Mindfulness: When It Isn't All Up to You

Mindfulness is the aware, balanced acceptance of the present experience.
It isn't more complicated than that.
It is opening to or receiving the present moment, pleasant or unpleasant, just as it is,
without either clinging to it or rejecting it.

-Sylvia Boorstein

If one lives long enough, it becomes clear that there are no guarantees in life. There are moments, days and weeks when the lack of control feels overwhelming. This seems particularly true when a loved one is struggling with a chronic illness. I have a mother and a sister struggling with autoimmune diseases. My mother has fought this battle since my earliest memories. I lost a brother to suicide. Every family walks with joy and pain, wonderful bounties and excruciating losses. I often need to remind myself that facing these issues is as emotionally painful for me as anyone else around the world, yet my burden is lessened simply because of the luck of the draw. We are an upper middle class family born in a country with many, many resources. Things could be so much more difficult if we were living in poverty, didn’t have family and friends’ support, couldn’t read or write or speak the community language.

My daughter lives with bipolar disorder.

Sometimes she “has” bipolar disorder and sometimes she “struggles with” bipolar disorder and, yes, sometimes she “suffers” from bipolar disorder.

Yet it is still a painful struggle, not only for a person facing a chronic illness every single day, but for those who love him or her. My daughter lives with bipolar disorder. Sometimes she “has” bipolar disorder and sometimes she “struggles with” bipolar disorder and, yes, sometimes she “suffers” from bipolar disorder. I, too, have various relationships with her illness. When things are going well I am particularly aware of our incredible blessings or luck or whatever you want to call it. Yet when my mother falls or my sister struggles with new symptoms I find it difficult to count my blessings while fighting the worries that well up from my heart. When my daughter’s illness takes her into bumps or dips or even on roller-coaster rides I struggle against fear, anger and grief. Yet, I have no control. There is so much that I can do but also so much that I cannot. I cannot fix it or make it go away. I have tried negotiating with my Higher Being when my daughter was the sickest: “Give it to me. Let me have it. My daughter is young and just beginning her life. I can handle it.” But the answer is always, “No, sorry, not possible.”

Finally and ultimately I have no choice but to simply accept it. As a colleague once said about his relationship with his very ill son, “Sometimes all I can do is sit by the swamp with him and just be.” Just be. A concept so very difficult but something that I try to practice every single day. A concept exceedingly tested by the experiences of living with a chronic illness. I also remind myself that there are many positive and wonderful things that have come from this journey. Sometimes these are difficult to remember but so true: honesty, love, deeper friendships and relationship, commitment, strength, humility and patience. There is wonder at the strength of the human spirit of my daughter, my mother and my sister to move forward when faced again and again with incredible pain and worry beyond my own experiences. We are in this together. I will continue to work towards acceptance and embrace the simple joy found in the love of my family. I wish you the same.

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Wow, this could have not come at a better time. This is me, my life, my child and my family.
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Thank You,
Tammy
Mother of Jacob who is 8yrs old
Diagnosed with Pediatric Bipolar 1 Mixed / ADD / Undiagnosed Psychosis
Antipsychotic – Abilify 15mg
Antihypertensive – Intuniv 3mg
Mood Stabilizer – Tegratol XR 400m 2x a day
Lithium 300mg 2x a day (New add 3-15-2011)

Correct when you must, and please accommodate—or tolerate—when you can.

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Thank you for sharing so openly and positively!
-Chrissie

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Thank you, Tammy and Chrissie, for you kind comments. Sometimes it is a day at a time and sometimes it is a minute at a time. But have you noticed that when things are going well you really, really appreciate it? I don't take much for granted anymore. Is that the "lesson" in all of this? Love to you and your families! Cinda

Cinda Johnson

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This post touches me so deeply on so many levels. Tears in my eyes after reading. I have worked in the medical field, watched people lose loved ones, heard so many cry out why, and what could i have done. I watch my 6 yr old struggle with emotions he is to young to even name, let alone handle. I watch friends take their kids to check ups for seizures and cat scans, hold their hands as they are yet again poked and stuck and prodded. I feel so cursed at times, why must all this come to me and mine, Can't we get a break?? But then I feel so blessed. Blessed to be there for those i love. Blessed to have strength enough to hold them up when their strength is gone. Blessed to have stood beside so many as they lose some battles, and win others. Blessed to have the baility to be the rock for so many i hold so close to my heart. I to have come to the realization that at times, all you can do is be. Be there, be open, be kind, be gentle, be loving, be you. Just be. Thank you for sharing. I wish peace and blessings to you and yours.

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~Busy Mama~