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Letter to My Wife's Family Garry Prowe, BrainLine Page 2 of 2

Our life is only going to become more difficult as we age. Jessica is a prime candidate for dementia and/or Alzheimer’s. She’s been having balance difficulties lately and has fallen a few times. With her osteoporosis, our future certainly will include some bone fractures. There’s mounting evidence that brain injuries are accompanied by a variety of other medical problems and should be treated as a chronic condition with new symptoms appearing as survivors age.

Jessica has become a different person because of her brain injury. She’s not the woman I fell in love with. You’ve all spent some time with her and have seen many of her impairments. But you’ve never seen the full extent of Jessica’s disability. You’ve never seen her explode with anger. You’ve never been deprived because of her selfishness. Jessica and I have lost the equal partnership of a marriage. There’s now an element of father-daughter in our relationship. In some ways, Jessica is like a ten-year-old, so caught up in her own life she’s oblivious to what’s happening to those who care for her. But, unlike the ten-year-old who will grow up and learn to see her parents in a different light, in this respect, Jessica will remain ten years old.

I still love Jessica very much. This message is not an ultimatum. I will willingly take care of Jessica for the rest of my life. If I don’t get more help, I’ll somehow manage. But I don’t understand your reluctance to help. I don’t know if it’s the family culture, a lack of compassion, or such a focus on your own lives that you’re unable to see our difficulties.

Over the years, when asked by you for help, we’ve always responded favorably, with our time, our money, and/or a temporary place to live. At times, when we’ve seen a need, we offered assistance without being asked. For the past few years, I’ve hoped that at least one of you would call and offer to visit for a week, or to invite Jessica to do something with you so I could get a break.

Jessica is also surprised and saddened by your lack of involvement in her life and her care. At times, she fears that you no longer like or love her because of her brain injury. When we need help, her first reaction is to call my sister Jennifer. Jessica has become reluctant to ask for your help because she now expects to hear reasons why you can’t or won’t help.

From a distance, our life probably doesn’t seem that difficult to you. We don’t have to earn a paycheck. We have all this free time. We have money in the bank. What’s the problem? Well, there’s a reason we can’t work. Believe me, there are few things as frustrating as having time, but not the energy nor the freedom from pain to use that time in an enjoyable or productive way. For years now, I’ve been using much of my limited energy to care for Jessica and write about brain injury. The energy to write has disappeared. I’d like there to be more to my life than just caring for Jessica.

How can you help? I need a respite break of at least seven nights every nine months. If all five of you participate, this means giving us a week of your time just once every 45 months.

Please help me set up a schedule now so everyone knows well in advance when their time to help will come. I need you, and Jessica needs you.

Thanks for giving this serious consideration.

Your favorite brother-in-law, Garry

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Written exclusively for BrainLine by Garry Prowe, author of Successfully Surviving a Brain Injury: A Family Guidebook.

 Comments [19]

Hello Gary I feel your pain and agony. Thank you for being so honest. I have a simular situation. Thanks so much for this information. I am currently experiencing the same situation as I am the girlfriend of a male partner who was involved in a fatal car accidient that claimed the life of his father. This happened 5 years ago and I am still dealing with his head injyr effects. He is impulsive, verbally and emotional inappropirate, egocentric, and overly sexually stimlated. I have grown to dis-like him and feell used at times as I have sacrificed alot for him even more than his family. We are not married and I quickly shy away from this and try to discourage him from asking. I have tried on mulitple occasions to talk to him about how i feel to only have an explosive argument in the process. I am emotionally drained and tired. I moved form TX to CA to get a way for a while while also seeking a movement in my career. He has now moved out here as his family were tired of dealing with him, but I insisted he get his own place. I often feel guilty and I believe that is why I am still in a relationship with him that is completly unfulfilling. I am not able to have even an slight conversation with him about work or anything before he immedicatly sees other objects, people or situations to comment on in thmiddle of my comments. I am so unhappy and have no one to talk to who understands or even wants to listen. I have never felt so trapped as I do now. I am seriously thinking of leaving him and just being friends. However, I will need to carfully craft this as he is very impulsive and somewhat unpredictable. I am not a person who has problems with anxiety but I have found that I need help in this area now that he is here. It is only a matter of time before he says or doses the wrong thing at his job , loses it and his apt to come running to stay here. This is a constant fear of mine as I am not responsible nor do I want to be responsible for his mistakes and issues. I need emotional satisfaction and happiness out of a relationship and I am not getting it here. One day, while he was in rehab, the social worker called me to find out “what was wrong with me’ as it was unusual for someone to be so devoted to a Head Injury such as his. She aked me somthing 5 years ago I never forgot and that was: ” you will never get anything out of this relationship”. I was so offended at the time but now I know what she mean. I hope some one is able to help. I just don’t know what to do. lisa

