A too-long-undiagnosed bout with Lyme Disease has left me challenged with arthritis and some neurological damage. The arthritis has its uses: I can predict rain, and the pain gives me something to offer up in prayer, or as penance.
Not so the neurological issues. At the peak of my illness I was unable to figure out how to do the dishes; my organizational skills have never fully recovered, and verbally I sometimes wander into strange lands, referring to cereal as cookies, or to hats as helmets. When that happens, and after I have apologized to my family for sending them into hysterics or on goose chases, I will ask, “Are you going to get rid of me, when my mind is gone?”
“We’re going to be confused a lot of the time,” they admit.
“Well,” I shrug, “as long as you still love me.”
CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen recently filed a report on the early-onset Alzheimer’s that began affecting his wife, Jan Chorlton, at the age of forty. It is an undeniably moving story; after introducing the viewer to images of the beautiful and lively Chorlton, the report shows us Petersen’s sixty-year old, still-beautiful wife, now living in what appears to be a top-notch assisted-living facility. She is unable to sustain simple conversation or to recognize her husband. Chorlton talks of a man she will always love, while Petersen openly weeps. When he asks his wife if she can name that man, she giggles, “Mr. Happy.”
Medical experts are introduced and they declare that there is no treatment for Alzheimer’s Disease, and no way to prevent it. In the near-future, we are told, sixteen million Americans will be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease.
Petersen reveals that he is now in a relationship with a widow; they live together, and they both love Jan in what one of them calls “this very peculiar new American family.” The piece closes challenging anyone to gainsay them, who has not walked in their shoes.
But, was it not precisely for such situations that marriage vows were designed? “For better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, together or apart.” Love, which is limitless, is supposed to be strong enough—even if we do not think we are—to survive these challenges.
The idea is not exclusive to churches; marital vows are common to secularists, as well, and societies have been built upon them for millennia. Why, suddenly, do they no longer “work”? Is it a generational thing? Are the same baby boomers who would not submit to military conscription or unplanned parenthood now refusing to embrace the difficult, shattering work of suffering for love? Has the church done such a poor job of demonstrating the efficacy of such surrender that there is simply no capacity for it left, in the post-modern world?
A neighbor of mine works as a therapist for Alzheimer’s patients, both high-functioning and low. She recently described one sixty-ish daily visitor. “He is a saint. Every day he brings his lunch and eats with his wife. She doesn’t recognize him, so every day she is meeting a new friend. When we told him he needn’t come so often he said, ‘But she is my bride; if I did not see her, I would miss her.’”
The man’s wife had changed, but if she was no longer capable of seeing her groom, he still beheld and adored his bride. Their marriage, then, is the microcosmic reflection of the macro-love of God for his people and the love of Christ for his church. Love without limit, love without fear, love without desertion; love in joy and in pain, love in the shallows and the depths, love without end.
We cannot see God except as he is made manifest through us, and in the covenant of marriage his faithfulness is beautifully reflected. We look to this manifestation—in all its turbulent courses—to get an inkling of him. When we cannot see the great love of God reflected so near to us, we are diminished.
When love is rationalized into limits, we have sold love, and ourselves, short. If God is love, we have sold God short, too. We have chosen to walk around a fire, rather than through it, chosen not to trust that our sufferings have meaning and that they are, on balance, the crucibles of our commonalities, which mold and strengthen our societies.
Petersen says his wife’s love has been “lost to the long-goodbye of Alzheimer’s.” That suggests a perspective that sees love, and life, as finite—a measure brought to close, and the rest is silence.
To the nameless, lunch-bearing husband of my neighbor’s acquaintance, love is not lost; it is wholly there and alive. Petersen’s love is not “lost,” either, but perhaps he cannot quite perceive its nearness because he has dropped the lens of eternity.
Hard times are endurable, and suffering can be borne; if humanity no longer believes that, it will quickly extinguish itself, in an effort to go through life anaesthetized and feeling nothing but “fine.”
