Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Progress

Neal has always done his fair share of housework. But I usually did put his clean laundry away, just because it seems like a nice thing to do for your partner.

After the stroke, for many months the only thing I could do by myself was to put my underwear in the bureau, one-handed, while sitting down. Now I've progressed to sorting a whole of basket of my laundry, including hanging up my tops with my both hands (although with several breaks because of my fatigue).

Yesterday I put my own clean clothes away, and then even hung up some of Neal's shirts. Two of them.

5 comments:

  1. Wow... I'm impressed. Just this morning, my husband came to me and asked if he should put away two pairs of my jeans, apologizing for coming across as critical because I had not put them away.

    The last time I did laundry, it was a struggle to do one-handed; it involved dropping my clothes in the stairwell to a basket on the first floor. I dragged the basket to move it, so I'm thinking of getting a laundry cart for each floor; I can't get that upstairs, though.

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  2. Hanging up button shirts is so hard! I drape my husband's neatly on a chair back and let him hang them up -- although I have figured out how to hang polos. I have a hard time with all open-fronted items because the side I put on the hangar first slides off before I can get the second side on.

    Fortunately, our house is one-story. I carry the laundry baskets back and forth on my wheelchair. Using both hands to push the chair is good therapy.

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  3. Grace-You are making me look bad! I make Grant take his to the dry cleaners! (Although that was the one "pass" I had before we married-I don't iron! Funny how I can't remember what Grant's "pass" was...)

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  4. I have never done my husband's wash. He has been doing mine for 3 and a half years now. I wish I had been nicer about the laundry years ago when I had the chance.
    Grace, you are a nice lady.

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  5. This is such as easy task for an able-bodied person. It is triple triumph for a stroke survivor: better hand function, better endurance, and the pleasure of contributing to a partnership. I really relate to this post.

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