At the end of life, how does one know whether they’ve lived a good life or not? More personally, how will you know if you have? How will I?
Many of us live as if professional reputation, material wealth, and social status are the key ingredients, but watching The Good Wife get closer to the end provides an altogether different litmus test.
Which is this. Have you been a good enough friend, to enough people, long enough, that they’re there for you at the end? Or has a certain self-centeredness and peripatetic life left you mostly alone?
You’ll only know which of these is the case if you die slowly. Some of us will go quickly like a friend of mine who fell over dead on his bike in Italy last summer. Although he didn’t have time for the “close friend” litmus test, his memorial service provided positive clues to a life well lived.
Based on the “close friend” test, Lynn has lived an exceptional life. Unfortunately though, she’s unable to take solace in that knowledge. Because like many of us, she’s incredibly hard on herself. My unprovable hypothesis is that the built-in feeling of inadequacy began at birth with Lynn wondering, “Why didn’t my mom want me?” Almost certainly, it didn’t help when 45 years later she contacted her birth mom only to learn she still didn’t want any kind of relationship.
Consider the last 48 hours. Yesterday, Lynn participated in a zoom call with her four dear college roommates. “Participated” meaning listened intently and smiled throughout. Today, an hour before Pastor Carol was coming by with communion, Susan texted to see if she could pop in. I said she could join Lynn and Carol, Carol happens to be Susan’s pastor, and the three of them visited for over an hour. I could go on and on. Lynn’s support network has blown my mind. She is being loved and supported by so many people none of whom are the least bit phased by her worsening symptoms like her loss of voice.
Some bring art, some bring pictures, a lot bring food. In the end, they just want to be next to her. And to see her smile. When we’re without her smile there is going to be a painful void in a lot of people’s lives, not just A’s, J’s, and mine.
I intend on honoring Lynn’s eventual legacy by prioritizing friendships even more.
Maybe the answer is as simple as my wife, Lynn, is aging at warp speed due to her Multiple Systems Atrophy, a rare degenerative neurological disorder for which there’s no cure. But one thing gnaws at me. Compared to most caregivers, I have so many more resources. So, what’s my problem?
Physically, I am healthy. Not all caregivers are.
Most significantly, we can pay for her care without undue worry. That includes two health care aides who work weekdays. It’s not cheap. Together, they account for about 45% of Lynn’s total care. I am also fortunate to have two helpful daughters who I team with on weekends. Their help equates to about 10% of the total, meaning I fly solo the other 45% of the time.
Also, there are numerous friends and family who love Lynn and are supporting us in myriad ways. Especially my niece and sister, who, like clockwork, fly to Seattle from Salt Lake City and Northwest Indiana, drive down to Olympia where we live, and rent a place for five days every three months. My niece is an ace physical therapist, and when she visits, she works with Lynn almost non-stop mostly making accommodations to our house and improving Lynn’s routines.
Then, there’s Kris, Marybeth, and Joan, who show up every Saturday at noon with Lynn’s favorite lunch from the local deli. They talk, and talk, and talk. And giggle. And garden. And inject much needed levity and normality.
Also, there’s Susan, who brought dinner over this week despite her dad dying, in Seattle, at age 98, a few days ago.
Then, there’s Vince, who knocks at the door, hands over amazing Ziploc bags filled with wonderful produce from his garden and jets. Kevin sends UberEats gift certificates from SoCal. And similar to Susan, Michael, Dan, Mary, and Travis show up with food and good cheer. And Monica. And a few of my daughters’ friends who I have never even met. If I stop long enough to reflect on these random acts of kindness, they bring me to tears.
Altogether, Lynn’s CaringBridge website has 94 people from other neighborhoods, states, and countries who are reading my manic/dorky updates, praying for us, sending supportive messages, and ultimately, seeing us from afar.
And despite this all-world support, I’m completely broken. So again, I wonder, what’s wrong with me? Why am I shattered. Emotionally bereft. Socially toxic as a result of not a short fuse, but no fuse. Why have I not just hit an MSA wall, but been completely crushed by one?
How about an anecdote to give you a feel for my sadsackness. First though, let me summarize how my work colleagues talk about me. In short, they say they most appreciate my poise, thoughtfulness, and calm demeanor. LOL.
