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Hoping for Hope
By Linda Albert

Editor's
note: Linda
Lee Albert
is a
corporate trainer and a personal communication and life
coach with a Master Certification in Neuro-Linguistics. An
author and poet, Linda’s work has appeared in many journals
and magazines, including McCalls Magazine and The
Wall Street Journal. Among her awards are the Olivet and
Dyer-Ives Foundation Poetry Prizes. Linda resides in
Longboat Key, Florida with her husband, Jim. Visit the
author’s website at
www.lindaalbert.net.
© Reprinted
with permission from
Springboard
Promotions.
My
husband,
Jim,
had no intention of retiring. He was never a man who longed
to replace his office for the golf course — who pictured
himself leaving his native Michigan for warmer climates. He
was a man who considered it a worthy challenge to maneuver
his car without mishap in the kind of lake-effect snow and
ice for which we were famous, and who never looked out the
window during our very long winters and fretted over the
gloom and absence of sun for which we were also well known.
For the first seven years after his
diagnosis of Parkinson's disease at the age of 58, Jim
barely turned a hair. He had climbed to a successful enough
place in life to satisfy himself; found a comfortable
plateau in his profession managing a small stable of real
estate holdings he had developed, and was content to stay
there for the rest of his life. Then one day, things
changed. He felt stiff and lethargic in a way he had not
previously experienced. His optimism was suddenly no longer
in evidence. His belief in his ability to make good
decisions disappeared. Trips to his neurologist did nothing
to reassure him, even though the doctor was convinced there
was no particular change for the worse in the progression of
his disease. We were bewildered, and Jim was beginning to be
frightened.
Fortunately, our son-in-law, Andy, a
clinical social worker, took it upon himself to do a search
for us on the Internet. According to what he found, 50 % of
Parkinson's patients will be fated to undergo a clinical
depression at some point in the course of their illness,
with the symptoms imitating the Parkinson's symptoms
themselves, so that a diagnosis is very difficult to
ascertain. No fault or failing on the part of the person
suffering through this is to blame, we discovered — not even
the pain and disappointment of having to deal with a
progressive physical disease — but rather, the compromised
brain chemistry itself was both the primary cause and the
potential remedy.
Neither my husband's internist nor
neurologist had alerted us to this possibility, but once
armed with information we were ultimately able to find a
neuropsychiatrist who aided us in understanding what my
husband was going through, and who reassured us that Jim
could be helped. The doctor prescribed Wellbutrin, an
antidepressant, to give my husband what he called "a floor"
on which to stand emotionally and encouraged him to get
back into living his life as fully as possible.
But there were challenges ahead. Jim had
retired abruptly from his work, leaving me to handle our
personal affairs in order to save him from stress, and
leaving his
long-time trusted assistant to carry on in his behalf until
we could figure out how to sell our investments and close
down the business. He no longer went to the office and with
no retirement plans in place, life appeared to be over as
far as he was concerned. He spent long days sitting around
the house in his bathrobe. I would try to perk him up by
encouraging him to think of what still lay ahead for us —
some of our children yet to marry — weddings to plan or
attend — grandchildren to look forward to — new places to
explore. But this only appeared to make him feel worse. He
felt hopeless and was ashamed of his inability to improve
his spirits.
Then I learned from a nun who was
teaching a course for Spiritual Directors which I was taking
at the time that, in Catholic tradition, hope is not
considered something you can force into being through your
own will power, but rather is a gift from God that comes
through Grace. I was stunned to hear this.
Having grown up with the notion that
"God helps those who help themselves," I was a strong
believer in action, in the idea that we have to pull
ourselves up by our own bootstraps in order for anything
worthwhile to happen. But things were not good at home and I
was willing, as I usually am, to consider any idea that
might be helpful. Sometimes the best gifts come when our
backs are against the wall or from worlds different than
our own.
If it was true that we humans cannot
actually will hope, then my efforts to persuade Jim
to feel more hopeful were clearly failing for good reason.
Not only that, they were undoubtedly exacerbating the
pressure he was under to find his way when the path he
planned to be on had clearly closed down on him. I returned
home, told him about what I had learned that day in class,
and apologized.
If hope could only come as a gift, then
there was nothing my husband could do to be hopeful when
hope had disappeared. There was no point wasting energy
beating himself up about his lack of success in trying to do
the impossible. It was hard enough to be without hope. What
he could do instead, we reasoned, what was still within his
power, was to begin to hope for hope. It was a gentle
recognition and a feasible one.
It was something, in fact, the two of us
could do together. That was the beginning of a turning point
in our lives: the start of a remarkable journey that has led
us to Florida — a place we never expected to be — to a
beautiful condominium overlooking a beautiful bay, to warmth
and sunlight, and improved health and energy for my husband.
These past 10 years have brought all kinds of amazing
synchronicities and new possibilities our way, and the
sweetest 10 years of our almost 50-year marriage.
What challenges the future will bring,
we do not know. Nor can we control that future, much as we
might like to. But it is a gift to know that good things can
often come out of bad, that surprises and adventures of the
best sort may be around a dark and frightening corner, and
that even when things seem hopeless, we can always hope for
hope.
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