Taking My Own Advice….. and it’s about time.

WITHOUT INTERVENTION…..LIES WILL LAST FOREVER. 

Life for me is still very hard. I have become withdrawn, anxious and depressed. The past few years have caught up with me and I am now under 2 medics and on medications. None of this for sympathy, I really don’t want that, they are just to paint a picture of where I find myself today. You would have thought that being a Psychotherapist for over 20 years, I could have stopped this from happening. No, physician heal thyself has never worked. I am writing this for me. For the Carol Ann I was and hope to be again. I always encouraged clients to write down how they feel and read what they have written, back to themselves and if possible, to those they feel have helped put them where they find themselves, emotionally. Well I can do the first of these but not the second but I do know I have friends on here who may read this and so that will cover the 2nd part of this advice. So here I am,writing it all down in the hope I can move on from how I feel at this moment in time. 

Over the past few years, as with most of us who read the news, watch TV or listen to the radio, I have listened to the stories about the Royal family, lies that have been proven to be lies. Stories that should have stayed within the family. The badmouthing from family members about other family members, with shock and sometimes anger. But because of my own experience, not disbelieving some people’s behaviour. It seems that being ‘family’ allows you to behave in any cruel manner you choose, for some people .During this time, those to whom the lies and falsehoods have been attributed, have remained mostly silent. Trying hard to keep the dignity of the family by saying very little. Then the book, The SPARE came out and things were written that shocked and hurt the Royals, in a way only family can hurt you. Things that should never have been made public, never have been reported and in most of these cases, never shared with anyone other than those concerned. I don’t read everything, in fact I have stopped reading about the many things that have been said as truths, because they have been proven to be lies. Hopefully, one day, the real truth will come out but until then I believe the Royal family will remain silent and hope we can all see through the lies.  

But my reason for talking about this today, is that to remain silent when injustices have been and are being done, is so very difficult ,especially when it intrudes on your very life, no matter how hard you try to dismiss these things and I am sure the Windsors sometimes struggle with this. 

No one wants people to lie to them and more importantly, lie to others about them. I am no different.  

I do not for one minute liken my experiences to those of the Royals but I do know how hard keeping your dignity and allowing others to spread lies about you, without retaliating, can be. I thankfully am not famous and so the lies are not spread on all kinds of media because no one would know who I was, but having lies spread on social media and to ‘friends’ who then tell anyone else who knows me and the perpetrator, is unforgivable. Not being  able to tell the truth is so very hard. Trying to stay silent and say nothing has now made me ill and I have to try and put a stop to this. I have now had enough. It’s time for me to tell my side. So here I am. 

For those of you who have followed my blog, you will remember that a few years ago I went through a horrid time, that saw my literary contract terminated and some family members alienated from me, after being told lies by my eldest daughter and youngest sister. The lies, if they had not been so hurtful, cruel and nasty, would have been funny. But they were not funny and are still not funny.I lost a huge amount, temporarily lost family and friends but have since put this right but can do nothing about my writing career as Cassie Harte so will now write under my own name, Carol Ann Wright. Back then, they had broken my terms of contract ,by identifying themselves and therefore identifying me, on social media and then told my publisher that I had named them. I was going to take this further, but you don’t do you, not when it’s family. Big mistake.I have made my peace with the things done back then, tried to make right the relationship with my eldest daughter, as those who have read my blogs, know. We moved back to Hampshire to be closer to her and my grandchildren and I tried to put this behind me…. but others would not allow me to do this. Close friends told me not to, reminding me of an analogy I used often with them and clients, if you find yourself in a burning house and get hurt but get out ,and it is still burning, would you go back in?? Of course you wouldn’t but I did. 3 or 4 or more times I had been betrayed by my daughter and yet I still gave her another chance. 

Since living here and being so let down and hurt again, I have had occasion to meet up with or chat to people we both know, people who had been told the nasty lies she had spread before, which put me in a very awkward position . The worst of these lies was to tell people that I had tried to stop her adopting my grand daughter back in 2013. Thisis a complete lie. I supported the adoption from beginning to the end. I drove for 2 and ahalf hours, each way to meet with the social worker and spent 2 hours making a supportive statement to her and I thought tall was okay. I have never said she was unfit to adopt. Why would I? I was so looking forward to this little girl joining our family. While I was waiting for the staement to come back for me to sign a few days later, She made accusations that wewre untrue, blocked me form all social medai and so the nasties began. How could I sign a staement saying I was her ‘pivvatol support’ when I couldn’t even contact her becaus eof her blocvking me? I stilll have all th epaperwork to do with the adoption an dlost years of my granddaughter’s life. Com8ing back to Hampshire was supposed to be the beginning of a lovely relationship but she was still spreading these nasty lies and would not say sorry for everything she had done. I couldn’t talk about people like my brother Tony, because she ‘didn’t like it’, my son Jonathan or Tony’s family. Conversation became awkward with me walking on eggshells.This all contributed to my asking her if she was sorry for the lies and she told me she wasn’t and shut us out of her life. She again blocked me. She said that nothing she had said was a lie and she wasn’t sorry. Then blocked me in every way she could so that I could not contact her. No discussion, no apology, just shut me out.. Again. This is her usual way of ‘dealing’ with something she has caused.This was the ultimate hurt and betrayal because I stupidly believed she knew the truth and was sorry for the pain she had caused me. Her Mum .I thought that was why she wanted us to move down close to her. 

Now that was bad, yes it hurt but the lies hurt more. Now she has influenced my eldest grandson and he has stopped contact with me and David and we are devastated. I am not sure what he has been told, what lies she has told him but to influence another person with lies is unforgivable in my book. 

Would I have taken any of this from someone I knew, a friend for instance? No of course I wouldn’t. Would I have trusted someone who had hurt me over and over , again? No of course I wouldn’t. So why do we take it from family? Our own children? Why when this hurts more than anyone else could ever hurt us.? Why does King Charles take it from Harry? Because he is his Dad.  

In my book, this makes it so much worse and we, as parents should not feel bad about telling the truth, when others are telling lies about us, or their lives with us. In my case, it was my honesty that began all the nasties in the very beginning but not anymore. Yes I will remain honest but will fight the lies with the truth. That is what I will be doing from today. If I meet anyone who again asks why my daughter is not talking to me, I will tell them why. When I speak with someone on whatever media, who asks the same, I will tell them. I am fed up with being made to be the one in the wrong and refuse to allow these nasty lies to continue without the truth being spoken. 

If you have read this and think I am wrong, please comment and let me know why. If this has made anyone angry, I apologise but I needed to write it all down and try and move on from it if I can.  Should I not have written this because of is about my daughter? Did she think about this, when she has and still is telling lies about me, her Mum? No.

Always remember, the truth will always come out and if you have lied, this could easily hurt you, the way you have caused pain to those you have lied about. To be a good liar, you should have a very good memory, sadly some liars haven’t and the story changes over time when you can’t remember what you said before, because it was a lie.

After today, my blogs I hope, will return to being inspirational, sometimes funny when I can find my sense of humour and always ,always honest. 

Thank you for reading. X 

One year on and so relevant today.LEARNING TO PUT THE TWO OF US FIRST

Many of my oldest friends will be happy to read this blog.Long time coming I can hear them say. Better late than never, just took a very long time for me to learn.

So here we are again. 1 year on, house on the market and looking to move. This time we really are going home. We thought we were last year when we made the move to Hampshire as per my first blog of the year, last week,but it proved to be a big mistake so here we are but this time really ‘going home’.

Having always put my children first as most Mum’s do, giving up chances in life, like taking a really good job in London with a top computer magazine, because I didn’t want to move the girls,I thought this was being a good mum. I did everything I did willingly as they were so important to me.

My eldest though, left home at the first opportunity to live in a tiny bedsit because I was too strict, re not allowing her then boyfriend, to stay over with her. She was only 16 and I felt it was right to do this. Life was different back then and being a single Mum maybe I just tried too hard.

But back in 1997 when David was moved to Bristol with the MOD, I had a choice. Stay in Hampshire and see him at weekends, sometimes, or move with him. My eldest was married with a family and thinking about moving to Spain and my youngest wanted to go with her Dad and me, so this time I suppose I put my marriage and David first. I did not want to be a weekend wife.At that time we had horses and a pony so we chose to move over to Wales where we could buy a home with land and have them with us, one of the things we all wanted. It was the best thing we ever did. Wales changed us all, we became lovers of the countryside, the peace and quiet and enjoyed having our animals so close to us. But the person who changed most of all was me.

