dotinthesky: (Default)


Nicholas

Nicholas



About a week ago, a woman got in touch, interested in booking a room for a night. After the usual back and forth, she let me know it needed to be a room with wheel chair access for her son. She was pleased with the video of one room I sent her: “it’s perfect! We can wheel him in without any problems. He doesn’t move by himself but we can easily carry him inside.”

She finalised the booking on 7th September, my brother Nicholas’ birthday. “What an interesting coincidence,” I said to my brother Martin. “Exactly on Nicholas’s birthday we book a family who have a boy just like him!”

In the pousada’s entire 17 years, I don’t remember us ever receiving a child with special needs like Nicky.

On Saturday they arrived, a lovely young couple. “Would you like to meet Nicky?” She asked me as her husband took the boy out of the car and placed him on his wheelchair.

“Excuse me,” I said. “Did you say Nicky?”

“Yes. His name is Nicholas.”

Goosebumps all over. I told her about the coincidences and from then on we had the most wonderful visit with them. It turns out they have an Instagram account dedicated to travel (with about 4,000 followers) where they promote different places they have been with their Nicky. They made beautiful Instagram Stories and Reels with our pousada and brought us some new followers. They were beyond kind.

“We’ll be back,” they promised as they said their goodbyes, and I believe them.

Nicky

Aug. 21st, 2019 11:11 am
dotinthesky: (Default)

It's been a month since my brother Nicholas passed away. He was 37 years old.

Nicholas was born in 1982. When he was a few months old, he suffered an allergic reaction to the whooping cough vaccine. The doctors told my parents it happened to 1 in a million kids. It left him brain damaged and in need of medication to control convulsions for the rest of his life. When people asked me about him, I always said he was a 2-month old trapped in the body of an adult as he needed care for everything - from feeding to washing, to moving on a wheel chair. But the truth was that he was an adult locked in the body of an adult with no access to his own nervous system.

When you lived with him you got to discover a personality inside, with likes and dislikes like anyone else - a fully formed internal world - which seemed to get lost due to heavy medication and the frequent bouts of illness that he fought throughout his life. Pneumonia was one of them, and it was pneumonia that finally took him from us.

I've met a few people over the years who asked me, very candidly, if it would have been better for him not to have lived. As much as I believe he is now free of pain and in peace, I also know that nobody can judge and decide whether his life was good or bad. We gave him the best possible life we could - his life expectancy was 20 and he lived to his 30s - he was very loved by those around him, and he brought clarity to our lives; he taught us how to feel compassion for those different from us. Did he hate his life? We can't know for sure, but I don't think he did. I think he was strong and weathered a lot of suffering, but when he was well he was calm, peaceful, and he could even laugh - and he definitely saved a smile for those he really liked (or for his favourite meals, from McDonalds!) He lived in his own world but he fully understood ours too.

One of the main reasons for my return to Brasil was to relieve my brother Martin from Nicholas' and my mom's care (she has Alzheimer's). But Nicky left us 10 days before my flight and suddenly everything changed. I'm now here with my mom, as her new carer, settling into this new stage of my life, but with some free time which I didn't think I was going to have. I was prepared to spend all my time caring for them both while Martin took a long break then returned to teaching. In the meantime, we would also look for buyers for our guesthouse, so we could then use the money for caring for them. As that's now changed, there isn't pressure anymore to sell the guesthouse and, in fact, it's now possible for us to reopen it.

I said goodbye to 18 years of life in London, and 20 years together with my (now ex) boyfriend. I said goodbye to old friends. Now I'm here in Brasil, slowly settling in, taking each day as it comes, appreciative of not needing to hurry, appreciative that there's so much I can help with here, but also of what I can do for myself.

Where I sit in the living room I can see photos of Nicholas on our mantel piece. We have donated his clothes and soon we'll repaint his bedroom so that it can become my own. I think of him every day.

Profile

dotinthesky: (Default)
Dot in the Sky

June 2024

S M T W T F S
       1
2 3 45 6 78
91011 12131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 14th, 2025 12:07 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios