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What Would You Consider The Greatest Obstacle You've Ever Had To Face?
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How did you overcome it? Explain. Thank you :)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As your life progresses ostacles come along , I would find it hard to pick the worst/greatest.
Death of a spouse.
Fear when I heard the Nurse tell a Doctor she couldn't find my pulse.
Depression and crippling panic attacks.
With each obstacle I do as most do - face the fear and carry on the best I can.
Death of a spouse.
Fear when I heard the Nurse tell a Doctor she couldn't find my pulse.
Depression and crippling panic attacks.
With each obstacle I do as most do - face the fear and carry on the best I can.
Almost impossible to answer in a few words. So many levels. Looking back, I realise that being female in my formative years was a huge obstacle, but I just kept on battering away - now I see how that was one of a number of actions which has led to the powerhouse we have today.
Obstacles - being of an artistic/historical bent in a scientific age. All husband's friends were scientists and very 'nice' to me. 'Specifically' is personal and involves divorce after the realisation that an assumed happiness and long-term relationship (30 years) was deadening and going nowhere. This led to the appalled realisation that I went under or 'jumped ship' - very frightening.
In the end, I did not want to be subsumed so I summoned all my courage, threw caution, children (then aged 18 and 21, so not so bad)and security to the winds and went on my apprehensively merry way to France and a total change of life and society.
There is no other way to say this - it was hard. You could lose yourself in bucolic pleasure and timespans, but not all the time. I found a society in which I could function and find friends - lots of them, but only 4 are brought back to UK with me. I did it by going out and helping people, finding a place where I was needed to help other ex-pats., giving lessons for nothing to help people communicate in French so they could manage in their lives. They became friends and a support group.
So I overcame obstacles by simply plugging away, putting one foot in front of another and meeting and being friendly to people. I was hugely lucky in meeting Mr. J2, who was also similarly adrift and coping. Now we are together, married and living in a village in E. Yorkshire - but we have both been through massive upheavals and obstacles (his was being widowed whilst in France). Life will always bring obstacles; you get on with it.
Obstacles - being of an artistic/historical bent in a scientific age. All husband's friends were scientists and very 'nice' to me. 'Specifically' is personal and involves divorce after the realisation that an assumed happiness and long-term relationship (30 years) was deadening and going nowhere. This led to the appalled realisation that I went under or 'jumped ship' - very frightening.
In the end, I did not want to be subsumed so I summoned all my courage, threw caution, children (then aged 18 and 21, so not so bad)and security to the winds and went on my apprehensively merry way to France and a total change of life and society.
There is no other way to say this - it was hard. You could lose yourself in bucolic pleasure and timespans, but not all the time. I found a society in which I could function and find friends - lots of them, but only 4 are brought back to UK with me. I did it by going out and helping people, finding a place where I was needed to help other ex-pats., giving lessons for nothing to help people communicate in French so they could manage in their lives. They became friends and a support group.
So I overcame obstacles by simply plugging away, putting one foot in front of another and meeting and being friendly to people. I was hugely lucky in meeting Mr. J2, who was also similarly adrift and coping. Now we are together, married and living in a village in E. Yorkshire - but we have both been through massive upheavals and obstacles (his was being widowed whilst in France). Life will always bring obstacles; you get on with it.
Being told I had cervical cancer and the doctor asking 'do you give us permission to operate otherwise you will die prematurely' answer 'book me in when will it be'. No brainer when I had two children aged 8 & 10 at the time. I had to survive. 14 years ago. Still here & healthy. This is the greatest obstacle that I overcame. Not sure how I would of coped in lardhelmets shoes x
Discovering after fifteen years of marriage my wife had cancer. She did all the right things, attending the doctor straight away, having operations and treatment and being told nine months later she was clear. It returned and 3 months later she was dead,aged just forty. Having to tell our two boys , aged 12 and 10 their mother was dead. You don't overcome these sort of things, you gradually learn to accept them and carry on the best you can.
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