On arriving in South Wales at our lovely 300 year old cottage that was in disrepair, I was very poorly with Brittle Asthma and arthritis. My GP registered me disabled and a specialist said I would never work again and basically, that was that! I did not accept that, I couldn’t and so decided to try and retrain for something I could do with not as much physical effort. I took myself off to college and an Advanced Diploma in Counselling, a 3 year course. During this time I did practical therapy in a local hospital with members of the health trust staff. I had found my vocation and loved it.Once my training was over, I set up my own Private Practice and took on a consulting room in Abergavenny. I worked with staff of the Welsh Ambulance service, a local Health trust and local county council as well as clients sent to me after accidents by local solicitors. I had found my place in life and loved it.Watching people come into therapy, in sometimes a very low place and seeing how therapy changed them and gave them their life back, was something I loved. Helping those lost in this ever changing world. I then went on to University and gained a Masters in CBT. David and Marie were so proud of me at my graduation, still brings a smile to my face now remembering that wonderful day.

As part of my training I had to ‘deal’ with my own demons and the result of that was my first book, I DID TELL I DID under the pseudonym, for privacy, of Cassie Harte.To my huge surprise it went straight into the charts to Number One and stayed there for weeks and weeks and is still selling today. How good is that! Not bad for someone the medics had written off and I owe it all to coming to Wales and the love and support of my husband and youngest daughter.Our equine family grew, taking on rescued ponies and our youngest daughter flourished.

My brother and his wife visited regularly and so did my eldest daughter and her family, it was so good seeing our grandsons enjoy our country home. Happy times.

After 14 years David retired and to pay off our mortgage and be mortgage free, we moved again, to West Wales where we bought a 1930’s farmhouse and once again, did it up and it became a lovely country home. Our youngest lived with us still, wanting to stay close but lived independently in a static van on our drive. We had ducks and geese on our lake, acres to enjoy and grew vegetables and fruit in our polytunnel and lived the good life. Lots of hard work but it enabled us to once again increase the number of ponies we had, up to 9 at one time and 3 of our daughters, two dogs and 2 cats. Life was wonderful.

Over the past few years, with online bullying that resulted in my losing my literary contract, because of lies told to my publisher, I suffered anxiety and depression and became unwell. I lost my confidence and could no longer do the things I had always done. I had become someone I did not recognise. The land and house were getting too much for us both and we had lost our last 3 ponies and our beloved dogs.Because of my health I had to give up my practice and then Covid hit. We didn’t mind the lockdowns, we had everything we needed ‘on the farm’ and felt safe. But being on our own did nothing for my confidence, in fact quite the opposite. I didn’t want to meet with anyone and for me, a ‘people person’ that was strange and uncomfortable.

We knew we had to move, no reason to keep the big house and land and at first were going to move within Wales, as we loved it so much but as I said last week, we were persuaded to move to Hampshire and that has not worked out. I was hoping to be part of my family and enjoy my grandchildren but it hasn’t worked out that way and now we have nothing to stay here for. As I said last week, we had been missing Wales but would have handled that if things had been different but are now happy to be returning to a country that changed me as a person and my family in so many positive ways.

So here we are, one year on and in the same position as we were last year. Our house here in Hampshire is on the market and we are looking for a place back in Wales. Although I am of course sad things didn’t work out here, I know that David is not happy here and only moved back for me, thinking it was the right thing to do. He is angry about my being hurt again and angry that we gave so much and received so little in return.

So for the first time in the 38 years we have been together, I am putting him and myself first and doing this for us.38 very happy years and I know how lucky I am and am thankful, every single day for having him in my life. Never a cross word. No arguments that weren’t brought about by others. We are very lucky to be as much in love today as we were all those years ago when we first got together.

He makes me smile every single day. Does silly things just to make me laugh.He shows his love for me all the time. The support he has given me over the years and the support he has shown my daughters cannot be faulted. I am so very lucky and feel it is time I put him, us first.

We will find a home we both love, possibly back in Ceredigion and move back with love and hope for whatever time we have left.It isn’t the house that makes a home but the person or people you share it with. Although our hope is that family in Wales will be reunited with us, this move has to be for us with no expectations.

Watch this space and thank you for reading. x

When Life Changes Us,Who Do We Become? Identity Change?

WHO ARE YOU

 

 

Firstly, I hope I am not upsetting anyone with my blogs. I began blogging just before my husband was diagnosed with Prostate cancer and every single week of that painful scary journey. Sometimes not believing I would survive as a wife of a man suffering from PC.  I wrote from my perspective not my husbands. My blogs were truthful, gritty, full of emotion and were written, including all the ups and downs of my family life. Warts ‘n all.As I have said before, when cancer strikes it takes no heed of what is going on in your life. Of any struggles, pain etc. It just strikes in it’s selfish painful manner with no thought for adding to the issues in our lives at that time. I have had wonderful feedback and comments from other partners and wives who could identify with what I was saying.Last week, I seemed to offend a couple of gentlemen on one of the groups I belong to. I did write a few months ago, saying I would still blog even  though thankfully, David, my husband has had the all clear, if members did not want to continue to follow my life story on here, for them to scroll past.It won’t always reference PC. I would like to re iterate that please. Many have asked me to continue to write, honestly and openly and sometimes with appropriate humour, so I will.

Today I am talking about our identity. How we see ourselves at certain times in our lives and how others may see us.Some of how we see ourselves can come from childhood, how we are seen by parents, teachers, friends etc. As a child I was told over and over that I was ugly. So often that I have always believed it. Not being loved by family, by my ‘mother’, convinced me that it must be because I was ugly. Why else would a mother not love her child? So as soon as I could, I began to wear make up, covering the ugly and making myself look different. So far, well until the past few weeks, it has worked. 

Once I became a Mum, something I loved from the very first time I held my firstborn daughter Lisa, Carol became, Mummy. I was a wife, a housekeeper, a cook, a cleaner, a comforter, a nurse, etc etc. Doing all the things a Mum does. And I loved every minute. Having 2 daughters I soon began to forget who Carol was. I was someone’s wife and someone’s Mum, my own name was seldom used. My identity had changed. I was part of something bigger, a family whom I loved with all my heart. But where was Carol?

 Just after I wrote my children’s book, I added my second name to my signature and am now known as Carol Ann, not a new person but yes, a new identity.I then moved to Wales and was known as Carol Ann from the start, changed my hair colour and was nothing like the little dark haired girl who had lost her identity somewhere. I went to college and pursued a career in Counselling, took a degree in Psychotherapy and gained my Masters. I had transformed from a frightened lost child to a confident mature Psychotherapist and author.I was also still a wife and mum. I changed my looks and my identity and have been happy with both.Well not so much my looks, getting older put paid to that.

Then I wrote my autobiography and had to take on another identity, a pseudonym to write under for legal reasons, Thus Cassie Harte was born. I had so wanted to use my own name but was not allowed. I wrote to change myself, this time by choice, from victim to survivor and it did just that. The book was a huge success and is still selling. Carol Ann had changed her identity and although I wasn’t happy with that, it was at the time the right thing to do. Now I own the book and have taken it back under my own name. I have identified myself as the author and it feels right.

This blog is about how we see ourselves and how others see us, how life can change our identity when circumstances change and we can’t stop it. Our roles change sometimes and we have to take on the challenge and I for one know how hard that can be. I have written in earlier blogs of how I found David being ill very  hard.He had never been ill in the whole 30 years we had been together, so this was new. This was a shock for both of us but he dealt with it in his usual pragmatic way. But it did change him. I have had many illnesses, not always serious but he had always taken care of me. A wonderful husband. He is my rock and although I am a very strong professional woman, or was, I still leaned on him, relied on him. We made decisions together but I nearly always took the lead from my man. After diagnosis of PC, things changed. He became hesitant, concerned about things he had previously not worried about. After surgery, for a while as we all do, I became the carer. Suddenly this was how I was seen. I wasn’t Carol Ann, I wasn’t the strong professional woman. I was a woman flailing in the wind but trying not to  show it. Terrified of life but appearing to be brave. I would try and creep into the garden, into the barn or to the fields, go to my ponies and cuddle into their manes and try and cry. Crying has never come easily to me. Did I mind being the carer? No of course I didn’t but I didn’t like it either. It seemed that I had lost ‘me’ somewhere and could not ever see a time when ‘I’  would return but I did. If you identify with me, you too will come back. Stronger and wiser hopefully. Since surgery 2 years ago, a great deal has happened and I have written about how David is changed, how he is different but we are both just glad he survived the cancer and I survived the journey. Many on  here did not and I can only send them my love and thoughts. I never ever forget that it could have been different.

