Mr. Lancaster, While I don't often post about it, I've been following your story since before the stroke. Cheering you on in your battle against Sylvia Browne (I really, really dislike that that woman) and wishing I still prayed after your stroke.
Your posts are a way of keeping in touch without adding the strain of stranger's well-meaning but exhausting contact. I look forward to them, they let me know how you are progressing. Please don't worry about being a bit maudlin sometimes, getting knocked down makes everyone introspective.
Take of yourself, you've got a lot of people rooting for you, even if we're not always vocal about it.
Robert,
It really is good to let it out and deal with it. You are someone I admire and I think you have the strength and support group to get you closer to life you would like to restart.
My mother had a stroke when I was 13 (she was 40), and I really was a case of my mother going into a coma and someone else coming home. May be it was me being at a rather awkward development stage, but I did in some ways resent that the woman that raised me was no longer there. I would avoid hospital visits and was rather ashame to have her in a wheelchair at the school musical that was my first starring role. Eventually, I matured and realized that save for mood swings, occasional fits of berating herself, and the inability to hit me, she was still my mother, and really the same person.
Sure, thanks! I would really like to work on it...I'm sure your children will come around, and I think you will continue to surprise everyone (yourself included) as you keep bouncing back. I can recommend a good singing teacher out there if ya like...![]()
Your post made me think about all the ways that I am not the person I used to be, or I hoped I would become. We all fall short. You have had a debilitating health issue, some of us have had other life-changing events, but as long as we support each other through the difficult times we can hope that whatever expectations we didn't live up to, we will be able to create new expectations that we strive to meet.
Well, I didn't start this with the intention of being fascinating, but it seems that I struck a chord - speaking of which, I forgot to mentionThis has been a very interesting thread. The idea that "who I am" changes all the time--even for those of us who haven't had a major stroke--is fascinating.
I'm definitely not the same person I was some years ago. Some of the ways I've changed are by intention, but probably most, not so. And some of those ways aren't thinks I like (and fall within my power to do something about it). Yet, for the most part, I schlep along under the illusion that I am the same person I once was.
Again, Robert, I admire you for tackling this stuff head on and using your tried and true skeptical reasoning. (I find as often as not, I use my "best" reasoning to avoid confronting issues like this--the honest assessment of who I am.)
As others have said, you're an inspiration.
I'm not sure how much this will help but the great film critic Roger Ebert had complications from cancer that left him in a coma, required multiple surgeries, left him unable to walk for months and required a tracheotomy that left him unable to speak without a voicebox to this day. He also needed to have part of his jaw removed and then required plastic surgery to rebuild it somewhat.
Another effect of his stroke was that he became extremely pained when having to read about or see anything to do with being in rehab, being in a hospital, undergoing medical treatment or anything else to do with severe illness. (He wrote an entire blog about having to turn off the film Wit after a few minutes.)
For what it's worth, no matter what, you are still my hero. You might not have your body but you have your mind and that's all you need. As Ebert said, we make the vast majority of our contributions to each other through the power of our minds.
You are still kind, funny, smart and sharp.
Robert, it was an absolute delight meeting you and Susan in LA, and I hope to have the opportunity to do so again some time. I echo everything everyone else has had to say (except for that one), but all I can say is hang in there. You have a wonderful wife who loves you, and lots of people all over the world who are very concerned for your health and happiness. Not a lot of people can say that.
...snip... But, between her and the aforementioed daughter, I am really starting to question my self-image of having been a good husband and father back then.
...snip... But, between her and the aforementioed daughter, I am really starting to question my self-image of having been a good husband and father back then.
Hello again, all. For whatever reasons, I am back into a very introspective mode now. I have been thinking a LOT about my daughter (the one who has neither seen nor contacted me since the stroke) and my ex-wife, who, unacountably to me, hasn't seen or contacted me either. I don't know if I mentioed this in the OP, but, not long after the stroke, she came to the hospital where I was, and visited with our children and my siblings, but did not even stick her head into my room to say "hello." I've never understood why she refuses to even be friends noow. She divorced me largely for financial reasons. there was no affair, no abuse... so, why she refuses to be friends is a mystery to me. But, between her and the aforementioed daughter, I am really starting to question my self-image of having been a good husband and father back then.
I will if/when I see them in person. My emails to both are seldom answered. for all I know, they are summarily deleted.Their actions probably reflect more on them than on you. If it bothers you though you might ask them about it, and get their perspective. It may not be what you expect at all.
Speaking just for myself, whenever someone close to me has had a serious or terminal illness, or died, I've tried to completely ignore them.