
story by‘Three weeks ago, I was flying around the world. Now I can't go to the bathroom by myself.’
‘I told him a joke, and he burst out crying; I told him my brother died, and he burst out laughing.’
‘She was the love of my life..I can't believe I said that. I'm talking like she's gone. And she's right here.’
Stroke survivors and their spouses are daunted by the task of coming home to the familiar space that marked them as husband and wife. In the time it took to say, "I do," all those many years ago, a tiny blood clot, and changed their entire landscape.

James Grotta, MD, professor and chair, neurology, UT Medical School at Houston.
UT Houston Stroke Team At Memorial-Hermann – Texas Medical Center
To make an appointment
http://www.utdocs.com/AdultClinic/Neurology/
The man who once checked every door before he went to bed may not know where the doors are anymore. The novelist wife may not remember how to read. Lifetime roles get reversed in a blink. Can you be a caregiver and a couple at the same time?
"For couples, the loss of who they were together, is profound. So the sooner they try to reestablish what they reasonably can do as a couple, the better, with the knowledge that some aspects may change forever," says Sharon Ostwald, PhD, RN, professor and Isla Carroll Turner Chair in Gerontological Nursing at The University of Texas School of Nursing at Houston, Center on Aging.
Usually the job of redefining a mutually satisfying future together will fall to the primary caregiver, the spouse, during the most stressful and lonely time ever.
The impending fear of loss of intimacy as a couple can be as paralyzing as the stroke itself. Sex, depending on age and its importance to the relationship pre-stroke, need not be a thing to fear or relinquish. "Generally if you were sexually active before the stroke, you can return to it safely," Ostwald says.
Pay attention to fatigue levels: make love in the morning, not at the end of the day when you are both exhausted, Ostwald suggests. Change positions to accommodate weaker limbs. Realize that society imbues a man with a need to perform, so your husband may feel frightened that he's not up to the task. You might fear that sex will bring on another stroke. Depression, a typical and treatable offshoot of stroke, both for survivor and caregiver, may trample sexual desire altogether.
So, talk about it. "You may each be suffering your own silent agonies, with neither of you wanting to bring it up," Ostwald says. "It may be that you simply need to resume non-sexual intimacy more than anything else."
The hard facts are that the largest percentage of improvement post-stroke occurs in the first six months. Profound fatigue, depression and frustration are part of the recovery phase for both of you. Sometimes these will all disappear. Sometimes not.
The key to maintaining a "couple" mentality in the looming shadow of fulltime care giving, is accepting what the new reality is and finding a way to flourish during the process of recovery.
"The problem with stroke though, is that you don't always know how long the recovery will be, or how much will occur, " Ostwald says. Caregivers burn themselves out by trying to be perfect; stroke survivors feel tremendous guilt from becoming a burden. And neither know how to give themselves permission to stop feeling this way.
So, take a fresh look at what is, what will be, what you can change, and what you can accept. In order to be a healthy and loving couple in the face of your "new" relationship with one another, you might first have to form one with yourself.


Dr. Sharon Ostwald is a professor and Isla Carroll Turner Chair in Gerontological Nursing at the UT School of Nursing, Center on Aging.
See Dr. Ostwald also at:
Food Irradiation
and Safety
On August 22, 2008, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published a final rule that allows the use of irradiation to make fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach safer and last longer without spoiling.
Irradiating fresh iceberg lettuce and spinach will help protect consumers from disease-causing bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli O157:H7 (E. coli). Illnesses from these bacteria range from uncomfortable symptoms to life-threatening health problems.
The foods affected by the final rule are
Irradiation (also sometimes termed "ionizing radiation") is a process of treating products with a measured dose of radiation. Food irradiation is not new. FDA has conducted irradiation safety evaluations for more than 40 years and has determined the process to be safe for use on a variety of foods.
After studying the safety of irradiating fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach, FDA has determined that these greens, when irradiated under the conditions specified in the final rule, retain their nutrient value and are safe to eat.
FDA considers irradiation a complement to, not a replacement for, proper food-handling by producers, processors, and consumers. Irradiation is just another tool to reduce the levels of disease-causing microorganisms on fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh pinach.
Irradiation does not take the place of washing. FDA continues to recommend that consumers wash fresh and bagged produce before eating unless the packaging specifically states that the product has been pre-washed.
For more information, go to: http://www.fda.gov)