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So..after 3 months without thinking long enough, you asked her to marry you....then thinking you made a mistake and didn't mention this to her, you've strung her along and now when she really needs you, you want out? WOW! The very least you can do is help her till she's able to be independent. What you are going through right now is NOTHING compared to what she is going through and about to go through. I think it best you remain single. It is clear you are not at this time able to care for her in sickness, in health, for better, for worse, as long as you both shall live. Hopefully she realizes you have this problem and makes your job easier by breaking it off with you. Good luck.
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MaryKathleen Jul 2020
Charlie is not married to her, she is not even trying to do her exercises at home. I agree they rushed into this too soon, but it is water under the bridge and if he wants out, he should get out. All that for better or worse stuff doesn't count. I divorced my last husband because I could not take it any more. My daughter divorced a Pedophile who was abusive to her. Should she have stayed for "better or worse"? I think not.
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"Which upon careful review makes me feel like the biggest, shallowest, myopic, SOB that ever walked this earth. But I do NOT have the emotional resources to be given charge over the well-being of another person, only to watch my efforts fail so miserably in the most critical area of pain management, EVEN IF IT IS THROUGH NO FAULT OF MY OWN"

Maybe, I just think you both rushed into something too early. As they say, "the honeymoon is over". Your other comment

"She is incredibly stubborn and unfathomably vain in terms of her personal appearance and the house being neat as a pin "in case" anyone should stop by (no one ever does). She assumes people to be insanely judgemental toward the slightest imperfections -- things no reasonable person is at all likely to notice. It is disproportionate to sheer common sense."

Can you live with someone like this the rest of your life? I feel you were having second thoughts prior to her hip replacement and her surgery was just the straw that broke the camels back. This is what engagements are for, to get to know someone better as a couple. You have found out that marriage will not work. Maybe ur not cut out for this type of relationship. Thats OK. At 70 you need to live the rest of your life the way you want to. Thank God at our age there are no kids to worry about.
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
I almost called it off after a major argument just two months after having proposed. I had casually remarked to an acquaintance that I had failed to file my 2018 taxes on time and was going to owe substantial penalties and interest. When I related that conversation, she went ballistic. Gave me total grief for revealing PRIVATE FINANCIAL information to a personal friend.

Let me repeat that: she was PERSONALLY HUMILIATED about a tax liability I had incurred before we ever MET and that I had CHOSEN to share with someone else simply because I had not regarded it has any big damn deal.

I told her it was none of her business what I chose to confide to MY friends about ME personally. That's when I first wondered where her insecurity came from. I had seen nothing like it before.
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Reviewing the facts as stated by Charlie,
He proposed, they moved in together, financially investing in a home together, lived together a year.....without marriage.

Setting aside the hip surgery and decline, when was the marriage going to take place?
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
Her desire to be married in the Catholic church has (due to our respective divorces) resulted in a lengthy administrative delay. The "petition" is under review. No date has been set.
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After what you’ve been through with your mother, you deserve to have a happy life. You did not sign up for another caregiving job. You CAN and have the choice of opting out. Tell her to contact someone from her family. You are getting burnt out. I hope she doesn’t become a squatter & refuse to leave & claim it’s her property. Just end it. I feel bad for you because I’m going through caregiving for my 93 yo mother with dementia. I’m 61. I’ve said to myself that I will NEVER do caregiving again for anyone!!!! I “plan “ to enjoy my life after this ends...but I know how God laughs when people make plans. Just break engagement. How you do it is up to you. Maybe help her get into ALF. (Assisted living facility) But don’t sign up for being her advocate or she’ll make you responsible for $$$paying for facility!!! & BTW, your tax & financial situation is none of her business!!! Uugghh!!!!! Good luck & lots of hugs 🤗
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JoAnn29 Jul 2020
They own the house together.
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One reason older people do not get married is the financial implications of doing so. Even if there is a prenuptial, Medicaid does not consider assets as individual property. Assets have become a pool where each person is now responsible for cost of health needs. When 50% of the pool is spent then the other person has the remainder for their future living expenses and health care needs and only if it has been setup properly by an attorney.

