A Problem Shared…
Carolyn Voisey
Mum to one incredible little dude, I work full time in higher education and have my own small business as a jewellery designer/creator. I love noth...
The old saying, "A problem shared is a problem halved?"
For us, while sharing our fears, trials and battles with those who genuinely do understand may not actually make the problem any smaller, it DOES make it easier for us to deal with.
Sometimes, those fears are so huge that we aren’t able to confide in others who haven’t walked this path with us.
Sometimes sharing those fears and battles with our wider family and friends just doesn’t feel possible.
Yes, they walk that path alongside us but unless you’ve felt those very same sharp and agonising stones under your feet it’s impossible to fully grasp what it feels like.
We physically feel each other’s fear and pain.
And we share each other’s joy when our kids overcome some hurdle, or achieve a new milestone.
But it is also a tremendously frustrating thing, to feel how much someone else is hurting and to be completely helpless to do anything to alleviate that pain.
Right now, many of my friend’s children are either facing extremely risky surgeries or they are struggling against a system which seems unwilling or unable to offer even basic support for families in crisis.
And there is nothing you can do but be on the end of a phone, or chatting via social media.
We are each other’s life lines, but right now I just want to get into my car and drive to see them, and to give them a proper hug, not a virtual one.
More often than not, there are no answers, no solutions.
Life with medically complex children often feels like the incomplete problem, where no matter what you do there is no solution.
In such times we feel like all we can manage is getting out of bed.
But having that monumental support genuinely does make us feel like we can take on the world.