Hi Darkies corner,
As I was writing it my partner made the same point - that winning $1M would be equally distressing and I agree, a bit in that yes, any major change in our life is a stress. With an illness the difference is that you are forced to confront some big questions that you could normally avoid by distraction.
It was almost impossible to distract myself from myself and my inner world. When I was just lying like a vegetable, and my brain just wasn't functioning (can't go have coffee or shop, can't read, watch tv or hold a conversation), there was still a voice inside, an inner voice that was directing me to wonder: when all of this life is stripped away - like it is right now, as you watch the drip in your arm, the other deathly people around you zonked out, and people are mumbling at you - when it's all stripped away... what is it about then? And the questioning keeps going from there, deeply and intensely.
Personally, I believe it's a great line of questioning, a line that we are 'supposed' to take; we are meant to question life and spend time on internal reflection. We are instead distracted from this inner world as we become immersed only with the physicality of this life, and the gratification that it brings us (movies, going out for coffee, shopping etc). What I was suggesting above was, there's kind of a great disservice to yourself if you keep longing for the way things were, before. You have a new experience now and you simply must incorporate it into your psyche - somehow, otherwise you will have to contend with the consequential trauma that comes from refusing your own growth. To long for the past is understandable, but it is ultimately regressive, and when it comes to big shifts in our lives, you are really being called to move forward in a new paradigm.
I think when you are not physically disabled from the experience, eg, when you win lotto, or are a secondhand experiencer (family etc), you can still distract yourself from the experience quite easily, and avoid the deeper questioning that is at the root. That avoidance means not moving through the new experience in a conscious way, and it comes at a cost.