Healing in the Dark

Healing in the Dark

Some stories take a long time before they’re ready to be brought into the light. They’re too raw and devastating, requiring tender, patient care in the darkness before they can be gently eased out into sunshine. This is one of mine.

I remember the first time that my late husband, Bear, hit me. The night he threw me to the floor and choked me. The moment he grabbed me, shoved me outside, and locked the doors, leaving me shivering in the dark.

I learned later that Bear had cancer that had metastasised to his brain, causing severe inflammation and swelling that completely altered his personality. When the swelling was bad, he was violent and aggressive, when it went down again, my lovely, kind Bear was back, but with no memory of what he’d done. Everything made sense later, but at the time, all I knew was that my loving, supportive husband was disappearing and my once good marriage was a living hell.

My upbringing in a patriarchal religious cult left me wholly unprepared for how to navigate this situation, and it took time before I found the courage to tell Bear’s doctors what was happening. Thankfully, they were supportive and helped me develop strategies to keep me safer while still looking after Bear. They ensured I had the support of a good therapist so I was not alone in my situation, and we began to refer to Bear as two distinct personas: Good Bear and Evil Bear.

This separation of personalities helped me navigate the day-to-day hell I was living in, but had a side effect: it made me feel that the abuse I was experiencing didn’t count, that it wasn’t “real abuse” because there was no intention behind it. It wasn’t Bear, it was the cancer. It wasn’t his fault, so there was no “bad guy” to be held accountable. It was this horrible netherworld where violence, cruelty, and emotional abuse were symptoms, not behaviours, side effects, not conscious choices. When someone chooses to abuse you, there is recourse, a clear plan of action, and, in the best-case scenario, the police are called, evidence is provided, and the perpetrator is arrested and incarcerated so the abused person is safe. But what do you do when the guilty party is cancer?

sunrise over canal

I would navigate it much differently now. I would prioritise my safety and well-being and tell those close to me so I would be supported and protected, but I did the best I could with what I knew at the time. I set boundaries, validated and documented my experiences with Evil Bear, and celebrated those precious moments when Good Bear was in residence. But it was exhausting, overwhelming, and deeply painful. Evil Bear was vile, not only harming me physically, but regularly telling me that none of our friends would love me if they actually knew me, berating me for not doing enough even though I was working full-time, managing the farm, and caring for him, and telling me I was useless, worthless, and unlovable. It was…devastating.

In those moments, even though I knew he’d have no memory of it later, I stood up for myself. I’d look him in the eyes and say, “Babe, I love you so much, but this person you are right now is nasty and cruel and you do not get to treat me like that. I do not believe a word you are saying. I am kind and loving and brave and I’m going outside now because I deserve to be treated with love. I’ll be back in a little while when you’re yourself again, and we’ll have a lovely time together.” Then I’d go out to my gardens and pull weeds and sob and dig holes and sob until the pain dissolved into the soil and I could face my life again. Then I’d take a deep breath, climb the back steps, and hope against hope that Good Bear was waiting for me.

Bear’s doctors continued to run test after test, trying to figure out what on earth was doing this to him. In the meantime, our world got smaller and smaller as his condition worsened and his good moments got fewer and fewer. We couldn’t go to medieval events or meet up with friends for the simple reason that I couldn’t let Evil Bear harm anyone else.

Finally, the results came back: cancer. It was both a devastating shock and deep relief. Everything fell into place, everything made sense.

Until Bear went into hospital, no one had experienced Evil Bear but me. His first morning there, the hospital called and asked me to please come in early because he was out of control and calling for me and they hoped I’d be able to calm him. I could hear him bellowing from down the corridor and I walked into a scene of utter mayhem. His cancer-addled brain was telling him that they were attacking him, holding him against his will, and the sheer panic and fury on his face until he saw me was horrible to see. He thought I was coming to rescue him and take him home, but the moment he realised I wasn’t, he hit me. Someone triggered an alarm and it took four wardies to hold him down so they could secure him. I leaned against a wall in the corridor and cried with anguish, yes, but also relief that I didn’t have to do this alone anymore.