As a Psychotherapist, I take on another identity, that of Counsellor. This has to happen, not a choice of mine but part of the service I offer. But again I am not seen as a woman, a family woman, with all that entails. I am seen as Professional, there to guide others at times of distress  or confusion. I was good at my job, I succeeded many times when other professionals had not. Maybe living the life I have lived prepared me, I don’t know but I loved every minute of helping my clients. Circumstance rendered me unable to work, stress in my own personal life, made me ill. Like a bad joke isn’t it.During the 22 years of working in my field, I gained confidence and enjoyed being seen as the strong Professional woman I had become.Losing all of this because of emotional illness, stress from family stuff, took it’s toll.

Back in 2013,and for the following 6 years, as I have told you in earlier blogs, I was having a horrid time with certain family and this brought out a side of me I didn’t recognise. It seemed again, to change my whole identity. I became someone who had to defend herself, had to fight for people I loved. I became a frightened , a sad ‘child’ and behaved in a way that I do not understand. I  have to reconcile myself with that. I lived it all out, on Social media because that is how it was for me, family attacking me in public view and me defending myself over and over.I was denied any other contact with those who were bullying me and those I loved. I didn’t recognise this person, the person I had become.Who was that? Why did she do that? Who had I become?I realise now that I had become the frightened child I had been, at 7 years old again and was trying to tell my side in the only way I could. On SM. I am not proud of that , wasn’t back then, but as I said, I don’t know who I was back then. My identity had changed because of how things were. 

This past year, my role has changed again. David is almost back to how he was but PC has left him with a great loss of physical strength than he had pre PC, that in itself brings change.Our lives are different, full of love but different. Last January I had pneumonia and was very weak. I had lost my beloved brother in 2018 and had not grieved properly. I know that now. Since then my identity, my role in the family has changed. I am being cared for and I don’t like it one bit. Again, I don’t recognise who I have become. During the PC journey I think, like many wives/partners, I tried to hide my fears, my worries and did not allow myself to grieve for how things had been. The only place I could talk about how I felt was on here, my blog. I have a great belief in writing as a tool. It can help so much and did.Then I had  virus after virus, still have conjunctivitis and very painful eyes. This brings me to another ‘identity’ note. I have worn make up all of my adult life. I love my eye makeup and it appears to be my signature ‘fashion accessory’ Marie my youngest has said that when I die, she will make sure she makes my eyes up as I like to and puts my lipstick, on as I am never seen without it. Well I am now! I would never leave the house, even to do the birds, I know, stupid isn’t it. But it is how I am. Get up, shower, wash my hair and do my make up. It doesn’t matter how rough I feel, my eyes are always done. But I haven’t been able to put eye makeup on for 6 weeks!! I never went out for the first 4, actually was too ill but I have felt well enough to go out this past week and have worn dark glasses. No make up, can’t be seen. Vain ? Maybe but remember, little Carol. ‘if I am ugly no one will love me.’ Make up covers the ugly. Childhood stuff like that never leaves. 

So circumstances can steal our identity. Jobs can do the same but underneath we must always try and be true to who we really are. 

As asked, I will continue to blog. It helps me. It may help others. If you don’t want to read, please scroll past. 

Thank You for reading x

 

 

who am I

What The World Needs Now…….and It’s Up To Us All. x

desperately sad

 

These past few days, weeks for some of us, have been worrying, scary and upsetting.Raging fires in Australia, volcano’s erupting, floods in places where they were never expected. Swarms of locust destroying crops that were much needed. Terrorism, war, murders and rapes. Now a new virus that is spreading at an alarming rate. What on earth is happening to our world? All of these bring fear.I often wonder if our world is fighting back. Who knows but in my limited knowledge I can only see one common factor in all of this sadly. Us. the Human Race. As someone once said, we are living here like we have some place else to go. Like the Earth is not the only place we can survive. Well at this moment in time, it is and it is up to all of us to change things. We all need to do our bit. I am not going to talk in this blog about Climate change because everyone else is and I am in no position to preach about something I know little about. I am just venting and giving my opinion.

Most reasons for war, terrorism, rape and murder are man made.Where is respect these days? Respect for others, their right to live their own lives. Where is compassion, again allowing others to live how they choose as long as it hurts no one. But looking at the bigger picture, we all need to be kinder, more thoughtful of others, more compassionate and caring and show empathy for our fellow man. We all belong to the same family, the family of Man and need to remember this. 

But.

What hope do we have if we do not practice this within our own family, our birth family? What hope do we have of caring for others, those not blood related, if we hurt, ridicule, and cause pain to those who should be closest to us. Our own flesh and blood. Our own siblings. Our own family. How do we include the larger family we belong to, show them love and compassion, stay close to them, share with them and love them, if we can so easily hurt our brothers and sisters? No hope at all, so something has to change.

This past few weeks I have witnessed the cruelty and unkindness within a family. My family. The family I was born into and those I grew up with. I have been shut out at a time I should have been included. Nothing new there but I suppose it never ceases to shock me how wicked people can be, at a time when their own feelings should be set aside. As some of you know, I am estranged from most of my birth family, have been for the past 6 years courtesy of my youngest sister. I have been fed second hand lies about my sister’s funeral, having been told she has been cremated and her ashes sent abroad a few weeks ago. This is not true.How cruel, unnecessary and hurtful is that. During the last few weeks all kinds of stories and lies have come my way and I have seen the very worst of what lengths some people would go to to hurt me. But I have also seen the very best in those who really care and to them I am forever grateful. I have been comforted by my late brother’s family and friends who have shown true empathy and love and I thank you all. My own little family ‘here on the farm’, have, as always, shown support and love and held me while I cried. They know how I feel about them x

I fear for us as a race, I fear for the future of our children. During the past few years of blogging, I have been contacted by so many readers who have families like mine. That makes me sad. No one should have to bear that burden. No-one should be shut out of the family they belong in. But it happens far too often. Too easily. Some families have no respect or concern for anyone.We all have one mother and one father. I was not lucky enough to have a good mother but I was always there for her, right up to the end. Why? Because she was family. I also hear of awful things happening within a family but they pull through. Why? Because they are family and families should stick together.Mine have not done that, well, not to me. Of my siblings now, there are just 2 of us. Me and my youngest sister Tricia. For unknown reasons, she chose to alienate herself from me, more than 40 years ago. No one knows why, I know for a fact that nothing happened to bring this about. I have tried many times to make this right and failed. Coming back into the lives of my late brother and my daughter,after more than 35 years,she has caused me pain, loss, both financial and emotional and estrangement from my own daughter and grand children. How can family do this? Now she is on her own.

Why am I telling you this? Repeating it I think? Because if we can’t honour our own birthright, if we can’t show love, tolerance, respect within our own set up, our birth family,to our siblings, how can we ever expect to do this for others? How can we show these traits to the bigger family, to those in our society, those in other countries who live different lives to us but are still part of our earth family? What hope is there, for our global family? For the bigger picture? For mankind? Over the years I have been saddened by how many families can treat each other so badly. It needs to stop. It needs to stop now beginning at home. Why? Because the world is facing crisis after crisis and we need each other. We are all so quick to blame, to hurt, to destroy. Each other and our planet. As Billy Ocean sang today on the radio, ‘We have one world let’s take care of it. People out there will burst your bubble with the games they play.’ We need to stop. Stop hurting each other, stop harming our Earth and thus stop hurting ourselves. 

So let’s begin here. Let’s spread love to our friends. Show respect to our neighbours. Do our bit for Mother Earth and in that way we will help ourselves. Each and everyone of us.