My mom was well situated financially, married at 80 to her high school sweetheart, also well situated financially, thank goodness. He paid for everything they did before facility living and passed first, enough assets to pay for his own care. Mom passed nine months later and had enough of her own assets to continue paying the cost of her care. It could have played out very differently had either of them not had the savings. Had they both understood that they would have made a different decision, I think. Both wanted inheritance for their own children.

Me, I will never marry again. Shack up maybe, for now, I enjoy my life for what it is and not having either emotional or financial responsibility for anyone but me. This should be a primary consideration for anyone considering marrying later in life.
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cherokeegrrl54 Jul 2020
Amen, sister!! Agree totally
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Okay, the tax story is just too much. This lady has some serious control issues. I would not proceed with this relationship.

Charlie, I would pull back on the "waiting on her hand and foot". I would not make any comments about PT. I would encourage you to start getting out of the house/apartment more, at least a couple of times a day. Make yourself less available.

Get yourself a consult with a lawyer well versed in real estate to give you advice about the best way to get out of the co-ownership situation. Find out about breach of promise laws in your state.

And please, find yourself a therapist.
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
I agree with everything you said. But that is a long list of things I need to do for ME while necessarily taking care of someone living in OUR house. You're not wrong. Just sayin'....
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Charlie, WHY do you need to take care of her?

Because she expects it?

Why can't you say, "hon, I can't do this alone any more. You need to get some help in."

Alternatively, you can send the laundry out and eat a lot of takeout. In my city, my house cleaner has not come back to work, but maybe in your area you can have a cleaner in?

If I had hip replacement surgery, there is no way that I'd expect my 67 year old husband of 18 years to take up all the slack. And vice versa.
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
Well, the short answer is because we've been thrown into this quite suddenly, we live together in the same house we co-own and neither one of us has family within a three-state radius to help out. And no friends to speak of in the retirement community where we live.

But, yes, there are other resources. I got Visiting Angels to bring in a companion today while I was gone over four hours for a medical appointment. We may well do more of that. We're going to have to.

But she had me running around cleaning up stuff in preparation for the arrival of the PAID COMPANION. Insisted I remove the porta-potty from the living room ("Why?" I asked, "So you can fool her into thinking you're not the patient?"). She did the same thing before the regular cleaning people came in back when she was healthy....and went around cleaning WITH them and after them because no one performs to her standards.

You mentioned control issues. Yeah, I think the thing that is killing her most emotionally is the control she lost over her environment. I would think that would be fairly common for many people, but I can guarantee it is a major depressive issue for her.
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Erroxy, I think that you're wrong (and mean, but that's besides the point). One elder cannot "do it all" without help if someone is essentially bedbound. Just not possible. Nothing to do with how much you love the other person.

I think that Charlie IS suffering from burnout and also from a bit of PTSD; he remembers trying to care solo for his mother and knows what happened to him then. Self-preservation is different from selfishness.

We more or less constantly tell folks here that they need to take care of themselves first, or else who is going to take care of the person they are caring for? Charlie needs to try getting some help in, maybe getting himself some therapy and setting boundaries about how much he is willing to do. Boundaries make for healthy relationships and good marriages. (I have the tee shirt, as the saying goes).
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
Yeah, I'll just say that I think Erroxy is more than slightly presumptuous in assuming that my primary dissatisfaction is the burden of "waiting on someone" while not getting my quota of anticipated sex.

Let me assure you of one thing, Errox. If I do break this engagement (something thousands of people do every day) and if I build that little hermit hut out in the middle of nowhere as has been suggested, doing without sex from the legion of arrogant, know-it-alls like yourself will be the easiest sacrifice I would have to make.

Karen's love for me is the major energy force that is sustaining me RIGHT NOW. And I will repeat what I said in my second post as to the current source of MY greatest pain and torment: I do NOT have the emotional resources to be given charge over the well-being of another person, only to watch my efforts fail so miserably in the most critical area of pain management, EVEN IF IT IS THROUGH NO FAULT OF MY OWN.

I could have added, "and the thought of having to watch my loved one suffer in agony for a period of years due to a possible chronic, incurable condition is a curse I simply cannot bear."

