Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Lucky Touch

I’m sitting here unable to walk very far looking out at the rain on the lake.  If you came and asked me how I got here, I would say I didn’t know.  Would that make things any more clearer to you than they are now?

If I said, “Oh, it went this way and that way.  It was all very predictable.”  Would that make you feel better?

Or just knowing that there is no rhyme or reason for why it went this way or that.  The fact that I was standing on the corner over there instead of this one.  How does that work for you?

It is just happenstance.  The luck of the draw.  My situation versus your situation.

There is an element of “luck” in there.  At times, an element of extreme persistence.  But, there are no guarantees with persistence.  And, luck is just that:  a lucky break.

My friend said to me recently, “That is the first lie they tell us.  That if you work hard you will be rewarded.”  The same is true of persistence.  Sometimes, these things are rewarded.  Often, they are not.

There is another element that I will call a “lucky touch” where things a particular person might put their hand to tend to work out right or well.  There is no accounting for this.  Two people might do the exact same steps but the outcome is different.  A particular person might have nine things go right out of ten over their lifetime.  When another similarly situated individual might only have two things go right out of ten time after time.  This is what crushes individuals when most of what they touch does not work out.

I was reading about a technological phenomena that was called “tech karma.”  In my house, I have the touch.  My partner, Ronnie, tries to make a certain electronic gadget work.  She knows the steps.  Often she tries them several times before she asks me to step in.  Many times, I do what she has been trying to do, and it works on the first try.

“WHAT DID YOU DO?”  She asks me with a bit of accusation.

“I don’t know.  I just touched it,” I respond with a guilty shrug.  It is a laying on of hands.  There’s no explanation for it.  

This is part of the human condition.  “Why did it work for him but not for me?”  Often, there is a subtle or not so subtle social group privilege involved which is something that can be accounted for or not.  Other times, there is no explanation.  The switch worked when I touched it.  It didn’t work for Ronnie.  I’m not better, smarter, or more deserving. I am just lucky in that way. 

I don’t believe in a higher power or a god.  I am okay with the fact that believers take comfort in these things.  I am not okay when they decide their belief is the only right one.  I cannot believe that people on the other side of the world deserve what they get because they are not my skin color or born in my country or think the way I do.

In fact, I take comfort from wishing for good, protective things from the mountain, the sun, the moon, or the stars.  I don’t believe it is really powerful in terms of my specific life.  But, when I’m scared or sad, I hope it is powerful.  However, I don’t believe I can control my destiny.  I can only nudge it and continue to keep nudging it over and over.

When something good happens to me, I hate it when people say I deserve it.  We all deserve good things.  Even people I don’t like or don’t respect deserve good things.  I just don’t want to be the one to give them those good things.

I don’t believe my lot in life is based on any of the religions I tried and failed, nor the fact that I don’t respect my parents, nor that I am gay and not straight, nor for any other one particular reason.  Lots of people like me didn’t make it.  I lucked out.

I had a wonderful friend who got a terminal cancer diagnosis. People told him it was so very terrible. He said, “No. I was just unlucky.  Many times I have done stupid things.  They just worked out because I was lucky.  This time, I was just unlucky.”  

I try to remember this when someone tells me their story.  When I am sitting across the desk from someone at work, or pass someone who is homeless, or remember my friends who aren’t here any more, I know that the difference between them and me is just circumstance.  I suspend judgment as much as I can. Yes, there may have been things they did that tipped the balance.  We all make decisions that nudge our lives.  Or, they might have just been unlucky or lucky as the case maybe. 

As I sit here unable to walk any significant distance, I know I am lucky.  I have gotten so much of what I wanted in life.  Many things have worked out.  But, on that walking thing, I’m just unlucky.

L’Chaim.

Joceile

4.16.18

For more stories, go to:  joceile7.blogspot.com


Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Friendly Warning

Message sent to my coworkers today:

Friendly Warning

Hi, all.  Forty years ago today, I started employment with the state of Washington, LNI, as a Clerk 1, aka file clerk.  I was young, full of idealism, and just trying to get through life.  Somehow, I got caught up in this relentless cycle of employment.  It’s called the Pay and Return Cycle. It is not well publicized.  In a nut shell, the cycle is set up when an employee comes to work, is paid, returns to work, and is paid again.  This cycle of predictable reward can turn out to be endless.  I have just been another victim. 