Later, when Bear had received a strong anti-inflammatory and painkillers, he was his dear old self again, smiling and chatting with the nurses as they did his obs. He grinned at me from his bed and told me how happy he was to be in a different room because in the old one there was a crazy man yelling and screaming and causing so much trouble. The nurse smiled and said, “Robin, that was you!” I’ll never forget the look of utter shock on his face. He looked up at me for confirmation and I nodded. He was horrified and apologised to the nurse and asked her to bring in all the staff who had been in there so he could apologise to them too. She assured him that wasn’t necessary, but he insisted, so all the doctors and nurses trooped in and he apologised profusely for what he’d put them through. They assured him it was unnecessary, that they knew it wasn’t “him” but just the cancer. After they left, he apologised to the nurse again and she said, “Robin, you don’t need to apologise to me, but you do need to apologise to your wife because you hit her.” The colour went out of his face then, and again he looked up at me, “Babe?” I nodded and he just deflated, couldn’t speak, couldn’t move, just sat there.

The nurse left and I sat beside him and took his hand. “Love, I need to talk with you about this. You hit me today, yes, but it’s more than that. You’ve been hitting me for a long time. It’s not your fault, I know it isn’t you, it’s the cancer, and I completely forgive you, but I need to know how you feel about it now that you know.” He sat there awhile, just staring into space, and I thought I might have lost him again, but then he said quietly, “Babe, I’m so ashamed I can’t even look at you. I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry. I don’t remember any of it, but I believe every word you’re saying.” We talked then, cried, held each other, and, in that moment, it was enough.

Soon, we were overtaken by the horrors of aggressive cancer and dying. We had a few more precious lucid moments where he said, “Babe, I need to die so I don’t hurt you anymore. I need to die first, because I couldn’t last a single day without you.” Those words and moments were an anchor for my soul when I was ready to heal the abuse after he died.

It took time to be able to face, name, process, and heal the domestic abuse I experienced, but I got there. Naming it as abuse was vital to my healing. I needed to face the whole truth, to honour my own story, to validate what I went through so it didn’t continue to haunt or harm me. It was lovely to see that as I spoke the truth out loud and sat with and felt all the feelings, the abuse, pain, and fear left my soul, and love flooded in, soothing those shattered places with light and warmth.

sunrise at the farm

The physical bruises are long gone, and I’ve stopped flinching when someone moves too quickly around me. I still shrink a bit when someone gets angry, but I have tools that help me ground myself, stand tall again, and befriend anger as a necessary, valid, and empowering emotion as long as it doesn’t devolve into abuse of any sort. I sometimes get teary when I talk about those dark days, but they’re tears of gratitude for my healing, safety, and inner strength. I feel safe in myself and in the world again, and I know to my bones that I deserve to be treated with love, dignity, and respect.

I have two pictures of Bear in my cottage, one of Good Bear, one of Evil Bear, and I’m grateful that I can now look at both of them with love and compassion. Good Bear healed me with his love, protection, and gentleness, while my experiences with Evil Bear taught me to heal myself, to be my own advocate and defender, my own steadfast source of love, kindness, and generosity of spirit.

I’m a different person now, and I’m so grateful for the chance to go forward in this world with a heart that is brave and strong yet somehow, amazingly, still soft and open. I’m so very proud of myself for that.

Soften

Soften

“When you reach your edge, soften.
Soften until you slip through the constraints and
can create a new rhythm,
a new route,
a new release.
Water is soft yet powerful.
Reach your edge, and soften.”
Victoria Erickson

I read Victoria’s words over a year ago and they clung to my soul like a beautiful burr, providing light, comfort, and guidance through this incredibly difficult year. Whenever I felt challenging circumstances make me rigid, brittle, or put me in a state of hyper-vigilance waiting for the next tidal wave to hit, I’d whisper to myself, “Soften, soften.”

When I lost dear friends to car accidents and disease…soften, soften.

When someone stole money and resources I needed for survival…soften, soften.

When my animals were killed, fierce storms battered my farm, and I watched helplessly as my loves suffered horrifically from war, abuse, and disease…soften, soften.

soft light farm sunset

Suffering ebbs and flows, sometimes tolerable, sometimes unbearable, but somehow, softening helps me through it.

As I intentionally relax my body, slow my racing thoughts, and remember to breathe deep and slow, my mind calms, my emotions settle, and I can remember my next mantra: “Keep calm and look for options. You always have options until you’re dead.