For anyone to equate that torture to whatever distaste I have for doing her laundry in addition to mine makes me sick to my stomach.
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Yes, I see that SC still has them. Which is why he needs to see a lawyer.
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In addition to my previous post, I wanted to add that my mother, when she was in her 60s got hip replacement & was walking next day! She was also out of the pain that she was experiencing from the bad hip. She got physical therapy at home & shortly after that, we went on a cruise to celebrate! So, something in your fiancés surgery went terribly wrong. She should go to hospital & get X Rays, MRI & probably needs another surgery to correct. You should call ambulance for her...then explain to them you cannot under any circumstances take her back home. You cannot take care of her. Talk to Social Worker there & tell them to place her. If she gets surgery again, she goes to rehab facility after hospital. Don’t feel obligated to stay at hospital day & night to kill yourself. BTW, my mother went to HSS in Manhattan for her hip surgery. Hugs 🤗
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
Thank you, but, yes, we almost certainly KNOW what went wrong with her surgery. I've researched the hell out of it. It is NERVE DAMAGE, NOT a mechanical problem with the new artificial hip. The surgeon has already been back in once to look for hematoma. There wasn't any. I had a long talk with the physical therapist today who believes that trauma done to the nerves in or near the surgical site could very well account for the peripheral neuropathic pain she is experiencing in her FOOT. The FOOT is her pain problem -- NOT the hip. The new hip is FINE!! The LAST thing this woman needs right now is more surgery.
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Hi again Charlie,

You mentioned that Karen's pain is being caused by Nerve Damage. Have you read this article by the Mayo Clinic? I cut and pasted it below. Very interesting.

As I suggested before, please bring Karen to a different doctor (if you have to, bring her to 10 different doctors) just to get their opinions. When I was married to my 2nd husband he developed Crohn's Disease and over 20 doctors wanted to operate and put a colostomy bag inside of him, I said NO. I kept bringing him to different doctors until we found a doctor who treated his Crohn's with medication which worked for him.

My point is that there are doctors and then there are better doctors. Don't settle and don't give up.

Article:
Mayo Clinic Study Finds Nerve Damage After Hip Surgery May Be Due to Inflammation:

ROCHESTER, Minn. — A recent Mayo Clinic Proceedings article links some nerve damage after hip surgery to inflammatory neuropathy. Historically, nerve damage from hip surgery has been attributed to mechanical factors caused by anesthesiologists or surgeons, such as positioning of the patient during surgery or direct surgical injury of the nerves.

In this study, researchers examined patients who developed inflammatory neuropathies, where the immune system attacks the nerves, leading to weakness and pain. Inflammatory neuropathies may be treated with immunotherapy.

“Neuropathy after surgery can significantly affect postsurgical outcomes,” says Nathan Staff, M.D., Ph.D., Mayo Clinic neurologist. “The good news is that if we’re able to identify patients experiencing postsurgical inflammatory neuropathy, rather than damage caused by a mechanical process, we may be able to provide treatment immediately to mitigate pain and improve overall outcomes.”

The study was a retrospective case series, including patients who developed pain and weakness in a limb after undergoing hip surgery where there was no documented direct or traction injury during surgery. Nerve biopsy demonstrated an inflammatory neuropathy in all patients.

Neuropathy refers to damage to the peripheral nerves in the limbs. Patients with neuropathy often experience numbness, tingling, pain and weakness that starts in their feet and moves upward. Neuropathy described in this study is isolated to the limb where the hip surgery occurred — often affecting the sciatic nerve that runs down the leg and controls strength and sensation.

Dr. Staff says it is important that physicians understand that nerve damage may be related to an inflammatory issue, and there are some telltale signs for physicians to look for:

Patient’s neuropathy isn’t immediate, but rather it develops over time:
Severe pain
Neuropathy progresses
Different anatomical distribution than expected

“We know new or worsened weakness after hip surgery can be attributed to surgical factors, such as stretching, compression, contusion, hematoma or even transection of the nerve. But now we know that this weakness may be attributed to an inflammatory issue, and it’s important that physicians look for this cause, too,” says Dr. Staff.

