Dear Trish,
my heart breaks for your situation. For you and the hundreds of thousands of other caregivers in this country. You are clear and eloquent and suffering. So now what? I'm not going to address the practical issues about respite care, support systems or other social resources that might be available to you. I'm sure you have thought of all of them. So I'll just address the very thing you clearly need need. You need kindness and you need care.
Two of the most significant factors that lead to caretaker burnout are unreasonable demand that can't be met and denial of feelings. Your external demands are overwhelming. Your internal demands make it much worse. You said that after six years you feel you should have "mastered" this business of being a caregiver! Well Trish I have been a quadriplegic for 29 years and I am still working on the mastery thing. And to make matters worse, you feel guilty about the fact that you are exhausted and have needs of your own. So not only do your deepest needs get ignored, you feel guilty for having them!
On a recent interview, I described how my relationship with my body has evolved over the course of my life. Before my accident I ignored it. After my accident I despised it. I was ashamed of the way it looked and I felt rageful that the way it acted. So I didn't take very good care of it. About 10 years after my accident I would tell people that my body acted like a terrorist but I had to treat it like a fragile lover. Over these last 10 years, I love my body. I feel grateful for how hard it has worked over the course of my life just to keep me alive. It has done more for me than most bodies do for their owners. So I feel great compassion, gratitude and love for my body.
And yours? It's not just your body, it is your heart soul and mind that have been taxed relentlessly over the course of six years. Your body has maintained its stamina, you have developed effective coping skills, at the deepest levels you are acting out of compassion and love. And you are human. You are tired and you are angry and you need care. So why not start with you?
You certainly cannot ignore your husband's needs. But please allow yourself to feel what you feel whether it is exhaustion or anger or relief or even the joy of your children's existence. Please just notice what is happening in your life and allow yourself to feel at all. And when you feel exhaustion or despair, try to feel the same kind of compassion for yourself that I felt for you when I read your letter. I'm not talking about self-pity, I'm talking about simple kindness -- the same you would show for me if I was suffering.
You can love yourself without being selfish. You can care for your suffering without ignoring his. Your identity is not lost simply evolving. Open up your heart and let yourself be kind to you. You won't be able to do it all day and there will be many days you will forget. But the more you practice this open hearted kindness for the person you are, the better you will become at doing it.
As a matter of fact, I am feeling that open hearted kindness for the person you are right now.
I wish you the best and I wish you a happy birthday at home taking a warm bath and relaxing.
Daniel Gottlieb Ph.D.
www.DrDanGottlieb.com