Softening connects me back to my own heart, helping me focus on making sure my needs for rest, nourishment, friendship, play, and movement are prioritised so I can make decisions and choices from a place of strength. I want to respond to life, not react to it.

Softening helps me be gentle with myself, honest about what I can and cannot take on, and flexible when my goals and dreams don’t align with my available resources, strength, and support.

And softening helps me be gentle with others, to balance good judgment with compassion, patience, and generosity of spirit.

Sometimes I soften well, and other times I’m a frozen bundle of nerves longing for nothing more than a blanket fort, popcorn, and comforting stories where the good guys always win. And that’s OK. There’s no need for perfection, just slow, steady growth and much love.

Wishing you softness in your challenges this year, with glistening threads of love, friendship, and happiness to make those challenges bearable. xo

 

A Gentle Rebuilding

A Gentle Rebuilding

“I hope you believe that you can still make a beautiful life for yourself
even if you lost many years of it to grief,
or darkness,
or a wound that wouldn’t close.”
Bianca Sparacino

Many things are wondrous to me: love in a cruel world, plants that come back to life after drought, fire, or hail, and people who choose kindness when life has given them every possible excuse to go to the dark side.

This week my wonder has turned inward as I discover that the hope I’ve clung to that life might be good again has deepened into a belief so strong I can feel it in my bones.

I know I’m going to be OK.

golden rain tree leaves

I don’t know what it will look like, but that’s alright. For now, I’m just focused on slowly, steadily, and gently building a strong foundation.

I’ve discovered that rebuilding looks a whole lot like cleaning. Sorting through boxes, sheds, and shipping containers, clearing away what no longer suits, carting all the broken, unusable bits to the dump or the burn pile, and donating the good stuff that doesn’t fit my new life, trusting it will bring joy to someone else.

Rebuilding is decidedly non-glamorous and mostly involves days spent covered in dust and cobwebs, my skin an assortment of scrapes and bruises as I remove the old to make room for the new, honouring the old stories and my need to write new ones.

guinea fowl eggs

As I clear each shelf, each corner, each patch of earth, I feel an unexpected but most welcome excitement stirring as I envision new uses for those spaces.

I’ve turned the granny flat into a rustic bunkhouse for my loves to stay in when they visit, planted winter gardens full of artichokes, peas, cabbages, lettuces, leeks, garlic, and flowers, and I’ve made steady progress in transforming the sheds into usable spaces for sewing, wood-working, and all the fun foodie things I love to do like brewing, fermenting, and preserving.

For now, it’s mostly solitary work, but, it makes me smile to picture future days with medieval mates hanging out in the woodshop making furniture or shields, clustering around a big table with friends working on crafts of some sort, and gathering with dear ones around the bonfire, visiting for hours and making amazing memories.

coffee and cookies by campfire

Life will always hold challenges, but I’m doing my best to face them with shoulders squared and head held high, looking for ways to make even the hardest days a bit more beautiful and easier to bear. xo

When Everything is Broken

When Everything is Broken

“I have been avoiding all society, skulking away at home in a kind of shame.
I am staying away from others because…I’m afraid,
and I don’t have the grace to conceal it.”
Katherine May, “Wintering”

When Bear died, I had no idea how long it would take to be part of the world again, how much time I would need to spend in solitude, how many shadows I would need to face and bring into the light so they could be seen, understood, and healed.

I didn’t realize how much this path would change me and that I would have to get to know myself again before I could even start to think about building a new life.

And I couldn’t foresee that more devastating circumstances would arise that would leave me financially destitute and physically shattered.

It has felt like everything that gives me a sense of security and safety in the world has been torn away, and I’ve been left sitting alone in the rubble wondering how on earth to keep going.

It’s an odd place to be in. Terrifying, heartbreaking, yet strangely liberating. When everything is broken, we have the chance, when we’re ready, to make something new. Yes, there’s fear to work through, grief to manage, and a lot of clearing to do, but then one day I’ll look up and all that work will be done and it will be time to create something good.

I’m not there yet.

raindrops on chives

I’m still in the scary, messy middle, doing my best to care for my body, rebuild my finances, and clear away the rubble. And that’s OK. The inner work I’ve done over the past 18 months has prepared me well for this. I know that no cycle of life, good or bad, lasts forever. This wintering of the soul will give way to spring one day, but for now, I need to live this pain and loss.

