Phil

In 2013 Phil’s 46-year-old partner Lewis had a brain haemorrhage, leaving him in a minimally conscious state.

In 2012, Phil returned home to find his partner Lewis collapsed on the floor from a brain haemorrhage. Lewis was 46. He was rushed to hospital where he had an operation to remove a blood clot and was placed in an induced coma. Interviewed in early 2014 Phil says, “Denial and hope are the only two things that you can rely on to keep a positive attitude, really, you just have to hope. And all they’ll say is, ‘it was severe, but the brain does strange things.’ They say the first 6 months really count, then the first year really counts and things drag on. And over time you lose the opportunity to be able to sit down with the right kind of people to try and discuss it properly, yet at the time you don’t know what to ask.”

A year after his partner’s collapse Phil paid for a private consultant to review Lewis’s notes and scans. “The consultant indicated that the most we could hope for would be to get to a ‘yes or no’ answer, which would be a good leap forward from today. But that’s likely to be it. So that would imply severely, severely disabled and dependent at the very best. So that was crushing.”

Lewis’s level of cognitive ability seems to vary: “He occasionally looks at me with normal eyes and might mouth words very quickly and that’s when I know he’s more there, but for a lot of the time he is more distant.” After a long period of unmanageable pain, (“Every day he was in acute pain, grimacing and wincing and it was just awful.”) Lewis is now more comfortable. He can now swallow and anticipates food coming, you don’t have to touch his lips. Phil’s greatest hope is that eventually Lewis might be able to communicate in some form.

Phil has given up work to be able to go in regularly to the care home, and has formed close bonds with other relatives there: “They have become my other family and we provide each other with empathy and a form of unstructured, organic counselling.” He hopes that Lewis is not distressed by his current existence, even though Lewis had previously stated he would not want to live like this. “They say that if you are like this then your perspective changes, so you can’t guarantee that he wouldn’t want to have an existence where he could have pleasure from my daily visits‚ and all those things. But if something serious happened to him health-wise again we might look to see if he would be able to go quietly instead of fighting so hard to help him live, and that’s horrible.” Phil misses Lewis terribly and is in grief but, “you’re grieving for someone that you’ve lost but you’ve kind of still got them, you sort of hope that you’re going to get a bit more of them but you don’t know what, when, how or if – you’re in a hideous limbo.”

Phil argued for his partner to go into critical care because he feels Lewis gets very little attention if left on a ward.

Age at interview 43

Gender Male

It was hope and naivety’ that kept Phil able to stay optimistic during the early weeks and months. However, after a year he paid for a review of his partner’s notes and he now feels he has a realistic’ sense of what is possible.

Age at interview 43

Gender Male

Phil talks about accepting the reality of his partner’s condition. He thinks he could not face what it happening without hope.

Age at interview 43

Gender Male

A hideous limbo’ is how Phil describes his situation, and he feels that he has been unable to fully grieve for his partner since the brain haemorrhage.

Age at interview 43

Gender Male

Talking to other families in the same boat’ has been invaluable to Phil. He feels under a great deal of emotional stress (and has now got a puppy which cheers him up, but adds its own challenges!).

Age at interview 43

Gender Male