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My “Year + Two Month” Strokeaversary

Somehow my one-year strokeaversary slipped by without a blog post, even though Sara and I marked it privately. Now here we are: way past twelve months. Already to 14 and counting.

I’m not sure why I didn’t push myself to post a one-year column on the actual day.

It could have been that I wasn’t emotionally ready. I was – and I still am – processing the fact that as far as I’ve come, I haven’t yet mended as I’d wished. Paralysed and stuck in my wheelchair a year ago at St. Martha’s Regional Hospital, Antigonish, I told my youngest, Gabe, that by September 2025 we’d be going for another 100 km walk to celebrate my recovery, like we did on the Celtic Shores Trail along the Cape Breton coast in the month before the stroke.

Well….that won’t be happening anytime soon, although I still hold out hope. While I can walk farther and faster than at any point since my brain damage, my best distance is a couple of kilometres with a limp. It’s hardly 100 km in a week like we did in 2024, striding into a new coastal village every afternoon in the late-afternoon sunshine.

I also dreamt that at one year post-stroke the part of my body the slowest to recover, my left hand, would be fully back in use. I imagined somehow I’d be chording smoothly on guitar, holding my mug of tea, and most importantly, typing. The truth is that yes, I can actually DO all those things, sort of! It’s a miracle. And I recognize that miracle when I’m properly “glass-half-full” thinking. For instance, I’ve typed this blog-post using both hands.

But the deeper truth is more nuanced.  Chording is still slow….usually too slow for a song to really feel like a proper song. A full cup of tea is dangerous to hold in my left hand for too long – and a hot cast iron pan more dangerous still! But I’m able to reach, and lift, and manipulate more with that hand every week. I can now screw the milk and toothpaste lids off and on as a leftie. I regularly empty the dishwasher with my left hand as therapy. I can almost snap my fingers and make the Vulcan salute. Holding a nail in September while hammering was sometimes an act of faith. But the nails got in. Eventually.

Typing is not as slow as it was. But it’s still tedious, difficult, and tends toward errors. Sara says that she can tell my typing has improved because in the last month I’ve written a lot more pieces – articles, reviews, and the like. “You must feel more comfortable composing,” she remarked. “You’re getting back to your enthusiasm for new ideas.”

I feel that too. This fall I taught an online course on Leonard Cohen and St Paul, and had a wonderful time with my adult students. My classes about early Christian asceticism at StFX are fun, and recently I took first-year kids on a tour of the Saint Ninian Cathedral, being sure to point out features I write about in my book “Someone Else’s Saint.” Sara and I each gave keynote presentations on subsequent weeks at different institutions in Halifax, which was a chance for trips “to the big city” and mini-holidays.

My public talks and interviews are happening again. I was interviewed this fall by Jesse Zink of Montreal Diocesan College in his “Principal Meets Author” Series. Be sure to listen to an upcoming episode of CBC Radio’s “The Cost of Living,” where I’ll be on a segment talking about Advent Calendars! This week I’m also presenting in the Research Chairs Colloquium Series at my university, an honour for me.

So, the one-year strokeaversary slipped by.

When she read what I just wrote above, Sara pointed out that maybe it wasn’t disappointment that stopped me after all. Maybe I let the 12-month blogpost slide simply because my fall has been so incredibly busy. True enough. But the anniversary didn’t pass completely unmarked.

It turned out that I had a follow-up appointment at the hospital one year to the day from my initial TIA – Trans Ischemic Attack, September 16th. So I ordered two cakes from our local Sobeys and Sara and I took them in to mark the day: one for the physio ward, since that’s where I’ve spent so much time post-discharge, and the other for St. Martha Regional Hospital’s third-floor hospital wing, where I lived for almost four months last fall.

Those cakes turned out to be a pretty good metaphor for the hospitalization and recovery process, and for the nature of institutions. On the physio wing, it turned out that almost all of the Occupational Therapists and Physiotherapists who’ve worked with me this past year were there. To a chorus of “oohs” and “aahs” the cake was quickly divvied up. There was lots of laughter and shared memories, and many thanks and congratulations given and received. It was wonderful.

However, when I carried my one-year cake to the nurses’ station, it was a different story. That day, none of the faces looked familiar at all, except my own GP, who was at the desk. Apparently, there’s been quite a bit of turnover recently on the ward. A nurse politely thanked me for the cake, took it, and congratulated me on my recovery. Sara and I stood around a minute or two awkwardly, then left. I’m sure the staff there that day enjoyed the sweets. But through no fault of theirs, they didn’t know me from Adam. There was no one at the desk from “my” past, no one who shared my memories, and no one to mark with me those tumultuous months that were so significant.

That’s life, I guess. In the end, our experiences change us profoundly. Sometimes permanently. But for everyone else, things can sometimes go back to normal pretty quickly.

Speaking of major life-changes this fall: in October, Sara’s parents moved back to Moncton for the winter, after a wonderful, but very busy, summer of cooking, canning, and building. I took a very quick, very short trip to Montreal to hug my kids after their own family tragedy: the untimely death of my ex, their mom. Sara and I made our first juice from our first grapes, and filled our pantry with summer’s jellies. Since then my own step-mother, Mary Anderson (Hattum) passed away, along with another good friend in Saskatchewan, John McPhail. Oh yes, and a feral cat we’re calling Theodore seems to have adopted us, on and off….

