Archive for December, 2008

Cut Out of Each Other's Lives

Cut Out of Each Other's Lives

 

 

Cut out of each other’s lives:  friendship was a casualty of illness, money problems, and divorce.

 

 A Short Story in Three Parts. Featured in Rita Watson’s nationally syndicated Relationships blog: www.ritawatson.com

Julie grew more angry and distressed at the strain of the mortgage, taxes, and unanticipated household repairs.

I dropped hints: “You could rent out your house and get a nice one bedroom and pocket the change,” I said. “You could refinance. You could use a roommate service and screen candidates.  You could place an ad.”

 Julie vetoed all suggestions.  She was not going to move, and she was not going to get someone in off the street. Candidates referred through friends proved unacceptable: “I don’t want someone else’s – stuff – all over my house,” she spat.        

Every time I talked to Julie things were worse. She descended into panicked thinking.  Instead of paying $75 to have someone look at her broken dryer, she hauled wet clothes to a Laundromat for months. Why didn’t she get her new boyfriend (a handyman) to look at the malfunctioning appliance?  She didn’t want to be “dependent.” My husband invited her to my 40th birthday luncheon. I should have told him not to, because it was held at a gaudy, overpriced restaurant, attended by prosperous people whose ostentatious materialism, I knew, she would loathe.

My best Wall Street-era girlfriend boasted of having just bought two mink coats. Noting the acid downward curve of Julie’s mouth, I thought, I ought to have told her not to come.  She hated these people, and she was starting to hate me, with my marital compromises, stay-at-home life, my new blond highlights.  About six months after Julie sent Dave away, she began to talk about her neighbor’s husband. “Don’t waste your time,” I told her, “flirting with married men.” This wasn’t what I expected when I handed her a check to help speed up her divorce.

More than half a year passed without a dollar repaid. My husband and I had money stresses of our own by then, and I had to come out and ask for my loan back. Julie had just spent a weekend with millionaire friends.  As I’d been talking about our own unexpectedly huge tax bill, I assumed she’d got the hint and arranged her visit to relieve me. I was wrong.  Julie was livid.

“Look,” I said in my defense. “You’ve had a boyfriend for six months. Why can’t you ask him for a loan, or to move in and help with the bills?”

Julie hung up on me, furious.  Within a month, I got a check for the full amount of my loan in the mail. We had no contact for a year. I finally called and learned that her handyman boyfriend was long gone, and her ex-neighbor’s husband was living with her, and that he, too was divorcing.

Sounding upbeat, but hardened, Julie dismissed my good wishes for her new relationship; she had no interest in marrying this man. He paid his share and did things around the house. His ex was awful, took the kids back to Maine.  She would make use of him till the expiration date ran out.

Hanging up, I thought back to Julie’s wedding — the white dress, the lilies, the dark cathedral, the hopeful, holy words, the peacock bursting into full plume. I thought of the dance performance the night she announced her divorce.

I suppose I often see myself in marriage, indeed, in any relationship, as the Minotaur – stumbling along, half an awkward hybrid body, struggling to reconcile the ugly with the sublime. I easily forgave Julie her bad temper and outbursts at the time of her divorce, but could not forgive the home wrecking, nor could she forgive my judging her dark side.

Naively, I’d thought our friendship would outlast our marriages; I thought it would flourish forever. But like the peacock’s fan, its glory was short-lived. I thought of her declaration: “All relationships have expiration dates.”

Ours, apparently, had run out.  ~~~

 

Chronic Illness strained my marriage almost to the breaking point. I chose to stay; Julie took a different path when she and Steve hit the rocks.

 

Expiration Dates: A Short Story of Friendship and Money in Three Parts.

Featured in Rita Watson’s nationally syndicated Relationships blog. www.ritawatson.com

 

 “You know,” I confessed over our Cobb salads, “when I was cleaning out my closet, I thought of throwing out the dress I wore to your wedding.”  It was a cheap, pale green catalogue dress from my days as a freelancer, when I watched every penny while saving the down-payment that finally liberated us from our suffocating New York apartment. “That was the only time I wore it,” I said. “I was only holding onto it for sentimental reasons. I guess it’s O.K. to throw it out now.”  She agreed.

There was another reason I wanted to toss faded green dress — it signified bad times and I was ready to embrace a new future.

I was enviably thin in those pictures at Julie’s wedding. I smiled, but my eyes belied deep distress.  If anyone had asked me then if I thought my marriage would make it, I couldn’t have answered. 

At the time Julie married, I had just found my husband out in a betrayal. He’d run up debts that nearly canceled out all the money I’d been scrupulously saving and investing for house, baby, and our future.  His betrayal of trust wiped out years of dreams.

Somehow, putting that pale green dress in the bag for Good Will, gave me a new sense of purpose. I wanted to believe that I could put an end to the hurt that I experienced during those four years between Julie’s wedding and her divorce dinner. 

