Between November 3rd and last Thursday, Oscar has had three epileptic seizures – maybe four. Whatever the underlying cause is, it’s not good. He’s an old cat with many ailments, hanging on to a life still good enough.
You need to read The Cat Who Woke Me Up (thanks, Doc). It’s beautiful in so many ways. It makes me wish I were able to write about the truth of the world like that.
I haven’t got around to sharing even a tenth of all that I have understood over the nine long months since my accident. But somewhere in there, there is writing. And there is dealing with emotions. And grief. It is our struggle as humans, inevitably, to be faced with emotions. They colour our life. Maybe helping each other, being there for one another, all has to do with emotions. Maybe it all comes down to that. Emotions as the truth of life.
Christmas is approaching, and my old cat is inching closer to the end. It could be next month, it could be next week, it could be next summer. Though honestly, I think the likelihood of the latter is slim. Winter is not good for my cats. Both Bagha and Quintus died in the time before Christmas. Tounsi just after. Erica a few months later. I’m not superstitious and I don’t believe in anything. These days are just not filled with happy feline memories. And it’s a fact that winter, like the heatwaves of the summer, is not gentle on frail, ageing bodies.
I’m struggling with my brain right now. It’s not good either, in a different way. Obviously, I keep overestimating how much “available brain” (I don’t like “energy”) I have. As soon as things get better and more normal, I end up overdoing it, without realising, and then crashing again.
I underestimated the impact my programme for Friday and Saturday would have (and forgot to factor in some wiggle room for “unknowns”, which definitely made themselves known). Saturday evening I was completely exhausted. This means: headache, buzzing brain, making mistakes with numbers, struggling to put my thoughts clearly into sentences, more misunderstandings or lost threads when listening to others, and the odd word eluding me. Oh, and leaving my keys in the door (but that was Saturday noon already).
Sunday was headache, mostly rest, a friend over for tea, cancelling a videocall with another. Today had less headache, felt quite better, but after two hours Christmas shopping this afternoon my brain is filled with pounding rain and lightening and I gave up on heading out again for the second shopping trip I had planned. Christmas preparation is going to be much more challenging than expected. I look at the coming week and can’t see when I’m going to get the downtime to recover. It’s not good, and I don’t know what to do about it. That, of course, is part of the problem.
Next Monday, I’m going to the chalet. I don’t know what state my brain or my cat will be in. There are loud bells ringing telling me it would be more reasonable not to go. There are equally loud bells telling me that I haven’t been to the chalet in a year, that I desperately need a holiday, and that I want to go back skiing because this year has already been so dreadfully frustrating for me that I just can’t bear to give up on yet another plan.
I have had to get better at letting go of things. It doesn’t mean I’m good at it. And as I am still on the road to improvement, I logically should need to let go of less and less as time goes on. I keep thinking I can relax a bit, inch closer to my “normal life”, but I keep overshooting and being all the more frustrated: because I’m disappointed, with the double whammy that when my brain is fried, managing my emotions is more difficult.
I remember, in the first hours after my accident – or maybe days? – wondering through the fog of my concussion if this accident would leave a lasting mark on my life. Would it have big consequences. Would there be a before and after. Would it change me. Would a split second on a ski slope change the trajectory of a life. It made me even more acutely aware that some split seconds end lives – I was already very much aware of this, but knowing in your mind and feeling in your body are two different things.
My recovery is not just managing my tiredness and cognitive load to remain in the sweet zone of “enough activity but not too much” that supports healing and regaining function. It’s also grappling with Big Questions regarding the meaning of life, what’s important and less important, truly understanding that my ressources are finite, not just when I’m recovering from an accident, but always, and that I want to be mindful of how I use the time and energy of this one life I’m given. It’s figuring out what I want to do and dealing with the existential anxiety of my mortality, determining how much place I give to others and to myself.
I want to write about all this. If there is meaning, to me, it lies in making our time alive a little easier for each other. And though there is no better learning than through our own lived experience, sometimes the stories of others can resonate. Sometimes we find keys in the lives or insights of others. I want to write, and it’s terribly frustrating (that word again) to not have the availability to do it in a timely manner.
I hope Oscar doesn’t die too soon. It’s hard enough and sad enough as is. Of course I won’t want to have to deal with his death. But I accept I will have to. I would just like to be in a better place (cognitively) when it happens. 2025 has brought enough grief, and the last handful of years more than their fair share.

