Was Your Partner Already Sci When You Met?
#61
Posted 11 February 2010 - 05:43 AM
#62
Posted 11 March 2010 - 04:40 AM
i'm 23, c4/c5. I'm bright, funny, humble and educated. i am hopeful for recovery but i'm scared about a girl loving me. Where should a guy like me venture to find potential love.
I had a g/f shortly after i got injured. She told me she loved me and that she wanted children. The pressure of taking care of me became high. she missed holding hands, and aggressive love behavior. She was only 19 and she remained honest through out our relationship. she is now my best friend and says she cant be without me in her life. she told me that one day she could see herself with me but she doesnt know. i hate that i feel like a plan b. the questions i have, are for couples who started after a sci.
where did you meet
how long did it take you to realize you were in love
any advice
i really am a positive person. i have high goals and i am just new to this (injury-march 15 2009)
Edited by leothelion, 13 March 2010 - 12:10 AM.
#63
Posted 11 March 2010 - 07:23 AM
and in sickness and health
loved when healthy
loved even now i am still alive
loved even though i am permmanetly wheelchair bound
we both have come to terms with with my codition through excellent and trusting people for who we can both talk to
we both live each and every day as it comes
this has now made us both very stronger
and our marriage has a stronger bond
== love is all around==
#64
Posted 12 March 2010 - 12:56 PM
#65
Posted 13 March 2010 - 12:18 AM
Spinner, on Mar 12 2010, 07:56 AM, said:
thanks, your words meant a lot. i plan to go back to school so........who knows. thanks again
#66
Posted 27 March 2010 - 05:13 PM
I remember my Mom saying something deprecating, but that was only initially. My family has been amazing. I have always had a great relationship with my siblings, although they can tend to be a bit brutal at times. They embraced my husband wholeheartedly. My father made adaptations to both his houses for when we come to visit.
It has been quite different, living and being married with a paraplegic man. And although I'm classified as his carer, I try as much as I can to encourage him to be independent. There has definitely been a learning curve. I have to say that we have the same ups and downs as anybody in a relationship, but all I continue to see is this amazing, courageous, warm, loving (as well as stubborn, irritating, irrational, etc) man that I married.
We are about to embark on the biggest adventure yet...starting a family.
#68
Posted 25 May 2010 - 09:36 AM
I found him again a couple of years ago on a social networking site (one of the first people I searched for) and when my own divorce began, we starting chatting online. This time last year, I spent a lovely evening in his company, and ended up assisting him after a bowel mishap. It made an unusual first date! It really wasn't a big deal to me at the time, but I was quite impressed with myself afterwards, after years of being told I was useless by my ex... I knew that first date that I wanted to be with him, whatever happened.
Since then I have learnt how to deal with his various needs, and now I think there's nothing I can't do for him - changing his catheter was my biggest worry but I did it and it was ok. He made me feel like it wasn't a big deal and that helped a lot. To know I can help is the best thing ever.
To get to know him properly after all those years and now living with him is great. We will be celebrating our first anniversary next month, and this year has been the happiest of my life so far. I hope for many, many more to come. I will gladly take 'in sickness and in health' because at the end of the day, I love him with all my heart and I know how lucky I am to have him.
lovemypara, on Feb 11 2010, 06:43 AM, said:
#69
Posted 28 May 2010 - 01:15 AM
I do have to say I probably couldn't have dealt with the SCI if my husband had been AB when I started dating him and then had an accident causing a SCI. The memories of my accident and the months of rehab after would have made it hard to go threw it again with him. I also would have been a hard nosed task master. "I did all of this when I was 6 years old and you don't want to do it. Good god your a grown man buck up!". Not that I would say that unless I was really ticked off but I am sure I won't give my husband as much slack as he says his family gave him. Plus adjusting to having two chairs in the house after having only one would be hard. Espically if my SO had been my career before his accident. So I guess I'm glad I meet my husband after his accident.
#70
Posted 28 May 2010 - 01:52 AM
#72
Posted 29 May 2010 - 02:48 PM
Never had a problem with her SCI, just had the initial curiosity of what makes her life a little bit different. Not much really, just the proximity of toilets.
#73
Posted 29 May 2010 - 03:35 PM
mellowgator
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