2024

New Perspectives, Christmas Eve, and Ugly Crying

I belong to a couple of Long Covid groups on Facebook; one is a group called Survivor Corp, which is a great public group to join for information and support if you or someone you know is suffering from the after-effects of Covid.  A woman whose husband has been dealing with Long Covid for almost 3 years recently posted something that really resonated with me.  She said that her husband had attended appointment after appointment with every type of specialist imaginable, and there just weren't any answers or resolutions for his symptoms.  (I know this scenario all too well myself.) She said when they went to see a cardiologist, they were given the best advice of all.  He told them that if her husband had not improved significantly after 4 months with Long Covid, the chance of recovery wasn't very likely to happen.  BUT, he told them that in 2 years her husband would be feeling much better.  He told them it wouldn't be because the symptoms had noticeably improved, but because they would have had time to grieve the loss of the life they'd had, time to grieve the changes and the illness, and would have learned their "new normal" though she said she hated that term.  (As do I at this point.)  She said it really was true; life was better now, after 2 years, than it had been because they'd learned how to accommodate for his limitations.  She said their children had learned that "Dad" couldn't do certain things with them (playing in the yard, going on amusement park rides, etc.).  She said her husband's friends no longer looked at him sympathetically when they saw him with his cane or riding his mobility scooter; that they'd adjusted to the changes and now talk and joke with him the way they had done before he had Long Covid.  That new perspective is something I need to work on for myself...
I have had Long Covid for 2 years now, and I haven't gotten past that grieving stage yet.  There are still days that are so hard I have fleeting thoughts that maybe it would have been better to have not survived Covid than to have had a relatively mild case, but then dealt with all of this for the past 2 years.  I would estimate that 3-4 days out of every 7 days of the week I have tears running down my cheeks while my husband helps me with my personal care and getting dressed because I'm so sad and angry and humiliated that I need someone to help me get dressed every day, someone to assist me with regular, routine tasks, with activities of daily living and even some executive functioning skills.  
My therapist and my disability lawyer have both basically given me the same advice: You can only control your own actions; don't worry about the things you can't control.  Well, I really took that to heart this year for Christmas.  I began my shopping back in early September.  I carefully chose everyone's gifts based on what I knew about them and their personal tastes.  I purchased multiple gift bags and gift boxes to make wrapping easier because I knew it would be exhausting.  I demanded that my husband get our living room remodel finished before Christmas Eve, which I was hosting.  I went all out.  I bought new matching paper plates, napkins, soup bowls, plastic cups, foam coffee cups, sparkly plastic spoons, the works.  I even bought a Christmas dress and "Merry Christmas" leggings.  I went all out in ways I never had before, and I have been hosting a "Soups and Snacks" Christmas gathering for the past 17 years!  I was controlling the things I could, and I wanted everything to be PERFECT.  And, honestly, it was. 
And then I paid for it.
On Christmas Day my head was pounding and I had dizzy spells throughout the day. I was completely exhausted.  The week between Christmas and New Year is a blur.  I honestly don't even remember those 7 days, and I didn't leave the house for 13 days following Christmas.  I was exhausted; mentally, emotionally, cognitively, physically, I was completely drained.  
This past week involved some ugly crying too...Thinking about school starting back up prompted me to think about what I would have done in class on that first day after break.  I started thinking about how I would give them Bell Work, with directions projected on the whiteboard.  
"Write one paragraph sharing your favorite part of Christmas break.  
Write one paragraph sharing your least favorite part of Christmas break.  
Write one paragraph sharing anything you'd like me to know, any topic you choose.  You do not have to share aloud in class, and no one will read them except me." 
I would then have used the rest of the class period to let students who DID want to talk and share things do so, using it as a speaking, listening, and asking appropriate questions lesson (which is a 6th-grade standard).  As I talked about it with my husband and daughter my longing to be teaching came back with a vengeance.  It's a physical ache in my chest, that longing to be in my classroom, to be with my kids again, to feel their energy and excitement.  I miss laughing every single day because of things my kids said or did.  I miss that feeling that I can't even describe in words when their faces light up because something "clicked" and they are learning and understanding and are developing the passion for reading and writing that I have.  There is nothing else in the world that feels the way it felt to teach and to see my kids LEARNING. 
And that's when the ugly crying happens...when I allow myself to feel the grief of no longer teaching...

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