To those that have health and those that plan for a future.

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5 Oct 2007
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I do not know a lot, my experiences in life are unique as the experiences we all have but from what I have learnt over the last 20 years, I can in good conscience offer some advice.

Many will ignore this advice, many will think they know better but if this post makes just one person stop and think then it is worth it.

Before my wife became ill and my life took a different path, I was no different than many of you, 26, studying Bsc in Computer sciences at Stafford University, my hobbies were computers, games and Science Fiction, I spent a lot of time in my local computer shop.

When I met Paola and after less than 3 weeks I sold my Pace 9000 surround sound satellite system (I loved that setup) and payed the rental deposit on a small drafty terrace house, we didn't even have a bed for 6 months but we had love and a crazy kind of optimism, we spent our spare time doing live action vampire roleplay (we were part of the first official Vampire the Masquerade game, also the werewolf game and Mage) we loved computer games although at first we only had one.

She was studying creative writing with an eye on becoming a writer her secondary love was Archaeology and me I spent most of my time outside of lessons in the tech support having fun with old and new tech.

The point is we were no different than anyone else and we had plans, we wanted to visit Egypt, we wanted to explore Europe.


That morning she fainted on the way to college I had no idea what was coming my way, months of misdiagnosis and then finally a home visit Doctor took me aside and said "brace yourself this is going to be bad".

I have spent the last 20 years with my wife in Cancer wards recently Renal wards and Dementia wards with my Mum.

What have I learnt.


It is okay to save up and provide for your future but do not forget today, a man I got to know was a millionaire part of the double glazed windows boom of the 90's, he had a beautiful wife and two children but for 5 years he put off spending money and going on holiday, his wife was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer and within 3 months was dead, the thought that he wasted those 5 years destroyed him, his money meant nothing.

Many times I met people at end times who wished they had done things differently hindsight is a wonderful thing.

So my first advice is think about how your life is going, are you happy and if something really bad happened what would you personally regret not doing.


My second is very simple appreciate your health, when you can not even walk 20 yards to the local shop or stand up for more than 30 seconds it comes home to you, go for a walk, explore where you live, explore somewhere new, watch the sunrise.

Third, if you have someone in your life you love make damn sure they know it every single day, we do not need birthdays or corporate holidays as an excuse, do what makes you both happy and if you have no one then don't close yourself off to the possibility.

After all me and Paola met when I was not looking, the odds were against us from the start, her friends didn't like me, she had just been dumped 1 hour earlier and my mum thought she just wanted my money *laughs* I sat down next to her at a party and we just talked for 4 hours.

Enjoy life because you never know what can happen in the next 5 minutes let alone tomorrow.
 
It all depends what means more to you, out of college before I got into computers I went to work at a local Pottery firm, my first paid job and this was in the 80's paid 900 a week take home, it was hard graft and work started at 3-4am but really nice money, the down side was the dust that go into your lungs from the slip, most people on the potteries industry that made it to retirement died within a few years.

I massively destroyed my credit rating and got into huge debt when Paola was diagnosed with cancer and I do not regret it one bit, see for the first 18 months of treatment while in hospital both local and then Birmingham Queen Elizabeth hospital I daily had to make choices like pay a bill or visit my wife, take her out to town to visit some shops on a day in between the chemo or pay a bill especially seen as back then we were rolling the dice on her survival weekly.

No one should have to make those choices.

Yes be sensible but make sure you make time now as well as the future.

Then you have my mum who saved all her money to pass on to us for 40 years of her life and only in the last 2 years before Dementia hit did she start living (she went to America and Paris) but what was the point when all that money she saved is now being siphoned off by the local government to pay for her Dementia care.
 
Life is always a balancing act. You need to find time to enjoy it and so many people simply don’t. They get into the daily rut of life and spend their life treading water or planning for a time several will never see or when they get there it’s not as they planned. It isn’t until you lose something you fully appreciate it and that is when regrets form.

Do not waste your life. Make time for friends and passions and don’t put off living for the fear of the unknown. Your place in life is for the vast majority under your control.

Crap job? Change it!
Crap relationship? Change it!
Crap fitness? Change it!
Crap friends? Change them!
Crap day to day living? Change it!
Depressed? Seek help!

If you are reading that list and some things are resonating with you, but your first thought is “it’s not that easy” then it’s you I’m talking to. Life is rarely easy but it is usually under your control, health allowing. Don’t waste it.
That is a great way of putting it.
We all have challenges and sometimes they seem insurmountable, one step at a time can make a real difference.
 
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