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Waking up to find Im not Disabled

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  • This topic has 11 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by jock.
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  • #88019
    jock
    Participant

    I worked for about 6 months assisting the severely disabled a few years ago. Turns out I was a slow learner and my colleagues lost patience with me to the point that I felt I had to leave. But that is another story.
    These days, sometimes I wake up in the morning and think “well, at least I’m not disabled”. That job taught me to appreciate having physical independence. Imagine, waking up every day and you can’t even get out of bed until someone helps you into your wheelchair. Then you need someone to change your diaper, shower you, and feed you.” Where’s the quality of life in that? It’s a sad state of affairs and I’m hoping I’ll never be in that situation myself in the future one day.
    But who knows. Life can change in an instant. A car accident. Someone mugs you and you get an acquired brain injury. As Buddhism teaches, your current situation is impermanent. Don’t get attached to anything or anyone. Guess that means we have to be ready if life suddenly deals us a cruel blow.
    I appreciate my current circumstance but I worry how it will change one day.
    With this kind of thinking, it means I can never fully relax but at least I have some acceptance of life’s roller coaster.Life’s fluctuating fortunes.

    • This topic was modified 9 years ago by jock.
    #88023
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi jack,

    I kind of know what you mean. Who would take care of you if something bad happens, what would that look like and can they afford it?

    But what if you’re alone? Freaks me the heck out!

    This year, for whatever reason, friends, family, and acquaintances have been dying off. At least one a month if you average it out. (Usually three a month and then nothing ~ clusters). Older people look at me and say, “Well, you’re getting to that age…” It drives me nuts.

    So off course now I’m thinking quite a bit on our own mortality.

    Sometimes I lay awake at night in a panic. What if my DH dies before me? And what if he dies NOW? I’d be screwed. He’s the type of person who micro manages everything into HIS screwy system! Like he has 100 passwords on one crumpled sheet of paper written in smudged pencil. But then he has gorgeous spread sheets on the household budget. But then he has to dig around 1000 business cards to find the name of the new guy who handles our taxes. And yet has memorized the number of the snow plow guy. And that’s just the household stuff. What about the business??

    If you take active steps to prepare for the inevitable, probable and possible, that’s all you can do.

    Getting back to disabilities, now I know why people say, “S/he died in his/her sleep, it’s a blessing.” Not even being disabled, but being very old.

    I want to be a spry 90 year old who will die in her sleep!! Living in a cottage with my DH! With a personal secretary/house manager to make sure we’re OK if one of us dies first!!

    I don’t know if I answered your question/thought, but it did activate an anxiety in me!

    Inky

    • This reply was modified 9 years ago by Inky.
    #88033
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Jack:

    Everything in moderation, even the Buddhist principle of non attachment. There is such a thing (still boggles my mind) called “death meditation”- there are Buddhists out there who meditate on giving up their attachment to their bodies and being okay with dying. My hat off to anyone succeeding in such a venture. For more than a moment, if that. The extreme, unworkable part of Buddhism is the idea that it is possible to achieve complete detachment, to be completely prepared for disease and death by being prepared for it all the time. That is an anxious way of living, achieving the exact opposite.

    When I examine my fear, I realize most of my fears are about things that already happened. I will be in a much better spot if I only fear what may or will happen. It cuts down on the load of fear.

    anita

    #88036
    Anonymous
    Guest

    this is me asking me (because someone should): So, what is it that you were afraid of and now realize it ALREADY happened?

    this is me answering:

    1) I woke up this morning being 54 years old (how the … did that happen)?
    More about 1: I woke up this morning to see wrinkles on my face that will not go away except in dim light. I woke up this morning with cellulite…. I woke up this morning with grey hair… I woke up this morning and I am no longer a child, a teenager, a young adult in my 20s, a 30+, a 40+. I woke up this morning and in the best case scenario I have way less life to live than at any other time in the past. I woke up this morning and my digestive system doesn’t work as well as it used to.

    2) If I was told before I was born that I was going to be born to a woman that will HURT me, again and again, purposefully, with malice, WANTING to hurt me- I would be scared to death about being born to that woman. Guess what? It already happened.

    3) If I was told that my childhood would be wasted on being sick, mentally unwell, I would be so sad and scared of the prospect of living it. It already happened.

    4) If I was told that my teenage years, my 20s, my 30s, my 40s will be wasted on sickness and I will not get a redo, I’d be scared to death. It already happened.

    5) My fear of feeling pain, great emotional pain… it already happened- and I survived it. The emotional pain did not kill me. And it already happened.

    6) When I fear what is yet to happen, that fear I feel about the future, already happened at the time I was fearing the future.

    anita

    #88041
    jock
    Participant

    When I examine my fear, I realize most of my fears are about things that already happened. I will be in a much better spot if I only fear what may or will happen. It cuts down on the load of fear.

    I’m sorry anita if this thread triggered your past fears. I certainly don’t want to add to your burden.

    #88043
    Anonymous
    Guest

    How can you possibly add to my burden, Jack? No need to take responsibility where you have none!

    anita

    #88047
    jock
    Participant

    Inky
    thanks for your input. Seems we share similar anxiety about getting old, disabled and dependant. Oh and our partner dying first. Yeah that one is a concern too. 🙂

    #88057
    Inky
    Participant

    I actually have … A PLAN!! (LOL)

    In five years (at a certain AGE) I will hang out with DH when he does paper work, with a notebook in hand. I will write down who we pay and any passwords/websites/phone numbers, etc. I will also make note of any yearly house maintenance routine, what he does when he goes down in the basement to fix the Wifi/electrical/water. Who he calls.

    Ten years after that I will do the paperwork WITH him. (See where this is going?)

    Ten years after THAT, I will do the paperwork!! (He is older than me and by then will be too old to argue)

    And if he dies first and I’m past a certain age, I’ll have a secretary/kids do it or I will be in a home!!!

    And in the unlikely event he dies, um, NOW, I’d be in such a grief spiral they can just take the house away!!! And I will “claim refuge in the Buddha” and you can find me at the local Buddhist Meditation Center!!

    #88077
    jock
    Participant

    (He is older than me and by then will be too old to argue)

    it is a sad truth that as men decline with age, women get stronger. I let my partner win some arguments though 🙂

    #88094
    Diana
    Participant

    Jack
    I am the disabled person who can’t care for herself. A few years back I had a stroke and how you describe above my life completely changed. But don’t feel bad cause all the things I suddenly can’t do I found clever ways around as a result I’ve learned to be very resourceful. Today as hard as it is to believe I have a good quality of life cause I’m learning a lot new things. Among them how to stop looking for happiness outside ourselves.

    I agree though we have to stop taking things for granted while we have them.

    #88186
    Anonymous
    Guest

    * dear Diana: glad you are on tiny buddha. Read your posts in the past. I hope you post more, comment on others’ posts, you have lessons to teach.

    anita

    #88187
    jock
    Participant

    Among them how to stop looking for happiness outside ourselves

    • This reply was modified 9 years ago by jock.
    • This reply was modified 9 years ago by jock.
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