TheBanyanTree: A Five Year Anniversary

mrsfes@gmail.com mrsfes at gmail.com
Sat Jun 1 07:43:16 PDT 2013


Beautiful piece, Monique. Well written, as usual, and a lovely tribute to Stew.

Sent from my HTC One™ X, an AT&T 4G LTE smartphone

----- Reply message -----
From: "Monique Colver" <monique.colver at gmail.com>
To: "Banyan Tree" <thebanyantree at lists.remsset.com>
Subject: TheBanyanTree: A Five Year Anniversary
Date: Fri, May 31, 2013 12:24 PM


Five years ago today I stood at the bedside of Stew Young and held his head
while he died.

That sounds overly dramatic and sad, when I say it like that. How about
this:

Five years ago today I had a very bad day. For Stew, it was the last very
bad day in a long line of them.

After years of living with mental illness, it was cancer that got him. I’m
never sure if I should be participating in cancer walks or mental illness
walks. Stew would find that amusing.

But Stew should not be remembered as the guy with a mental illness, or the
guy with cancer. Those were not his primary traits, those were things that
happened to him, and those things don’t tell us anything about him. None of
us are defined by the things that happen to us, by the illnesses and
accidents and events that distract us as we go from here to there. We are
not those things.

Stew was a writer. He co-authored the book we wrote, though it wasn’t
published until several years after his death. The delay was my fault, not
his. He was a good writer, but not, as he would happily concede, as good as
me. I’m not sure that’s grammatically correct, but I said I was a good
writer, not an excellent one. We would argue about comma placement,
punctuation being one of the ways we kept the rules of the world straight.

He made me laugh. Even when things were at their worst and I didn’t know
how I was going to pay both the rent and utilities, not to mention his
meds, he would make me laugh. It helped me get through the times he wasn’t
all there with me, when his mind would be in such chaos that he couldn’t
function at all, when he could only think of harming himself, or when there
was no expression at all. I always had hope that the person he was would
come back out and he would make me laugh again, and he always did.

The laughter was often in relief, but still, we take what we can get.

He had an amazing relationship with his parents. When they couldn’t
understand his illness, because they had no experience of it, they learned
everything they could. They were always supportive of him, of me too, and
all they wanted was the son they knew to come back from wherever he’d gone.
And Stew just wanted to make them proud. He did, of course, because they
loved him no matter what – it wasn’t conditional upon anything.

Stew was intelligent, so very intelligent. His dream job was to analyze
data and make it into something meaningful. Or being a screenwriter. One or
the other. Something other than the crazy guy on disability. He was
politically conservative (to my dismay), loved corporations and big pharma
(who he credited with keeping him from complete destruction), and loved to
debate online.

He loved our dog, Honey, though when she first moved in he thought, because
of her inherent Chowness and love of me, that it wouldn’t work out. But of
course it did, and when she stayed with him she slept on his bed, and he
would do anything for her. She gave him a sense of responsibility, and she
gave him a reason to go out when he mostly wanted to hide from the world.
But the dog had to be walked, and though he’d often come back and tell me
of the things he’d seen that didn’t really exist, it was good for him.

He’d learned to live with the hallucinations, and later on they subsided.
The voices were worse because they told him things no one should have to
hear, and fighting voices coming from inside one’s head is so much harder
than those coming from another person. It’s hard when you can’t tell if
it’s you or them, when they’re telling you that you deserve to die and you
know it’s not you, but the voices are inside of you, and they’re demons.

I can’t imagine it. The voices telling me I’m unworthy were implanted long
ago, and I know, mostly, that while they’re a part of me, they’re not
necessarily accurate.

Sometimes he forgot that life wasn’t all bad, and so I’d watch, and wait,
and when he laughed or smiled or was having a good moment I’d turn on him
and say, “Hah! Look at that!” It was so easy for him to forget that in a
life filled with pain, there were still plenty of shiny happy moments.
There was still the light bouncing off the Sound, the dog who would let you
cuddle with her, books to read, pizza, watching me eat crab (which he
always found amusing), and even the dark clouds of a Seattle day, heavy
with rain and the promise of a good cleansing. He loved the dark grey days.

 He loved his family, his friends, his dogs, and me. Later, he loved my new
husband. That’s how he was –he wanted me to be happy. He always wanted
that, no matter what happened between us. When people rejected him because
of his illness he would react with anger, because it made him sad. Stew was
always willing to help people, always seeing the good side of people. He
fought his battles the best he could, and he had plenty of battles to
fight.

A day or so before he died he told me he was afraid of doing it wrong. Of
dying, that is, as if there’s a right way and a wrong way, as if the
process should come with some sort of instruction manual. That’s how he
was, he wanted to do things the right way, the proper way. I told him that
he was going do it just fine, that there was no wrong way to go about it,
and that so far, he’d done everything just right.

Sometimes just doing things the only way we know how is the only right way.

No one with mental illness is just that person with mental illness. It’s
just something that happened to them.

It’s what we do with what happens to us that matters.

Stew wrote because he wanted people with mental illness to know they
weren’t alone, and he wanted people without mental illness to know what it
was like. He wanted to increase our awareness, and he wanted others to not
have to go through some of the things he did.

But mostly he liked people to be happy, and he liked to laugh and get
others to laugh. He loved his family and his friends. That was his thing.
On this day I remember him for his life, not his death. It was his life
that mattered, and death was just something that happened to him.

Laugh. Be happy. Look for the rays of light.
*
*
*We appreciate your referrals!*

Monique Colver
Colver Business Solutions
www.colverbusinesssolutions.com
monique.colver at gmail.com
(425) 772-6218


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