I write today to warn my fellow employees to BEWARE!  This could happen to you.  But, you have a choice.  You can get caught up in this cycle unawares.  Or, you can strive to do your best work, turn this cycle on its ear, and make it work for you. 

I have been extremely lucky to end up with work I love and coworkers I respect and enjoy despite my having been a victim of this wicked cycle.  Thanks for joining me on this ride. 

No, I am not retiring.  My plan is two to five more years.  I’m sorry to be the one to share this bad news. 

Best wishes and good luck to all of us. 

Joceile 

4.10.18


Monday, March 12, 2018

Running Dog and I

Running Dog and I are soul mates.  Across species soul mates.  Running Dog, aka Sheba, and I both have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) from childhood abuse, or puppy hood abuse in her case.  Sheba and I met in December 2013 after I saw her on a website for dogs needing adoption.  They said she was three years old, had been taken from a home in Idaho with too many animals, and weighed 67 pounds.

I am a 60 year old woman with significant mobility issues.  We’ve had Sheba with us for four years.  Sheba doesn’t have any mobility issues.  But, she has trouble being around other dogs and kids.  She is very loving to my partner, Ronnie, and I.  A real gentle being.  But, if there is anything new, it registers as dangerous to her.  She gets protective.

This means she can’t go to a dog park.  She can’t play with other dogs.  We go through a few minutes of stress when new people come to visit.  We have to lock her up when kids visit.  With my mobility issues, I have had to be creative about getting her exercise.  We can’t just load her up and take her for a walk in the park.  On a leash, her behavior gets worse.  I am always looking for places to safely exercise her as our yard is not big enough for a big dog romp.  Also, she happily grew to a healthy weight of 90 pounds.  We are talking BIG dog romp.

The first year, I discovered one of those run off ponds near the train station.  It was completely fenced with a gate.  It was safe for her there.  I discovered she loved to chase the ball.  I use a flinger so I can give her a good run.  I would park, let myself and Sheba in, then throw the ball for 20 or 30 minutes and quietly leave.

I learned that Sheba required two balls.  She isn’t able to part with one unless another is ready to be thrown.  Not that big a deal unless I forget a second ball or lose it.  I carefully cleaned up any poop with the thought that the less mess I made the less notice I would get.  I knew someday someone would say something because that’s just the way the world is.

After a year and a half through spring, winter, summer, and fall, I noticed a county owned car moving around the parking lot and giving me a look.  I had a little camp stool I sat on between throws.  The guy drove slowly past me and then sat idling away a bit.  I didn’t figure this was good news.

A guy in a uniform got out and sauntered up to the gate, “What are you doing?”

“I’m throwing the ball for my dog.”

“This isn’t a dog park, you know.  We’d prefer you not be in here.”

“I’m not hurting anything.  My dog is a rescue dog.  It’s hard to find places where she can run around.”

“I called my supervisor.  This is county property.  We’d rather you weren’t here.  You maybe safe but somebody could get hurt.”

“I tell you what.  Tell me who to write to.  I’ll sign a release.  I really want to exercise my dog.  I won’t tell anybody, and I’ll keep a low profile.”

He walked away, shaking his head.  I knew that someday our little place would end.  All they had to do was put a lock on the gate.  

Sheba and I had another year of enjoying the yard.  It was about half an acre.  In the winter, the pond froze.  In the late summer, it disappeared entirely.  In the spring, there were ducks.  God only knows what the run off water had in it.  I tried to keep Sheba from drinking it.

Sheba won’t swim.  She can’t stand to have her feet leave terra firma.  But, she won’t leave a ball.  One time, she paced around for ten minutes trying to find a way to a ball when someone (me) accidentally threw the ball in the middle.  We had to wait a week for it to move to the side.

When the pond was frozen and the ball skittered into the middle, we had to wait for the ice to melt to retrieve the ball.  Sheba never forgot that ball was there.  She patiently waited until it was retrievable.

Finally, those nudnik county folks figured they could store two small trailers in that yard.  Sheba and I just walked around them and kept on throwing.  I pondered how easy it would be for someone to steal those trailers.  After about a month, it apparently occurred to those county people too, because one day the gate had a bright orange chain and a lock on it.  They even bothered to walk around to the inaccessible side gate and put a lock on that too.  It remains to this day.  Sheba and I had to find another way to get her exercise.