Study authors also include Ruple Laughlin, M.D., P.B. Dyck, M.D., James Watson, M.D., Robert Spinner, M.D., Kimberly Amrami, M.D., Rafael Sierra, M.D., and Robert Trousdale, M.D., all of Mayo Clinic.

Hope this helps,
Jenna
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BarbBrooklyn Jul 2020
Charlie has read that article; he had read it even before I sent it to him. As he says, he has researched the heck out of this situation.

Is this a situation in which a medical malpractice suit is brought? Just thinking out loud.

Charlie; as I said in a previous post, good relationships are rooted in each partner being able to say "no" to the other. You CAN say "no, I"m not going to move the porta potty, it makes no sense to do that". You can say "I have things out of the home that require tending each day; let's figure out how much help we need to hire so that your needs are covered".

I think most of us understand that you are unwilling to watch your loved one in constant, chronic pain with no hope of relief. Having watched my mom's slow decline, a sudden acute issue made me hop up in down in frustration with my brother who had POA who was refusing to bring in hospice to get her the relief she needed. I only promised my mom ONE thing, and that was that she wouldn't die in pain. If I couldn't keep that promise, I wasn't going to stand around, helpless, and have her think i was betraying her. My brother realized I was going to walk away and he signed. Mom died, drifting on a morphine cloud three days later.

So, yes, we get that this is torture for you. But consider that if you get away for a bit each day, you will have more brain space to be compassionate and creative in your problem-solving and Karen may find a relief from the constant togetherness as well.

(((((hugs)))))))
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Nooooooooooo

Took care of my dad who had many chronic conditions. Now my mom. The only person left is my husband should something happen to him. Then, I’m done. No reason to marry anymore. Just another project waiting to happen.

I hope you are not her POA. Don’t be miserable for the time you have left to live. Write down your action plan and start chipping away at it bit by bit.
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Charlie, You've assessed the situation, your feelings and the considerations for the future very carefully. I hope that your fiance's pain lessens soon, if possible.

(My one piece of advice would be to try acupuncture for her pain. It could work, and it does work with those meridians in the body, so perhaps that referred pain would respond to it. I'd pursue anything that might bring her some relief.)

I can understand not wanting to sign up for 20+ years of care taking, and I also understand that the painful memories from your mother's dementia are still lingering and coloring the present.

Before you step away from this relationship, I hope you would consider talking to a therapist about this situation. It might help you be more able see the present situation as separate from your past experience with your mother.

Of course in the end you'll have to make this difficult decision, but with so many issues weighing so heavily on you, having a supportive professional in your corner right now can only be to the positive.
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To BarbBrooklyn,

Since I can't respond to you directly where you posted, I wasn't thinking of a malpractice suit (that's up to Charlie and Karen), I was thinking of a revision surgery in which Karen wouldn't have any more pain.

If it were me, I would find a surgeon (after talking to many different surgeons) to do the revision surgery (I'm not that far from being 67) and I would not want to live the rest of my life in horrible pain.

(Taken from another article):
Revision surgery is more complicated:

In the majority of cases a revision procedure is more complex than the initial replacement surgery because your surgeon must remove the original implant and replace it with new components. This is made more complicated where there is infection, lack of adequate bone stock, or difficulty encountered in separating the implants from the bone. The surgery can also take considerably longer to perform when specialized techniques and equipment are required.

Revision hip replacement surgery further complicates recovery as surgical
trauma, scar tissue, and mechanical weakening of bone can reduce performance of the joint and hip area in general.

Recovery and outcomes:

Care after hip revision surgery is similar to the care you’d receive after total hip replacement. This includes a combination of light physical therapy and pain medications as needed. Blood thinning medication will also be given to prevent blood clots. A walker or crutches will be used early in your recovery period, then you’ll progress to a cane and eventually walking without any assistance as your condition improves.

More than 90% of patients who undergo revision procedures can expect good to excellent results. Although pain relief and increased stability are expected outcomes, occasionally complete pain relief and restoration of function is not always possible. However strength and mobility may continue to improve over the next one to two years after hip revision surgery.

