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An Almost
Unbearable Heartache
an excerpt
A Note from the Author:
The ‘almost unbearable heartache’ in the title of this work does not
refer to how I felt about taking care of a terminally ill parent.
Instead, it relates to how I felt about some of the circumstances and
people that came along with the responsibility, which I describe in
detail in the book and more generally below*.
I did not plan to write a book
about the end of my mother’s life.
Even though friends, along with colleagues in Alzheimer’s support
groups, encouraged me to keep notes or write a journal for possible
future reference, I didn’t.
For two reasons: one, was that my mother’s illness began to progress to
the point where she needed full time care shortly after I returned from
India early in 2008, where I had gone in order to finish researching
and taking pictures for a book I was writing on Yogi Amrit Desai and
the founding of Kripalu Yoga. A typical day for me from that time until
my mother’s passing in the summer of 2009 was to get up as early as I
could and work on The Kripalu Story until she awakened. The remainder
of the day was then spent managing her care.
I didn’t finish writing The Kripalu Story until the week before my
mother died.
The other reason I didn’t write about the experience as I was living it
is that I felt as though if I ever wanted to do that – write about it
-- I would not need self-reminders of what had taken place. The
experience of being in a situation that literally involves living with
the reality of imminent death for someone you love dearly is not
something that fades from one’s memory.
Then, after my mother passed, and with The Kripalu Story finished and
ready for publication, I felt a very strong urge to begin sharing
publicly what I had experienced. I contacted Alzheimer’s Association
groups and Hospice agencies about advocating for them via public
speaking engagements and other community outreach programs.
They responded favorably, but there were bureaucratic snafus in the way
of hiring me independently to provide these kinds of services. And I
did not want to put myself back full-time in an atmosphere of
care-giving for the terminally ill.
As the urge to express myself grew stronger, I decided first to write a
clinical ‘A to Z’ guidebook for Alzheimer’s caregivers based on my
experience. I had, after all, made use of social programs, financial
assistance and support groups that most people are not aware of.
The problem I had with writing a dry, factual guidebook is that I felt
that most people would want to know how I found out about these
programs in the first place, on my own. And I had, in fact, learned
about the availability of assistance programs and social services as a
direct result of another member of my family trying to undermine the
home care I was providing for my mother. In my case, under these
circumstances, it was vitally urgent for me to obtain outside help and
assistance in order to allow me to continue caring for my mother in her
own home, as I had promised her I would.
Although my situation with another family member involved extremes -
the calling in of intrusive social agencies and the filing of a
malicious, time-consuming law suits - what happened to me is not that
different in kind to what happens to primary caregivers in many
families. It is all too common for them to be misunderstood and then
become isolated, even from the very members of their own family whom
they now need more than ever to count on for support.
I therefore felt it was important to include descriptions of these
incidents and conflicts in the book in order to explain my
discovery-process as well as forewarn anyone taking on this type of
seemingly benign responsibility to the kinds of hostile reactions they
might very well receive in turn.
That in the end I was not able to keep my promise to my mother is
precisely what begets this book its somber title and which also
instigated a dire aching feeling of brokenness and despair in me for
several months following her passing
Even though at the time it was deeply painful for me not to see my
mother at home when she breathed her last breath, I am now buttressed
in the present by knowing that I did do everything that I could have
done in order to try to make that happen.
[*The actual experience of caring for my mother at home was never
‘almost unbearable’, nor a ‘heartache’. It was, in fact, an
exhilarating privilege and a bittersweet joy.]
Therefore, in the end, this book is about validating the principle that
says it is always better to do all that you can do to provide the best
for someone you love, no matter how great the challenge or
uncontrollable the forces are that can direct the outcome.
Mostly, though, this book is an homage to family caregivers and the
unique rewards they reap through this experience. Something that only
them, and perhaps now you, can fully understand and appreciate.
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