Anonymous wrote:No, I wouldn't. Then again, DH has an illness that makes his chances of ending up in a wheelchair sooner or later very high and I knew this going in. The calculus is different for me, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like to think that I wouldn't. I meant it when I said forever no matter what. However, I'm not there, can't even imagine the realities, and have no idea. An acquaintance of mine years ago left her husband several years after he was disabled, and the decision tore her up and wasn't one that she wanted to make, but she ultimately had to for her own sanity.
What was the disability? And what did her husband end up doing after she left him?
My understanding was that it was trauma related, involved paralysis from the neck down, as well as some pretty serious personality changes. I'm not sure what happened afterwards. This was many years ago and we have lost touch. Although I know as much as I posted, we weren't all that close to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like to think that I wouldn't. I meant it when I said forever no matter what. However, I'm not there, can't even imagine the realities, and have no idea. An acquaintance of mine years ago left her husband several years after he was disabled, and the decision tore her up and wasn't one that she wanted to make, but she ultimately had to for her own sanity.
What was the disability? And what did her husband end up doing after she left him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you see the "Theory of Everything?" It appears, in then end, that Jane was not prepared to be a lifelong caregiver no matter how idealistic and determined she was from the beginning.
Also in that movie they expected him to die within a couple of years. Turned out he lived, and lived, and lived .... I realize that sounds crass, but she could see how she could handle a temporary assignment, but that temporary assignment turned out to be permanent caregiver.
Anonymous wrote:I'm suprised so many people are put off by the possibility of a wheelchair for their partner or themselves. If you think about it, wheelchair is not the end of the world. In fact, it's very far from the end of the world for either the person or their family. Things can be so much worse than wheelchair, that your fear of it makes me chuckle. You naive sheltered people. May life never show you true horror.
Anonymous wrote:I would like to think that I wouldn't. I meant it when I said forever no matter what. However, I'm not there, can't even imagine the realities, and have no idea. An acquaintance of mine years ago left her husband several years after he was disabled, and the decision tore her up and wasn't one that she wanted to make, but she ultimately had to for her own sanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm suprised so many people are put off by the possibility of a wheelchair for their partner or themselves. If you think about it, wheelchair is not the end of the world. In fact, it's very far from the end of the world for either the person or their family. Things can be so much worse than wheelchair, that your fear of it makes me chuckle. You naive sheltered people. May life never show you true horror.
eh, I would rather have a spouse in a wheelchair than a spouse with Alzheimer's but neither situation is ideal.
I could see falling apart if the person became quadraplegic or something. Wheelchair? NBG.Anonymous wrote:I could but I'm also someone who would get an abortion if there were certain abnormalities in my pregnancy. I'm not physically or mentally equipped to care for someone who will be handicapped for the rest of their life. Call me a horrible person, bitch, evil, whatever. It is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:I could but I'm also someone who would get an abortion if there were certain abnormalities in my pregnancy. I'm not physically or mentally equipped to care for someone who will be handicapped for the rest of their life. Call me a horrible person, bitch, evil, whatever. It is what it is.