I’m not able to walk very far anymore.  When we took Sheba to the ocean, we discovered she loves the beach and chasing balls there too.  In fact, we discovered that for some reason on the beach Sheba thinks everyone is a friend—dogs and people alike.  Too our horror, she would chase the ball and then run down the beach to meet a dog or dogs she saw.  We were petrified. It wasn’t like I could always anticipate who would show up.  It wasn’t like I could go running after her.  Screaming for someone at the ocean is hopeless.  My yells are swallowed up in the sound of the waves and wind.  

I learned to just turn and start walking away.  I discovered there is an invisible tie between Sheba and I.  As I started to move away, she was pulled back to me.  She was playful and friendly with other dogs.  It was such a change that I wrote to her dog trainer.  The trainer told me that this isn’t unusual.  Many dogs that are unsafe in a close environment found the beach big and safe with room for everyone.

Ronnie bought Sheba a headlight that went on a collar.  When I was able to walk enough to go in the woods, Sheba would walk with me late at night.  Running around like a lunatic with that light bopping around.  She’s a dark, long haired brindle colored dog.  With the light, I could see where she was when she was running or looking at me and tearing back to me.  It was grand fun until I stopped being able to walk in the woods.  I had to find another way to get her exercise.

With some experimentation in after hour parking lots, I learned Sheba could run with the car safely with her headlight.  She would just bust out running 15 miles per hour as if her soul had been set free.  I would keep my eyes out for places abandoned at night were she could safely run.  I would go out each night with her before going to bed.  We called it “Running Dog.”

I learned that she was as safe running as she is on the beach.  Over time, we would bump into people, men mostly, walking.  Sheba didn’t care about them.  If she bothered to look at them at all, it was quick.  If she went the wrong way, I just tapped my horn and she corrected.  One time in a cemetery, we came upon a man sitting under a tree with a big pack.  She was running right toward him with me in the car.  I just yelled out, “Sheeb, come on.”  She veered around the man and kept running.  

Occasionally, someone would just stand watching her run around the parking lot with a smile on their face.  One guy was dumbfounded. I passed by with the window rolled down and explained, “She loves to run and it’s safe here.”

He grinned and said, “I think it’s brilliant.”

She loves Running Dog more than chasing balls.  I kept my window down and my eyes open looking for anything that might get us in trouble.  It is so beautiful to watch her run with that gliding, wavy motion over the ground.  It fills my heart to watch her enjoy moving full out with such grace.

Recently, my walking got worse.  There has always been an element of Running Dog that is a little scary.  We’ve been okay, because I keep my eyes peeled and she is primarily just interested in running.  A week ago, I bought a little, light weight, portable electric scooter.  We took it to the little ocean town we stay at.  I discovered to my delight that Sheba and I can do Running Dog with me on the scooter.  I wear a waist leash which is long enough for her to get some distance, but strong enough that she can’t pull away from me.

She has her headlight.  The scooter has a head and tail light.  Running Dog and I go out each night and several times a day. Me on the scooter.  Her on the leash.  We are two happy campers.  Sometimes, it’s a little more like Fast Trotting Dog, but Running Dog is such a cool name that Ronnie wants to keep it.  I agree.  

It’s impossible to know how long Sheba and I will be partners in this Running Dog business. Because, life is constantly changing. There are no guarantees. Sheba will not live forever.  Neither will I, but I’m hoping to out live her. For now, it is happiness extraordinaire. I have learned to focus on the pleasure of the moment and the enjoyment of the day.  The two of us, Running Dog and her person, will enjoy our moments as long as we can.

L’Chaim. 

Joceile 


3.12.18

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Dancing with Depression

I’m dancing with Depression. Not my favorite. I believe it is “situational” Depression which means there isn’t a random chemical imbalance. But, knowing the why doesn’t make the how any easier.  Depression skews my thinking. 

I’m angry and depressed because of what’s happening to my body.  I’m in chronic pain and my mobility and dexterity are impaired.  However, I still have to pay close attention to my thinking. If someone asks me, “Have you tried X?”  I have to not jump to the conclusion there is an implied judgment being secretly expressed.  Such as my inside voices ad libbing by saying, “Really, Joceile, you haven’t tried enough. You haven’t worked hard enough. That’s what she’s really thinking.” For me, that way lies madness. 