I watched her eyes and wondered if people would see pain in my own if I chose to end my marriage rather than stick it out?   My husband and I managed to get out of debt and heal the emotional wounds, but overwhelmed by the strain of working full time while battling my illness, I lost my health and any hopes for a normal life.   

Perhaps learning from my example, Julie chose another route, refusing to take a financial hit for a man. Since she and Dave had moved in together six years before, she’d switched jobs several times, doubling her salary to afford the modest home they’d purchased in their third year of marriage. 

Dave, on the other hand, was in the same job, earning the same money, so they could barely afford their new mortgage payments. Despite her constant encouragements, which degenerated into nagfests, Dave did not jump-start his career, see a therapist, get tested for a range of physical maladies, lift a finger around the house bought with only Julie’s money, learn to balance the checkbook, shop or cook, or get a car so Julie wouldn’t have to drive him everywhere, as if he were the teenage son she never had.

Julie tired of screaming. As she explained over our salads, she was basically a happy, peaceful, loving person. Under the current circumstances, she could no longer act kindly towards her husband. “I just see myself as an embittered old hag at 50. I want to get out while I’m still young enough to meet someone else.” 

But I was worried about how she would manage. Under my fiscal guidelines, she and Dave could barely afford to run a house together. She claimed she could do it on her own, for at least a month or so. Then she’d get a roommate. 

Two weeks after our divorce dinner, Dave was still in the house. He couldn’t find a place he could afford. Julie dropped hints; I offered a loan to hasten his departure. I’d lent her money before, for her down payment, and she’d paid it back in full and in a timely fashion.     

“All relationships have expiration dates,” she announced philosophically at our next lunch.

“You’re getting a roommate soon, right?” I said, handing her the check.

But month after month went by, and no roommate, and no loan repayment. I knew she needed time on her own, without the additional stress of sharing her home with a stranger. But I couldn’t help noticing she had money for new clothes to cheer herself up, for entertaining her young co-workers from the city, for buying wedding gifts for people she hardly knew.

(End of Part II)

  

 

A Short Story of Money and Friendship in Three Parts

Featured in Rita Watson’s nationally syndicated Relationships blog: www.ritawatson.com.

 

When my best friend Julie told me she was splitting with her husband, it didn’t come as a complete surprise.  She’d sounded uncharacteristically tense when we talked on the phone over the past few months. We hadn’t had an in-person heart to heart since the winter before, when on her 41st birthday, she talked in desperate tones about facing the future with her husband, Dave. 

Since then she had stopped complaining about her husband, hardly mentioned him at all. Our telephone conversations skittered over the surface of things – updates of her hectic job and crowded commuting days, contrasting with self-deprecating anecdotes drawn from my less eventful life – which went from a corporate whirlwind to a first-time suburban housewife – thanks to a relapse of a chronic illness about which I am often in denial. Nonetheless, courtesy of my company’s short-term disability insurance, I felt a mixture of childlike glee and adult guilt at my first laid back summer in decades.

With the anticipation of a child going on a favorite play date, I awaited seeing Julie in person for the first time in months.  When I flung open the door to embrace her, standing before me was a woman with a pinched, tormented face.  Her emaciated frame said it all before she delivered her news. It was painful to see her lovely, happy-go-lucky self suppressed; I was glad she was exiting a torturous situation.

She told me of her plans to divorce just before we sat down to watch a dance recital held in the Riverside Cathedral, whose majestic grey stone silhouette dominates the western shore of the upper west side of Manhattan. Four springs before, Julie and Dave were married just a few blocks east, in another great Cathedral, on a small budget but in great peripheral splendor, in one of the chapels of St. John the Divine. 

Four years before, I had shopped with Julie at Laura Ashley for her wedding dress, observed her arrange the entire event elegantly but cheaply — negotiating with chaplains and cajoling florists and caterers to offer their services as wedding gifts. I’d seen her research, book, and single-handedly pay for the honeymoon.  

The misty weather that day suited a ceremony in the dark cathedral. Outside, the spring foliage was bright green and new, the trees just bursting into flower.  She’d instructed the minister that Children and the Will of God be mentioned during the service. To honor her husband’s Scottish heritage, bagpipers played Amazing Grace at the exit, and the sounds moistened our eyes. As if on cue, one of the peacocks that prance around the rectory burst into plumage: a good omen. 

But four years later, as I look back, I see it was a false omen.

At the reception, as dry ice clouded the stage, eastern flutes piped over the soundtrack, and the dance performance began. The dance’s theme centered on the ancient Greek legend of the Minotaur — the half-human, half-bull god who, the program notes explained, “represents the collective dark roots of humanity that have been denied, repressed and locked away.” 