Feb 15th, 2012 3:39am

Don\'t we all feel like that? 15 months into an extremely severe case that started with several months in ICU/Neuro. Umpteen doctors, tests, therapy sessins and medication. Early 30\'s, 3 kids under 10, work full time, all of the responsibilty and then some. It\'s a bad hand to be dealt. Im tired of the comments of how aweful I look because I am bairly functioning due to exauhstion, empty gestures of help of guilt, comments behind my back and people choosing to turn a blind eye so they don\'t have to deal with it or except it(mainly family and close friends). My favorite is the Monday morning quarterback on how I am doing things. Unfortunaltely I have found that my spouse pushes people away and minimizes behavior to prevent the questions and visits. I have also found a shocked look of surprise when I tell people the reality of the situation. I only expect further seperation and lack of understanding from others and quite frankly, I am tired of asking for help. I barely have enough left of me to keep my spouse, kids and basic responsibilities afloat. So to all of the spouses and caregivers, it is one day at a time. What you don\'t get done today...try tomorrow. And if you wish you had done something different today...try again tomorrow. There is no field book, clear answer or cure. I have found that my priorities are much clearer since the TBI. I figure their loss, not mine. I have a spouse and 3 kids to worry about. Not the unneeded comments, stupid adivce or lack of educataion from others. Best wishes to all in my shoes. Stay strong and don\'t forget how to love who\'s important and laugh at the stupid things.

Feb 1st, 2012 2:32am

Gary - Ive walked in your shoes many times over - I tip my hat to you and those close to you should- must- step up -doing this alone is not the way to go for many reasons and will only make matters worse in the long run. If I can be of any assistance, please do not hesitate to contact me at bud1270@gmail.com. Brian

Jan 14th, 2012 3:53pm

I completely feel for you garry. However my story is of my daughter. She is completely dependent on me. I still don\'t understand how my family could desert us like they have. I am single, I also have a 15 year old. He was ten at the time. And have sworn to never put her in a care facility. As her mother I cannot! But I am tired, there is no relief in site. No way to go but, forward. but I can feel my body giving way. I have came right out and said the words \"please, help me! I get \"sure of course, but how about the second Tuesday of next week? Which of course never comes. I\'m just so tired physically, emotionally and mentally. But tomarrow is a new day......

Jan 2nd, 2012 10:54pm

For Jessica... An excerpt from 'My Latent Self, Recovering my Soul after Brain Injury.' There is no conscious comprehension of miscommunication on our part, and the only ones who can fathom this are you, our helpers, supporters, our markers and signposts. Those of us with brain injuries are always giving one hundred percent; it just comes out or across as maybe five. We have no recognition of what is missing, or that anything is awry, and giving feedback in the same way as you would do to any ‘normal’ person, goes straight over our heads.... Worse still, is when people don’t give us any feedback at all, because they aren’t sure if it is our circuitry, or ‘us,’ that has gone awry. Either way, if we aren’t getting it ‘right,’ then we need to know. We don’t only need correcting; we also need an explanation, just as any five-year-old does. When we still don’t understand we will also need your endearing patience, especially for the times we unwittingly throw your help back in your face! We simply don’t know any better – we just think we do! I guess that dealing with us can sometimes feel like you are trying to shift a dead elephant on a single roller-skate. You will need patience, but you will also need to be flexible and creative... I get that we confuse people. I can totally understand you have no initial idea as to how to relate to us, and I realise you have much to learn in order to be able not only to help us, but also to be able to deal with, and live with us. What we unknowingly ask of you is way beyond the normal call of duty. If brain injury has never cropped up in your life before, then it is inevitable that you will have no experience of dealing with someone who has been brain injured, and that you too will feel lost, confused and frustrated. I can understand the grief, the mourning even, for the apparent loss of the soul you have always so loved. Who is there to assure you? Who is there to train you – the one who becomes the inevitable trainer? How are you best able to learn the new communication skills you will need? Do you even know, or recognise, how our dependency on you requires that the way you have always perceived and judged the way we cognitively function, needs to change? The confusing part is how to separate what is a lack of brain function, from what is not a change in personality. I am sure you all know that the changes in behaviour which occur as a result of brain injury are not premeditated; they are accidental implications that arrive like frogs falling from the sky on a clear blue day. For those of you on the outside, when our injuries cause you life changes in ways that do not meet with your previous experiences, you can be easily thrown into an uncertain world of rocky ground, which you tentatively step upon in the fear that what is left underfoot, may also fall away. Life can feel undermined, like the crashing waves of the ocean eating away at the bedrock of your existence, eroding your capabilities and normalities, chewing up everything that was once familiar, and leaving you with an inner chaos that holds no direction. I understand that brain injury does not only alter the lives of those of us who are afflicted, but spreads out like the turbulent ripples on a great lake. We don’t know we are affected; we are certainly oblivious to the fact that you are...