Lynn decides to make an ice cream cone. To get the cone, she has to get into a cupboard in the smallish laundry room. She ends up repeatedly moving her wheelchair forwards and backwards in the tight space. Fast forward a few minutes. Part of the door frame lies on the ground. There’s ice cream all over the floor. And counter. The ice cream container fared poorly in this ordeal too and is now too crumpled for the top.
Because you’re rational, you’re thinking, “Big shit. The door can be repaired. The floor and counter quickly and easily cleaned. The container and top? Come on bruh, get real. Altogether, minor trade-offs for Lynn feeling a wee bit independent.”
But what you’re not factoring in is the cumulative effect of this type of experience hundreds of times over. Combined with other, way more substantive challenges, that have completely chipped away at my reservoir of patience, kindness, and humor.
I lost it, yelling, “WHY DIDN’T YOU ASK ME TO MAKE YOU AN ICE CREAM CONE?!” And then stayed Mad. Yes, you’re absolutely right, a complete and total overreaction.
There are two ways I could pivot from here. The more obvious one is to ask the question on most people’s minds, what can/should I do to better manage my anger and heal more generally? Or more specifically, when the hell is Ron going to find a good therapist? Sorry sports fans, I’m choosing the second, less obvious one, where I ask, what exactly has been MSA’s toll on me? Buckle up.
The losses are overwhelming because the challenges are multilayered. Some hard, others harder, two especially hard.
Hard
• We can’t do the ordinary day-to-day things we always took for granted because they were so easy to do. Things you mostly like still take for granted because they’re still easy for you and yours to do. We can’t go out to dinner. We can’t go for a walk. Or for a lake swim. We can’t go to Victoria for the weekend. In the end, these small things are the lifeblood of intimate friendship. Gone.
• We can’t plan for the future. Before MSA hit, we never made the time to make a list of fun future activities, but it’s still hard to come to grips with the fact that there’s nothing to look forward to on our calendar. The four of us will not be going to Spain or hanging in an Alderbrook cabin anymore. Hope for fun in the future. Gone.
Harder
• It feels like my second global pandemic with all the lockdown rigamarole. Since returning from a cycling trip to Bend, Oregon on June 1, 2024, I have been completely housebound because Lynn’s so dependent upon her meds, her bathroom, and her hospice bed. I’ll spare you the details, but her digestive system is completely whacked, meaning even day trips are too difficult to tackle. Spending a few hours at Alison’s apartment in Seattle recently felt like an international trip.
For fourteen straight months my daily routine has been the same. I wake up and wait for Lynn to ring my intercom doodad which I can’t wait to chuck in the trash. Then, absent our healthcare aides, I help her with everything, pretty much non-stop. Because MSA is like a demented dimmer switch that someone’s slowly turning, she needs more help each month, meaning my breaks have grown increasingly short. And ultimately, insufficient. Lynn mistakenly thinks if I could just get away for a few days I’d be fine. I tell her I don’t need 4-5 days, I need 4-5 months where I don’t have to cook, clean, or care for anyone. At all. Any meaningful flexibility of movement. Gone.
• We’ve had a modern marriage meaning we’ve split the work pretty evenly. Now, I’m wilting from the pressure of having to do everything I’ve always done plus everything Lynn always did. Among other things, she used to help with groceries and she did the bulk of the cooking, and all of the laundry, and half of the housework. And she called the service peeps. Now, it’s all me, all the time. I cook every meal, clean the kitchen every night, do the dishes, the laundry, take care of the trash/recycling/compost, vacuum, take care of the yard, stay on top of our personal finances, and ended up having to partner with a CPA to close Lynn’s parents’ estate for which she was the executor. That old energy saving division of labor. Gone.
Hardest
• Overwhelmed by her symptoms, Lynn has lost the ability to perspective take. She’s always been uber-caring, but now, not so much. Here’s what I wish she’d say, “I’m really sorry for what this disease has taken from you.” I’ve tried to understand this change. All I can come up with is her life is so hard, there’s not any psychic energy left for anyone else, even me. Whenever I try to express my profound sadness, she tends to take it personally, gets defensive, and immediately starts talking about her own feelings. Instead of doing the only thing that creates connection, asking follow up questions, and genuinely probing for more insight. I want her to say, “Tell me more so I can understand even better.” But it’s not going to happen. Because of MSA. Curiosity and perspective. Gone.
