24-03-2015 07:39 PM
24-03-2015 07:39 PM
Why can't you tell your employer? You may be surprised at how understanding they will be. I have been open with mine and when I do need to take days off for similiar reasons to yourself I can do it guilt free, to let go of your job, your last piece of normality as you say would be disastrous, I am thankful for work most days because it is the only time I am not thinking of my daughter and all the related problems,, i think i would lose my last thread of sanity without it and then I wouldn't be able to help anyone... hang in there 🙂
24-03-2015 07:40 PM
24-03-2015 07:40 PM
24-03-2015 07:42 PM
24-03-2015 07:42 PM
24-03-2015 07:43 PM
24-03-2015 07:43 PM
Hi CherryBomb that's a really good question about how we manage after life has been so radically altered. I think it is about finding a balance of connecting with your old life and also accommodating the chages that have occured. The "old life" may never come back exactly as it was, and that in itself can be cause for grief. However we can learn to grow around this loss and to find new ways of living in the changed world that we are now in. It's also importnat to take time out from the demands of caring from someone and to nuture yourself.
24-03-2015 07:44 PM
24-03-2015 07:44 PM
24-03-2015 07:44 PM
24-03-2015 07:44 PM
Hi Sarah,
I'd love any advice on how to get some freedom back. Because my daughter is suicidal, and has been for around six months, she sees me as her 'rock'. She's not coping with anything, and I feel totally smothered. I hardly socialise or do anything on my own for fear that it will be too much for her and she will end it all.
24-03-2015 07:45 PM
24-03-2015 07:45 PM
24-03-2015 07:47 PM
24-03-2015 07:47 PM
24-03-2015 07:49 PM
24-03-2015 07:49 PM
Thanks Viv,
I can certainly relate to this. My daughter became very unwell several years ago. I think we can hide our feeling of loss and grief when we're busy getting care in the early days. But, at some stage I think as carers we need to face up to our sense of loss.
When I came to the conclusion that I couldn't change her, or her illness, I realised that I had to change myself and the way I thought about things.
I sometimes think about the 15 year old girl that she was when she had a psychosis, but then I move on to the lovely courageous young woman she has become. Not living the life she would otherwise be living, but a good life regardless of the illness she lives with.
24-03-2015 07:50 PM
24-03-2015 07:50 PM
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