If my inside voices make up enough of those stories, I get mad at myself. I think it’s all my fault, and I withdraw from myself, my partner, and those who love and care for me. This is a cycle that can destroy me or anyone else similarly focused. 

I have to tell myself that is not what the friend meant and check it out with them. “When you asked that, were you thinking I haven’t tried enough things or what were you thinking?”  Checking out my assumptions this way is a very brave and hard thing to do. But, how else am I going to get to the truth?

If I let myself pull back and close into a shell, I have even less of a life than the problem I started out with. This is not a pretty picture and certainly not life sustaining. 

I get blisteringly angry at the world, my life, and sometimes everything in between.  My therapist and I talked about it as being a layer cake.  Starting with the base layer of being an abused child and waiting for the next beating.  Then, when that beating came, experiencing a release or a lightening of mood.  This is the abuse cycle, but my body internalized it such that if I’m hurting I should be really made to hurt so I can feel better.

My therapists said, “Are you okay with the cake metaphor?  I can do pie or something else.”

“No,” I say.  “Cake is good.  I can visualize that.”

The next layer is being mentally ill and being in a state hospital that believed in behavioral modification.  Treat bad behavior badly and reward good behavior.  (Thank you, Dr. B. F. Skinner.). This too adds to the “I’m doing something wrong so I should be punished” thinking. Good dog training is “reward the good behavior and ignore the bad behavior.”  I wish this was the thinking with children especially really, really upset children.

The layer after that being a late teen lesbian.  “I must be really bad.  There is something wrong with me.  Why don’t I fit in?  Maybe I should change my gender.  Then, I would fit in.”  Later, I learned that being a lesbian wearing men’s clothes is not really a sin against man and god.

Later comes the medical model.  “You are having trouble walking.  I see you have a history of mental illness.  Have you talked to your counselor about this?”  This has included a multi decade slog through trying to get at my own truth of what is happening to my body.

I get angry about these layers and their interplay.  From Michael Jackson’s, “Because, I’m bad.  I’m bad.  (Bad, bad, really, really bad).”  How could I not be bad?  And if I’m bad, maybe everyone else is too.  Or maybe all this badness just deserves punishment.

Which leads me to I hate everybody who can still walk.  See that young guy loping along, I hate him.  See that woman jogging with her golden retriever?  I hate her.  See those people walking and laughing?  I hate them.  This attitude does not a good life make.

My therapist asked, “Could you draw your anger?”

“Sure,” I say, “I could draw tracking down the person responsible for the pain I’m in and killing them.”  But, as Hawkeye says in one M*A*S*H episode, “Who’s responsible?”  (He was talking about war, of course.  This a battle of a different nature.)  Is it me, my parents, their parents, or am I really looking to track down “God” and assassinate “him”?

So, my therapist adds, “Have you ever heard of this exercise?  You start with:

Once upon a time....  (and you finish it)
And every day....  (and you finish)
Until one day....  (finish...)
And because of that....
And because of that....
And because of that....  (as many of these as you like)
Until finally....
And ever since then....
And the moral of the story is....  (But you don’t have to have a moral.)”

“That’s interesting.  I could try it....

“Once upon a time, my mother shot my father.  And every day, she was waiting for the police to come.  Until one day, they came, arrested her, and took her away.  And because of that, my brother and I were separated and sent to foster care.  And because of that, my brother became a heroin addict.  And because of that, he died of an overdose.  And because of that, I was in terrible pain.  And because of that, I became a priest.  And because of that, I started ministering to heroin addicts.  Until finally, I had a great shelter to help homeless heroin addicts.  And ever since then, I have aided hundreds of addicts to get safe and clean.  And the moral of the story is, don’t shoot your husband.

“Yeah, I can work with this.”

After our session winds down, I told my therapist that I envisioned a great specialized emergency center where each of those layers go to an intensive care unit room with a team that specialized in the ailment of each layer.  In this setting, my job is just to visit, watch, and support all those layers in healing.  In lieu of that, I will do my best to be patient with, care for, and love myself. Of that, I’m the one in charge. 

L’Chaim.

