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The Most Loving ThingBy Dizzy -- WSA Support Group Leader, Forum and WSA Member A year ago today I walked out of the assisted living community without her. It was quiet--deeply quiet--walking alone to my rented car and driving away. Away. A dreadful word loomed just beyond my sense of exhaustion, relief and freedom. I didn't think about it head-on, but it lurked there waiting. Abandonment. A series of illness had hijacked her, and me, and dropped us in a strange land. Her with dementia, me with my own madness for which I have no name. It is the madness of loss--loss of a lovely home, a good job, friends, family, retirement, travel, community, intimacy, companionship--peace. Madness of subordination of self to the every need she expressed from simple basics of life to the complex needs of rehab--possibilities never realized. Possibilities once quashed that left me spent, angry and desperate. I had thoughts of suicide. And then I stumbled into Wellspouse. Years of well-meaning but non-understanding friends, family, church members and others, had not prepared me for the oasis of my first Wellspouse support group meeting. I found myself drinking wine with five others whose lives seemed more desperate than mine. To every whining complaint I offered, each individual looked into my eyes and said, "I know". And I knew they knew. It was all there--the years of trying, moving on, finding a new normal, looking for solutions--being well spouses. I laughed and I cried. I haven't stopped either laughing or crying.
Dizzy “ WS Support Group Leader, Forum and WSA Member |






A few months after that first meeting I found myself leaving her in her own community, separate from me, but cared for by others. A year later, that dreadful word, that lurking monster "abandonment" has faded. Not disappeared, just faded. In its place I have a new conscious thought, "It is the most loving thing." Most loving for her--most loving for me. She has adapted to a life within the community. Her days are full. I have moved forward.....not far.....but forward. There is no nirvana in my life, not now, probably not tomorrow. But I have hope. And I no longer see myself in the mirror and think, "abandoner!" Instead, I realize that I am caring for her--in the most loving way.