Me! I have had enough. Enough lies. Enough pain. Enough hurt to last for the rest of my life. I don’t need or want any more thank  you.These past 2 weeks have shown me that people hurt you because they don’t like them selves. That is through no fault of mine, I know but it is sad. I can’t change them, can’t make this right as I wanted, so have to accept it. But in the wider world, I can make a difference. I can do my bit for the environment.I  can love my family and friends as I do and try always to be kind to everyone. I want to spread hope, love and happiness. Make people smile and make people feel good about life and about them selves. My life has changed dramatically these past years but I am still here. Still loving my family and in spite everything, I still care.

Thank you for reading . x

 

we need joy

My Letter to My Sister. Written With Love.

when i think of you

This post is for anyone and everyone who knew my sister June. Those who knew her and those who thought they did. A memoriam if you like, for a much loved sister. For those who loved her, those who mourn her and for me.Others, please feel free to scroll past.

My earliest memory, a real memory of you June, was being taken to Horsham, a sunshine school, where you and Georgina had spent some time after the war. I was very young, and didn’t understand why you were there. You took me under the Nissan huts and we shared sweets. Then you cried, you wanted to come home. I promised I would ask if you could. We both knew that my request, as it came from me, would be futile but I did ask. I am not sure how long after this you returned to our bungalow in Portchester but it seemed an age.I was the youngest at the time and we shared our home with our parents, Georgina and our beloved brother Tony. You and Georgina were much older than Tony and I so didn’t  have much in common but our love for each other.You were different from us, Nan would tell us that you had Meningitis as a baby and that had left it’s mark. She said you were ‘different’, a little bit slower than your peers but I loved you for that.We often slept head head to toe in a large bed, being left with Georgina in charge and she would read us stories. How you would giggle at ‘ghosts and ghouls’, she told us about, while I hid under the blankets.

My next memory was of the Portchester May Queen, I was a train bearer, 4 years old, Tony carried the crown on a cushion and you were a maid of honour. A lovely day, ending with us dancing around the Maypole. I wonder if you ever thought of that day? 

You found school very hard, no special needs back then but you and I, as I grew up, would spend hours reading, me teaching you and you lapping up the learning.You were very clever , practical, making things, sewing, embroidering. I still have a lovely picture you made out of black jack paint and silver paper , a crinoline lady with a parasol. No one taught you, you just knew how to do it.We would go cycling, to Lee on Solent and laugh, a lot. You had a lovely laugh.Did you ever think of those days? The days you  took Lulu , our Siamese cat out on your shoulders, on a lead. She loved it, loved you.Although you were much older than me, we shared happy times, few in my life, but always happy with you.

A sad memory, is of the day you left home.You were 21 and Mum did not approve of your choice of partner. We were coming back from Portsmouth, on the Gosport  bus and you got off long before our stop. That’s when you told me, you were going to live with your future mum in law and not coming home. I was heartbroken. You were part of my ‘respite’, my ‘okay at home’ and I would miss you. My favourite photo of you, in your spotted dress and urchin haircut, holds pride of place here ‘on the farm’.

We stayed in touch, I visited as often as I could. I was there when your first baby girl Angela,died, we cried together, held each other. I was there when your son and two other daughters were born and we shared our children’s times together regularly. It was good.I was Godmother to your first daughter daughter Tina and watched the children grow up.As adults, we saw each other regularly, throughout the years even after I moved to Portsmouth and then back to Catisfield. I helped you through your husband’s illness and subsequent death. We had moved to Wales a year before but came back many times and I would spend days with you.

We all talk about you June, especially memories of the lovely holiday you took with us at our cottage in Monmouth.Such fun times. You were like a big child in your wonderful innocence. Asking so many questions as children do. Staying up, long after David and I had gone to bed, learning to make dream catchers with Marie, giggling for hours. I don’t think we stopped laughing together the whole holiday. Wonderful times. You helped muck out the ponies, weed our garden and just spend hours enjoying our home. We went out for day trips and you never ceased to make us all happy.

After you returned home, both of us, all of us sad to see you go, you met your second partner, Keith and before long we were at your wedding. Another lovely day.I still have the pressed flowers you gave me, the wooden tulips, the beautiful little clock for my study. All here. All treasured gifts given with love.

Although we had moved to Wales, we visited often, always spending time with you and Keith. We shared friendship. sisterhood, love and laughter. 

When sadly our sister Georgina died, we both said  our goodbyes and spent a while chatting. You, sharing your kindness, your compassion and memories of us all. But that was when it changed and we both know why. But today is not a time for that. I never had a chance to say goodbye. I was kept out of your life for someone elses’s warped satisfaction and will always regret that, although it was not of my doing. I never had a chance to say goodbye June, that I will always regret. We did talk at Tony’s and I made my peace with you as you did with me but that was all we had. Throughout our lives we shared fun, happiness, grief and sadness and I remember mostly your innocence, your gullibility, your kindness and your love. I may not be there to say goodbye but you will know that I was there in spirit. I will trust our past, our closeness. Our love. Perhaps in the past few years, those who pushed us apart with lies and stories , think they succeeded in alienating us. They are wrong. I never blamed you for anything. Never held any animosity towards you. You were gullible, trusting and they were there, I was not. But in my head I know you knew the truth, knew that I loved you. Love you.

So here I am saying goodbye, sending my love, my memories and smiling. You brought so much happiness, so much love, in your childlike but wise way. Until a few years ago, we were very close, I was grateful for you to be able to stay and help look after Tony in his last months, wish I could have done that. My last memory of you June, was in his bungalow, talking about the awful things you had been told. You said you knew none of it was true, believed me as you always have done. We hugged, said we loved each other and parted friends. That is what I will add to my memories,that is how I will remember us. So bye bye Junie, give Tony and Georgina a hug for me please.They may have kept me away but they can never steal my memories. God bless. 

Your sister Carol Ann xx

 

i will always have

Change. A Force for Good, or Not?

sometimes you have Jan.20

Today, something happened, ‘here on the farm’ that made me look at how life changes, sometimes serving us a curve ball, sometimes unexpected, sometimes expected but not wanted.We may not always be where we either planned to be or wanted to be, at certain times in our lives. Emotionally or physically, life may not have been what we had envisaged or planned. Life can get in the way of the best laid plans. People can behave in such a way that affects how our life pans out. Change happens. People change. Circumstances change. Change happens.

To be where I am today, is not how I had planned my life. I have spoken of this before, I know, but bear with me. I always thought, as I was bringing my children up, that one day, this day, I would be surrounded by grandchildren, always having a full house, busy helping them with whatever was needed. Relatively healthy and happy with myself and my lot. Well, I have no grandchildren as such in my life now, having been denied that by my eldest daughter but I do have contact, albeit brief, with my eldest grandson and for that I am grateful. I had always hoped that my ‘dysfunctional’ birth family would all have grown closer and they would be a big part of my life, our life, since I met David. But that has not and will not happen. This is the reality, so not as I had imagined. Life happens and this is a change that didn’t, my family getting closer I mean. This is reality, life happens and can get in the way.

As we grow older , we ourselves change, that is a given. No choice. Sometimes for the better sometimes not. We change physically, we can do less, or struggle to do what we have always, done, well in my case anyway. Psychologically we change and have to accept that life is now different. We change physically and psychologically but not always emotionally. I cannot do the things I could always do and struggle with that, it annoys me, gets me down and sometimes makes me a bit angry, or frustrated at least. Inside I am still capable of everything I have always been capable of doing but my body has other ideas and often says No! I do argue with it but not always succeed. 

My darling husband is still the man I married, still the man I love but he too has changed. Since his operation for Prostate cancer, he doesn’t have the same physical strength, not as much energy and although the spirit is always willing, sometimes the flesh is weak. Or weaker, this makes him cross and frustrated, or did, and for a short time, made him doubt his manhood, but no longer. With a great deal of encouragement and love and support, he now knows and accepts his limits. Something I never thought would happen. But in his words, as life goes on and changes happen, we could just sit and bemoan our situation, but he says ‘we are where we are and we are both still here’ At that point, all is well.   He is still my man, my rock and the man I married, albeit a bit different as our life is, but still my David. Another change that I have spoken of, is he is more emotional, more able to share his feelings and accept his feelings with no embarrassment. That is a huge positive change and all of this helps him accept that although our life together is different, as it is for many who have survived the journey PC takes us on, life is still full of love and yes, laughter. So all is well.