• I am the loneliest I’ve ever been. There’s two parts to it. The first is I’m disconnected from my friends. Because, remember, I’m housebound. On top of everything else, I keep Lynn’s social calendar. I organize friend visits for her almost daily. But ironically, I almost never see my friends. Not to mention, meet anyone new. Zilch socializing.
On top of that, right now, my connection with Lynn is tenuous at best. We’ve always enjoyed an intense physical connection. In fact, truth be told, we may have gone all the way in an empty Norwegian university swimming pool locker room. A few times. Now, MSA has doused those flames. The mind is willing, but the body is not. Which saddens both of us greatly.
We don’t have in-depth conversations either. The other day I told her about an article I had read about “anchor offs” which you can see from our deck. These are destitute people living on boats anchored in Budd Inlet. I summarized the article, explained how they prefer the water to the streets, and . . . nothing. I’m sure she was thinking about what I was saying, she just couldn’t communicate her thoughts. She doesn’t really maintain eye contact either. So, it’s like playing tennis against a wall instead of with another person. Mark told me Lisa got a real kick out of his story about the 30 mopeders who passed us on 113th on a recent ride. I was a little jelly. Lynn isn’t able to ask about where I’ve cycled or how it’s gone. Post ride, I think to myself, she’ll never have any feel for those two hours of my life.
A few weeks ago, I told her I was thinking of buying a house in Bend. I wanted her to say, “You’re crazy” or “Cool, which ones are you considering? Show me.” Ultimately, like with the “anchor off” story, I was looking for connection. But there was none. If a convo happens in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? Deep-seated, profound connection, built over decades. Going.
Shout out to Redmond, WA and Hong Kong for the recent ever-so kind and encouraging words. Words that have inspired me to share this post from the other blog writing I’m doing just for friends of Lynn interested in knowing how she’s doing.
Just as there are two distinct Lynn MSA stories to tell, there are two distinct ones that I could tell about myself as primary caregiver.
When you tell your own story, you run the risk of making yourself into a hero. Of emphasizing all that’s admirable and slighting the inevitable messiness and selfishness. This story is hella complex with contrasting personal histories all mixed together with psychology, mental health challenges, emotion, and spirituality.
Thus, the Reader’s Digest version.
Lynn’s predicament is way, way worse than mine, but I’m as unhappy as I’ve ever been. Lynn’s only advantage is that her challenges are obvious to the steady stream of people who visit. People mostly look past me, assuming I’m fine, which I try telling myself I am.
But that’s bullshit. I’ve never experienced anything remotely this challenging. And I don’t feel like I can tell the whole story to anyone because who would have the capacity for the whole damn thing? Simpler to say “fine”, “okay”, “hanging in”, “coping”, “keeping my head just above the water”. I’m a five tool player when it comes to keeping people at a safe distance.*
The sad fact of the matter is I have had to sacrifice everything that brings me joy, especially social connections, in service of Lynn’s daily needs. I have been housebound for exactly a year now. Except for a daily shortish run, ride, or swim. Without those physical activities, I don’t know where I’d be.
I also don’t know where I’d be without our two health care assistants, my two daughters, and Lynn’s closest friends who keep showing up for her, and by extension, our family. People keep making meals for us even without the Meal Train. People are praying for us and sustaining us with flowers, fellowship, and love.
Still, I recently told Lynn I don’t know how long I can carry my half. And feeling abandoned just at the idea of some alternative arrangement, she broke down. And for now, to make a very hard thing even harder, things suck between us.
Hearts will soften and things will improve. They always do. But this challenge will not lessen. I feel overwhelmed almost all the time. I am no match for this relentless disease. But doing the best I can for her. Today at least.
Postscript: I have caught a second, or is it third, or fourth, or fifth wind? And hearts have softened and we are back on track. For now.
*a baseball concept for a player that excels in all five key areas: hitting for average, hitting for power, running speed, fielding ability, and throwing arm strength