If mentally absent spouses can credibly be warehoused and apportioned a third of a marriage, that will quickly devolve into something more banal and expedient, particularly for those lacking means. The lives of “gone” spouses will eventually be deemed too expensive to sustain, and another thread in the seamless garment of life-and-death issues will have frayed and snapped.
I cannot judge Barry Petersen, and I would not; that is God’s job. I have no idea what torments he has endured, or how he came to his decisions. But it is not enough to ride a sentimental wave of emotion. Those choices will resonate within our consciences, eventually affecting medical and legislative actions and further challenging the churches.
I am a woman with neurological problems, and these questions about the limits of life and love, awkward and unwelcome as they are, must be asked, before much more is lost.
Elizabeth Scalia is a contributing writer for First Things. She blogs at The Anchoress.
Comments:
Sometimes God takes us by the hand and asks us to walk through the fire knowing that if we do we will come closer to that Divine Love that is waiting for all of us. For whatever reason Barry Peterson refused to walk through the fire so for now he can not understand the increase of love and joy that God had planned for him. He and all those around him have lost out on a great gift.
I don't believe the author is threatened by the experience of Barry Peterson. I think she understands what Barry Peterson is loosing out on.
But love without these things is ... not love. In trying to articulate a response, I find myself retreating into poetry. Once we had a better understanding.
549
That I did always love
I bring thee Proof
That till I loved
I never lived—Enough—
That I shall love alway—
I argue thee
That love is life—
And life hath Immortality—
This—dost thou doubt—Sweet—
Then have I
Nothing to show
But Calvary—
Emily Dickinson
"...But Mr. Petersen has gained a gentle happiness in life and his wife has not been physically or emotionally neglected. ...the maximization of happiness can sometimes be justifiable if no one is harmed.
I won't presume that I'll immediately change your mind, and let me emphasize that all of this is not to judge the man in the interview - it is to respond to your comments. Here are some thoughts in response:
How have you defined happiness, and how can you measure it? Some of the most happy times of my life have been when I'm serving and loving my wife during times of illness.
Not emotionally or physically neglected? By whose measuring stick? Are you so certain that a husband's presence, (and I'm not talking about a constant bedside vigil,) and *undivided* attention and love, would not be even more beneficial in the later years of life?
No one is harmed? Here's one person - the husband, who has perhaps innocently but nonetheless deprived himself of the gentle deep grace of steadfastness that can only be experienced by letting your wife be your only love even when that love cannot be returned. Perhaps this is the final opportunity for conversion away from self for this man. Perhaps this is an experience of God's love for us that he will miss out on. God uses people to concretely "explain" himself to us. There are some things I never understood about God until I became a father myself. There are some things perhaps I will never understand about God unless I maintain my covenant with someone without receiving anything in return other than that person.
Hoping that the effects of some of the good alternative therapies would be looked at , in some chronic ailments ..there is mention of the Indian Mulberry juice , in Book of Maccabees ; it is otherwsie populary known as noni juice , considered good for a variety of ailments and its cultivation, if popularised , could serve many poor in the tropics ..
B12 , esp. under the tongue, in older persons , a little addition of other supporters , such as even codliver oil , even avoidance of certain items such as dairy that many could be sensitive to - all these could have its place in chronic inflammations .
The Word tell us that a husband's body belongs to the wife and vice versa ..
Let us hope that such a deep identity would help us all , to ponder as to all the implications of events ..are there areas that need deep repentance ..even rebuking prayers .. ..and the sharpening of those skills to bring much good ..
Many nursing homes seem as forlorn areas ..and even Church groups who go to visit spending the time in nursery like projects ..
and persons spending time in mindless t.v viewing ..
How much diffrent it could be if we have the peaceful chants of Gregorain music and Divine mercy , even joyful rhythms of good energetic Jewish music in the air ...and mixed groups of children and teens visiting often enough ...