Nov 7th, 2011 5:27pm

Well, your letter just goes to prove that whenever you think you're the only one...you're not :-) I have a friend diagnosed with TBI several years ago - her husband treated her poorly and she finally decided to get a divorce. Usually it's the other way around - so you can imagine how bad it is. Sigh - I am not even family. I am a friend who has become her family (sad when you think about it). I have powers of attorney and have taken the responsibility her life so justly deserves. I still don't understand how her family could abandon her so completely. Trying to get them to help is too much work - and not worth the effort anymore. I can't even begin to tell you how difficult it is trying to help someone who is high-functioning with TBI go through the legal system. MY GOD! She isn't even respected by her lawyer (sigh). I do the best I can, but there is no advocacy program in existence that is here to help someone with a brain injury get through something like a divorce. Your letter helped me feel less 'alone'. Thank you.

Nov 2nd, 2011 7:01pm

Wow! My husband said you could have written this. I am so proud of you for writing this and I hope the family got the letter and got the message. How afraid we are to ask them for what their sibling needs. Hang in there and please keep writing. Caregiver at GettingaFoothold.blogspot.com

Nov 2nd, 2011 4:59pm

I am in floods of tears Garry... My heart really does come out to you both. If you need a break then I will fly over and take care of Jessica for two weeks, a month even. I know that I could help her. Please don't give up on Jessica, she won't always be ten-years-old... We do get better, I promise you that we can get better... I promise you that the real Jessica is still there beneath the surface. I can't believe how I was sat here writting about this very thing in my own book when an email popped in from a friend with this link. As a TBI survivor I am the miracle walking. I have had to grow up all over again. I went back to being a five-year-old and was oblivious to everything and everybody in the world around me. I am coming home though Garry, I am coming home... Please contact me through my site. I would sincerely love to help. If I could stick my heart on this page then I would... www.mylatentself.co.uk I will fly out tomorrow x Annie

Nov 2nd, 2011 10:05am

Hello Garry. Thanks for sharing this side of the "story". I can relate to your life because in March 2011, my 47 year old Husband suffered a left (right side affected) stroke. Because of this kind of stroke he still suffers from aphasia. It puts the onus on me to help him speak when he can't find the words. I constantly am speaking for him in company, and he looks to me to do this when he can't get the words to flow. I let him try on his own but the frustration of seeing him struggle in this manner is sometimes hard to see. My husband is getting better but it has changed both our lives in ways only someone such as yourself can understand. I keep thinking I just want my Husband back...the way he was. We moved back to our home province since his stroke because this is where our families are. I can especially relate to the part of your article about people thinking everything must be ok because he seems ok, for the most part, to everyone looking on. They don't see the struggles he has and myself as his caregiver. I recently went back to working part time because I need to for both our sakes. I still think about him when I am at work..wondering if he is ok at home alone. As for the part you mentioned about being self-centered..I find my husband more that way, too. I look forward to reading more from you. Thanks for doing this for us caregivers...it means so much.

Oct 9th, 2011 11:30am

I wish to thank you, Gary, for your expression of what so many of us go through in the care of our loved ones with TBI. I am glad that I am not alone. I aught to send this to the Insurance company and lawyer who are having me kicked out of my brother's home (a TBI survivor of 43 years). I have lost everyone, everything that I own, my children, etc. after being guardian for close to 20 years. I will be on the streets. I have no money for electric nor heat! And no one to help me.

