I have (as I’m sure all of us here have) always been her husband and always planned my life with this person. And it’s so damn hard trying to figure out who I am and what my life looks like without them.
Yes, it really is as fundamental as figuring out who we are now that our life partner in on a different path than our previous joined path. I still refer to that time as being reduced to dust and having to rebuild (reinvent) myself. I didn't even really feel like a human being at times. I had reduced peripheral vision and became extra careful driving because the whole world seemed strange and my brain was on overload, yet couldn't focus on anything very long.
Once I connected the idea that I responded physiologically with my adrenal glands pumping out adrenalin, that's when I became serious about exercising to burn the effects from high adrenalin levels off. I also became serious about finding what other coping strategies worked for me and doing more of those.
My whole body was responding in a state that I was in high alert/danger and so I did things that helped me have breaks from that physiological state and train myself back to my normal state. Relatively early on, that became my singular focus because I simply didn't want to live in that pain anymore.
There was me in this physiological state and then me managing myself so I could heal. I was implementing my care plan that I was also figuring out along the way and that slowly changed along the way.
It felt like I was like clawing myself back to normal stasis, inch by inch. And with each inch, my emotions began to get better (with lots of spurts and starts). But when I had just a few moments of relief (normality), I became even more determined to get back to my normal level of happiness. And whatever was associated with elevating or prolonging the pain was eliminated or reduced. I knew I could always add those back in later
And I am forever grateful to those who helped along the way; they literally saved my life.