Prevention of Alzheimers too ..talk about stress as a cause .. toxins such as alumimnum ..The Word warning us of poisons , may be esp. in these times of ours ..and what would spare us ..how those of us who have been given good weapons against stress , such as a good confession , Adoration and yes , again prayers that rebuke the spirit of idolatry ...and any unforgiveness ..taking it all to the One who alone can deal with it all !
and may be the friend mentioned in the article would turn out to be a good sister sort of friend ...that his two daughters can recall the heroic father role , and in turn to be persons who would think of The Father with so much love ..and a smile !
I don't think anyone is disagreeing with your assessment of the reality. But you seem to be swayed that it is an acceptable reality. With that you'll get a disagreement.
The actions being discussed here are not a mere distancing from a "perfect constancy of devotion." The man has in all practical senses - certainly in the emotional sense - taken a second wife. That's not merely a utilitarian decision.
BTW, if the person is maintaining a constancy toward the debilitated spouse, that is no "illusion." The difference between feelings and performance is not equal to the difference between reality and illusion. The devotion is still being shown, and most significantly, the violation that Mr. Peterson is committing is still refrained from.
If the television reporter Ms. Scalia writes about wants to be a 19th century aristocrat who has a mistress and still takes care of his disabled wife, then he should go to it. But he should admit that is what he's doing and not expect everyone else to clap for his "very peculiar new American family."
Let's not dismiss Dr. Murray too quickly. I saw it close up too. After the wife of a famous prof told me of her troubles with her sinking hubby, perhaps foolishly I volunteered to help. I lived there for a couple of months and the scene was ghastly. It is a miracle if love survives under certain conditions. I hope I will be ready but will not place any bets.
When my sister chose to take a giant step into eternal darkness (as she perceived it) to escape what she considered the darkness of her life by drinking a quart bottle of pain cocktail, she ended up in a coma, and six neurologists confirmed that she "would never recognize a person, would never have a thought. She is essentially a vegetable."
I chose to care for her, arranging for her to be in a nursing home close to where I lived during my work hours, and her living with me the rest of the time. It was strange: all it took was to make the decision to do so, and I entered holy ground: my life did become what Paul suggested it should be, a praying all the time. And it was during that time that I came to live the joy that Jesus promised in all my relationships, but especially (in answering your question) in those who kept fighting against my decision. I lived the truth in love, especially towards those who made themselves my enemy in fighting to finish what my sister had started: "It's her right! It's what she chose!" I always spoke the truth in love without hesitation, and to answer your question, one must move into prayer/agape and speak as the Holy Spirit encourages us to speak. The strange thing was my sister, against all the assurances otherwise, came around, and her first words to me were, "Thanks for saving my life." You see, my sister didn't want to die: she wanted to end her suffering, which began in childhood when our dad assigned her the role of surrogate wife.
My sister's "lover" had lots of money and fought me in court, and everyone who had witnessed that I was being faithful to my commitment, especially the guardian ad litem, came over to my side and supported my efforts until my sister's lover brought up my past as a notorious criminal and drug addict (even though 25 years had passed since my involvement): it was then that everyone turned on me and the court eventually gave her lover custody, and her lover did what she promised she would do, ended my sister’s life -- via severe neglect.
Descartes severed reasoning from the “animal” side of human existence, and since then the judgment of the physical by our reason has only escalated. In this mode where reason dominates the physical, passing judgment on the latter becomes easy, especially when the latter is judged useless by the former. Even we Christians have in one degree or another lost the essential insight that the spirit is what contains the physical and the cognitive processes, and when either or both of the latter begin to fail, the containment is still there in the spiritual, which cannot be violated, for it is a violation of the Holy Spirit. Only agape moves us to live in the movements of the Holy Spirit. But as children of Descartes and Kant, we too often choose reason over agape.
But Barry does. He knows that he is an oath-breaker. He knows his promises aren't worth spit. And he may think to himself that he's not hurting anyone and that he keeps his promises to people who have some way of knowing whether or not he does, and every other justification in that video. But he knows he really is a liar and an oath-breaker, and that's got to cost him something.
the love described in this beautiful article.