Oct 8th, 2011 10:28am

It is the ten year anniversary of my husband's TBI on Sept. 18, 2011. He sounds about the same cognitively as your wife, a bit worse, like an 8 or 9 year old in problem solving, very flat affect. I had him home for about a year with 24 hour caregivers, that was just horrible, and I lost 30 pounds from the stress. He lives in a private, excellent care home in Southern Calif. I've found that there is one brother (he has three brothers) that can handle him visiting, has enough compassion and sense to be clear on problems, length of stay (3 days), etc. The rest of family and friends, no help. Amazingly, my husband Dwight is able to fly "home" with the staff taking him to the airport, and has been able to enjoy his first granddaughter (although he loses interest quickly). My two adult sons, who live at home, are a "little" help when my husband visits but it's all up to me, really. Dwight needs constant entertaining, a strict schedule that mimics the rehab schedule, and "gives" nothing. However I am lucky to have a settlement (work injury) that pays for the group care home. So very lucky!!! I was feeling sorry for myself tonight. I would never divorce him, I want to be his advocate...we have been married almost 40 years. But the last 10, he has been my child. I find that alanon has been a huge help, letting me release my resentment...my sons have had drug and alcohol problems, and my oldest son has been in prison repeatedly, but has become sober and married, a father, the last 2 years (he is 30). Sigh. Thanks for writing the article even though you were exhausted.

Sep 5th, 2011 2:25am

Gary, thank you for your frank and honest description of compassion fatigue, and the health consequences of caregiving. I wrote a similar letter to my my husband Alan's family several years into his journey with a severe brain injury that led to dementia and Parkinson's. My letter led to some heated arguments, a downgrading of my expectations of them, and an occasional respite break with family coverage. Caregivers need to go public with the health toll. I had several back injuries that led to spinal fusion surgery last year. I also had periods of compassion fatigue, especially for the psychiatric illness caused by Alan's brain injury- and I'm a psychiatric RN! I wish you a long rest,more support from family and new acquaintances, and a spontaneous expression of appreciation from your spouse. Janet Cromer "Professor Cromer Learns to Read: A Couple's New Life after Brain Injury

Aug 3rd, 2011 12:57pm

Wow! A fantastic letter...and I share a lot of what you are feeling...yesterday was the 4 year anniversary...my husband (Garry, with two rs, go figure!) is also high functioning...mostly frontal lobe damage...bursts of anger, I know those...they suck the soul right out of you sometimes! Stay strong and keep remembering YOU!! P :)

Jun 5th, 2011 3:45pm

Garry, your honest and heart wrenching plea to your family struck a cord with me! Your letter makes me weep every time I read it. It could have been written by me. I have had the identical lack of support, empathy or compassion from my own family/friends for the past 22 years! I have been a single mother through it all and my "adult" daughter's care giver, teacher, mentor, bookkeeper, memory, and the push and constant reminder - also with "no light at the end of the tunnel"! Similar to your wife Jessica - my daughter's TBI is invisible. She drives and even went back to college P/T to finish the courses she was taking when the initial accident happened. Afterwards she tried to work but the pain from breaking her Thorasic spine in 4 places and dislocating her shoulder in the same car accident, plus her cognitive problems, all prevented her from trying to work. Our problems did not stop there - 3 years ago she was rear ended by a large truck and 3 weeks later hit by a taxi. She now has cervical damage and chronic daily neck/shoulder and back pain all over again. She tries to live independently which puts more pressure my job as her care giver. It is an exhausting life-long job, as you pointed out, but the burden could be lessoned for us if the family members and/or friends would step up to plate and offer some help. I wish you luck in reaching out to your family. And I wish you well. Please take care of yourself. Thank you so much for taking the time to write this letter. God bless you.

May 11th, 2011 5:26pm

Amazed and overwhelmed just reading this. We have a son with a TBI and his fiance has taken the role of caring for what he needs as well as pushing him in his recovery. It seems he does less and cares less about recovery when he is with us. This is good information for the future. I pray that Jessica's family steps up and takes responsibility.

May 5th, 2011 8:54pm

I wept when I read this, I pray that her family will give you a break more often than you have asked! I pray that we would all love each other enough to lift each others burdens, so that those like you and your wife...could be refreshed and be able to enjoy simple things in life, so each day is filled with hope and not hopelessness! May christians reach out to you and others, to help love you and your wife by being Jesus hands,feet, words, heart and life! A TBI christain female...Terri

May 5th, 2011 3:41pm

Thank you for verbalizing so many of my thoughts. I have my husband to help me with my adult daughter who suffered a TBI 4 1/2 yrs. ago, but we are aging. It has taken a toll on our relationship. How difficult for you to go it all alone. God bless you, I will keep you in my prayers.

May 5th, 2011 3:05pm

God Bless You, Garry! You have said everything that I cannot say. In spades. Peace be with you. Teri

May 5th, 2011 2:25pm

God bless you Garry. Our son also has TBI...it's a struggle, that's for sure. He, too, looks normal enough, can drive, etc...but holding onto a job is another matter. We've fought Social Services for many many years. We pray that your situation improves and that Jessica's family puts a real effort to support the love that you have for her. Take care of yourself as well! Pam

May 5th, 2011 1:53pm

 

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