Chez

Chez’s husband was diagnosed with MS in 1986, just a few months before they were married. He was 28 and Chez was 18. Despite all the challenges they have faced, and continue to face, Chez talks very positively about their life together.

Chez married her husband at the age of 18 knowing that he had recently been diagnosed with MS. They are still together after 25 years, having lived with many challenges together. Chez says they are soul mates. When he was diagnosed, they celebrated with relief that his symptoms were due to MS rather than a brain tumour. Chez found out as much as she could about MS, mainly from the MS Society, so that she would know what she was facing. Her husband preferred not to know and lived for some time in what Chez calls denial’ about his condition.

Chez’s whole life is devoted to caring for her husband and she never switches off from MS. Her own health problems mean that recently her husband has had to go into a care home temporarily. He has told Chez that he wants to move back to his roots, in Wales and currently Chez is working hard to make that happen. She feels, though, that she has to fight constantly with social services to get the care services and financial arrangements that are appropriate to their needs.

Chez has a positive outlook on life with MS, having not known anything else in her adult life. Despite this the cumulative effect of caring for and motivating her husband over many years has led to her becoming depressed over the last few years. Their family life has been affected, too. Their eldest daughter chose to leave the family home at age 14 to live with her boyfriend (Chez is grateful for the support of social services during that period of their life) and rarely visits her father as she finds it difficult to witness the progress of his condition. Their younger daughter became a little withdrawn but does now visit her father weekly, despite being away at university.

Chez doesn’t plan too far ahead. She says, It’s a lot easier to deal with things if you look on a day to day basis rather than looking too far into the future, because the future can change, and it can change rather dramatically.’

Chez thinks it is easier to live life day to day rather than looking weeks into the future.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez thinks that moving to Wales will be a positive step because it is something her husband really wants to do. She is used to moving around and thinks the time is right for something different.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez tries not to push her children in particular directions when it comes to their relationship with their father, but to let them do their own thing in their own way.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez gets disheartened and depressed by fighting’ with social services, but she keeps going because she wants to get the best possible care for her husband.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez was about to get married when her fiancé was diagnosed. She took on the role of finding out what to expect of life with MS.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez’s husband had MS before she married him. She has always seen herself as his carer as well as his wife.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez has pain in her back and knees from 20 years of physically caring for her husband. She accepts that she is going to need help with that side of things now, but feels that she is letting him down.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez was about to get married when her husband was diagnosed. They have survived the ups and downs’ by talking about things and because, she says, they are soul mates.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez thinks that depression is more likely to happen in the carer than the person with MS. She has had depression for the last seven years.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez’s husband has had MS for 24 years but it has only changed to secondary progressive MS in the last five years and he was able to continue working until very recently.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Chez was more concerned about a brain tumour than MS so the diagnosis was, in some ways, a relief.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female