And We’ve Got Ants (The Burnout Is Real)

Black and white photo of a puddle on pavement with several leaves floating on the surface.June and July were spectacularly challenging months.

My father ended up in the ER four times in June. The first time was early in the month with what was determined to be a COPD flare up. He then went twice in the same weekend later in the month, first for abdominal pain, and then for difficulty breathing. The latter led to a 911 call at 3 in the morning and him being hospitalized for four days.

While he was in the hospital, I was driving 30 minutes each way visiting him every day while also working and trying to figure out when I was going to get my yearly blood work done, and how I was going to get my colon cancer check done (that turned out to be an interesting side quest), and when I was going to get the housework done and the errands run. I had planned on using my day off that week to play catch up. I had called Dad that morning and we agreed that unless he was getting discharged, I’d stay home and call him again that evening to check in. I was actually waiting at the local hospital to get my blood work done when I got the call that he was being discharged. My day off turned into a day of shenanigans, but I got him home.

And then Monday, I came home from work and we went back to the ER for abdominal pain. Again. What do you know? He had some inflammation in his stomach lining, most likely an ulcer. Neat. More meds and something else to discuss with his primary doctor.

Because when you’re admitted to the hospital, you have to follow up with your doctors after you’re discharged. My dad has four doctors, which means four follow up appointments, three of which are 30-35 minutes away. And every discharge and follow up appointment and ER visit comes with new meds and med changes. In that two week period, I went to the local pharmacy four or five times.

As the month of June wrapped up, my sister’s visit drew closer. She, my brother-in-law, and my baby niece were driving up from Texas to visit family. They’d planned on staying at the house, which meant my small dwelling was about to acquire three extra people and it was barely in a fit state for the two living there. This isn’t to say that I don’t clean. I just don’t clean enough. It’s fine if you live here, but not if you’re company. Especially if you’d like to stay in this establishment and the upkeep of the rooms available hasn’t been a high priority on the To Do List.

The truth is I haven’t done much of anything with Carrie’s room since she passed aside from packing up some of the more important items and sending them to her parents. It’s still largely like she left it. Even the easiest thing -going through her clothes and donating/tossing them- has been put off. The only reason I washed her duvet is because the cat threw up on it (thanks for that motivation, Antoinette). I did end up doing some dusting and vacuuming at the end of June in the early stages of preparing for my sister’s visit, but that was about it.

The Box Room is a hopeless mess. My inability to have it ready in time for their visit was the main reason that my sister and her family ended up staying in a hotel, which turned out to be for the best. Just their daily visits of a few hours wore Dad out. Having them in the house the whole time would have exhausted him.

I did have time to catch up on some of the yard work before the visit. I mow about every week, but the trimming and the “jungle” (a cluster of plants, mostly pokeberry, at the corner of the house) had been neglected. It took me a little over an hour to get it all neatened up so the house looked less abandoned by the time everyone arrived.

Also, we have ants. We get ants every year and this year isn’t nearly as bad as previous years, except for the fact that I cannot get rid of them. Every time it looks like they’re gone, a missed crumb calls them back to the kitchen counter in full force. So, that’s been a fun, ongoing battle that I’ve been losing.

I am glad to say that my sister’s visit went well. If anyone noticed that I forgot to wipe up the crumbs by the toaster, nobody mentioned it.

It occurred to me during this particularly extra challenging period of my recent existence that I might be a little burned out. Some bad habits started to reemerge (a creeping increase of screentime, procrastinating tasks, bedtime procrastination to my detriment). The constant fatigue, tiredness, and exhaustion. The casual neglect of my needs and the default to lazy behaviors. The overwhelming feeling that I can’t keep up with anything and I’m failing at everything.

It’s not surprising that I would be burned out as I’m already terrible at functioning at an adult level and I’ve been forced to go full-throttle at it for the last nine or so months. Care giving is an adventure. Some days Dad does pretty well and some days he doesn’t. I have no idea what I’m waking up to every morning or walking into when I come home from work. And between care giving and work, there are no days off. It’s not like my dad requires constant care, but I’m on-call 24/7. I make sure he gets his meds and takes his meds, I get him to his appointments where I am his knowledge keeper and translator (he has trouble hearing). I make sure he’s eaten. I am his problem solver on the days that he doesn’t feel well (“Have you tried X, Y, and Z?”). I get a couple of hours here and there that I’m able to get out of the house and not do caregiver or work-related things.

And I haven’t even talked about the work-related things, library or creative.

I honestly don’t even feel entitled to my burnout. I feel like other people would be handling all of this much better than I have and than I am, so I don’t really deserve to be burned out. Other people would have the gutters and their dead roommate’s room cleaned out by now.

But the burnout is real for me and I’m doing my best to deal with it. Not by going easy on myself, of course. I don’t deserve that. Instead, I’m trying to make the manageable bits more manageable so they don’t become overwhelming. It requires a lot of list making and organizing things on paper because I do better when I can see the contents of my brain. Hopefully, it will eventually help.

So, why the long-winded whine?

It’s one of the immutable laws of the internet.

Complain online, and the complaint fixes itself.

2 thoughts on “And We’ve Got Ants (The Burnout Is Real)

  1. Oh lord, I’m sorry, that’s pretty much the worst. You’re doing a pretty good job though, it’s impressive. I know what it’s like when it’s just you with no respite.

    You’re doing great work and folks a re rooting for you and your Dad.

Leave a comment