Making enormous sacrifices for someone who cannot even witness and appreciate them seems, honestly, dumb. I have personally witnessed Alzheimers in the mother of my best friend, and no matter how hard you try, you cannot reach their now vanished minds.
I saw my friend try desperately to reach his mother, who he loved, and I could see that she was truly no longer with us.
Should I get married, and should I later suffer from Alzheimers, I would explicitly like my wife to give me the best care possible, and to find someone new she could be happy with. I would, in other words, expressly not want her to suffer as you are suggesting would be her obligation.
David
David
This is simply not so. (At least in the Catholic Church) The death of a spouse releases one from the marriage vow.
Otherwise how could anyone marry again in the church after that?
I'd be very interested to see what choice YOU make when faced with the prospect, at a young age, of being unhappy for the rest of your life.
What troubles me more, though, is the notion of how wonderful suffering is. I've noticed that this is often espoused most actively by those who have suffered the least. Also, to glibly proclaim that you understand another's suffering so well that you can rate it. I've seen suffering, and it is extremely rare that it is or can be turned into a sort of grace.
Last point, I fully expect to be surprised by who I meet in heaven. The righteous commenters here I expect will also be surprised, but unpleasantly. How will they be able to stand seeing people in heaven who they were so sure didn't deserve it? But we do like to make God the junior partner in deciding who gets to heaven and who doesn't, don't we?
This seems out of place because its not spiritual - but still people should think about the physical.
Wheat allergy - not glucose or ceoliac but the rarer wheat allergy - causes body wide inflammation thus intensifying arthritis. It also dims your mind because you are fatigued from the inflammation - like being very tired. But you can't see why you are tired after a good sleep and a"good" breakfast of toast and eggs.
It's very easy to check out. Just don't eat wheat for three days. If your energy soars in that time, you have the allergy. After that avoid wheat as much as possible because its effect is just like a low fever.
And I believe sensitivity to this allergy increases with age.
I love my mom, but I hate having to even see her anymore. Sad, because we used to have an awesome relationship (I'm betting she had about a 130 IQ in her prime).
I believe it's important to understand that some people are blessed with the abilities necessary to be good caregivers - the behavioral nurse working with mom is a genius with dementia patients - and some are not, through no fault of their own.
I was definitely not cut out to deal with irrational people (I'm also allergic to children for the same reason), but i certainly respect those who can.
How do you know how much people on this thread have suffered. Why don't you go tell Gil Costello how little he has suffered. Did you know that when you are accusing people of being too judgemental you are yourself making a judgement. Better check the beam in your own eye before you try to remove the speck from others.
Head injury survivors often change so completely, their spouses feel exactly as if the one they married is dead and gone, and some stranger occupying their body is now sitting there staring at them, maybe even demanding their love. Or perhaps others are reminding them of their vows. But what if that person is gone? Forever? This reaction of the "surviving" spouse is not faithlessness to a sick loved one. It's the recognition emotionally that their loved one is gone. Peterson has taken up with a widow. I don't see anything wrong with that, since he's a widower himself in all but name.
If you don't believe in God, you can call Him whatever you want.
But the truth is that He is never cruel or evil. There are so many stories of people who have found themselves in tough spots and, after patiently trusting the Lord, have seen what at first they hated become a source of blessing. How many have suffered the loss of one job, or one fiance, only to find that the next one was the one they were always waiting for?
If you trust the Lord, He won't let you down.
I know very well what you've gone through with the neurological problems. I have a bad back - a two-level cervical fusion (that will be extended to three levels later this month), osteoarthritis both in the facet joints and in the disk spaces, degenerative disk disease, a couple of bulging disks and a herniated disk in my lower back. Pain is a daily visitor, and remembering what day of the week it is is occasionally very difficult. Thankfully, I have a loving wife that takes care of me.
My wife's mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 1985, and died in 2005 from the disease. She didn't recognize any member of her family for the last ten years of her life. That was especially hard for my wife, who was very close to her mother. My wife has a great fear that she will also develop Alzheimer's (my wife is 67, and her mother was 65 when she began to have problems). We both pray that some of the research now being done will lead to ways to forestall the disease, if not prevent it.