It was a bit too obvious an analogy to the realities of marriage Julie and I both knew too well — realities white-washed by images of happily ever after, Baby Gap and Range Rovers. We both knew what it was like to feel, within the framework of marriage, like the Minotaur, his dual nature a shame to be hidden by the ruling gods.

Julie and I didn’t have to talk much about the problems that killed her marriage, or the ones mine barely survived. We’d dissected them endlessly over the course of our eight year friendship, analyzing the challenge of asserting our feminist selves within the framework of marriage, deconstructing each power struggle in detail, all the while looking forward to the happy resolution when career, husband, home and child fell into place.

After the performance I drove us up to the suburbs where we now lived, and bought my friend dinner. The end of a marriage called for a solemn observance of its own. (End of Part One)

Is that it works.

 

Here are some remedies I’ve tried:

 

  • Multi-dimensional Lifestyle Counseling
  • Reiki Healing
  • Infra-red sauna
  • Brain Gym
  • Acupuncture
  • Chiropractor 
  • Shamanistic Soul Retrieval
  • Journey to Your Sexual Soul
  • Cognitive Therapy
  • Psychotherapy
  • Yoga 
  • Meditation
  • Cranialsacral Therapy
  • Massage
  • Kinesiology
  • Dream Analysis
  • Graded Exercise
  • Homeopathic Medicine
  • Naturopath
  • Pilates
  • Psychoneurological Retraining
  • The Landmark Seminar (aka, EST)
  • Super Blue-Green Algae
  • The Maker’s Diet.
  •  Supplements: Greens, Fish oils, shitake mushrooms, NADH, Co-Q10, Goji juice, Chines herbs, Ancient Aryuvedic Medicine
  • Elimination diets and nutrition regimes: Super Green, Macrobiotic, no red meat, carbs, gluten, dairy, the Anti-inflammatory Diet. 
  • Pharmaceuticals: anti-depressants, sedatives, anti-virals, amphetamines.
  • Programs: Dr. Jeffrey Teitlebaum’s From Fatigued to Fantastic, Dr. Bernie Seigel, anything by, at least a dozen books with a variation on the title, I Cured Myself of CFS and You Can, Too! The Highly Sensitive Person, by Dr. Elaine Aaron. Dr. Micheal Cheikin’s Nine-Step Pathway to Healing.

        This is a partial list.

 

         What’s closest to a push-button cure? Traditional medicine, megavitamin and mineral IV drip with Dr. L in New York. Avoiding stressful people, situations. Engagement in productive and pleasurable activity. Moderate exercise. High protein diet. Warm weather, sunshine, laughter.  

 
       Like the witches in the Wizard of Oz, there’s Good Snake Oil and Bad Snake Oil. The difference has to do with “promise style.” If something says it’s going to cure  EVERYTHING, get you to 150% super-productivity, grow hair on your long-bald pate, straighten crooked teeth, make you fertile at 55, banish cancer – that’s Bad Snake Oil.   

 

 

        Good Snake Oil, is where the seller says – This helped me, why don’t you give it a try?  Most Snake Oil treamtents have helped — just not nearly as much as their claims. My purpose is vetting:  is this particular treatment worth its price? Should the money be better spent on traditional medicine, or some other life/health need, like a warm weather vacation? Is it worth going into debt for? Is it doable in the context of the full-time work life it promises to restore you to, replete with commuting, housework, family care and social life?

  

      Or will you have to sleep eleven hours a night, meditate and self-monitor for an hour each morning, eat stir-fried broccoli three times a day, chant aloud affirmations at regular intervals in the relative imprivacy of your cube? Can you do it driving a truck, working in an emergency room, flying a helicopter, in a trading pit?

 

        “Well” to me means working at full speed.  Getting by on six or seven hours sleep a night, rather than  nine to eleven. 

        Earning a good living again — that’s my goal. And I’m calling all Snake Oil for help!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome. Please hold the applause.

In the summer of 1991, an interloper fooled the bouncers guarding my otherwise -functional immune system, ducked under the velvet ropes and broke into my DNA. The miscreant might have been Lyme, Epstein-Barr, Herpes VI, or any combination of those viruses, in cahoots with some as-yet-unidentified evil-doer. The vandals left me with drastically reduced mental and physical functioning, a state eventually diagnosed as Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome.

 

I’m a different person than the exuberant young New Yorker I was before, the person with who could work out twenty hours a week on top of a demanding job, run around town with my husband and friends and still spend a couple of hours at night writing short stories.

 

Having CFIDS means that over the years I’ve had to quit or cut down on most of these activities. It also means I’ve grown used to being labeled a hypochondriac, mentally ill, an alcoholic, and a drug addict.

 

What’s it like? Imagine looking at this page and not being able to read it, to see only bugs jumping around. Or peering into the kitchen cabinet and not recognizing the box of Cheerios —you see the yellow box, but you don’t know what it’s for. Or driving a familiar route and suddenly not knowing where you are or how to use the instruments on the dashboard panel.