These past years have changed me. With every loss, there is a change. Every grief stricken day, makes me slightly altered as a person,than I was the day before. Physically I am not as capable and that I find hard. Because of the past few years of stress and hurt, I am no longer able to take the stresses and strains of life in my stride, a change I dislike immensely.After my ‘meltdown, breakdown, last September, I feel far more fragile than I am comfortable with. I am working hard on this ‘change’ to change it back to how I was. I did for a while, after losing my eldest daughter and grandchildren, feel very hard done by, robbed in fact, of the life I had planned. But in order for me to survive, to live a worthwhile future, I now accept that I have done all I can to make that right and didn’t fail. It just wasn’t to be. To make things right, both parties have to want it. But I tried and now accept how it is. As David says, ‘we are we we are’.

Another change in my life is that I have now retired from my role of Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapist. After having pneumonia last January and not recovering well, I hadn’t worked. I intended to go back to the job I love but September showed me I shouldn’t. I need to put all my energy into my family here, my ‘role’ as mum and wife and to for the first time, look after Carol Ann. So no more counselling I am afraid and have to accept this.Another big change. I haven’t however, stopped working all together as I intend to concentrate on my writing. 2 books in the making and an update of my children’s books.I also have animals to be be more active in the care of and enjoy. 

One of the big events in life and something that changes us all, is the loss of those we love. These past years have seen many losses , my brother who I loved so much, my ‘Mum and Dad’, many ponies and my little Ellie Mae. Each loss brought about fundamental changes for me. Sometimes positive, sometimes for a while, negative. But changes. Losing Tony was like losing an arm or a leg. I didn’t at first know ‘how to be’, how to behave. Until I accepted his death, I was lost. When Ellie Mae died, I was bereft, unable to imagine her not being around but once acceptance had been allowed to happen, I grieved for both and began to heal. But I felt different, a change I never wanted but had to happen.

The world is continuously changing, it has to and we can do nothing about it. Heads of countries, politicians, may decide on changes that affect us, without our input. We ‘reap’ the rewards or suffer the consequences. Nature is continuously changing, Spring to Summer, Summer to Autumn and then to Winter, with no help or hindrance from us. Each season brings it’s own beauty and it’s own problems, but it continues to change. What we need to do, what I need to do is to concentrate on where we are in our lives. Who is in our lives.

For us, what lies ahead? A new home, a new way of life, more time for David and I to enjoy I hope. This will be a positive change. Although we have loved our life ‘here on the farm’, we have to accept the ‘ravages of time’, the changes that life throws at us and either moan about them or embrace them. I choose to embrace. 

So change can come as a shock, sometimes at the very time we don’t need it. It can come slowly, can be influenced by ourselves or others, or circumstances. Change can be seen, by ourselves, as not good, not wanted.But whatever we do, one thing is certain, change will come. In life we may meet certain people who can stop us in our tracks, behave in ways we don’t like, ways that are wrong and we hope they will change. My husband has always said, ‘people never fundamentally change’. In my professional life I have always believed that everyone can, the essence of CBT. Change. I now accept that sometimes people don’t, maybe they can’t, but accepting life as it is, people as they are, has helped me come to terms with how my family life is now. And that’s okay.

Prostate cancer changed us both, as individuals and as a couple. We had to learn a new way of being, if that’s not too profound, a new way of sharing a new way of loving. It tested us both to  our limits, sometimes I thought and felt I had reached mine and was not sure I would make it through. But I did. Different yes, changed yes but the one thing that didn’t falter, didn’t change, was our love. Well actually maybe it did. It made us stronger. Coming so close to losing my beloved husband, showed me how much he meant to me, how lucky I am to have him by my side. It made me grateful for every minute of every day with him. We were the lucky ones, PC was caught in time but we never lost sight of what might have been. How quickly life could have been snatched away and how our lives could change in a hugely negative way. At that point our love did change, I see that now. I gained a whole new respect for this man I married and he said he did for me. So sometimes, out of fear, worry and illness, change can bring about a huge difference in how we see and value life.  Change can be good, we know that only too well. 

So life isn’t how I thought it would be. My family is smaller that I envisaged but small is good. It’s not the quantity but the quality. The love we share is immense, what we have is wonderful and I will spend the rest of my life loving and caring for those around me and accepting any changes that come my way. So life, bring it on!

Thank you for reading x

 

 

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A Thank you. An Explanation and a Warning. ‘There but for the Grace……’

Depression

This blog is my first for a few months. Because my presence on Social Media has been noticed and by some missed, which came as a great surprise to me, I feel the need to explain my absence.Of course I could just say nothing, or say I have been far too busy;that I have been away;that my Internet has been out of action but none of that would be true and honesty, as you know, is important to me. So do I say, I have been unwell and leave it at that? Give my illness a physical title, a name? Say I have had flu or something similar? No, I will say none of the above. I intend to tell it as it was, just as I promised a few years ago when I began blogging.

I want to start by thanking everyone who has commented on my page, messaged me or emailed me wondering if I was okay. I will try and get round to you all soon but for today, I will explain here, in my Sunday blog.

Yes I have been ill, very poorly. In this year of Mental Health Awareness with royalty, celebrities,sportsman etc. all disclosing how they have fought and in some cases  are still fighting, Anxiety, Depression and other emotional illnesses, little did I think, that as a Health professional for more than 22 years, I would be joining them. I should have seen it coming. Having bad dreams, when able to sleep. Reluctant to go out, loss of confidence and self belief. Feeling physically stressed all the time, hurting everywhere and the deep sadness I felt,some days was hard to handle. Family had noticed  a change in my behaviour but said nothing. I knew I was physically worn out, the bout of pneumonia in January showed that and my consultant asked if I had been under any prolonged stress.None of what I am writing is for sympathy, I don’t want that, I would like understanding and a commitment from readers that they always seek help and talk about how they feel.

We are all being encouraged to talk about our worries, our fears, our emotions, For goodness sake, that is part of my job, making others aware of the importance of doing this. But I didn’t. I played out my pain on here, received a lot of support for which I am so grateful but still became so unwell.So today, here I am talking about it, talking about the past few weeks/months, years that have rendered me dysfunctional. Talking about the importance of mental wellness, to prevent mental illness.

As some of you who have followed my blogs, you will know how difficult the past years have been. For those who have’t I will precis that awful time.At the end of 2012, after being entrenched in a horrid online hoax, I lost my best friend Mo. Cancer has taken so many of those I loved.Since 2013 I have been estranged from my eldest daughter and her family because of my need for honesty and integrity. This all got out of hand and some will have seen it play out on social media, something I regret so much. I have spent the following years trying to put things right, fighting to clear my name from the lies and stories told to anyone who wanted to listen, on SM and in person. I worried, fought, defended myself and struggled the whole time with emotions that were all out of control. I had to try, or rather, I felt I had to try and make people see the real me, not the one ‘family’ portrayed on here. Defend myself from the gossip and lies told that were, looking back, so stupid and nonsensical that no one who knew me, would have believed anyway. I now know that even it they did, I know the truth, my family know the truth so nothing else matters. Because of lies, my very successful autobiography was taken off the market, but this was a battle I eventually won and it is back where it belongs and still selling well.During this onslaught, I lost my eldest sister and my surrogate mum. I had a cancer scare and you all  know how that can affect you.At the very worst of this time, the worst of the onslaught by family, my darling husband was diagnosed with Prostate cancer and none of us knew how that would play out. Lots of worry, waiting and stress for us all. Still the nasties came, no respect for him, no thought for an of us.Anyone who has a loved one with PC will understand my blogs at that time.Since then I have lost my beloved brother, my surrogate ‘Dad’, 7 ponies and my little Ellie Mae my dog and a much loved cat. With each ‘event’ I thought I had coped with but I was wrong.

Every year, when Davids’ PSA test comes around, the anxiety levels reach a whole new peak. September would bring that again and I was dreading it.Thankfully, his test proved undetectable. Even without all the things that were happening in my family during our journey with this scary and unpredictable disease, the fear is real and if not talked about and acknowledged can cause you to become ill. Please talk about them,find someone who will understand, talk on here, anything but don’t keep your fears to yourself please.