Things aren’t the same as a year ago in so many ways, some large, some small. I keep having to learn and relearn the lesson that life is beautiful, often fragile, and that the time to tell folks you love and appreciate them is right now.

I feel very fortunate to be alive, and thankful every day for the chance to experience this world in all its confusing glory. Strangely enough, I believe my life has been enriched by my stroke a year ago, and by the struggles that have followed. I appreciate you who have accompanied me through this year (plus a couple of months). As the leaves drop, the Grey Cup finishes (yay SK!) and November tilts toward Advent and Christmas, I hope you find some love and joy in these days as well.

9 replies on “My “Year + Two Month” Strokeaversary”

Matthew. I follow your progress as a friend. I pray for you to be able to continue being positive. You are a blessing to all that know you.

I just finished reading ” The Way of a Pilgrim” for the 3rd time. It was suggested to me by a close Christian friend who has since passed. The book is by an anonymous Russian pilgrim of Greek Orthodox beliefs (maybe 13th century Im not sure). He is seeking the meaning of Pauls instruction to pray without ceasing. I expect you may already be familiar with this book.

During a section of reading it caused me to think of you.

A pilgrim that was a Christian university professor was relating to a small reverend gathering, an incident in his journey finding true prayer.

I just copied and pasted a section below.

seemed to be paralyzed, for I could not move my hands and feet. A doctor was called, who diagnosed my illness as paralysis caused by shock or fear. For a whole year after this incident I lay in bed and was under the doctor’s care, but there was not even the slightest improvement in my sickness and I found it necessary to resign from my teaching profession. At this time my elderly mother died and my sister decided to enter a religious community; and this fact made my illness even worse. I had only one comfort during this time of my illness and that was reading the Gospel; from the beginning of my sickness it never left my hands but served as a reminder of that mysterious happening. One day, very unexpectedly, a monk who was collecting money for his monastery stopped by our house. He asked about my illness and then told me very forcefully that I should not put all my trust in medicine, which without the help of God has no power to heal; he encouraged me to ask God for help, to earnestly pray about my condition because prayer is the most powerful means of healing of all sickness, both physical and spiritual. In my confusion, I objected, “How can I possibly pray in this condition when I have no strength to make prostrations or even to raise my hand for the sign of the cross?” His only response was, “Make an effort to pray!” and he gave me no further explanation of how I should pray. After my guest left, almost against my will, I found myself thinking about prayer, about its effects and its power. I began to remember the theological lectures which I had heard a long time ago when I was a student, and I found comfort in recalling religious truths; they brought me comfort and I began to feel some relief in my sickness. As the Go

I forwarded this just to raise your interest in the book and not to suggest anything. I download my copy from Kindle.

All the best wishes to you.

Billy

Hi Billy, thank you for this, and thank you for reading and for being in touch. It’s a gift for me to hear from you, a fellow pilgrim and one who was there at the beginning of my interest in walking long distances and spiritual paths.

I appreciate your friendship and this quotation. I know the book! It’s mysterious to me, and sacred, how the journey exists both in what we walk with our feet, and what we live through in life. I think anyone at our age has experienced some of both of those pilgrimages. Thank you for sharing this wisdom and care. They’re deeply appreciated. I enjoy the hints I hear and see on Facebook of your walks.

Dear Matthew, thank you so much for the update. So many lessons lived and learned from, so many gifts of all sorts, parcels to be examined, studied and worked through. Someday you and I will walk together again.

My knees collapsed this fall after completing the Hadrian’s Wall hike. I had a short stint on a wheelchair and the use of a chain. I felt quite debilitated and worried that I’d never walk again. After an injection on the bursitis and continuous exercise (physio) I am recovering fairly well. I still have go get An MRI. I have been wearing a small acorn on a chain around my neck to symbolize that may be my last rugged walk everything else will have to be flat-land!!

Welcome back, big hugs to you and Sara. Louise

Hi, Louise,

You sound so determined! I’m not surprised. It’s long been a dream of mine to walk Hadrian’s wall – I hope to do that someday. But I treasure the idea of walking again with you, even on the flatland, maybe especially on the flatland prairies. So I will tuck that in as a dream, and look forward to that after more physio and exercise and recovery, for both of us. Thank you for the encouragement, friend. Big hugs back to you both.

Peace to you, Matthew.

Thank you for this update. So much in your life!
It is good to hear your intentional marking of the dyings and risings in your life, and of the life you have made together with Sara.

Continued strength and imagination and joy to you.

Peace,
debbie lou

Thanks Debbie Lou. It’s been a bracing autumn, and it’s not over yet, but I guess that’s what comes with the years. I hope all is well in KW and at the school. We are fortunate to enjoy the golden days we’re given!

Matthew, you’ve ‘walked’ so much farther than 100 k! You’ve done really well and have had excellent support along the way. I’m proud of how far you’ve come and will still go. xxAlice

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