 

But it’s not always this bad, not every day. When people think “disabled” they think of someone flat-out in bed, confined to a wheelchair. Lots of people with this thing spend a good part of their day on the couch. I had to, when I was first sent home from work. I don’t now. After ten years, I know what to eat and not to eat, how to enforce “down time,” that brain work is a morning-only thing, and sometimes must be banned all day. So no reading, writing, better keep away from the check book or there’ll be hell to pay later, be really careful driving — don’t want that premium going up again! Don’t go into any strange stores, it can only end in tears.

 

How do we treat it? With traditional medicine. And lots of Snake Oil.

 

Elaine and Austine Tracey in the 1960s

Stalking Irish Madness has been named one of the Best Books of 2008 by Slate magazine: http://www.slate.com/id/2206635/pagenum/all/

Years ago when we lived in New York city, my husband and I spent four or five hours every Sunday night delivering sandwiches to homeless men. The vast majority were Viet Nam War vets, out of work and homes because mentally ill. Most were clean, quiet, polite, grateful. A few – like the 6’3” drag queen up in Times Square – were angry, swinging at the air, arguing with unseen enemies.

Schizophrenia,” we said to each other in whispers, gingerly extending a brown bag pre-packed with chicken salad sandwich, yogurt and an apple, which the drag queen snatched before stalking off in high heels, muttering.

Recently we travelled up to Brookline Mass, where our friend Pat Tracey gave a reading to promote his book, Stalking Irish Madness: Searching for the Roots of my Family’s Schizophrenia. All four of his sisters — including the two affected by with the mental illness, were there.

I was struck by how normal they seemed. When one has a chronic condition, whether physical, mental, or a combination of both, it’s easy to fall into black and white thinking – the “normals” and the afflicted.

Eighty percent of chronic illnesses are invisible, and you’d be hard put to sort out at first glance which two of the four Tracey sisters were afflicted. Michelle, who has bi-polar schizo-affective disorder,  is as effusive and articulate as her twin Seanna, who is “normal.” Austine, once catatonic, merely appeared shy and sweet. There were no verbal histrionics, no talking to invisible people, no bursts of anger.

Said Pat, “Maybe the worst thing about this illness, worse than the altered reality and the hearing of voices itself, is the stigma attached.” The “crazy” label that compounds the isolation, and against which the ill often respond with frustration and anger.

I live with a completely different illness, but I had the same response when it first invaded my life. The reaction from bosses, some of my family and friends, if not my husband, was not compassion, but anger: Stop this nonsense right now! The worst probably came from myself — anger that I was ill, that my life had changed so drastically, that people distanced themselves from and condemned me for having a physical condition I hadn’t asked for, and had as yet no control over.

Of schizophrenics, Pat said, “Maybe these people are on a different wave length. Maybe instead of being thought crazy, they ought to be honored. A millennium ago, they were thought to be seers, shamans. Now they’re picking through garbage cans. Prisons are full of schizophrenics.”

Pat reports that, in addition to famine leading to gestational malnutrition — the roots of his own family’s illness date back to the Great Irish Famine — war is a big trigger for schizophrenia.

One in a hundred people have the disease – that’s five million Americans. Yet there’s so much shame around it. Why? Rather than accept chronic illness as a fact of life, there is always that push for a miracle cure. A well-meaning woman in the audience was eager to inform Pat — who did extensive scientific research for his book — that a certain component of vitamin B would cure his sistsers’ ills. They’ve been affected over 30 years, and subject to every possible medical treatment. Their conditions have been stabilized, not cured. The fact is, the vitamin therapy works for about one percent of people who hear voices.
“I think the best cure for schizophrenia is understanding from the family, and love.”

I’d also like to add – adequate financial resources for good health care. Austine and Michelle are both fortunate enough to benefit from residency in good state-funded group homes, not far from where their “well” siblings, Elaine, Seanna and Patrick live in the Boston area. They were clean and well-kept.

For 30 years, the eldest Elaine, who never had children of her own, but who Pat describes as “the matriarch” has been the primary caretaker of the afflicted sisters.  Without such understanding, I shudder to think where Michelle and Austine might have wound up. The Traceys expemplify the kind of family values I can get behind.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’d also like to add – adequate financial resources for good health care. Austine and Michelle are both fortunate enough to benefit from residency in good state-funded group homes, not far from where their siblings, Elaine, Seanna and Patrick live in the Boston area. They were clean and well-kept.

For 30 years, the eldest Elaine, who never had children of her own, but who Pat describes as “the matriarch,” has been the primary caretaker of the afflicted sisters.  Without such understanding, I shudder to think where Michelle and Austine might have wound up. The Traceys expemplify the kind of family values I can get behind.