Source: https://bonesmart.org/hip/hip-revision-surgery/?gclid=Cj0KCQjw3ZX4BRDmARIsAFYh7ZJmJJ5qapElvdlnw8j5KI8cpR7OLYTxacnPKswjNjaNb0IjZYmBY74aAkGvEALw_wcB

More information:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884042/
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BarbBrooklyn Jul 2020
Jenna, the surgeon already went back in and looked for a hematoma or some other issue causing the pain. The problem is not the replaced hip; the problem is that some nerve got cut or trapped or something during the surgery. The hip replacement itself is fine.

I was musing about medical malpractice, not as a reply to you, but as a suggestion to Charlie. If Karen is going to be in chronic pain as the direct result of surgery and will need care for the rest of her life, there should be recourse. That's what medimal is all about.
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Charlie; one more thing.

When my 80 year old granma fell and broke her hip in 1965 and had hip surgery, she assumed she was going to be bedridden (because that's what happened before 1965, when Medicare came into effect). She called all her friends rather excitedly and said "I'm going to be an invalid; my daughters will have to care for me". She sounded pretty jazzed about the prospect. (note that my grandmother was an extremely controlling person; a teacup that she had finished with had to be removed IMMEDIATELY; none of us ever lived up to her expectations for neatness, sad to say).

At the time, my mother had 3 kids, one a toddler of 2 years. My aunt worked full time. Who was going to wait on bedridden grandma was beyond me.

Mom said to grandma; "there is no one to care for you; you will go to rehab and learn to walk again with a walker and you will go back to your apartment in the Bronx. We will come visit and clean each week, but we cannot take on your full time care".

Grandma was astounded. And as mad as a wet hen. "How can you sene me to live amongst strangers?". "My how you've changed". "I'll never speak to you again". And so on.

Mom and aunt stood firm. Grandma got better. Life went on.

Don't discount the idea that some folks enjoy being waited on Charlie. Stand firm in the idea that you CANNOT do this all by yourself.
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If she recovers you will help facilitate the recovery, if not you may break things off. Just leave! You obviously jumped into this relationship far to fast. As far as the joint ownership in the house, if she agrees sell it. If not, try to buy her out or just live there as roommates until such time you both can figure out how to deal with the situation. You just do your thing and let her deal with her situation herself.
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DILhagen2 Jul 2020
He didn’t say the woman jointly owns the homes. If her name isn’t on the Note or Mrtg., she’s a tenant because her mail is delivered there.
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No, you are not wrong and you are not legally responsible for this woman, as you aren’t married. You already stated that you realized you made a mistake about this relationship...outside of her medical issue. It’s time to officially break the relationship off & be 100% honest and not let anyone put a guilt trip on you. You’re 70 years old...speak your truth Sir. It’s time for you to call her adult children and tell them they’ve got 1 month to make arrangements. It’s unfortunate that she resides in your home, because now she’s considered a legal tenant. You may need to file a formal eviction if she doesn’t move forward w/ moving out.
If you know you’re an enabler, seek out counseling now.
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DILhagen2 Jul 2020
Sorry,
I read further down that she is the co-owner. She will have to either
1. Buy you out
2. Jointly agree to sell & get house on the market
3. Legal suit for “Partition”...forcing her to sell.
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Charlie, From the outside looking in, it seems that the problem is twofold: 1) you were having doubts about this relationship before the surgery; 2) your are neither emotionally nor physically prepared to tough it through this extended period of pain. So you really want out, especially now that her less-than-pleasant side is exaggerated due to her physical discomfort. I can empathize with both you and your fiance. She is in pain, uncomfortable, irritable, and (as previously noted) controlling. You are uncomfortable, irritable, and astounded by her controlling and the thought of being a caregiver once again (empathy, I'm in that role right now----not fun). The best you can do is help her find a pain-control expert, advise her relatives that you need assistance, and if they are unavailable have a frank discussion with her about obtaining help in the house for the long term. While you many not want to leave the relationship while she's down because it would make you seem like a cad. (which i get), you don't want to be part of a relationship with an invalid, you have to tell her at some point. As you both age, it is likely you will both need care.