The best Gift that God has ever given me, save for His Son, has been this wonderful woman that has been my wife for the past 45 years.
I feel very sorry for you. You are just the sort of utilitarian who thinks himself to be wise and pities the poor ignorant religious. Yet you are the one missing out. You have a philosophy which can not find God.
Try reading the book of Job. There is hope for you yet, if you will just drop what you think you know and open yourself to the eternity of who God is.
Please list for me all of the positive aspects of having Alzheimers' Disease, or of watching someone you care about suffer from it.
While I am sure Pam is right in responding to A Little Sense in saying that s/he cannot evaluate the suffering of people he does not know, I think the essential point is valid. Why are we saying suffering is such a good thing?
I would hope if there was a God, he would not want us to suffer and be miserable. If there is a God who wants us to suffer and be miserable, I have to ask, well, why do we worship and thank someone who has caused so much misery? That doesn't make any sense.
David
Another is celiac.com
Celiac, like Lyne, is a great imitator in terms of symptoms and under-diagnosed.
I tremble to think how I'd react in such a situation myself. The likelihood that I'd fail to do the right thing is pretty high, and the only thing that could possibly stand between me and that is the grace of God. But that doesn't change what is right. If I began to rate moral responses based on what I'd do if left to myself, I'd become an international advocate for sitting around eating chips, reading novels, and net-surfing. Thankfully, I am motivated to pursue better things, even though I know I don't always do even the easy stuff right.
Have you had a B12 test? Such a simple test, but it can mimic dementia,alzheimers, etc. It can also lead to incurable mental decline. I have a severe deficiency and have minor balance problems,etc. Pls check into this if you haven't.
Perhaps some commenters sound smug, but I think we have in mind the ideal / goal of Catholic service. Just like all ideals, I would hope I could rise to meet the challenge (with His help), but hope I am never put to the test.
A person is the totality of a human being. If you marry a person, you marry all the possible ways they can ever be. You marry them waking and sleeping, you marry them demented, you marry them criminal.
Re: sickness and health --
Of course that was considered in the vows. Do you really think nobody ever grew "senile" or "addled", back in the day? They married 'em in the expectation of no anesthesia, a solid chance of death in every childbirth, horrible diseases everywhere, and a good chance of starvation or exposure deaths for a lot of people. In other words, they had a highly realistic view of life; but we somehow think that pain and fear and unhappiness will never apply to us.
The whole point of marriage vows is to say, "No matter what happens, no matter how hopeless or helpless you are, I will be your husband and you will be my wife as long as we live. You can trust me and I believe I can trust you."
If people don't have the skill or temperament to take care of a loved one every day or in their own home, that's no disgrace. That's why nurses and helpers and care homes exist. That's not abandonment, as long as you're trying.
I pity people whose spouses have Alzheimer's, and their lives are hard, and it may be hard for them to keep their vows. But it is also hard for soldiers to keep their oaths and stand their ground under fire, and yet they do it -- for their buddies, not even their spouses -- for an abstract Constitution, for people they don't know.
Break an oath, and you prove yourself a coward. Barry Petersen broke his vows, and proved himself faithless and a nithing. I'm not sure what the other woman broke -- her common sense, for certain. She'd better take good care of herself and never ever get sick or hurt, because a man who'll throw away one will throw away two.
But saying that a vow only counts if someone is fully conscious and has the same personality as when you married is like saying that a vow only counts if your spouse is awake, or if it hasn't been more than five minutes since you married. Saying that it doesn't count if the other person doesn't know is like saying that, if you don't do something in front of a camera or a microphone or another observer, it never happened. Ridiculous.
I wrote a bit on when suicide is quite justifiable a while ago:
http://blog-in-the-box.blogspot.com/2008/08/suicide-is-painless.html
If I could choose between curing cancer and curing Alzheimer's, I'd pick Alzheimer's every time. The strength and dedication of the folks who have a loved one with Alzheimer's is truly amazing and awe-inspiring...