As I was recovering, earlier in the year, from pneumonia I realised just how tired I was. As I became stronger, or thought I had, I began thinking back over all the losses. The futility of the nastiness within the family, I determined once again to try and put things right. I failed. Even at our lowest point as a family, David having cancer, the online stuff didn’t stop, so I tried to make it stop and try and rekindle my relationship with family. I have managed that but not with my daughter.We don’t only lose people to death, grieve their loss, sometimes grieving for someone who is still living is as hard, if not harder. The acceptance just doesn’t seem to happen.As September approached, always a hard month, my eldest daughter’s birthday and my first grandsons. This year was harder still as it was a year ago in September that my ‘Dad’ lost his fight and left us. As the days went on I felt more ill by the day, couldn’t actually identify how, but just ill and so very tired. I wasn’t functioning,couldn’t enjoy anything, wasn’t sleeping or eating properly and I collapsed with complete nervous exhaustion resulting in abject panic, fear and depression and unable to function. 

I should have seen it coming but I didn’t. I realise now that over the past years, being so hurt by everything, having so much loss, had been taking bits of me, slowly and rendering me a shadow of the woman I had been. My self confidence was rock bottom, my self love and self esteem even lower. My body had been under so much emotional and psychological stress that it had said, enough’s enough’ and almost stopped working. Scary, to say the least.I now understand what David had said all along. He would say, ‘ignore what they are saying, we all know the truth. Don’t engage with them, don’t play their games’ . But he also knew how much I love my daughter and grandsons and so understood why I was reacting the way I did. I also know that I should have responded and not reacted because being so hurt, the sadness came across as anger. ‘anger is sad’s bodyguard’. But my doing this set the scene for more nastiness and other people who didn’t even know me, becoming involved. It was out of control and I should have known better, should have closed it all down. But I didn’t. 

A Warning.

Stress kills. If it doesn’t kill you it can kill parts of you, rendering you helpless and hurting. Caring too much about what others think or say about you, can make you physically unwell and leave you emotionally empty, damaged. It reminds me of a blog I wrote about PC, asking wives and partners to make sure they look after themselves whilst caring for their partners. PC affects both of you, in different ways obviously but just as severely. Take care of you first to be able to care for him. In my work I often tell carers to make sure they have put their own oxygen mask on before trying to put one on the person  they are trying to care for.Sometimes we care too much. Forget that we are also human with all the vulnerability that brings. The past years , allowing people to get to me, struggling with worry, hurt, pain and loss has brought me to my knees.

Why did I ‘break’ when I did? Not sure but I had reached out once again to my daughter only to be rejected and I think that might have been the last straw.

For the past 22 years, I have worked helping people who were suffering from stress, anxiety, depression and other emotional psychological illnesses. I am good at what I do because I believe in it and love helping those who have lost their way or need support. It is something I am very proud to have been able to do. Every client who shared their stories, their pain, their fear, grief or loss, made me feel humbled and privileged. Although I often heard horrifying , sad heartbreaking stories of their true lives. I learned so much about myself. I wouldn’t have missed a minute. Now is the time to heal me.

Life is beginning to feel a little better today. I am back in touch with my eldest grandson and that feels so good.From earlier this week, I have begun teaching myself to change all my negative thoughts to positives, something that is life blood of my professional role. I taught others to do this over and over, I need to do it for me and it is is so hard. The thoughts just seem to come uninvited into my tired mind. But I will get there, I know I will. I need to learn that if I can’t change things, to accept them. When I miss someone, to remind myself of happy memories, good times and focus on them. To stop my when my body is tired and or my mind is telling me to. Sit and breath, enjoy this wonderful place we live in and let the future take care of itself. Love those around me who love me and don’t think about those who don’t. Hard yes by necessary. I need to  bring Carol Ann back and take care of her. 

So what I am saying  is, talk to people when you feel stressed. Respond rather than react to what others say. If you feel anxious, stressed or depressed, talk to someone about it. Find a trusted friend, a doctor, your practice nurse, someone who can help you identify your worries and help ease them. You know, if you push your body too hard, it might break. The same goes for your mind. And believe me, that is really scary.

This realisation of being mortal has made me make a decision to retire. I will miss my work but have not been able to do it since Christmas and feel it is time now to stop.So as I get stronger, I aim to enjoy life ‘here on the farm’ while we are still here and accept that life is now, not yesterday, not tomorrow, now. And now is actually okay.

Thank you for reading. x

anything that's human

My ‘Glimpse’ of How I See My World.Is This Yours?

Earth is not dying

 

When I awake to the beauty of where I live, ‘here on the farm’, I feel blessed. From my bed, I can see fields, trees, skies and nature at its best. The views from every window are breathtaking. I can see my ponies grazing in the fields and  although they have health issues, they are happy. My little dog Cody on my bed and my cats wherever they choose to be. All happy, all safe and all loved. My little world is good on the whole and I am forever grateful. We have had hard times but love has never left our home.

It seems the outside world is out of step with us here, or am I out of step with the rest of the world? If I am, I am glad to be so.A while ago I stopped watching the news, BREXIT for me was beginning to be the only thing everyone was talking about and as long as we do what the people asked for, I will just wait and see and hope all turns out okay. I am too old in the tooth to go on rallies, etc. Done that, been there, worn the T’shirt so to speak. But in the past few weeks, this last week in particular, the world seems to be on self destruct. I have heard and seen violence in so many parts of our world, unrest, murders, attacks, criminality of every kind and every depth, I sometimes think that my world here, is not part of any of it. Doesn’t want to be part of it.Oh how I wish that was possible!

It seems there is so  much anger about. People within families, so easily cut relatives out of their lives, shut them out,cancel the past,the memories and continue in their lives as though that person never existed. Angry at what? Maybe they never really know.I feel for some, family means very little.  Yes life  is harder on some fronts than it was when I was a child but so much easier on others. My childhood was hard, scary and painful as I have told before but the rest of my family, were close. We had grandparents and great aunts, cousins etc who we all looked up to , respected. I know now had any of them known what was happening to me, they would have helped. That’s what families do, or rather did. We had things going on in our community, fetes, bring and buy sales, church outings, family outings, into the country or to the sea. Families spent time together, villages and towns, people knew everyone and cared about their neighbours. No computers or mobiles, no theme parks or adventure centres, we had the great outdoors and loved every minute of it. So much easier to please us back then, but not now.Now the world has become greedy, taking things for granted, no appreciation of what it has and always seemingly wanting more. Material belongings have become super important and people secondary in some cases. Today, we have so much, take a look around you. Material things , competing to have the best of everything, the latest phone, clothes, cars etc.but forgetting important things like people, conversation, compassion.People back when I was young, enjoyed others successes, joined in their celebrations without envy. Helped others when they needed it. It’s called community, something we seem to be losing at an alarming rate.I never heard of people being knifed, beaten up, crimes against elderly people, we all looked out for each other. How sad this world is becoming.

For many, material wealth is off the scale but Mother nature’s wealth is beyond measuring and we are destroying it.Looking around me, listening to the news, seeing crime and destruction, those in authority turning a blind eye to what we are doing to our planet and each other, makes me sad but mostly angry. What can I do? I can try and spread love to those who will accept it. Always show people kindness and respect. Care for those whether animal or human in any way that I can. Care about my environment, do my bit to combat pollution, over use, destruction. For every tree taken down ‘in error’,as some were, here on the farm, we have planted another. We keep our river clean, re-use anything we can and save what we can. Not much but along with any other ‘green’ way of living, I hope we are doing our bit.

In this past week we have seen the destruction of the rain forests, not by natural forces but possibly by intention. How wicked. How futile. How dangerous. Whoever was responsible is risking  the future of the planet, our future and their own but seems uncaring about the results of this devastation.We are living on this planet as though we had another one, tucked away for the future. We haven’t. This is it!

Crime seems to also take up a huge amount of the news.I read of a son who attacked his own parents. How bad is that! The people who gave him life. No respect for that or for his own life it seems. Admitted I don’t know the facts but being a parent surely should mean that the person least likely to harm you is your own child. Did he do this because he was angry?

A boyfriend who murdered the girl he loved! Loved! No of course that was not an act of love. Because he was angry?

More shootings abroad, killing and maiming innocent people, for what? Because they were angry?How often do we hear this. Maybe something was wrong in the person’s life and anger took over!

The killing of a young policeman doing his duty. The killing of a social worker, again doing her duty. When will it all stop??!!??