Get your ducks in a row: Pain specialist, in-home assistance that she will pay for, legal advice on how to divest from the shared home, and the honesty to tell her you are not up to dealing with a sick fiance and you were viewing the relationship through rose-colored glasses. That's pretty much it. It's neither wrong nor right, it just is. She likely will be angry and not make it easy for you, but that's understandable. It's time to cut bait.
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I went back to Charlies first reply. He said the hip operation was not the problem. Her pain is caused by "peripheral neuropathy" in her foot which there is no cure but can be treated. So again I suggest she get pain management. At 67 she should not want to be an invalid for the rest of her life.
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Wow! Lots of deep questions. I am a RN. I think you have some unresolved pain with caring for your mom because of mentioning the "unrelieved pain" of others several times. Please consider getting some counselling about this. Hip surgery and recovery is not for the faint-hearted - it is a lot of hard work for the patient, a lot of help from others, and some pain that should be managed with medication and other therapies. That is why so many people opt to go to rehab for a short period until they are recovered enough to care for themselves. Since your fiancee' s pain management is not well-controlled, she may need to talk to her doctor and physical therapist to come up with better pain medication and non-medication strategies. It also might be a good idea to talk with your fiancee about going to rehab for a short time so she can get some intense physical therapy and help while she recovers. When she is recovered, I think you owe her a series of conversations about your expectations, her expectations, and your prior experiences. You need to decide together if your relationship is solid enough to weather "for worse.... in sickness" part of wedding vows.
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Update #3

Karen had first full PT session yesterday. Appeared to have gone well, although I saw very little. Had a good chat with therapist who wants her to ice the hip 3 to 5 times a day. The idea is that damaged nerves at the surgical site could cause the foot neuropathy. Therapist is not at all certain I will get much new information out of a neurological evaluation. In any event, that evaluation appears scheduled for next Tuesday. We'll see.

First meeting with new pain management doctor today. He very much wants her OFF opioids, as do Karen and I both. The question is HOW? I have no way of knowing whether or not she is addicted already. How would one know? Nobody is doing this to get HIGH. This is all in response to PAIN.

PMD has scheduled her for sympathetic nerve block on Monday, and has introduced a new possible diagnosis: Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). This is another area I had briefly researched. Check this link from the Mayo Clinic: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/crps-complex-regional-pain-syndrome/symptoms-causes/syc-20371151.

Karen clearly has five of the 10 symptoms. If it turns out she has CRPS this could be a very, very long painful haul. We have already had the conversation that I am NOT in this for the duration. She says she does not expect me to be. That may change once her eight siblings get involved and discover South Carolina still has "heart balm" laws surrounding broken engagements. These cases usually have very specific promises involved and often surround silly issues like who actually OWNS the engagement ring. Nonetheless, I will be proactively consulting an attorney versed in family law.

Today we revisited part of our earlier conversation about me helping her "get over the hump." I gently reminded her that as of the new information gleaned from the pain management doc today, we really have no idea where that hump is. But we are just over a month into this, and no hump appears to be in sight.

