Tag: Stroke

In Sickness And In Health

Jacob: David Good morning

David Bondze-Mbir (DBM): Good morning. How are you doing?

Jacob: Am fine. You?

DBM: I am doing alright, thanks.

Jacob: My wife is suffering from the aftermath of a stroke. The doctors assured me that she was going to be bedridden temporarily but it’s been over three years with limited mobility. She’s lost her independence to carry out any form of activity and it’s stressing me out each and every day. I feel so depressed and I feel like it’s depressing her in the process. Her demeanor on the daily has anger written all over it. And she’s unwilling to articulate what is bothering her. I don’t know how to help her.

DBM: Have you ever found your health in a state where your ability to simply care for yourself declines?

Jacob: I don’t think so.

DBM: Your wife is helpless with her new reality. That is the rage of emotions you’re probably witnessing.

Jacob: I understand and I don’t know what else to do

DBM: How old are you?

Jacob: 43

DBM: How old is she?

Jacob: 40

DBM: How long have you been married?

Jacob: 12 years

DBM: What is the story behind her current state?

Jacob: We were struggling to get pregnant after years of trying. Though we both had busy lifestyles and unbearable work commitments, we still made time to get together to actually have a lot of sex, which was fun. She got pregnant in January 2022. She started to bleed profusely after giving birth, and her blood pressure elevated for no reason. The next thing we realized, she was having difficulty speaking. Her face drooped and that was the beginning of her problems.

DBM: How is the baby?

Jacob: He is doing well. Thank you for asking

DBM: Has your wife held her baby yet?

Jacob: No. Her arms are still weak but she’s seeing him grow every day.

DBM: Let me guess, you’ve not had sex with wifey since then?

Jacob: I’ve had to push down the thought of having sex with her on the list of my priorities. It’s not easy, Dave. I don’t cheat. I have never cheated on my wife with another person. So, you can understand why this a bit hard for me. Three years is no joke

DBM: I can only imagine

Jacob: When I found out we were finally going to have a child, I couldn’t wait for that opportunity to raise my baby boy. Dave, it takes enormous responsibility to be an exemplary male figure in a child’s life. I want our little Jason to be what he sees his father do for his mother. My son has to see honor and integrity in me when he sees me. I want him to understand that my relationship with his mother is the most important relationship in my life and I do not intend to treat it casually. I am glad he’s seeing my commitment to his mother not as optional.

DBM: You sound like a decent man.

Jacob: I don’t want to be a liar, Dave. No one cheats without becoming deceitful on some level. Cheating and lying go hand in hand. If I tell my wife I’m working late at the office on any given day, I make sure it isn’t a half truth that I would later have to redefine the ‘working’ so I can silence a compromised conscience. Marriage is no laughing matter, especially, now, for me. This version of ‘in sickness and in health’ is quite trying for me right now.

DBM: You need to hold on someway, somehow, and trust the process. As sure as everything in life somehow, changes, so does marriage. Try not to give up on her

Jacob: I’m really trying. Ugh, Dave, you’re making me teary. It’s not easy at all.

DBM: Take things one day at a time, and continue to do the very best you can to do right by yourself, do right by your wife; do right by little Jason, and most importantly, by GOD. He comes through for those open to do their best to practice acceptance, patience and empathy in times like these.

Jacob: I hope so

DBM: Everything is going to be alright. Learn to live through this difficult phase in your marriage and take control of the narrative. Don’t let your wife’s sudden inability and transition to take control over your emotions and actions.

Jacob: Thank you

DBM: Do you mind if I pray for you?

Jacob: Please pray for me

DBM: I pray the Lord to give you enough grace, so much patience and endurance to be a loving support to your wife through this difficult time. I pray the Lord to wrap your home in His ever-protective presence, and remind you each and every day of His boundless and unfailing love. May the Lord comfort you in your pain, may He ease your wife’s suffering and give her enough strength to endure this severe illness. I pray the Lord to restore her body, cell by cell, and let His river of peace attend to her troubled mind. May the Lord hold you and Jason so close to Himself. By faith in the name of Jesus, you and your wife are made strong. I pray the Lord Jesus to heal your wife – for little Jason’s sake. I pray the Lord to heal your wife – for your own sake. I pray the Lord to heal your wife – for His name’s sake, because He loves us and desires to answer our prayers if only, we will come unto Him and ask. This we ask in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, who will receive all the glory when she is healed. We seek to praise You, O Lord, in that healing. Amen!

Jacob: Amen.

Image Credit: Danily UK

Let’s Talk To Hilda

David Bondze-Mbir (DBM): Thank you for participating. What name would you want to go by? (It can be your real first name or any other name of your choosing)

Participant 161: Hilda

DBM: Hello Hilda. How would you describe yourself?

Hilda: Daddy’s adorable princess

DBM: How happy are you on a scale of 1 to 10?

Hilda: Five

DBM: What do you want to talk about?

