Sometimes the tiredness over rules EVERYTHING and a seemingly normal conversation can rapidly turn the narcoleptic into the world's most argumentative, angry person.
As a wife and human being, that is the side of narcolepsy I have had the greatest problem understanding. It rarely escalates to that point and when it does it's generally because I'm beyond tired myself. A throw away comment from either of us at moments like that can rapidly become a lit fuse. The rational me is able to shrug off the barbed comments. The tired me takes the bait. The tired me wants to sleep. The tired me resents that an argument has been started and the hubby can just fall asleep while the pointless, childish argument has robbed me of that opportunity. That's when I HATE narcolepsy with a vengeance.
Last time was different though. I'm far from a needy, whiny person but occassionally, just like everyone else, all I need is a pair of strong arms around me especially when I'm thrown into a gross situation. With my extended family that seems to be just around the time when we have finally put the previous imposed drama behind us. We argued, I felt crap, he fell asleep, I stayed awake worrying. My eldest son was missing, considered to be a vulnerable person, a risk to himself. I reminded myself that sleep is the Mistress above all, that after a nap he would remember that he loved me enough to see he had acted unreasonably.
After his nap I tried to explain how his narky narcoleptic side had made me feel, how I had to remind myself it was the narcolepsy and that I understood the narcolepsy made him behave in ways that the husband I loved never would. His reply devastated me. I didn't understand anything about this wretched disorder, that the narky narcoleptic and him were impossible to seperate into the two pigeon holes held within my mind. I did what I do best and withdrew into myself, pulled my big girl pants on and worked through the whole missing son/pointless argument/hurtful statements on my own, in my own way, music and internet research.
Keeping my 'normal' narcoleptic husband seperate from the black narcoleptic was always my safety net. His lack of empathy, along with his insistence that the two sides were inseperable, along with my own stress, anger and tiredness were all making me question my sanity. I began searching for support groups created by people like me, then turned to narcolepsy forums, then to blogs written by narcoleptics. I eventually stumbled across the Narcoleptic Wife's blog. Finally, after 12 years, I was reading it from the other side, my side, the partners side. This was the first entry I read.
I resisted voicing the big, fat HA! I felt as I read it. But I suddenly realised I'm not alone. I felt a new invigoration reading her blog entries. I carried on reading and eventually came across these interviews from narcoleptics. And suddenly, I saw things completely differently. The last 30 months have been pretty hard on an emotional level. Family stuff beyond our control but stuff that still had a huge impact on us both. Sure I'd managed to deal with most of it myself but in doing so I'd lost sight of us as a couple. Neglected one of the most important people in my life.
I'm hoping that he'll read some of the forums/blogs written by other narcoleptics. 25 years is a very long time to never meet or talk to another narcoleptic and only another cataplectic can understand what an attack feels like. Tomorrow we are meeting up with Lily for a get to know you chat before her hospital appointment. Lily has endured years of no-one understanding that she's not lazy or idle. Her overwhelming tiredness has left her too sleepy to even consider socialising just now. The isolation and ignorance about the disorder makes me feel an immense frustration. There are other spouses and sufferers out there who are still feeling that isolation. I don't know where all this is heading but I do know that something in me has changed. The N.H.S. broke my spirit 6 years ago over their repeated ignorance. Life stuff kept that spirit broken. Narcoleptic's Wife helped restore it. Let's see if the N.H.S. is ready for the new and improved spirit. I'm certainly ready for them.






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