Charlie
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CaregiverL Jul 2020
Charlie...glad you’re getting some answers & you had talk with fiancé...it may sound silly, but even though you say you’re not in it for the long haul, your actions...going with her to dr, etc & saying, “We’ll see”, you are going along with her ...it seems you’re more involved emotionally than you say? It’s easy to get deeper & deeper in quicksand here without realizing it..just an observation! I hope this stress don’t take its toll on you! More hugs 🤗
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SCCharlie: I send you and Karen prayers. It's tough to see someone that you've grown to care about suffer.
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Wow! is all I can see after reading all this. Charlie you are clearly an intelligent man completely involved and dedicated to helping your fiancé to move forward. And frustrated that it isn’t happening as I’m sure she is too. I think it’s clear that there were other issues you were realising before she had the hip surgery that made you wonder if you’d done the right thing by proposing and moving in together. And you said her love for you is sustaining you. It’s good to be loved and to have someone appreciate all that you do for them. But I think you might now be wondering if YOU love HER. Please don’t feel a failure if this relationship doesn’t work out. You both entered it pretty quickly and it’s better to realise before you are married. It sounds like you are being proactive in looking at alternatives. It’s not fun but that’s life. If you do stay together it sounds like she might benefit from counselling to see why she is so worried about neatness and privacy and maybe learn to let go a little. It would certainly make her a happier more relaxed person.
About the pain. Has anyone discussed gabapentin or pregabalin? You use gabapentin cream so maybe you have and there is a reason she can’t use it. But oxycodone is NOT the right medication for nerve related pain. it depends very much on the individual how quickly they can become “addicted” to opiates. A good deal of the “addiction” is often psychological. I use quotes because addiction usually refers to the body’s physical dependence. My mother had chronic pain and used tramadol like sweeties. We tried and tried to get her to use them appropriately but she had a pain and it was the first one she reached for. I’m sure it shortened her life and decreased her quality of living. Once we managed to find alternatives and she stopped taking them it was much better. But she was very afraid of being in pain and needed something to use when it worsened. Eventually we got her to do things like drink a glass of water when she had a headache and give it 15 min. So the alternatives don’t necessarily have to be medications. Like the ice applications.
There is also capsaicin cream which might be worth trying. And the lidocaine patches. There is even a school of thought that lots of touching and stroking and hyper stimulating the painful area will reset the brain into accepting normal touch again without going into overdrive. Hopefully it isn’t complex regional pain syndrome. That is a difficult one. But try to be optimistic and don’t assume the worst. It wears you down! As far as being in too much pain to do her exercises goes, well you may have to leave that up to her. Maybe make her a chart and put stickers on it so she can get visual feed back about how many times she is doing them. It sounds childish but it works. You can’t do them for her. My mom had a knee replacement and was a right royal pain about it. Flat refused to stay in rehab and when the PT came to her home she would only do the exercise if he was standing over her. Bitched about the pain but wouldn’t do anything about it. I live overseas so once I went home there was nothing I could do about it. But she lived alone and was a determined woman so we told her to just get on with it. Her normal activities of daily living were what got her over it in the long run and she had beautiful function. So maybe try leaving her to do more for herself? It’s a balancing act because you don’t want her to fall or get hurt. But if she wants the house tidied before the paid help comes then let HER do it. It gets her up and about and moving so she regains muscular strength and it helps her psychologically to be moving and doing. The activity distracts her a bit from the pain because she has a target SHE has set. Don’t listen to the tears about how it increases her pain. If she is going to be obsessive about tidiness she will have to do it. Otherwise she will have to live according to your levels of acceptance of neatness. 😋
Good luck!
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
This is so, so helpful! Thank you so very much.

She is already on gabapentin in addition to the opioids and the pain management doctor wants us to gradually increase that dosage. I suppose pregabalin remains an option in addition to several others. I am truly fearful this IS CRPS, but in many respects it really does not matter. The time has now come to manage and plan for our separation in the midst of her efforts to recover. That separation is going to take place whether she recovers or not.

But Karen is all about the "power of positive thinking." And I don't think she has a good handle on when that mindset becomes merely "burying your head in the sand." Multitasking in terms of working, praying and focusing on the best while still planning for the worst is not something she readily accepts. She firmly believes that putting "negative thoughts" out into "the universe" actually increases the likelihood of their happening. And I told her just the other day that life isn't that simple. "If it was, this never would have happened. We certainly weren't fearful of a catastrophic outcome from a routine hip replacement. We barely gave it a thought. And look what happened."

It has been clear over the past year that we have several philosophical disconnects of this magnitude which has further caused me to question the wisdom of the union.

Thank you again for your compassionate support.

Charlie
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Charlie, thank you for the update! I'm glad that you were able to be honest with Karen about your feelings and that you're going to consult a lawyer.

And glad that the therapy is going well, that the pain med doc is moving along and that the neuro got scheduled. Time will tell how this is going to go and I agree with the poster above about being active. Keep us updated and vent away any time!
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Perhaps she's as anxious to get rid of you as you are to get rid of her. Many 67 year olds no longer feel that sex is a priority in their lives anymore. Maybe her pain is her perpetual answer to "having a headache".
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
Nothing about this has the slightest thing to do with sex. It's not a priority in my life anymore either. But, gee, thanks for dropping by.
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I think that we all have been bamboozled from the start.

Charlie states that she moved in with him and yet they own the condo together?