Joceile


2.5.18

Sunday, January 14, 2018

TM

I feel like screaming. Literally, growling or yowling, and wonder if that would help at all. After two weeks of managing all right, my legs are killing me and walking is nearly impossible. The damnable thing is that I have no idea why. 
It’s not like I did anything terribly different yesterday than I had on any of the previous days. I did walk a short way through the woods with my dog buddy for the third time in four days. I felt okay, relatively, when I went to sleep. But, I woke up at five this morning in pain and uncomfortable, and my walking is in the shitter. 

I had been feeling more hopeful. After our trip to Oaxaca, Mexico, in December, I had an appointment with another neurologist (one I had seen many years before).  I was not able to walk well in Oaxaca. This was unfortunate because as much as I love Oaxaca it is not the accessibility capital of the world. 

In any case, Ronnie and I decided we were going to pursue a diagnosis for me no matter what it took after all this time.  I wrote out my “Chronology of an Illness” with all the details of years of frustration. So, my request for him was written down as:

“What I am asking for:
  • Updated MRI, with plan for yearly MRIs to monitor
  • Diagnosis and/or treatment plan
  • Referral for electric wheelchair
  • What would you do if I was your wife?”

The neurologist looked at my history, what I’d written, notes from other neurologists, test results, all of it, and popped off with, “Have you heard of TM?”  

Ronnie and I looked at him and shook our heads no.  He said, “It’s Transverse Myelitis.”

In unison, we said, “What’s that?”

He went on to explain it’s a autoimmune disease that started out when I was much, much younger either from a viral infection or trauma. Ronnie and I exchange knowing looks. Trauma from childhood is my middle name.  It attacks the myelin coating of the nerves effecting the central nervous system.  This was in keeping with what we have known before. 

Then, there was a good news, bad news situation. He said the good news is that it hadn’t turned into multiple sclerosis and won’t now due to my age. Also, the autoimmune issues settle down as you get older. (I just proudly turned 60 which he noticed.)  The bad news was my body’s ability to cope with the previous nerve damage lessens. 

So, there it is.  As for electric wheeled devices to help one who can no longer push themselves?  Only if one can’t get around their own house. For work or community, it’s on me.  And, no, there’s nothing more he could do for his wife or daughter or brother or uncle or aunt or cousin. But, getting exercise is good for you. I haven’t figured out entirely how to do it without causing a flare with the related incapacity. 

And, here I am.  Extremely uncomfortable with no known reason why, trying not to think of what tomorrow will bring whether good or bad.  Because, tomorrow is of absolutely no help for today.  Thus, I think I’ll go brush the dog out on the deck and look at Mt. Rainier.  I don’t have to stand, and it’s exceptionally rewarding in its accomplishment.  It makes the dog very silky, and the house less hairy.  What’s not to love?

L’Chaim. 

Joceile 

1.14.18

For more stories, go to:  joceile7.blogspot.com






Saturday, January 13, 2018

I Nearly Lost Her

At 14, I wanted to kill myself.  I thought about it constantly but I just couldn’t throw caution to the wind, pull the trigger, or take the whole bottle of pills.  Other than my friend, Sasifraz, who was a mystery voice in my head, Suicide was my constant companion. 
To be sure, there were times when I took a calculated risk by taking the rest of the bottle of pills. It was never quite enough to take me out, though. One time I did end up losing three days because of the overdose. Sadly, it was harder on the people around me who were actually conscious than it was on me, because I had very little memory of the event.

I was 21. I remember Elizabeth, my partner at the time, yelling at me and pushing me down the hallway out to the car to go to the emergency room.  I remember the nurse handing me some type of tube like container to get urine thinking I was male.  I went and got a cup to give her.  I remember being in the hospital bed with Dr. West talking to me and me crying about my parents.  

The worst thing was that Elizabeth and I were supposed to move that week.  She was really pissed which I understand.  I seemed to have forgotten about the upcoming move. I remember going to work on the third day because I was worried about losing my job.  My boss asked me if I was okay.  She said I seemed inebriated.  I think I went home.

There was another time after that when my stomach was pumped.  I had taken a shit load of sleeping pills and went back to bed later in the morning.  Unfortunately, my mother dropped by unannounced.  I couldn’t stay awake.  My mom thought I was sick and left.  Elizabeth knew I was drugged and once again yelled at me to stay awake as we drove to the emergency room.  Why didn’t she ever call 911?  I guess we thought it would cost money. 

