Interesting isn't it, the way other people see you.
After my recent unexpected blurting out of my diagnosis and my conviction that I go on about MS just a bit too much, it appears not everyone thinks the same.
I was having a brief text catch-up with a friend who lives nearby, but who I haven't actually seen that much of in person this year.
I mentioned that I hadn't really felt well since March and they texted back with condolences and the reassurance* that no one would notice. They added that they didn't think I'd want it any other way.
And that surprised me - on two counts.
Firstly - and admittedly I'm speaking as someone who lives in this gradually declining body - I assumed that people would notice.
I do have to stop and sit down (or even lie down) more often than I ever used to before I can face the next part of the day.
I have had to rely on others to drive me around, I've had to turn down invitations from sheer exhaustion and while I have managed to keep working, it's been at quite a cost.
So is it that I've become a real expert in covering up? Is it that the changes aren't always easy for others to notice? Have we all just got too much going on in our own lives?
Or is it - if we're completely honest - that we don't always want to see?
Secondly, is it right that I wouldn't have it any other way?
Is that the impression I give? It may well be.
Or is that the impression that makes it easier for everyone else? It may be that too.
And if it's an impression and not the truth, then who am I lying to most?
It should be no shock to anyone that disabled people are still struggling with other's perceptions of them and I think this is particularly true for chronic, progressive diseases.
We've been one way for a long time and now we are gradually becoming another. We are striving to be the person we always were, but we are battling against something determined to thwart that effort. It's no wonder that we're confused, exhausted and almost continually grieving.
It's very hard to admit to yourself that you can't do what you used to, it's very difficult to explain it to others who have only seen the impression you are used to giving.
And I suspect I project that image because I am frightened of the person I am gradually becoming.
If I honestly think about the way I have managed my 15 years with MS, I don't think my friend was wrong on either of their points.
But I do think it's perhaps time I reconsidered the way I talk about my disease.
:: You keep it all in by The Beautiful South
* Is it a reassurance? And who is it reassuring?
A mixtape for multiple sclerosis
Wednesday, 25 September 2019
Wednesday, 18 September 2019
What's going on?
Multiple sclerosis is a disease of questions.
What is happening to my body? Why is it happening? Why is it different for different people? When will I relapse? What will happen to me in the future? Have I done something to cause it? Why isn't there a cure? Can someone make me a cup of tea?
As a former journalist - and all round nosy person - I have asked these questions a lot.*
And my role as the communications volunteer with our local MS group now allows me to ask the questions on behalf of others too - and share the answers in our quarterly newsletter.
I try and interview someone medically knowledgeable each edition, and autumn was the turn of our neurologist.
Here's one of the Q&As from our conversation. It's very interesting and may (or may not) be reassuring:
Q: What interests and frustrates you most about MS as a condition?
A: There
are a large number of puzzling issues about MS which make
it a very unusual condition. These include:
* why does it
affect people in different ways - some people have a pretty 'benign' course, others have a terrible time
* some people recover extremely well from relapses, so why do others do badly?
* why
is it so unpredictable? I have seen some people in their 70s have a
relapse after 50 years of stability?
* why do men and women have a
different pattern of MS?
* how does pregnancy - at a fundamental level
- affect MS?
* when/at what stage is it appropriate to give the
most powerful disease modifying therapies?
* what is going on in "true"
progressive MS?
The frustrations are mainly to do with a lack of
resources (funding, facilities and people) to support people with MS,
a complicated and pretty unsupportive benefits system and the
complicated rules and protocols that have to be followed when
considering therapies for MS. The lack of approved treatments
for patients with advanced forms of MS is particularly difficult.
* especially the last one
Thursday, 12 September 2019
I'm coming out
I've lived with MS for so long now that I sometimes forget that everyone else around me doesn't know I have it.
I talk about it, I blog about it, I tweet about it. (I should perhaps sometimes shut up about it.) So surely it's out there enough.
But this week I was reminded that actually not everyone does know.
Despite my May relapse I have carried on working - this is mainly because I am self-employed and have no safety net apart from myself, but also because I picked up a really interesting new project just as the relapse started.