I try to make it as easy as possible for myself. I take myself outside for a walk every day and lift my face to the autumn sunshine. I pick flowers in my gardens and put them in bowls around my cottage to cheer me. I journal and read in the wee hours of each morning to make sure I give all my feelings and experiences a voice and then figure out the next right step for me.

I go to therapy and visit my doctor, I take the herbal remedies my lovely herbalist prescribes, I drink lots of water and rest and make nourishing food and spend time with beautiful people who make this scary, messy middle so much easier to bear. It all helps.

raindrops on roses

For a long time, I couldn’t envision a future for myself, but I hoped that if I was patient and did the healing work, I would figure something out.

Recently, I’ve felt a shift, and some beautiful ideas have started clarifying in my mind and heart.

I’m not ready to share them yet, but I’m so grateful for the hope they bring in this difficult time.

raindrops on nasturtium leaves

It’s become important to me to share stories while they’re still happening, while they’re still foggy and muddled and hurt like hell. That’s when we need each other most to provide love, support, comfort, or even just a tiny light in the darkness. So, from my messy middle to yours, I wish you deepest comfort, strength to hold on, and true rest in body, mind, and spirit.

Several of you have asked how you can help, and that means so much to me. xo If you’d like to help out financially, you can send funds via Paypal to [email protected] Hearing from you always cheers me up, so, please keep sending messages or letters when you feel up to it. I love hearing about what you’re learning, going through, and discovering. xo

Until You’re You Again

Until You’re You Again

“Keep taking time for yourself until you’re you again.” Lalah Delia

For a long time after my Bear died last year, I didn’t think I’d ever be me again. The day he died, I went into shock. The following days, weeks, and months are a blur to me now, a hazy memory of trying to breathe, making myself eat, and doing the farm chores with tears streaming down my face as I told Bear over and over, “I can’t do this, babe, I can’t”.

My brain couldn’t accept the fact that my love was gone, that the creak I heard on the back steps wasn’t him coming up from the shed for a cuppa and chat, the ring of my phone wasn’t him calling to see how my day was going, that his side of the bed was empty when I’d reach for him in the night. It felt like nothing would ever be OK again.

And for a while, nothing was. Things got worse. Much worse.

spring harvest

Drought ravaged the farm creating cracks so big in the soil that I could slide my arm into them. Dogs and a fox got into my paddocks and killed half my herd and I spent days burning bodies. “Shiny, Happy People”, a documentary of the cult I was raised in, came out, triggering horrible dreams, PTSD, and severe flashbacks. Bushfires raged, I was hospitalised twice, and a nightmare litigation ensued.

I told Bear, “I can’t do this, babe, I can’t.” And felt him say in return, “I know, darlin’, it’s too much, but you will.”

So, I hung on. And when I couldn’t hang on, dear friends propped me up and gave me the love and support I needed to take another step forward. I went to therapy, read everything I could about grief, and sat with my shadows until I could see them for what they really were – my greatest strengths and the very things I needed to get through this life.

My neighbour helped me repair the irrigation so my plants and trees could have a fighting chance in the drought, I rebuilt fences and gates and made them dog and fox-proof, and I took ownership of my situation and studied Queensland law so I could navigate the litigation to the best of my ability.

summer harvest

In time, things got better. Rain came at last, putting out fires, filling in the cracks, and turning the whole region a dazzling green. Wounded animals recovered, rebuilt fences have done their job, and I’m no longer afraid of or intimidated by lawyers and litigation.

Even more precious is discovering that even though grief doesn’t go away, the soul/heart/spirit, whatever you want to call it, expands and stretches and makes room for peace and joy and love too. They’ve squeezed in alongside my loneliness and heartbreak and despair until they’re all nestled together quite cosily, enabling me somehow to live again. The pain of Bear’s death will always be with me, but as I care well for myself and stay close to my steadfastly loving people, I find that it gets cushioned, its sharp edges softened.

summer vegetables

I understand now that I’ll never be me again, not the old me. She is gone. But I can be the new me, the now me, the ever-changing, never-give-up, plant-seeds-in-drought me.

I know bushfires will flare up again, drought will return, and I will lose people I love. Unkind people will need to be stood up to, animals will die, and life will go all sorts of wonky, but I will be OK. Now I know to my very bones that no matter what happens, even when I can’t do it, I will.

Threads BlueSky