There were some other times involving my wrist and a razor blade.  At 17, I was in the emergency room shaking after they stitched up my arm.  The nurse said, “Well, if that doesn’t kill you...” gesturing at my arm, “this will.”  

I said, “This what?”

She said, “The drugs you’re on.”

“I’m not on drugs.”

“Oh,” she responded and instantly started being nicer to me.  It appeared that people who take drugs don’t deserve compassion but mental patients do.  I was grateful I fell on the mental patient side.  The next day I went to the psych ward at UW Hospital.  

That time I was terrified that I was a lesbian.  At a younger age, my mom told me she went to high school with a young woman who jumped off the Narrows Bridge.  Mom said she jumped off just because people thought she was homosexual.  I took that to mean it was better being dead than gay.  I don’t remember if “gay” was even in my vernacular then.

There were many, many more times with the stitches and the ER.  So many times that I’ve long since lost count.  There were two issues for me around self harm.  One was the ongoing internal discussion about suicide.  The other was the intense anger turned inward.

Because my anger was turned inward, I did not harm other people.  I acted out but mostly toward myself.  I was deeply disturbed and angry about the abuse and harm I was subjected to as a child.  I was so angry that I wanted to kill somebody.  But, my belief system did not allow me to harm others.  I believed the only thing I owned was my body.  I believed that my body was the only thing I had a right to harm.

It is a sad, sad point of view.  However, it kept me from committing crimes and going to jail.  Instead, it lead me down the garden path of mental illness.  The difference between being a criminal and being a mental patient is just a quirk of fate.  Whether the anger goes inside or outside, it is still profound anger.  That is partly why men are more likely to be in prison and women more likely to be in mental hospitals.  We are trained that way.  There maybe some biological imperative.  I don’t know anything about the science.

My desire to kill myself or hurt myself led me through harrowing times.  It hurt my family, my partner, and my daughter.  Obviously, it hurt me but that is not the burden I carry.  I nearly lost Ronnie.  She hung in with me until finally I was so far into depression she said, “I can’t live with suicide as your secret mistress.  I need you to stop that affair.”

It was a moment where our relationship hung in the balance.  At that point, I heard voices yelling at me to just bail.  I couldn’t dream of letting go of my suicidal fantasies.  At the start of the year that nearly destroyed us, I chose suicide over Ronnie.  I ask myself, “How can that be?”  But, the answer is that nothing was clear at the time.  It only clarifies on reflection.

At that point, Ronnie and I had been together for 21 years.  She had hung in with me through thick and thin.  Initially through four years of an on again, off again need to use a wheelchair.  But, the mental illness part was always there.  It always had been.  It was not like it would just go away.

I went to counseling faithfully every week.  I worked part-time for the state.  Our daughter was with us half of the time.  I had gone through three months of being off work due to depression while I switched state agencies in 1995.  There were times Ronnie told me later that she wondered how she would make it through to our daughter leaving home.

The final crisis happened after our daughter had graduated college.  I became disconnected from everything but work.  Ronnie’s parents had died.  My grandparents had died.  I was just obsessed with killing myself.  We had long since agreed that I would not cut myself.  Unfortunately, there were a lot of other ways to hurt myself including scratching and biting.  

After I chose my suicide mistress over Ronnie, we tried couples counseling.  But, I just fell further and further into a deep depression.  Since, I thought we had broken up I went back to cutting myself.  It entailed several self directed visits to the ER.  Finally in September of that year, I was hospitalized.  After I got out, I got hooked up with an exceptional psychiatrist.  Dr. McNabb actually listened to me and worked with me as a partner.  

I got a new therapist named Steve.  I had never had a male therapist before.  He was an extremely gentle and loving soul.  He taught me about Powerful with Love.  I was hospitalized again at Thanksgiving.  When I got out, I kept working with Steve.

Ronnie and I continued to live together.  We had a basement apartment that I stayed in.  I spent half the week with a friend and her family so that Ronnie and I could have a break.  I looked at an apartment once thinking that I should move out. It was in my price range. I went in. It was dark with an upstairs bedroom. I thought, “I couldn’t hope to not die here by killing myself.”  I didn’t look again after that. 