Orion
I cannot dispute the truth of the comment; however, I have pity on him, as I do for all sinners like myself. We strive for an ideal - and we fail more often than we would like. Those who have publically taken umbrage at Mr. Peterson's behavior should take heed of their righteous anger for no one knows when they will face the test. I would ask from you some charity, while acknowledging quietly his failure.
To those who seem to think this isn't a failure, obviously you are entitled your opinion, but I am afraid that your utilitarianism is a very callous and in the end vicious way to measure our few years on earth. No one made him take the vow, we must assume he chose to do so on his own. Commitment seems a very scary word to many of the modernists, who ask the state to clean up their sources of unhappiness. It's a world I would like to see us try to more actively avoid.
I think that's what I dislike about the Catholic Church - I understand its principles and why they are there, but they seem horribly rigid and unforgiving.
I am used to thinking of God as supposedly merciful and forgiving, and yet having to stick with a criminal, or someone whose mind is no longer with me, seems like the very opposite of mercy.
D
As a director of nursing in a nursing home for awhile I saw several husbands who were as attentive to their demented spouses as the one your neighbor describes. Once, I said to one who was pushing his wife in her wc, "Do you know what an inspiration your dedication to her is to the staff here?". He was obviously surprised & said, "But you all have no idea how much she's done for me for so many years"...which only made the whole story more inspiring to me!
My wife is facing depression and alcoholism, and has become more and more distant from me and her entire family over a few years. Right now, despite admitting that she is an alcoholic and being sober for 2 months, she seems to be losing her fight. While they are medically very different from Alzheimer's, the effect of her alcoholism and depression on all of us is very similar to that of an Alzheimer's family. My wife has moved out of our house, and I and her family seldom see her. I feel the same way that man does, ‘...she is my bride; if I did not see her, I would miss her.’ Right now, I miss her terribly. However, I take heart that my commitment to my marriage and to my wife, despite the pain and difficulty, are God's will.
Elizabeth, thank you for providing me with some much needed inspiration.
My mother cared for her husband as he disintegrated into dementia. Not once did she ever think about putting him in a home and 'getting on with life'. It took us a lot of prodding to get her to hire a caregiver to at least give her some respite. I really admire the way she so lovingly cared for him. He died three years ago. She really misses her best friend.
My stepmom cared for my father as he slowly died of cancer. She, too, was at his side every minute and cared for him with great love and gentleness. My father didn't want to be cared for by strangers, and she gladly made sure his wish was followed. Hospice was called just as formality. I'm amazed at her strength and capability. But she had a lot of experience; my dad was her second husband to die of cancer.
I hope I have one-tenth the strength they do if I need to care for my loving husband, my best friend, the love of my life.
Back to commenting on the comments:
Ali Rabinowitz says 8.11.2010 | 10:45am :
"David says, "there is either no God, or at least He is frequently cruel, evil and capricious." But ... He is never cruel or evil. ... How many have suffered the loss of one job, or one fiance, only to find that the next one was the one they were always waiting for? If you trust the Lord, He won't let you down."
========================
Sadly, not everybody gets the experience of "Something even better comes along" or "He won't let you down". Despite the certainty of your words, it just doesn't always work that way for everybody. Sometimes people are simply crushed by life -- does it mean it's their fault? are they not strong enough in their faith? when they can find no good, feel no hope, in the midst of their misery. Your statements come very close to the bromide "God won't give anyone a burden they can't handle", which is such a sweet, blithe, hopeful claim; yet how do you reconcile it with the real-world fact of suicide? Surely that's concrete proof that somebody "can't handle" those challenges. One might ask why the Almighty apparently doesn't know which of his children can't bear the burdens he lays on them...!
Sometimes it DOES seem like God is being cruel and capricious, even though our understanding is that God is loving, merciful, and All-Good.
I guess all I'm saying is that we don't know what others may be struggling with; life is hard, and then it seems to get harder. May there indeed be a loving God who helps us all.
