Four years ago, apparently what loomed large in my mind was the stump, what it would look like, what it would be like, and how I would deal with it. Part of all marriages is physical attraction, and for most people, stumps are just not attractive.
I should probably mention that his leg was ugly to begin with. The accident that ruined it happened long before I knew him, so I have always known him as a man with an ugly leg. That never kept me from loving him, and I knew that the stump would not, either. But still, my reaction to it worried me. Would I gasp when I saw it and hurt his feelings?
In the early days, I did all I could to avoid it, to avoid seeing it or even thinking about it. I had to help with bandage changes, and as long as I focused on the wound and not the limb, I could handle it. It made me laugh that after all my years of avoiding the medical field, I had become someone's personal nurse. It has never been the gore that bothered me about medicine, it is the caring, and since I already did care, I could handle the duties.
It took me a while to actually look at the stump without focusing just on wound care. When I did, my worst fears were confirmed. It was ugly. To me, it looked like a ham attached to my husband, but a ham that could move. The way it moves offends my sensibilities, as if it is something from a horror movie. The other end of Thing, perhaps.
At the same time, looking at it confirmed that I could handle it. As ugly as it is, I have never looked at him and been horrified that he no longer has a leg. He is still Doc, still my husband.
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