Dolly
Member
- Location
- Welsh Borders
OK! I'm new so thought I'd get this out of the way. Our daughter and only child was diagnosed with autism and epilepsy in 1981. She had no speech to speak of, was beautiful looking, and had severe epilepsy. My husband and I were her sole carers. he was a wonderful dad, one of the best you could imagine. My mum lived with us from retirement in 1980. She had been matron of a social service old folks home. The three of us were an awesome team, there was nothing we couldn't cope with.
The wheels started to come off in 2009. My husband had a heart attack and was in coronary intensive care for some time. We had given up smoking in 2005, and neither of us felt well since(lol) he recovered and apart from winter bronchitis has no ill effects. But it made us aware of the fact we were getting older
In 2010, out of the blue and very suddenly our beautiful daughter died whilst in an epileptic seizure. The shock and grief was indescribable.
In 2011, suddenly my mum started acting oddly, took no interest in her appearance and became very nasty. As a nurse I knew what was wrong... dementia. It absorbed her quickly and she entered end stage in 2012. Because she was violent, she had to go into residential care. It cost a lot but the home was fantastic. She died on January 6th this year. The old cliche 'happy release' has never been more apt.
So now there is just the two of us and the dog. We have moved house, from a large 3 storey, 4 if you count the basement, Victorian villa with 3 double bedrooms and 2 single, to a small semi in a quiet cul-de-sac and we are at last finding time to get our breath back and take stock. We didn't move immediately after our
daughter died (she was 32) because we would have taken all the emotional baggage with us. We waiting until the numbness wore off and moved last February. We are very happy here. It took a while to settle, everything felt strange after 38 years in the same house but we have made friends and have now settled in.
The weight piled on me after the shock and my knees are suffering so my aim this year is to eat sensibly and get this 'lard' off. Its no good crash dieting for me. I'd lose the weight OK but couldn't sustain a spartan regime. Slow and steady will be my watch-word.
We may have gone from a family of 4 to a family of 2 but we are still a close little family, just a bit smaller that's all
The wheels started to come off in 2009. My husband had a heart attack and was in coronary intensive care for some time. We had given up smoking in 2005, and neither of us felt well since(lol) he recovered and apart from winter bronchitis has no ill effects. But it made us aware of the fact we were getting older
In 2010, out of the blue and very suddenly our beautiful daughter died whilst in an epileptic seizure. The shock and grief was indescribable.
In 2011, suddenly my mum started acting oddly, took no interest in her appearance and became very nasty. As a nurse I knew what was wrong... dementia. It absorbed her quickly and she entered end stage in 2012. Because she was violent, she had to go into residential care. It cost a lot but the home was fantastic. She died on January 6th this year. The old cliche 'happy release' has never been more apt.
So now there is just the two of us and the dog. We have moved house, from a large 3 storey, 4 if you count the basement, Victorian villa with 3 double bedrooms and 2 single, to a small semi in a quiet cul-de-sac and we are at last finding time to get our breath back and take stock. We didn't move immediately after our
daughter died (she was 32) because we would have taken all the emotional baggage with us. We waiting until the numbness wore off and moved last February. We are very happy here. It took a while to settle, everything felt strange after 38 years in the same house but we have made friends and have now settled in.
The weight piled on me after the shock and my knees are suffering so my aim this year is to eat sensibly and get this 'lard' off. Its no good crash dieting for me. I'd lose the weight OK but couldn't sustain a spartan regime. Slow and steady will be my watch-word.
We may have gone from a family of 4 to a family of 2 but we are still a close little family, just a bit smaller that's all