Los Angeles Times

Caregiver is losing hope

- Send questions for Amy Dickinson to askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: My husband and I were happily married for 18 years when he was diagnosed with brain cancer. It has been five years since the cancer, and I feel I’m married to a different person.

He is now often odd, quirky, weird and annoying. Our whole life revolves around him and his cancer. I feel guilty that I have these negative feelings toward him because I know it’s not his fault, but it can be overwhelmi­ng.

I try so hard to be the loving caregiver, but I’m mourning the man he was.

I’m only 48 years old and I feel like the best years of my life are over. Then I feel selfish. I get to go to work and live a normal life outside the home, and he is home on full disability.

Sometimes I just want my old life back. I have many supportive friends, go to counseling, go to yoga and meditation, make art, and write in my journal.

What more can I do to relieve myself from feeling anxious and overwhelme­d?

Is it time for medication? I’m running out of hope and strategies.

Hopeless

Dear Hopeless: Ask your counselor and physician about medication. Medication could help you to cope with your anxiety and depression.

Some of the techniques you are using for stress relief might help your husband, too. Meditation and creative outlets like writing, music, painting or gardening could make a difference in his life.

But your question isn’t about him. The most powerful stress reliever will be the knowledge that you are not alone. Friends will allow you to express yourself and will not call you out for complainin­g. Vent, fume or rail at the world, but remind yourself to soften those brittle edges by treating yourself with loving kindness.

A cancer caregivers’ support group could be a gamechange­r for you. I appreciate the work of Cancer-support community.org, which includes Gilda’s Clubs around the country. Founded in memory of the late, great comedian Gilda Radner, these clubs offer support for people living with cancer.

Dear Amy: I am in my late 50s. My sisters have manipulate­d and bullied me my entire life. Our parents died, and I lived the closest to them. Neither sister lifted a finger to help empty out their house after they died.

Instead, they visited and stayed in the house, but left it a mess and told me to clean it up.

I am the only one with a job, but I had to take care of everything. The funerals were tense and very uncomforta­ble for me. The only time the younger one calls is to check on her inheritanc­e. I have not spoken to the older one in years.

What bothers me most is that my nephew didn’t invite me or my daughter to his wedding. I am sure this was because of my sister. I am trying to move on but can’t seem to forgive them. Suggestion­s?

No Family

Dear No Family: Moving on implies an acceptance of the reality in your family. I suggest you move on now, and work on forgivenes­s later.

The fact that you haven’t been included in a family wedding shows how insidious bullying can be, and how it can pass down through generation­s. Understand that because you and your sister haven’t had contact for many years, her son might not really know you.

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