I fully intended to write a blog post last night, but something else happened … my partner and I fell asleep sometime around 7:00pm. What knocked both of us out?
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Category Archives: partners
To Hug and To Hold
My partner, bless him, wrote a guest post last week that made me cry. Happy tears, but nonetheless, heartfelt.
He’s my love, to hug and to hold, from this day forward, until death do us part.
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Your Light, Your Love
Guest post by BHD’s partner
This is the first time I have written a post for your blog. I wanted to say in a public forum what I can’t put to words — how much your caring for me during the last year when I have been so sick means to me.
I know that I am not the easiest person to be around even when I am healthy. I know my disease makes me even more difficult. I’m sick, it hurts. I am angry at how long I have been sick, despite all the treatments with antibiotics and supplements that the specialists recommend. I know that I have placed quite a burden on you and our relationship.
As bad as things are, I still see you smiling at me for no reason. You give me that goofy grin or tell me a silly joke or make a pun, just to try to get me to laugh. I so need that, even if I react quite the opposite.
I see you go to great lengths to make me happy. You prepare yeast-free and gluten-free foods for me that you call rabbit food and dislike even the smell of it while you are cooking it. But you do it for me. You have more than adjusted your personal life to center on me and my needs, forgoing all else, including riding your motorcycle as much as you ordinarily would.
Your faith is a tremendous beacon on which I draw hope, when otherwise I have despair. I have not known anyone, including my parish priest, who has such deep faith. I can’t describe it. It’s there. You show it in how you act and what you do — not only for me, but for your family and your senior friends. You’ve said that your faith carries you forward. To me, your faith gives you steadiness in times of tempest. I am truly blessed to be loved by a such a faithful and devoted man.
Beyond faith, you are extremely patient. I know that I have tested your patience, probably every day. You listen to a lot of bullshit from my disease, and let a lot roll off your big, strong shoulders. I don’t know if I could muster 1/10 of the patience that you have. I know you said that you learned patience when caring for your aunt during her decline, but you have more skill and finesse in being patient among anyone I have every seen.
I think it is both your faith and your patience that have cemented our relationship, weathering the tremendous hurricane-force storm we have gone through since last November.
I can’t put into words how deeply I love you. How much I admire your rock-solid, steadfast support, and how superbly you have organized everything for me. You continue to fight my health insurance company’s denials (you are 8 for 8, amazing), taking on that behemoth, uncaring and thoughtless company as if it is a great game to fight and to win. You do that so well by how you document everything for easy future reference and referral.
But most of all, you make it seem as if it’s nothing at all. I know the opposite is true. Your focus on me and my recovery is so much appreciated. I know you have said, “it’s what I do, in sickness and in health,” quoting the line from a common wedding vow. Regardless if we can get married, you live every day as if we are, and show it through your actions.
I LYAWM, always, forever. Thank you is not enough, but will have to do.
Memories and Tributes
Today, the date of September 11 (not “9/11”), marks a very dark date in the history of the United States, where cowardly terrorists caused pain, anguish, injuries, and deaths in 2001. I won’t let them win by describing what they did — we all know that. Instead, today, I will pay tribute to the countless thousands of responders, both in professional positions (fire, law enforcement, EMS) and those who jumped in voluntarily to alleviate suffering and help as best they could.
I spent six months after that dreadful day doing my part in providing relief, and that included much time in New York City. It’s one reason why I have no plans ever to return to NYC … too many painful memories which still haunt me today.
But there’s more to this day than memories of those attacks…
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How Implied Discrimination Hurts Medically
Taking a turn on this blog to something much more personal — from boots and such to issues of what it’s like to be gay, have a long-term infection, and have others make absolutely wrong assumptions about underlying causes of ongoing symptoms “just because he’s gay.”
Here is the gory story…
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When Your Partner Knows Your Inner Leatherman/Biker
My beloved partner, bless him, really knows me well. You’d figure, after more than 19 years, he would have an idea about what I dreamed about, biker – leatherwise. (If that’s a word…).
I went out the other day but came home earlier than my partner expected. I heard doors slamming and “oh shucks, don’t look!” I figured he was doing something to prepare for my upcoming birthday. So I stayed away, but was damn curious. Then he surprised me….
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Disease Divorce?
My partner and I recently attended a support group meeting for people who have (or have had) his illness. The purpose of the meeting is to share ideas and information about how the disease can be treated, and how its symptoms affect not only the person infected, but her or his spouse and family.
What I heard a lot about was divorce. Yeah, marriage dissolution.
The disease symptoms causes the person with them to behave with extreme emotion at random times with loud outbursts. He (or she) is on an emotional roller coaster, and the extremes are unpredictable. My partner and I have experienced that situation — a lot. We had no evidence, until now, to know that happened with almost everyone with this disease and how severely relationships are strained by emotional outbursts caused the disease’s neurological symptoms. I sure can attest, though, this disease “has a voice” and that voice gets very ugly sometimes.
It really bothered us to hear that more than half of the some 40 attendees at this meeting had divorced or were separated, pending divorce — all due to how the illness causes symptoms that mess with the head, and incite strong arguments, anger, and other problems. Will the relationship I share with my partner be a similar casualty?
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Partner Update
It has been a while since I have blogged about my partner’s long-term recovery from the consequences of contracting a disease from a tick bite. His illness has been extraordinarily challenging for him, and for me as his primary caregiver, best friend, confidant, and health care advocate.
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For Better or Worse, In Sickness and in Health
These are lines from standard wedding vows, and is something that couples say to one another during a marriage ceremony. But these words apply just as well, and in my opinion, most directly, to my partner and me regardless of our official marriage status.
My partner remains sick with a very persistent infection that treatments so far have yet to resolve. For better or worse, I’m there….
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You Have to Change Boots Again?
Bless my partner. I love him, I really do, but there are times — even after being together for over 19 years — that he doesn’t get it.
Yesterday morning, I had to drive him to get an x-ray. No big deal; the medical imaging center is a mile away. I chose to wear a nice pair of gray ostrich cowboy boots for that trip. But that was only my first pair of boots for the day…
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