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The Rural Voice, 1989-07, Page 31financial rewards. And she has several words of caution for people stuck in situations where they feel they've lost control. "When I hated the environment I was working in, I became depressed, tired more quickly, and found real difficulty sleeping. Your body gives definite signals when it's operating on overload." But what about the changes you can do nothing about? Mary Beth Mann has encountered some major ones. Twenty years ago, Mary Beth married Bill, a dairy farmer, and settled five miles from where she was raised. Bill was considerably older than Mary Beth and a perfectionist. May Beth felt herself thrust into a learning role with a very particular taskmaster. "I really found myself dwelling on how inadequate I was," Mary Beth says. "Bill would point out what the neighbouring wives were capable of, and obviously expected the same from me." "It took many years, but I finally came to terms with myself," she says. "I found I did less than some and more than others and was happy with it." Mary Beth now finds herself a widow, living in Kitchener and going back to school. How did such a drastic change affect her? "The decisions were made after a great deal of thought and enduring a tremendous amount of pain," she says. Bill was sick with a degenerative disease for three years and became entirely dependent on her. He did not wish to stay in a hospital and Mary Beth obtained the services of Home- care and devoted herself entirely to Bill, often even excluding the growing needs of her two daughters. In retro- spect, Mary Beth found herself ques- tioning whether what she did was right. But she puts her conclusion simply. "I did all I could for Bill when he was alive so I wouldn't feel guilty after he died." After Bill's death, Mary Beth found it impossible to remain on the farm where so many treasured and sad memories had been shared. She chart- ed a course. The move to Kitchener really jolted Mary Beth and her two daughters. "The culture shock was tremen- dous. The girls missed their life-long friends from the Monkton area and found it difficult to enter the estab- lished society of the Kitchener school. The values my daughters have been raised in concerning work ethics and entertainment were different from those of their new acquaintances." Mary Beth took the ultimate chal- lenge a woman with two daughters almost grown can take. She enrolled in a college to get her degree as a social worker. "After what I had gone through," she says, "social work was a natural choice for me." Mary Beth surprised herself by how well she did. But, as it was with her farming career, she overcompen- sated and was close to burnout before she pulled back and re -assessed her situation. "Choices are thrown at you," Mary Beth says, "and when you really examine them closely, you find there really aren't that many. The most important choice anyone can make is to be good to themselves." Mary Beth still owns the farm she lived on for so many years. She hasn't been able at this point to go back and make decisions concerning it. "The pain is still raw," she says. There is yet another year of college to go through before Mary Beth realizes her objective, and she is fully confident she can succeed. "Perhaps someday I'll go back to the community I lived in for so long, but not right now. There are other challenges for me to face before I go back." Choices and changes — there is a difference between them. But most of the women interviewed agreed the difference was difficult to recognize at times. But it's also obvious that change brings many redeeming results. It strengthens the individual and often reaffirms or increases the strength of family ties.0 "1 would get the axe stuck when I couldn't hit the block right and if 1 didn't want to freeze to death had to learn how to chop and do it right..." RIPLEY ELEVATORS a division of Thompson Feed & Supply receiving WHEAT CANOLA FLAX Buyers of Barley, Oats & Mixed Grain Ripley Ont. Elevator 519-395-5959 Mill 519-395-5955 Res. 519.395-5550 PRESSURE WASHER SHOP LTD. Dynablasfi app S Propane Fired OSI Fired Energy Efficient Cleaning Machines Ontario Pork Industry Improvement Plan Approved For FREE Demonstration, Call: RON STEMMLER R.R.1, Elmira, Ontario N3B 2Z1 519-669-2150 JULY 1989 29