A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

Wednesday 30 January 2019

Waltzing along

A week is a long time in politics, as Harold Wilson is reported to have said.

Although anyone watching the constantly shifting sands of Brexit would argue that reducing that week to a day might be more accurate.

But it turns out that a week is a long time in my work panic time frame too.

After writing last week's blog about trying to find work, I had an unexpected meeting with my former employer offering me some consultancy work back with them.

Just for a limited period at present - but back doing what I did before and back thanks to a government grant awarded based on work I had done before.

Very relieved. And pleased.

But it has made me realize how closely my self-worth is tied up with working. And I suspect I'm not the only one who feels this way.

I was interviewing a fellow MSer yesterday for the branch's newsletter. A former police officer who had to take ill-health retirement.

I asked her how she had coped with letting work go.

The answer wasn't easy - she knew the health benefits early retirement had brought, but the loss of the status of employment had hit her.

She has managed to find other things to focus on, but the taking away of a job she had done (and loved) for 27 years has been a bitter blow.

I've not enjoyed the thought of not working and I don't know how I am going to deal with it if I get to the point where I have to stop.

But for now I am grateful to have been given a lifebelt that may keep me afloat in the seas of employment for a bit longer.


:: Waltzing along by James

Wednesday 23 January 2019

The times they are a-changin'

May you live in interesting times, goes the curse, and I do feel in the midst of a particularly fascinating one.

On a national scale, whatever side of the Brexit divide you are on, I think we can all agree the situation we are currently in is nothing short of a warning-to-history tragicomedy.

On a personal level, my recent freelancing work has come to an end, leaving me facing the prospect of a job search - not something I am relishing.

It's all change - and not necessarily ones I would have chosen.

So to stop me fretting and feeling completely useless, I have volunteered to help with our local branch of the MS Society.

Really I should have done this ages ago because apart from one charity collection outside a local supermarket, I have done nothing practical to help.

But after a committee meeting yesterday and the filing of paperwork, I am now a fully fledged volunteer.

I really hope I'm of some use to the group. And, if I'm honest, I hope that doing the role they need will be useful to me - to help give me a purpose while I'm not working.

Perhaps this change will do me good.



:: The times they are a-changin' by Bob Dylan


Wednesday 16 January 2019

Don't give up

When I was first diagnosed I set myself a personal coping time frame.

After the initial relapse, the shock of diagnosis and the subsequent settling period, my aim was to get through the first five years.

I don't know why I felt the need to set myself this limit, it wasn't as if MS was going to suddenly decide to quietly pack up and go away as soon as five years had elapsed.

And I don't know why I picked that arbitrary stretch. Maybe I'd read something about prognosis milestones which made me focus on that as a number. Whereas the benefit of actually having had MS for this length of time means you learn to focus more on the moments than the months.

But five years it was, and I made it through those years relatively unscathed.

So the next aim was 10.
And I made it - although with much more damage.

This weekend I hit 15 years.
And I made it - increasingly altered.

Fifteen years is a long time when you think about it isn't it? It's quite some time to be living with a disease that you did nothing to invite in. Fifteen years to live with uncertainty, change, deterioration and complete exhaustion.

It's an achievement of sorts though and I almost want to organise a bit of a bash. I won't of course, I'm not sure you can get MS party bags.

But I do feel there needs to be some sort of celebration of the past decade and a half.

Even if it's just a recognition of sheer bloody-mindedness, punctuated by periods of unexpected strength and bouts of utter gratefulness all wrapped up with the love and support of family and friends.



:: Don't give up by Peter Gabriel, ft Kate Bush




Wednesday 9 January 2019

Defying gravity

Over the Christmas and New Year break we did lots of lovely things as a family.

None more so than joining three of my daughter's friends on an early January day trip to London to see a matinee of Wicked - the true story of Elphaba, Oz's wicked witch of the west.

It was a glorious day out, filled with the enthusiasm and hilarity of four nine and 10-year-olds who were just enjoying every last little thing about the day.

What a privilege to be able to share it with them and how grateful I am that I could.

I'd warned the party that I would inevitably weep at Defying Gravity - Elphaba's defiant battle cry - and weep I did.

Because it's a wonderful song about not accepting limits, not bowing to critics and not being afraid to take chances.

Elphaba speaks for all of us when she proclaims that 'everybody deserves the chance to fly.'

I don't know what 2019 is going to hold, but I do know that hearing that song at the start of the year is a pretty good refrain to keep in mind as I go through it.



:: Defying gravity by Idina Menzel

Tuesday 1 January 2019

Perfect 10

Well, well, well – 2019.
New year, new you and all that guff.

It’s horribly predictable and not a little nauseating to see just how many newspaper features/online articles/advertising campaigns/shop fronts have the ‘new you’ mantra as their theme.

As if we’re all so utterly, unforgivably rubbish that we have to dramatically sweep away the person we were (low-key, overly sentimental, full of chocolate and gin) to suddenly become a shiny bright (and by inference, better) version of ourselves with leotards! And trainers! And fabulous hair!*

Of course it’s all just manufactured to make us a) feel rubbish about ourselves so we b) spend lots of cash on moisturiser/quinoa/gym membership then end up c) feeling briefly and insufferably smug about it all.

But by mid-January, this combination actually only equates to feeling a) shit + b) skint + c) sick - which is not the way I want to start a new year.

Because what if we quite like the old us actually? What if they’re familiar, slightly geeky and increasingly damaged but QUITE LOVELY THANK YOU?

What if we deal with a remarkable amount of testing times - MS or otherwise - and still manage to function like a normal human being?

What if we’ve learned a lot about ourselves and realised that in the end, we’re not that bad and are, in fact, quietly great?

And we don’t really want to make a new start because we’ve come quite a long way and somehow the start seems like something of a backward step?

Or am I reading too much into this?

There are of course, excellent examples of new year, new yous – amazing healthy lifestyle transformations, people quitting jobs to follow their dreams, great new projects that help and benefit people.

But I’d just like to put in a little plea for people to remember that maybe they don’t really need a totally new them.

Perhaps all we might need is to just find the bits of the existing us that are fabulous - the kindness, the humour, the strength, the thoughtfulness - and simply share them a bit more throughout the year.

Brand new year, great old you; could become a thing.