Nov 13, 2012 19:47
I have taken this week off from work, in the hopes of clearing my head and getting a better handle on managing my life in light of the problems with my parents' health. I seem to need some help, too.
It's an ongoing grieving process as they fail and die on the installment plan. My Dad is slipping slowly. His mental acuity has declined, so that he's much like the other human ghosts in the home, and he's physically much less steady on his feet. Soon, I think, even a walker won't be sufficient.
Mom has returned to the rehab hospital, and hopefully will not bounce back to the hospital for more acute care. The good news is that she is definitely recovering from the back surgery: she can sit up without pain, her legs don't hurt, she doesn't look so washed out. The bad news is that she's despondent and a bit confused. She's not remembering new people well, and she's asking me about driving back to Maine or called M by the wrong name. It's too early to despair, but this is what Dad's dementia was like at the beginning.
On top of that, I'm worried about what we are going to do in the longer term. Mom will, I hope, go back home by the end of the month, but I don't know how mobile she'll be. We have arranged for some in home care for now, but in the longer term, if Mom needs a walker that house becomes very difficult for her, and impossible if she's in a wheelchair. Finding a new house is something we have all acknowledged will be useful, but I'm at a loss for driving the process forward. I'm more reactive than strategic in my thinking, and that's a weakness in this context. The stress of confronting a problem whose limits I can't define, the next step for which I can't see clearly, and the consequences thereof could be severe for my family, eats at me.
Personally, I had a terrible job review last week. Honestly, it was more of an intervention. I have, apparently, gone from being a great ASM to a bad one because of the stress and worry and sadness I'm dealing with. This is not merely a knotty problem, or an extended crisis, it's a protracted grieving process. Apparently, it's leading me to be short with customers and employees, which cannot stand. I'm definitely forgetting things as they slide through my ADD brain without sticking.
The worst thing about it, though, was not hearing that I need to straighten up and fly right. I have heard such things before, and while I'm somewhat chagrined that I need to be told, it's sadly part and parcel of ADD. No, the worst was realizing that I needed help, and that these three people in what was ostensibly a professional context were going far beyond the call of duty to throw me a lifeline.
I'm ashamed that I let things get so bad they had to step in. I'm ashamed I didn't ask for help sooner. I'm especially ashamed at how Lefty, who I honestly feel like I can annoy at any moment without meaning to, made it very clear that he trusts and respects me professionally. (He even offered me a job as his full-time #2 again with the NY store. O.o)
EDIT: It occurs to me that I suffer from the fond delusion that I'm a bit like the Doctor: the compassionate madcap who pops out of the background from time to time, helps people, and then disappears while folks shrug and get on with things.
I guess this sort of distress is hard for me to notice. Instead of causing pain, it causes numbness. I'm going to have to do better in keeping it in mind. I need to work on re-establishing and maintaining my domestic routines, which will help me keep it together.
Which is my project for this week. So far, I'm off to a crappy start, with dozing away much of yesterday and today, but I have at least paid some bills, done some cleaning, and seen my therapist. I'm going to call a personal organizer to come and help me set up some systems to better control the chaos towards which I tend. I also could definitely use help from friends. If any of you would care to come by and help me sort through the clutter, I'd appreciate it, especially if you could come over and help me sort comics perhaps tomorrow evening?
edited to add,
personal,
work,
self-evaluation,
family,
call for help,
house,
friends