A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

Wednesday, 28 March 2018

Being boring

A lovely friend of mine is currently struggling with the achingly dull and deeply unnerving process of recovery.

She had her first relapse around this time last year and still feels she is dragging her way through the improvement swamp.

After the initial drama of the damage being done, the hospital admission, the steroids and the crisis management, it’s actually the recovery that proves itself to be the more testing journey.

A journey that manages to be both tedious and terrifying.

There might be noticeable leaps during the process, there might be tiny incremental steps, but at some point in every recovery comes the point at which you begin to wonder if this is it. Is this as much as I’m going to get back?

Sometimes it isn’t and your body will surprise you with a further glorious bust of repair.

But sometimes it is and that is when you have no choice but to start the process of mourning and gradual acceptance.

Every time it happens, it is like a mini death and every time it happens, you have to go through a grieving process.

And it all take SO LONG. My longest recovery (or, more accurately, where I improved enough, but not enough to be as I was before) took a year and a half.

A year and a half of hoping and waiting and watching and bargaining and being careful and declining invitations and being so bloody sensible.

With the end result of, well, what? Damaged vision, painful skin, impaired balance, cognitive mash.

As I said to my friend, the whole process reminds me of a line from the wonderful poet Philip Larkin.

In his poem Dockery and Son* he describes life as “first boredom, then fear” and it’s a line I think that could be stolen to describe the recovery process.

It takes a lot of patience and strength to wade through a recovery. It takes a lot to lie endlessly and uselessly in bed and wait, a lot to live in our own unhelpful thoughts and a lot to drag ourselves up and carry on. Living with the dreadful knowledge that sooner or later this will all happen again.

So we should remember to be proud of ourselves – even in the darkest times.

To be proud of how we make our own way through the boredom and the fear.




*Read the full poem here. It’s wonderful.
I first fell in love with Larkin's lyrical discontent as an A-level student, but the full aching sense of loss, disappointment and regret in this poem was lost on an 18-year-old. It’s only on re-reading as an adult that it’s made me cry.

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