Time to give up? Mourn and accept new health reality?
As each day brings new limitations, I think it is irrational for me to continue to reach out to sustain the way of life I had. Is it really that bad to retreat to the world of books,gardening,music,etc instead of an outward looking way of life?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuropathy Support Group.
a very happy and well dined bushy tailed rodent. Thank you for sharing and giving me a chuckle.
@parus - here's a link to a video of how he got on my bird feeder. Guess I need to shovel some snow from under my feeder so the squirrel cone is higher. It's one of those keep trying until you get it right messages.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1suhaodmVrDuLPABmVFDp8piIBsZk1swt/view?usp=sharing
John
@johnbishop Preety crafty squirrel there John! loved the vidio!
Hi @keeptrying
Here's an observation from my side of the screen. New limitations may be revealing new horizons. Have you noticed that the 2 discussions that you initiated on Connect in the Neuropathy group have resulted in very useful and reflective conversations touching many members?
- Acceptance https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/acceptance/ is the other discussion.
Perhaps "giving up" could be reframed as "Discovering The New ________" (The fill-in-the-blank options are endless: possibilities, capabilities, talents, super power.)
As Captain Kirk would have said in the 60's, "going where no man has gone before"! OK, maybe a bit overdramatic, but how about where no woman has gone before? This seems an appropriate time for that one. I think Colleen is spot on, though. I am reading a book on Mindfulness and it talks about how we go through a lot of our lives on autopilot and missing moments or as us golfers always try to "stay in the present". I can not impact anything that happened yesterday nor that which will happen tomorrow and if I think of either, I will miss the present. Sports coaches always talk about not letting one loss best us twice because we have not flushed it from our memory banks.I have used every tired cliche I can think of, so I will shut up and allow you the present to see what it holds.
One of the many reasons this group is helpful is that sometimes you can't help but smile!☺ Love your critter photo. I too tinker around with photography. There is something calming about doing a 'still life' of something you find in nature. If I can't hike in the woods anymore, I can surely bring the woods to me. Photography also brings the element of surprise that you encounter in a hike. Nature is good medicine for the soul (I think.)
Thank you jimhd. I am learning to embrace solitude. My father loved Thoreau so I am reading his meditations. Your words echo his, I think. I volunteer at a local hospice, just reading and listening. Self pity does not exist there. A butterfly landing on the windowsill is cause for celebration. Makes my losses seem minimal.
Wonderful words of wisdom, thank you. As we speak my orchids bud is just starting to blossom...You never know!☺
@keeptrying So sorry.
There are times when nothing works. Succumb and ride it through.