I also think you made an excellent point MooseMom about the anger and hurt being basically the same emotion. I don't think they can be separated. Right now there is plenty of both bubbling up inside of me and it is hard to manage. As you have said many times on these boards, there is nothing fair about the transplant process. The disease is not fair, the listing process is tedious and tortuous, the allocation system and varying wait times across regions is nonsensical to say the least, and the fact that for us to get a transplant someone has to either die or submit to an major operation and give up an organ is the most unfair of all. There are so many sources of the anger, but the roots of it run deep in the larger picture of unfairness. And in the end there is no one to ultimately blame. As any of you know who have met someone who is bipolar, most who suffer with the disease are often noncompliant with the meds and doctor appointments and live chaotic lives that hurt those around them For 35 years I fought hard to get well and stay well. I took all the meds my doctors suggested, suffered the side effects and worked hard to find the most effective and least toxic combination that would work for me, and went to all my doctor appointments and got monthly blood draws the whole time I was on lithium. I sought therapy and worked my way through some pretty difficult emotional stuff. It was worth it--I have been stable for a long time and I've experienced a better life than I could have imagined years ago. From the beginning, I understood the risk of kidney disease, but I was told the likelihood it would progress to ESRD was from 1% to 2% AND I was reassured 15 years ago when I got off the lithium that my kidney disease would not continue to deteriorate. What is fair about any of this? I reaped the rewards, paid a heavy price, and have to face what is ahead of me. But I would do it all over again even knowing what I know now, given what was available to me at the time. How's that for a cruel irony?
She said she thought she had been clear with me that she had serious reservations about her age and only wanted to get the initial testing to find out if she might be a match. Apparently that is all she ever intended to do, but she had not at all communicated this fact to me beforehand. She apologized for not being clearer about her intentions.
One part of what she wrote really pissed me off. She explained to me, as if this was all somehow new to me, that the testing process was a long one and that I should not count on anything or get my hopes up about a donor until they actually wheel me into surgery. She writes:"If anyone comes forward for that initial screening. it is only the beginning of a process that may or may not lead them to be a donor. Of course this emotional roller coaster is very difficult for you. I hope in time you will be able to hold the process loosely. Right now it is very new and very emotional."
It is loaded with emotion from the beginning. Second, although I may get more used to the process, I will never "hold the process loosely." This is my life that is at stake, and I choose to feel every bump and twist and turn in the road as fully and as deeply as I need to in order to get through this. I worked too hard for too many years to free myself of emotional numbness. If I don't give myself room to feel the pain and disappointment along the way I will also not be able to feel the hope and joy and love I experience as I move forward. I will not be able to enjoy the good things and open myself emotionally to the people I care about. Time's a'wasting here and I won't surrender a minute of feeling everything to its fullest.
Either she really is that detached from her own emotions or she is unable or unwilling to share much with me. I would like to believe this is the best she can do, and I am grateful for her willingness to keep up a relationship and offer to help. But the fact remains that she does not at all get what I am going through and probably never will. She says she has a strong feeling that a better option will be there for me, and she is probably right. She has decided she is "not my best option" based on incomplete and inaccurate information, but her mind is made up. I know I will have to accept that and move on, but it does not feel good to me right now.
My problem with what she said was the inference that my emotional reaction to her dropping out as a donor was because I did not yet understand the process and was too new to it to get a grip on my emotions.