Time heals all wounds
May. 30th, 2003 03:55 pmI feel better, today. Yesterday, I felt as if someone close to me had just died. I don't think I'm exaggerating. It feels the way it felt when Lilith, my 16 year old cat, died the April before last. So far, I haven't had any people I care about die on me, so I'm extrapolating, but Lilith was more of a person to me than some of my friends. Today, time has eroded that grief, it's a duller pain, less focused. Sometimes, I forget what it is that I feel so unhappy about. Time. Time's the way we fall into these disasters, you know. The wound heals over, and we ignore the scars.
Provigil continues to be a little jagged, and not entirely efficacious, but that's the way it is with drugs. Some days, I want to sing, "If I Only Had a Brain." Really, what I want are correctly balanced neurochemicals, but it doesn't scan.
Provigil continues to be a little jagged, and not entirely efficacious, but that's the way it is with drugs. Some days, I want to sing, "If I Only Had a Brain." Really, what I want are correctly balanced neurochemicals, but it doesn't scan.
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Date: 2003-06-01 05:54 pm (UTC)My understanding is that it gets easier with practice. I think it would have to; I can't imagine it getting worse.
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Date: 2003-06-02 07:41 am (UTC)I actually adopted Lilith with a litter mate, Ember. Ember is easily the most neurotic cat I have ever known. When she was about two, she was diagnosed with Feline Leukemia. I had a special horror of the disease because I had lost an entire litter of kittens to it some years before. Em had occasional bouts where she would get very sick and have to be force-fed for a day or two. She'd recover, and be her sweetly bizarre self for a couple more years.
I think she was about 8 when she had another really bad bout. After force-feeding her for a week, she was still refusing to eat on her own. I stupidly followed my vet's advice, rather than taking advantage of the offer that the vet school offered me of placing an NG tube and letting me force-feed her at home. She hated being at the vet's, and it certainly contributed to her refusal to eat.
I didn't get the NG tube placed. She didn't get better. I had to have her put down, and to make the whole thing more horrible, the first dose wasn't enough. The vet had to leave the room and get a second syringe.
That is the only time I've ever felt like I could die of grief. For days I couldn't imagine how it was that I was still living, still breathing. I cried my eyes red and raw, something I'd read about in books, but had never experienced. The pain was physical as well as psychic. I felt guilty, of course. It also attached to all of the other griefs in my life, and was simply too huge to metabolize. Eventually, I ended up in therapy, which was a good thing.
When Little Cat died last year, it hurt enormously. But it was no where near as traumatic as losing Em. I was ... content with my choices. I felt as if I really had done the best I could amongst all the complicated medical choices I'd been offered. I had a supportive sweetie, which made a huge difference. And it was a single sorrow, I wasn't trying to grieve for my entire life all at once. So I guess that it got easier. Kind of.
But lord, I miss her. It still hurts. I'm not anxious to learn what it's like to lose a human being, thank you very much. Losing cats is hard enough.