There is no current cure for Alzheimer's or neurological sequelae of Lyme's. None.
http://www.firstthings.com/article/2010/03/i-want-to-burden-my-loved-ones
Please note that no one who disagrees with a utilitarian view of things and Barry Peterson's actions thinks any of this is easy, nor are most of us smug. And based on what has been written I would say that the posters have suffered quite a bit otherwise they wouldn't have been able to express their thoughts so well. If you don't understand the benefit of suffering or have never experienced the grace that can come from it then I have to ask: are you Christian? Do you believe in God and have you given yourself over to Him and His will completely? I don't think suffering makes any sense until you accept Jesus and His as necessary for our salvation.
If you are about to say I am self righteous, idealistic or somehow irrational, please know before you do that I have suffered. I am not going to give details, it would take too long, on the other hand many have gone through similar things. It is this thing we call life and sometimes it stinks. And sometimes my suffering is nothing to others sometimes they get it. No matter. God is in charge and as long as I remember that then I am a recipient of His grace and I just don't have words for how it all works.
Love with limits isn't really love at all, certainly not true love in the way that God loves us. Love and vows that are only good until something changes (health, finances, convenience etc.) is really at the crux of our culture of death. How shallow we are that when the going gets tough the love is gone. I would say that it is actually idealistic and unrealistic to think that vows and committments are only binding until something changes. Maybe the poster didn't mean it this way but how shallow, how immature, how many times has that been used as an excuse for infidelity and "I don't love you anymore because blah blah blah". Believe me I have had moments when I wondered who it was that I married. That was a period that I call "when the rubber hits the road." I think we all have them and boy was I surprised when it hit me and my life. I thought I was different. If it wasn't for the conviction that was implanted in me through grace before I ever said "I do", the conviction that no matter WHAT this was for life, I would be divorced with 3 children and it would read like a soap opera. The promise was made long before I knew what I was getting into but that doesn't change the promise which comes down to "no matter what."
Now for those who respond with how insensitive the Church is on insisting that we stay locked in unhappy even disasterous situations: you do not know what you are talking about. The Church is very much aware that some marriages will fail and recognizes that some of those marriages were doomed from the start. It takes a great deal of work and fortitude and all kind of other graces to keep a marriage together. It is really nothing short of a miracle so really if you don't have God you won't understand any of this. The stories related here of spouses keeping their vows are miracles grace each day. Miracles! Suffering is going to get us whether we believe or not. How much better to believe and experience miracles everyday.
God bless.
"My wife is facing depression and alcoholism, and has become more and more distant from me and her entire family over a few years. Right now, despite admitting that she is an alcoholic and being sober for 2 months, she seems to be losing her fight."
2 months is early days recovery for either alcohol or depression. Maybe just give time time. Maybe a little outside help for yourself?
This is not a bromide or platitude. This is from scripture and it is a promise. God has promised that he will give us whatever we need to handle whatever burden has come our way. However, it is up to us to accept the burden, ask for His help and accept that help. So yes, how much faith and trust you have plays a HUGE role in how things turn out. That said, God will give you the faith and trust that you need but you have to accept those gifts as well. We cannot control what happens to us, most of the time, but we do control how we react-free will.
Yes, suicide is the result of a lack or loss of faith. It is a sign of desparation, of complete lack of hope. You will not lack hope if you have faith. I don't mean to say that it is just a matter of "pull up your bootstraps" and you will feel better. Not at all. There are a lot of factors at play with depression so deep it leads to suicical thoughts and actions and a lot of things may be needed to pull you out of it: counseling, medication, prayer. A strong prayer life and a complete surrender to Our Lord are necessary to keep us from getting to the edge of despair or from falling over that edge. It is very complicated and very sad and I have nothing but sympathy and empathy for those without hope or faith. I pray often that the Lord keep His hand on me so that I don't approach the edge or fall over. It is only by the grace of God that I haven't succumbed to despair thus far and it is only by His grace that I continue on. I know that I am no better than anyone else, just blessed with the gift of faith and all that entails.
God bless.


