AARP Hearing Center
“Why did this happen to him?” asked Margaret, the devoted wife of 72-year-old Don, who had had a major stroke. “He didn’t deserve it. He is a wonderful man.”
She was not asking me during this psychotherapy session for a medical explanation so much as a spiritual or philosophical one. What purpose could her husband’s stroke serve? What sense could it possibly make?
AARP Membership— $12 for your first year when you sign up for Automatic Renewal
Get instant access to members-only products and hundreds of discounts, a free second membership, and a subscription to AARP the Magazine.
I felt Margaret’s distress but had no answer for her. Nor did I know how to respond to the many other caregivers over the years who have posed the same basic question about their relatives’ dementia, traumatic brain injury, cancer, Parkinson’s disease, bipolar disorder, chronic pain or COPD. I empathized with them, but I, too, struggle with why we suffer.
Some caregivers believe there is no reason for suffering and little sense in wondering about it because it is part of the human condition. Others do wonder about it but do not dwell on it while immersed in caregiving tasks to attempt to relieve that suffering.
For Margaret, though, finding some explanation mattered greatly. Like many people with strong religious views, the conviction that life should be fair, or the expectation that, as the old saying goes, “what goes around, comes around,” she believed in a “just world” — that is, people ultimately get what they deserve.
She asked herself things such as “Did Don do something terrible earlier in his life that warranted his suffering now? Did I? Am I still unknowingly doing something wrong?” These questions added to her anguish.
More on Caregiving
My Journey as a Family Caregiver in the Wake of Grief
Five months after my mother’s death, I’m feeling more at peace
How to Forgive Others After Family Caregiving Ends
Looking at the past with new insight may help caregivers get over lingering hurt, anger
Why Caregivers Should Become Champions for Other Caregivers
Helping others navigate their caregiving journey can reduce stress and provide emotional benefits