Lately, I’ve been hot on writing the new book. It’s about
surviving the chaos when care giving an alcoholic. It could really be used for
any type of care giving situation, but I’m focusing on alcoholism. I want to
give you a glimpse inside the book in today’s blog post.
Between the covers you will find poems, cartoons, published
blog posts, explanations, exercises, forms, tips for maintaining sanity, and
lots of information. Discover who you really are and what you
would like to accomplish in your life. Learn to put your alcoholic care giving into a different section of your brain clearing your mind for things that help you to continue with a life of your own.
would like to accomplish in your life. Learn to put your alcoholic care giving into a different section of your brain clearing your mind for things that help you to continue with a life of your own.
This book is not an easy one to write. After all, I write
about my experiences. I write about how I feel and what has worked for me. Some
things in this are about what I may not have yet accomplished so far in this
journey. The truth is that surviving is a continual work in progress. You won’t
know if you survive until the alcoholic has passed on to another world. If the
alcoholic goes first, you survived. It’s really that simple or is it?
It turns out that it isn’t good enough just to outlive the
alcoholic. Sure, you survived, but did you survive as you or as the person the
alcoholic needed. Surviving as the alcoholic’s robot isn’t really surviving
because you aren’t being who you really are as a person. You may survive, but
you are not thriving.
The whole point of my new book is to get people to be able
to not just survive, but to thrive and flourish in spite of being a care giver
to an alcoholic. Thriving is being open to happiness and a full productive life
even in unfortunate circumstances. Flourishing is being continually being
successful in discovering yourself.
Writing the book is therapeutic for me in my attempt to
regain my own identity. It seems that I no longer know who I am other than
Riley’s caregiver. I know the basics, i.e. a person of strong work ethic who
can be a bit quirky, stubborn and persistent.
For a while I felt I had even lost my gender identity. I was a person
but didn’t feel much like a woman. I was a human robot. I started working on
saving the woman inside me and in the process started acting like ME again. The
book helps me to document my journey and pass on things I’ve learned to help
others find a way to love themselves again.
I’m sure that while reading the book you will say something
like “Everyone knows that…” and that may be true. But sometimes we forget the
obvious or we need a new viewpoint on issues. Reviewing is healthy. Sometimes
we discover, or rediscover, while we are reviewing.
We are facing another new year ahead and hopefully the start
of the year will be a start to regaining happiness and peace. I have planned
lots of exciting endeavors for 2017. I don’t plan on cancelling any of them
simply because I am an alcoholic’s caregiver. I may alter or re-arrange, but
not cancel. My life has become that important to me – as it always should have
been.
No comments:
Post a Comment