He brings up living with out sex and then gets offended by everyone that mentions it.

He says he can not talk to her about leaving while she is struggling with her health issues and then he says they revisit his helping until she gets over the hump.

I would be thinking about how soon this dude would be getting out of my house and life if this is what he is like.

Sorry Charlie no cigar for you.
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
You seem to have a comprehension problem, but I will admit that only a portion of it is your fault.

She lived two hours from me when we met online and we pursued a "commuting courtship" for several months. After I proposed she moved in with me in my small two bedroom home. Too small. We bought a larger house together in the same community. I contributed the vast majority of the purchase price, but her name is on the sales contract. She has also made most of the painting and construction upgrade. She co-owns this home and will have equal say as to how we divide this asset. We had an extremely wonderful year together that included sex and even extended periods before now without sex for reasons that are no one's business. I get pissed off about people who "bring it up" because they have absolutely no problem assuming that the absence of sex is a major reason for my taking the action I am taking. It is not. The idea is nauseating. It is simply a non-issue.

Yes, I found it extremely difficult to talk to her about her or my leaving or selling the house and splitting the proceeds in the midst of her ordeal, but found a time when the medication was at peak effect. We had that single conversation and I referenced it in passing a day or so later in the context of the pain management doctor's preliminary diagnosis. I have no desire to keep throwing it up in HER face, so I talk about it HERE.

I'm still here because I love her AND because I realize I have SOME responsibility to her because of our love and the plans we had made together. I anticipate being here for at LEAST several more months -- basically until it is clear to me that she has come to grips with the idea that she is going to have to make this part of her life journey without me and that the systems are in place for her to do that.

The original philosophical question before the forum was, "Do I still have the MORAL RESPONSIBILITY to marry her simply because of the original proposal and irrespective of my inability to properly care for her?" Most folks here seem to be of the opinion that I do not and should not.

I have appreciated EVERYONE'S advice and comments, but if you wish to go elsewhere for fear of being manipulated by some psychopath who has nothing better to do with his time, then I wish you good travels.

How ironic that your id is "isthisreallyreal." It is a horrific question that Karen and I ask ourselves continuously. Or at least I do. I guess I cannot speak for her.
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I took Charlie's first post to mean that a. he was impotent and b. that she moved in with him and then they bought a place together.
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Isthisrealyreal Jul 2020
I did not read it that way.
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1. I saw talk about the pain meds. I have to say my guy has been on two different doses of oxy (one long lasting one short) 2-3 times a day for the last 4 years for various areas of nerve pain. Until a few months ago, he is now completely off as of last month. What we did was 2 things I think helped with doing this. 1. We went low carb. Sugar and gluten are very inflammatory. 2. He started seeing a lady that does Rasha, which is definitely not in the realm of western medicine. But it really helps him get relief.

2. If you are feeling like you want out. Do it. Get her to a point of where she is ok. And move on. Don't live the rest of your life in regret and resentment.
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Hey Charlie. Bet you're sorry you posted, huh?
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SCCharlie Jul 2020
I don't know.... I am a bit perplexed about the way people's positions have aligned. Everyone is familiar with the challenges of caregiving within families -- spouses, siblings, as well as aging parents depending on their children. My experience with briefly caring for my mom before she went into a nursing home is not unusual.

But I thought the circumstance of "only" being engaged put an even more challenging perspective on the issue of moral responsibility and whether or not and to what degree it existed. I guess I was more right than I knew. I don't NEED anyone's permission to make a decision either way. But I suppose I was hoping for a little more nuanced reflection from folks on the central issue rather than redefining that issue as one of mere callousness.

But....I guess if that's how some people see it, that's what comes from putting yourself out there.
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ITRR: I have no idea why you are trying to start a fight with me.
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Isthisrealyreal Jul 2020
I am not trying to start a fight, you commented about what I posted and I am wondering how you think that you read something different from the original post. I will not go pm on this site because there are people that use that to say really nast things and try to start fights by lying, so I keep it public to avoid anyone saying I said something I did not.

If clarifying what you said is starting a fight with you then you need to toughen up. Different opinions are what make a forum.

This guy is only looking for permission to leave his fiance.
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