As a purely sensory one, this relapse has been unpleasant but not completely debilitating. I've been tired and very, very uncomfortable, but to look at me, you wouldn't know.
So it was a little odd this week that I found myself suddenly on the office floor and blurting out my situation to relatively new colleagues.
The scene: typing at my laptop (only mis-hitting every fourth key now, the hands are picking up) I decided to do the team round of teas.
Stand up, take one step, fall immediately on floor.
All heads turn.
Try to stand, fail, dramatically fall over again.
My immediate thoughts were - a) oh no, is this the sudden start of something new and horribly MS-ey or b) is it just a shoe issue?
You see I was wearing some new work trousers which were slightly too long. To stop them dragging on the floor and creating a trip hazard, I'd had to dig out an old pair of wedges - with a slightly dodgy heel.
Sitting on the floor with confused colleagues asking me what had happened, I gave them the two potential options and cheerfully mentioned I had a stick in my bag if I needed it.
Not the way I had thought I might out myself.
After the concerned witnesses had got me back on my chair, made me a cup of tea and fetched copious biscuits, I was able to give a bit more of an explanation.
It's become so normal now for me to talk about MS and I've told so many people in so many different ways over the years. But never yet from the floor of a busy office.
I'm not sure if it will get mentioned again, I'm a contractor who's only in one day a week and haven't had chance to get to know everyone very well yet.
But I was boosted by their thoughtful concern, their gentle questions - and the lovely girl who ran for some mounting spray and sellotape in an attempt to fix things.
Because it turns out that this time it was the heel of my wedge that had come adrift and resulted in a twisted ankle - and not multiple sclerosis.
But their quiet and kindly reassurance was good for the sole.*
:: I'm coming out by Diana Ross
*Bad pun intended.
I talk about it, I blog about it, I tweet about it. (I should perhaps sometimes shut up about it.) So surely it's out there enough.
But this week I was reminded that actually not everyone does know.
Despite my May relapse I have carried on working - this is mainly because I am self-employed and have no safety net apart from myself, but also because I picked up a really interesting new project just as the relapse started.
As a purely sensory one, this relapse has been unpleasant but not completely debilitating. I've been tired and very, very uncomfortable, but to look at me, you wouldn't know.
So it was a little odd this week that I found myself suddenly on the office floor and blurting out my situation to relatively new colleagues.
The scene: typing at my laptop (only mis-hitting every fourth key now, the hands are picking up) I decided to do the team round of teas.
Stand up, take one step, fall immediately on floor.
All heads turn.
Try to stand, fail, dramatically fall over again.
My immediate thoughts were - a) oh no, is this the sudden start of something new and horribly MS-ey or b) is it just a shoe issue?
You see I was wearing some new work trousers which were slightly too long. To stop them dragging on the floor and creating a trip hazard, I'd had to dig out an old pair of wedges - with a slightly dodgy heel.
Sitting on the floor with confused colleagues asking me what had happened, I gave them the two potential options and cheerfully mentioned I had a stick in my bag if I needed it.
Not the way I had thought I might out myself.
After the concerned witnesses had got me back on my chair, made me a cup of tea and fetched copious biscuits, I was able to give a bit more of an explanation.
It's become so normal now for me to talk about MS and I've told so many people in so many different ways over the years. But never yet from the floor of a busy office.
I'm not sure if it will get mentioned again, I'm a contractor who's only in one day a week and haven't had chance to get to know everyone very well yet.
But I was boosted by their thoughtful concern, their gentle questions - and the lovely girl who ran for some mounting spray and sellotape in an attempt to fix things.
Because it turns out that this time it was the heel of my wedge that had come adrift and resulted in a twisted ankle - and not multiple sclerosis.
But their quiet and kindly reassurance was good for the sole.*
The offending shoe. With emergency sellotape attached. |
:: I'm coming out by Diana Ross
*Bad pun intended.
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Mad world
Fingers endlessly tingling, workload keeps increasing and our political system is imploding.
I just want to sit like this. For quite some time.
:: Mad world by Tears for Fears
I just want to sit like this. For quite some time.
:: Mad world by Tears for Fears
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)