Hilda: My father’s blood has been clotting for the past months, and he’s also suffering from stroke. He cannot move his right hand and leg; he cannot eat or swallow food. Even his speech is affected. He cannot see properly; he doesn’t seem to also remember a number of things. He is only 66 years old. My mother is refusing to take care of him. They had a rough patch in their marriage and my mother is using their past to punish him.

DBM: Are they still married?

Hilda: Legally, yes.

DBM: Is there a ‘no’ in the other forms of ‘lly’s’?

Hilda: Traditionally, my mother’s family returned my father’s drinks to annul their marriage

DBM: So, they’re divorced?

Hilda: The court hasn’t pronounced them divorced yet. Neither of them was willing to proceed in court.

DBM: Describe the severity of their ‘rough patch’

Hilda: My father was involved in some affairs, and he packed out of his matrimonial home to move in with one of his women. They were together for 12 years

DBM: ‘Were together?’

Hilda: She was cheating on him too

DBM: ‘On him too’, meaning what?

Hilda: My dad was cheating on her with another woman.

DBM: Let me get this right, your father cheated on your mother with this woman he moved in with for 12 years, and was cheating on her too with another?

Hilda: Yes

DBM: A lot of married women get bored in their bedrooms. Especially those in great marriages, who had known more than one man intimately – prior to marriage. They equally do miss the rush and the thought of being excited in an intense emotional and sexual connection with an attractive man. Most men think they’re the only species moved by what they see. Many women will go after what attracts them too. The only motivation needed is the right challenge to be thrown. A woman’s libido is as alive and kicking, and very enthusiastic about feeling satisfied as much as that of men.

Hilda: My dad messed up, we all know that

DBM: But does he know he messed up?

Hilda: He does now

DBM: You mean to say, it had to take his paralysis and sensory impairment to bring him to his knees, no?

Hilda: Hmmm!

DBM: What happened after your father found out he wasn’t the only smart douchebag in the equation?

Hilda: He sacked her from his house

DBM: They had kids?

Hilda: Yes. I have three half-siblings

DBM: Where are they?

Hilda: They’re with their mother

DBM: How many siblings do you have from your mother’s side?

Hilda: One. A brother

DBM: Where is he?

Hilda: He lives in Tema, with his family

DBM: Are you married?

Hilda: Yes, with children

DBM: I have a clearer background now. What do you want from your mother again?

Hilda: My brother and I have decided it’s the right thing to do for my mother to take care of my father

DBM: Because of what?

Hilda: Legally, he’s still her husband

DBM: In what world? Your father spent 12 years with another woman, and even procreated with her. Didn’t your mother also move on with her life?

Hilda: She’s always believed she was still married to him

DBM: So, she didn’t date or get married?

Hilda: She remained single

DBM: Do you know why she chose not to move on?

Hilda: Yes. He was her true love. She also believed he would eventually come back to her

DBM: With his inability to localize his body parts? Anyways, why aren’t you welcoming your own father under your roof?

Hilda: It’s a huge responsibility. I already have a lot on my plate

DBM: Like?

Hilda: A husband, my children and work. It’s a lot to ask for

DBM: And you think your mother wouldn’t feel overwhelmed, taking care of him?

Hilda: She can do it

DBM: How do you know?

Hilda: I know my mother

DBM: Would you take your husband back to nurse him, if he had treated you the same way your father did your mother?

Hilda: I don’t know, maybe.

DBM: Or maybe not. You know why? Because any man worthy of your love will be unstinting with R-E-S-P-E-C-T. And no woman should be spelling this out to a man.

Hilda: As Christians, I do not think my mother should pay back evil with evil

DBM: If your mother’s peace of mind distracts you from seeing the GOD in her, then you were never good a daughter to her.

Hilda: What makes you think that?

DBM: Because you want to shove your father down her throat

Hilda: My father needs the people he loves around him in these critical moments

DBM: That’s why you and your brother are there, no?

Hilda: We cannot take up this responsibility

DBM: Send him to any one of his other women

Hilda: I’m not sure they would take him in his present state

DBM: Hire a caregiver then. You and your brother can afford such service, no?

Hilda: We can, but our mother would do a better job at loving and caring for him

DBM: Is your mother deserving of something good?

Hilda: Yes

DBM: Then find another alternative to figure help for your father. He is not a pleasant presence to uphold in your mother’s sight.

Hilda: How about forgiveness?

DBM: Forgiveness doesn’t mean you should deny the hurt. It doesn’t mean your father should be let off the hook. You are conveniently explaining away your mother’s hurt, and I find that rather unfortunate and disrespectful. Your mother has the right to want to choose your father in his very vulnerable state. It’s her choice

Hilda: I know

DBM:   It’s your turn to leave a question behind for the next participant

Hilda: Do you prefer a thoughtful balance of invigorating honesty, or a lenient little white lie would suffice?

DBM: Okay! Thank you!

Image Credit: Charlotte May

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