7. 🌸 Sharon
I enjoy all the beauties and the good in life: a bouquet of flowers, rainbows, the delicacy of porcelain china, the touch of snuggly fabrics, the scent of nature, the list could go on and on.
Samuel and I married early, we bought our first apartment with limited budget, I still tried hard to make the most of it to fit my “perfection”.
The small balcony was filled with plants and flowers. It was my secret garden, I can sip my cup of coffee and watch my greens all morning.
Not just the balcony; my kitchen was equipped with aesthetic and functional silverware and pots; I knocked down the tiles provided by the construction company, just to choose my own tiles, not to mention what I went through to find the right fabric and color for those hand towels.
Thus, I can not accept the fact that I was going to spend the rest of my life in a wheel-chair.
There was no more perfection.
The first year was the darkest time in my life. It felt like decades. No matter how hard I tried to squirm out of the whirlpool of darkness, the more I struggled, the more I was sucked into it. I was drowning.
There’s so much than what you see “a person in a wheelchair” who’s paralyzed. You don’t have bladder control, you suffer dysautonomia which simply means you have pains and cramps sending to your system by your damaged nerves. There are also issues like obesity, osteoporosis, and kidney, heart and lungs problems.
My stubborn tumor cuts me from T8-9, meaning from about 3 cm above my belly button until my waist down, I don’t feel a thing, and I can’t budge a toe. All of a sudden, from 167 cm tall, I became 125cm. With that height, I can’t see the faces of people, I can’t smell the fresh air, and no more scenic views for me.
Due to the PTSD, I started to lose weight, but with no balance and muscle to straighten my back, my tummy always stuck out. I looked like a shrimp that has a 6 months belly in a wheel chair. I had to throw out all my tight and pretty clothes in change of clothes that could cover up the bulging tummy, and easy to put on pants with elastic waists. My beloved shoes had to go too, my feet are easily swollen, I need bigger shoes.
My choice of clothing and trend was banished.
The nerve pains follow me EVERY SINGLE DAY, 24-7. The medications can only do so much. Isn’t it an irony? I can’t feel my son’s hands touching my legs. Or someone just come and pinch me, let me get some real pain here. Nope, they are all gone. Dealing with the pains of my body takes up most of my energy everyday.
I had to record everything that I take in and out too. I had to decide to rely on adult diapers or to use catheter. My pride and frustration was about to explode. It took one year with the help of my doctor to understand my body and find the way that I was most comfortable with.
My legs are paralyzed, and my weight kept on dropping. Physically and mentally I was a mess.
I could never get to my balcony anymore; my pretty tiles had handles on them; my velvet dresser chair became an obstacle for my wheel chair, so it had to go.
My porcelain tea cups were too high for me to reach. I can no more decorate my table exactly the way I want to.
These were nothing compared to how I had to pretend everything was alright with in front of Andrew. He was two, and he was just ecstatic mommy wasn’t leaving him every two to three months. I played and laughed with him everyday, until he sleeps.
But it was a pretty pass.
I have witnessed him tumbling down the stairs in a friend’s house. I was right there! There was nothing I could do except to bite my lips from screaming out loud. Hundreds of things that could have happened to him, and my SOPs zoomed through my mind in the flick of seconds. Samuel ran over to pick up our frightened baby, Andrew held out his arms to me. I held him tight, checked him from head to toe. I thank the Almighty that he was not hurt.
Sometimes, I sat on my recliner instead of the wheel chair. Andrew wanted me to follow him to his room and play. I took a piece of my heart and threw it to him, he catches it, pats his own heart. “Mommy is following you now.” My two-year-old walks always without any complaints.
I tried to be the super-mom that I wanted to be, I took Andrew downstairs to play by myself. When I tried to catch a balloon that flew away, I fell head over heals. Andrew was in so much fright that he refused to go anyway alone with me for the longest time.
I suck everything up in the morning, my tears, my frustration, my sorrows. Once Andrew falls asleep, the waterworks ran like tap water, it wouldn’t stop. No one can comfort me, no one could help me, not even Samuel. We have been fighting this battle for years side by side, we were not ready to face the defeat.
I wasn’t ready to talk to anyone about this. I can’t lose my sanity in front of Andrew. He deserves a better mommy and a lot more happiness.
My blue print for being a Mother was to be there for my kid: race in the park, lie on the grass and gaze at the sky, teach him how to swim. When it’s time for school, I want to be friends of his friends, I am going to run for the coolest mom in the whole class.
But now, life isn’t pretty any more.
All good that’s left, was Andrew.
tap up meaning 在 美國在台協會 AIT Facebook 的最讚貼文
9月15日至10月15日是「拉美裔傳統月」!本月份我們慶祝拉美裔美國人的文化及貢獻。今天我們邀請到AIT@40活動策劃人Crystal,跟我們分享身為墨西哥裔美國人的傳統和價值觀:
「我的祖先來自墨西哥,但我和表姊妹都於1986年出生於美國德州;我們從小在牧場上長大,身邊圍繞者祖父母和家人的愛與支持。我們的父母非常重視墨西哥的價值觀和文化,因此讓我們從小學習芭蕾舞、踢踏舞、爵士樂和各種才藝課,並鼓勵我們在拉美裔傳統月時,在德州南部的嘉年華、公立學校和養老院表演「墨西哥民俗芭蕾舞」,這種舞蹈是傳統墨西哥舞的統稱,透過芭蕾舞的特色(尖頭鞋、誇大的舞步及精準的舞碼)來呈現墨西哥民族文化。
我的父母在舞蹈和人生中灌輸了我們很好的理念:「達成我們設下的目標、永不放棄堅定的基督教信仰,並尊重年長者及地球。」
他們也教導我們要對人和善、擁抱失敗並重新站起來,並追求能帶來成功及快樂的教育。
由於我的家庭和文化的影響,我目前在美國在台協會工作,而我的表姊妹則是當老師和護士。三個姊妹加起來共有9個小孩,我們會將同樣的傳統傳承給下一代。」#NationalHispanicHeritageMonth
September 15 to October 15 is National Hispanic Heritage Month, which celebrates the contributions and culture of Americans of Hispanic heritage. As part of our continuing series, AIT’s own Crystal offers her perspective on how growing up with strong Mexican-American heritage and values led her to become AIT’s @40 Campaign Coordinator.
Though our roots trace back to Mexico, my all-American cousins and I were born in Texas in the summer of 1986. Because of our parent’s’ strong Mexican values and culture, my cousins and I grew up on a ranch with the loving support of family, including my Abuela and Abuelo (Grandma & Grandpa). In addition to ballet, tap, jazz and other extracurriculars, my cousins and I grew up celebrating ‘Hispanic Heritage Month’ by performing ”Baile Folklórico” at festivals, public schools and nursing homes throughout South Texas. “Baile folklórico”, (literally meaning "folkloric dance”) is a collective term for traditional Mexican dances that emphasize local folk culture through ballet characteristics - pointed toes, exaggerated movements, and precise choreography.
Both through dance and in life my parents instilled in me their ideals: to achieve whatever goal I set, to never let go of my strong Christian faith, and to respect the elderly and our planet.
My parents and grandparents showed me that kindness always matters and to embrace failure when encountering it before getting right back up again. One of their most significant and on-going life lessons was to pursue an education that would not only bring me success, but most importantly, happiness.
Because of the influence of my family and culture, I now work for the American Institute in Taiwan, while one of my cousins works as a teacher and the other as a nurse. With nine children among the three of us, we will pass on the same traditions that have guided our families to the next generation and beyond.”