Acts of terrorism, extreme acts that kill children and innocent people, in the name of religion. If religion makes you kill, change your religion!!

Unrest in Japan and China and now unrest on the streets of the UK. I read of crimes against elderly people, beatings of the elderly, cruelty to children and animals. Destruction in my own hometown of War memorials. Parks. No respect for anyone or anything. Just cruelty and destruction of people, animals and material things. Everyone appears to be so angry and uses that, not for the good of themselves or others but to harm and destroy. Why not use all that pent up emotion, for the good. Just think what could be achieved. If there is life on another planet we do not need to fear it, they wouldn’t want to come here!

If only the powers that be, took heed. We don’t need to destroy our planet, Nature will do that for us if we are not careful. Floods, hurricanes, fires caused by natural disasters etc.Changes in climate although Mr Trump would not have that.Nature is not doing that  willingly ,not for greed, power but with the help of us humans, our beautiful world seems to be set on self destruct with our help. Killing each other, killing our environment, polluting our waters, polluting our air. Sometimes through power in the wrong hands, sometimes through greed. We need to wake up fast!

We need to work together beginning at home. Beginning with family. If families stay loving each other, that will spread to the world they live in. Will become second nature. Empathy will return and care and respect for each other. We need to teach our children to love everyone. To treat  them with respect. To take care of their world in a way, some in these past years, haven’t. We need to teach them that everyone is important, everyone worth the same. We need to bring back something that has gone, empathy. I listened in the week to Billy Bragg on ‘what makes us human’. He says it is empathy, I agree. Compassion for others , no division, we seem to have lost this ability at least some have.No matter what colour, creed or religion, we are all children of this wonderful place we call home and it is the only one we have.

This sounds an angry blog , well I suppose it is in a way but it is something that I worry about. Killing each other, spending our precious lives hurting others, stealing what is not ours, fighting and destroying, is a waste of our lives and those of our children.We act as though we have time, that we have another planet, we act like waste doesn’t matter. Well I have a surprise for those who think this way, you don’t have time, you don’t have anywhere else to go after the earth is destroyed. This is it, so treasure it. It is a bit late for my generation, but not too late for my grandchildren so I hope this resonates with some who are young enough to try and make a difference in their own lives. Start by showing respect. Respect for the earth,for family, for others, the elderly and mostly for themselves.

On a bigger scale we need better communication. This begins at home. Make things right with those you have fallen out with, you may not have another chance. For governments, talk to each other, be reasonable, a little give and take would be good and less tit for tat that I see all the time, in our Government and America’s. Accept that somethings will happen, no matter what we do, what we want, don’t resort to violence to get what you think is right. Violence is never the answer. Arguing is never the answer.Lying is never the answer. distorting the truth to gain what you want,is never the answer. Honesty and compassion, empathy and compromise. The whole world needs this more than ever before, in my eyes.

If I had a wish it would be that the whole world woke up and realised that this is the only world we have. That man must work together, to save it. Loving, caring, sharing and respecting each other and the planet. Yes maybe that is my Utopia but I really believe, that showing each other these qualities could unite us and help us save this beautiful world we call home.If not world -wide, our own little part of it, how good life would be then for us all.

I feel helpless at this time of worldly upset, I feel we have turned on each other, that the world has turned on it’s head and doesn’t know which way is up. But for now and the future, ‘here on the farm’, my little bit of earth, my world, I will keep trying to do my bit. I will continue to love others, even those who don’t love me. I will live honestly, carefully, respectfully and hope that for the remainder of my time here, that will be enough. 

I don’t recognise the world as it has become, it makes me very sad. I fear for it’s future. Your future, my future but all I can do is my best. Maybe you could too.

Thank you for reading x

 

dennis-gabor-scientist-quote-till-now-man-has-been-up-against-nature

A Very Sad Wake Up Call.It Can Happen To Us All.And Happy. x

 

old man looking in mirror

It has been a strange few weeks, sad but happy in equal measures.I have written in the past few months about the sickness ‘here on the farm’, ponies, dogs etc.Me. Today I am not going to do that. I want to talk about something that scares us all. Worries us and takes up a great deal of energy in thought, or is that just me?What is that? Growing old. For me it sucks. Yes I know, some don’t have the chance to grow old and I appreciate that and am sad for everyone who has lost a loved one. I have lost many these past few years. I didn’t think there would be anything worse than losing someone you love . But there is. Two things come to mind. Grieving for someone who is still alive but estranged from you, someone you love. Every day is sad, missing that person and knowing they are ‘out there’ ‘having  a life ‘that you are no part of. You should be, but you’re not. How hard is that! But even more than that, grieving for someone who is or has changed, because of age, a disease etc.and is no longer the person they were. That’s hard. Sad, scary and painful.I think the most scary part is , ‘there but for the grace of God etc…’Who knows what life has planned ahead for us. No one.

So, firstly, I am happy because I have regained something precious that I thought I had lost forever. Won’t say any more but life is fuller than it was and for that I am so happy and so grateful.I have also begun a book that I promised to write a few years ago and am now able to do so. It needs writing and the world needs to read it. (Well some of the world at least I hope).So that is underway. George has new magnetic boots and is walking well so everything crossed.

The sad.

For many years, David and I have been visited by a close friend who now lives in Australia.A strong handsome man who David has known for more than 50 years and, unbeknown to each other, I have known since this man was in his teens. He is my husband’s best friend. We always look forward to his visits and prepare ourselves for the ‘volume’ to be raised  at home. He is strong, loud and fun to be around. A sportsman, and, a man interested in technology, always has the latest gadget. Phone, computer, camera etc.Always so much to talk about. But last week, things were different. He was different. We were expecting him a week later than  he actually arrived, so when he came to our home, we were out. He left a note and said he would be staying in New Quay that night and return to us the following morning. We tried to ring him but the phone just rang out so we waited for the next day. The phone rang and I expected it to me our friend but it was the manager of a hotel in Llandysul. He had not gone to New Quay but Llandysul! The manager wanted me to tell him our address and confirm that our friend had that address. He did. Then I handed the phone to David to speak with his friend. It seems, that although calling on us at our home, many times before, the evening before this call as well, he had become confused as to how to find our house. I was a bit worried but David went to meet up with him and they arrived home. All seemed okay although we were a bit confused as to how he ended up somewhere other than where he said as Llandysul is quite a way from us and New Quay just down the road. As the day went on, I noticed that he was a bit anxious when he couldn’t find his camera. It was in front of him. When David left us alone, this lovely man, confided that he was  becoming a bit confused at times and his memory was not as good as it was. He was quiet, not as cheeky or loud. He had lost a great deal of weight and seemed older by a lot than when we saw each other 2 years ago. He is younger than both David and me. I became a bit concerned but did not correct him when he made mistakes, just made him feel safe at our house. Asked him if his wife knew what he was telling me and sadly, won’t repeat what he said.David took him out for a meal in the evening and again, noticed the changes in his friend. I wanted him to stay with us because I was worried about him but for very personal reasons, not going to share on here, I didn’t ask him to. Something I now regret so much.After they returned he was not able to find his way back to where he was staying, or he didn’t think he could so David took him to his hotel. He would come back the next day and I had, by then, told David he could stay in spite of my reservations. He had 2 weeks left and would stay in Wales for around 7 days. The following morning, once again a call from his hotel, the manager again. He gave our friend the phone and he told us that he was going on to London to see his sister as he was running out of days in the UK. David assured him that he wasn’t, that he had another 2 weeks, but he became anxious and I told David to agree with him and ask him to ring when he reached his sisters. After putting the phone down, we looked at each other, both with tears in our eyes. This was not our friend, he seemed a stranger. No confidence, no ‘loud’, not ‘cheeky’, no him. It had been a shock to both of us but I think hit my lovely husband very much.

I had voiced that I was surprised that his wife had not accompanied him, as he had told us that she knew how confused he sometimes became and forgetful. She didn’t want to come was the response. I should not criticise her but I do know that David would not have gone anywhere on his own, if he had been in the’place’ our dear friend was. We were extremely worried. I spent the next 2 days trying to find out if he was okay. Find someone else he had spent time with whilst in the UK. Nothing. Until a few days ago when I managed to speak to a friend who confirmed that indeed, this lovely man had changed. No longer the life and soul of the party but an onlooker. I have  had an email to say he is back in Australia, earlier than planned so I hope he is now safe.We now have to rely on him writing to us and reassuring us he is okay and has taken my advice and seen a doctor. I know what it seems is happening to him and I also know that something can be done to help him. But I am helpless to do anything and that does not sit well with me.

