P_James_Moriarty wrote:
I think we've strayed away fron the original point. I think it was more coping with the onset of end of life issues.
No reason why we can't discuss that too, IMO! I am 53 and disabled from autoimmune issues, which result in chronic pain and becoming severely fatigued after doing very little. I lost my father in 2009, and my mother in 2010. Never before have I been made so aware of my own mortality. It weighs on my thoughts a lot. I knew that they would have to die sometime, but I don't think anyone is ever really prepared for the death of a loved one. I am also sorry to hear about your wife's illness.
P_James_Moriarty wrote:
Am I naïve? Sure. I still play video games, though this last 3 weeks or so I've not been much into it (got fired 3 weeks ago). I still think, dispite knowing otherwise, that occationaly someone actually means what they say, that rules are rules, that right is right and wrong is wrong, and that someday, somewhere in the "real world", I will find acceptance.
I still struggle with not finding acceptance. I feel accepted for about an hour once a month, when I meet with my local Adult Aspie support group. I am still considered weird by most people, and am still shunned by the majority of people that I meet. I have gotten more accepting of this fact, and the only acceptance I am guaranteed of, is from myself and my fiance.
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Dreams are renewable. No matter what our age or condition, there are still untapped possibilities within us and new beauty waiting to be born.
-- Dr. Dale Turner