Ronnie was looking for a house too. Neither one of us really wanted to be apart. She was looking for a house with a mother-in-law apartment for me, or a small attached house, or a little house just down the street. She wasn’t having any luck. 

We were still uniquely suited to be together. In the summer, we had a garage sale. We worked like a well oiled machine. Ronnie, who was thinking pretty clearly, thought, “Really, we can do this so well together and we have to break up?  Really?”

Ronnie was in terrible pain.  I was mostly out of it.  One day, Ronnie asked me what I wanted.  I stuttered.  “I want... I want.”

“What do you want?  I’m serious.”

“I want more of the Great Grey Nothingness,” I responded.  At that moment, I knew it was true.  I just wanted the great grey nothingness that came seductively with depression. 

Ronnie had been saying I was depressed for years.  But, one day, she said, “You are clinically depressed.”

Like an idiot that comes to, I responded with, “Oh, Clinical Depression.”  As if to add, “Why didn’t you say so.”

“That doesn’t really mean anything diagnostically, you know.”

“Maybe not.  But, it means something to me.”  Having a name for the severity of what I was experiencing was helpful to me.  It didn’t matter that it was diagnostically inaccurate.  I finally got a glimmer of the huge problem that was enveloping my life.  And Ronnie’s life.

As winter began to withdraw that year, I slowly started to come out of my self imposed prison.  Powerful with Love work with Steve included sitting in my loving space and sending that love far across the world to someone, somewhere who needed it.  It gradually expanded to me sending the love to some past incarnation of myself.

Also, the medication that Dr. McNabb gave me started having an affect.  I continued to hurt myself regularly but the fog was starting to clear.  I spoke to Steve about it.  He said, “Ah, the assistance of medication.”  But, we also continued to work on the love piece.  

Steve suggested I look at pictures of the folks I loved.  I did.  I looked at pictures of my daughter, my grandparents, and the friends of my youth.  At some point, I stumbled on the videos I had taken of our daughter while she grew up.  I was particularly taken with her earlier years at three.  I would play a few minutes of the video before I went to bed at night.  I would feel the love I had for my daughter.  Gradually, I would reach for the video whenever I felt really bad.  It could be several times a day.

Then, one day, I discovered a small part of the video that included Ronnie.  I was filming my daughter when Ronnie came in the room.  I didn’t have much video of Ronnie because filming her wasn’t her favorite thing.  As she came in the room and laid down on the couch to read, I caught her.  I swung the camera her way and said her name.  She looked up at me with an astonishing smile filled with genuine love for me and said laughing, “Hi, Joceile.”  I saw it.  In that moment, I saw she loved me.  I remembered she loved me, and I loved her.  I played it over and over again.

I remembered she was not my enemy trying to take away my suicidal mistress or making me someone that I wasn’t.  She just simply loved me, and I had forgotten.

Around the same time, we were visiting my daughter.  My daughter and I were lying on the floor joking about something.  She traced a scar line along my wrist.  She said to me, “You can do what you need to, but you can’t leave me.  Because, then I will feel like I did something wrong.”

At that moment, I knew I was done.  I couldn’t leave my daughter or Ronnie.  I was done with the great grey nothingness.  I was done with hurting myself.  I was done with Suicide.  It took months of talking to Ronnie to begin our recovery.  I needed to listen to her.  To listen to the hurt my illness had caused.  To listen, respond without defensiveness, and listen some more.

I wanted my Ronnie back.  I remembered the love in her face when she looked at me in the video so many years ago.  I knew that I had to make amends.  

It has been seven years now.  Ronnie and I have worked hard to rebuild our relationship.  I have worked hard to listen to her instead of the voices.  It is not easy.  It is not quick.  But, it is the most important work I have ever undertaken.  

We will always be recovering from that time.  We refer to it as the dark time.  Few weeks go by without our referencing it.  It was terrible.  It was catastrophic.  Sometimes, catastrophe can be the opening for healing.  It is an opportunity.  It is not without difficulty.  It is a challenge.  Knowing how close we came to losing each other pushes us to work hard to address issues over and over so we can stay together.

I nearly lost her.  I am glad every day that I didn’t.  It makes these older years so much sweeter.  Something to be savored and grateful for daily.  Thank you to the power of love.  And, Ronnie, I love you and me too. 

L’Chaim.

Joceile

12.5.17