What this visit has done, is highlight that age can do this to us. As we age, we change. Or do we? Is it just that others see us differently?I began to think of us, David and I , how we sometimes forget things, how we often have to remind each other of people’s names, places, events. My own realisation of the times I think, ‘was that right?’ It didn’t sound right. Having a conversation with myself. Is this aging? Did I get that wrong? Was that today was it last year? As we age, nothing is the same. Our bodies often let us down. We tire easily. Become weary after a short time doing something that we used to be able to do in a much shorter time!But inside, we are still 20!

A few years ago, or was it more? I worked in reminiscence therapy and was reminded of this these past days. How I tried to see the person behind the ‘haze’. The woman who was sitting in front of me, unable to identify me but able to recognise things from her childhood or earlier life. I made a promise to myself that I would always see the person who she had been. The young woman, the wife, the mother and not only the elderly, confused  lady confined to her chair. If she were me and I was treated as less of a person because I forgot; became confused, I would want to shout. ‘I haven’t always been this way’! ‘I was a mum, a wife , a Psychotherapist and an author. I loved to dance, to read poetry and to care for animals. Look at me please. I’m still here. I’m still me.’

Sometimes, after a serious illness, we can become different, not as capable,not as clear minded. Illness sucks. Growing old sucks but we need to be grateful for it. So please, always try and see the person. I feel the same. I know I am not able to do what I used to do but hey, I am still me. Still the same person even in my confusion and forgetfulness, I am still Carol Ann and would hope those around me always remember that. 

I will always be grateful for memories and hope our friend, I haven’t named him on purpose, I hope he has his memories for along time yet. We will always talk of him, laugh at the things he told us, the things he did. We will always remember HIM. No matter what.I am making a photo of David and our Aussie buddy, to place in pride of place, next to my darling brother’s photo. That is how we will remember them both. Smiling, handsome and strong.Yes age may be just a number but we always need to remember the younger version, of whoever is the subject of our thoughts.

Thank you for reading x

 

 

 

 

even though

A Letter To My Son’s Mother. (Not the post intended but needed by me.)x

birth mother 6

 

Hello,

Until a few days ago I had no idea of what you looked like even, your hair, your eyes, your smile. But now I do. As I look down at this photo of you, that has been given to me,after all the passing years, my eyes fill with tears. Some of sadness,some of happiness that at last I can see you. I can now at least,picture the woman who gave my precious baby boy, a home.

I had imagined you, many times.When I was first told how you were to be given my baby son, to take care of and love. I couldn’t ‘like you’. When, all those years ago, after I had struggled to find him in his foster home, and take him back with me, ‘They’ came and took him away again. My heart screamed at you back then. ‘I can love him. I can take care of him’. But of course I couldn’t. I was unwell and without, family or any kind of income that could support him and my daughter.  I couldn’t lose her and was made to make a choice. Lose both of my much loved children or let ‘them’ take my little boy and give him to you.That was not a choice and he went, unknowingly breaking my heart. You were happy, he was possibly happy and me? Well happy didn’t come into it. No,I didn’t feel warmly towards you, why would I?

But this is not about all of that. This is a letter to you, my son’s other mum. I gave birth to him and loved him and lost him. You took him on as your own and loved him. At that time, I wasn’t grateful to you. I wasn’t happy for you. I wasn’t wishing you everything that was good. How could I? You had my son.I didn’t know you then, I still don’t know you but now I know of you and a little about you. And now, I can see you. The lady he called Mum. 

You are different from what I imagined. I, for some reason thought you would be younger, brunette, fuller faced. How or why, I don’t know, because you were an entity that I didn’t want to think about. A person who had something that I wanted. Something that should have been mine by right,to be my son’s mum. Of course I had thought about you and not with any love or gratitude. Just jealousy and something akin to hatred. Very unhealthy. But not now. Life currently has been painful, full of loss and pain but it is time I put my house in order. I can’t do that in some areas but need to do this with you. Even if only in my mind.There comes a time and this is that time.

When I first saw your photo, a few days ago, I was surprised at how it made me feel. You look kind, smart,with your lovely red hair in curls down to your ears. Pearl ear-rings and a pretty top. The first thing that came into my head is that your eyes are so dark, not blue like mine and my son’s.I don’t know why but I had imagined they would have been blue.Don’t know why but things stick don’t they and I had been told by the adoption society, that things like that were important and they would match my baby with parents who had similar characteristics, like eye colour. But your photos is a nice photo.You are not what I had imagined at all. As I stared down at the stranger who had taken my place, I was full of so many emotions.I wanted to be angry. I thought I would be angry but No, I am not. Of course I wish things had been different. But I wish I had not been in that horrendous position when he was born and that he had stayed with me, grown up with me and my daughters but he didn’t. I wish, I wish, I wish so so much.He grew up with you.I have waited so many years to talk to you. To see you. Now I can, if only over this media. I see you now. I need to tell you so much.

I had always hoped we would meet. I made up this story in my head of me going to your home when my son, our son, was at school and sharing a mug of tea, chatting about how this precious boy was doing. This boy we both loved. Sharing our child, his ups and downs of growing up Becoming friends. I don’t know how I could possibly have imagined that happening, as adoption was so closed back when he was a child. But this little story in my head,gave me hope. Comfort on a bad day. I used to wonder if you would like me. If you would understand why you had him and I didn’t. I used to wonder so much over those years.How he was growing. What he liked, what sports he played. What music he enjoyed. I know all of that now, he told me when we met back in 1992. Just after he lost you, his other Mum.Yes I met him and we still have contact. Not in the way I would have hoped but so much more than I had while he was growing up.

I do wish you had told him how things were for me back when he was born. I understand why you didn’t, but do wish you had. 

You made me promises but didn’t keep them. Again, I understand why. This is not a recrimination, just how I feel. It is the same with many adopters, promises made at that emotional time, to the birth mum, promises that were meant to be kept. But as I said, I understand why they weren’t. When you first take charge of this much wanted baby, a long time coming, the promises are pushed aside, not even voluntarily, but just forgotten. Because you don’t want to be reminded of me, of a time before ‘you’. You want and need to forget I even exist ,to make this precious child your own. I understand all of that but not thinking about me does not make me go away. Didn’t make me less real.Yes I understand but it doesn’t work, didn’t work because I was always here. Waiting and hoping and yes, praying that one day, I would see him again.The problem is, if a child doesn’t have the whole truth, he will grow up thinking there is something wrong with him. He may feel guilty that he wasn’t enough for his birth mum to keep him. That is so wrong. In my case, the guilt was all mine. 

I bear you no ill. Of course I envy those wonderful years you shared, of my little boy growing up. All his milestones that I missed. Every single birthday for the first few years I sent a card. Every Christmas I bought gifts, that went to charity. If I heard his name called, I turned hoping. All to no avail. He was happy living with you and his dad and his sister. As you know I already had a daughter, one I love with all my heart. My son brought his own love but that wasn’t enough for me to keep him. We, my daughter and I, missed him so much in the early days and it was hard for her to understand. A difficult time for her, one that I had not really truly understood back then. So entrenched in my own pain and hurt.I went on to re marry and have another daughter and another son but sadly I lost him at birth. 

But my life now is good. Not perfect, not without pain, but in all, good. The regrets of the past have to be put to bed and that is why I now have your photo, here  on my desk. A photo of the lady who loved my son. The lady he called Mum and that is okay. That’s good.I will keep it always. Gratitude and love replace the jealousy and regret. As my husband always says, ‘we are where we are’. And where we are, is here. Today, not yesterday with its’ pain, its sadness, its guilt. I want to think of you and your family, our son, being happy in a love filled home. That helps the memories of the past, only a little, but helps.

I would love to have had the chance to say one thing to you. Thank you. Thank you for taking him into your home, your family. Thank you for giving him all you could. Thank you for loving him.I like to think that if you had received this letter, you would understand my need to write to you. So in my heart, I will pretend that you have. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Love from

Our son’s other mum. His birth mother.xx

 

 

For my readers,thank you for reading x

 

Birth mother 3