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Green Vanilla Tea

One Family's Extraordinary Journey of Love, Hope, and Remembering

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Green Vanilla Tea is a true story of love and courage in the face of a deadly and little understood illness. With literary finesse, compassion, and a powerful gift of storytelling, Marie Williams writes poignantly of her husband Dominic's struggles with early onset dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) at the age of 40, and how their family found hope amidst the wreckage of a mysterious neurological condition.
 
As the condition develops and progresses, the normally devoted family man and loving partner seems to disappear beneath an expressionless facade, erratic behavior, and a relentless desire to wander that often leaves him lost. The road to diagnosis is long and confusing, and what starts off as perplexing for the family then becomes frightening. The man they love is changing, and no one seems to know why. He no longer turns up to his sons' high school events. He falls and bumps into things. He becomes verbally disinhibited, emotionally disengaged, and, at times, belligerent. He doesn't seem to be able to read the social cues of other people. He gets lost in familiar places, as well as on obsessive work trips overseas. He recklessly spends the family money, leaving them in near financial ruin. Despite this, Williams and her children strive to find new ways to keep him safe and to connect with the husband and father they love so dearly.
 
While the family learns to cope with Dominic's illness—which they call the Green Goblin—Williams is determined that her children reclaim the dad of their memories. She finds creative ways to make visible the stories of the man beyond the illness, and helps them remember him as the engaged, healthy, and loving man she fell in love with. She humanizes the experience through storytelling and assembling a quilt made up of transferred photographs, painted artwork, family footprints, and personal inscriptions from family and friends. This, along with tea rituals, music, and stories of fatherhood, love and value, support them as fierce advocates for Dominic's dignity and give the family new ways to be together as they journey through his decline. Spanning between moments of intense joy and incredible sadness, this book is a passionate testament to one family's unconditional love for one another. It is, "a tale of a strange place—the real world— in which green goblins and hope find a way to live together."
 
Above all, it is a love story.

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    • Books+Publishing

      May 24, 2013
      Green Vanilla Tea is the winner of the 2013 Finch Memoir Prize and it’s easy to see why. Marie Williams, her husband Dominic, and their two sons Michael and Nicolas are recent arrivals to Brisbane from Vancouver. As the family juggles a new environment, jobs, schools and friends, Dominic starts to exhibit strange behaviour, from berating a colleague at a party to attacking his son in the study. Something is wrong but Dominic refuses to see a doctor. Is it a midlife crisis, a nervous breakdown or depression? As Dominic becomes more erratic and disconnected from his family, including draining all the money from the family’s bank accounts to support nearly every charity in Australia, leaving the family virtually penniless, Williams becomes increasingly bewildered. Finally, Dominic is admitted to a psych ward for assessment, where he is diagnosed with dementia and motor neurone disease, for which there is no cure. Williams and her two teenage sons now have to deal with Dominic’s inevitable decline. Williams has written a powerful and heartbreaking account of her husband’s illness, and the challenges faced by the family, which never loses sight of the immense love that binds this family together. This is an inspiring and important memoir.

      Sarina Gale is a freelance writer and bookseller at the Sun Bookshop in Yarraville

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  • English

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