Still Walking

Still Walking

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Saturday, September 2, 2017

Huffing and Puffing Through Another Month

I don't let things lie. I looked it up. The description I read said, "ALS: an incurable, untreatable, progressive, ultimately fatal disorder".

'Tis like a line of poetry.

What is this poet supposed to do with that?

Doctors told me on December 1, 2016. Merry Christmas !

Knew it months before they told me. Oh, no, not what it was, not by name, but knew it wasn't good. I knew it on a beautiful May morning when such things should be unthinkable. Sun was up to my left. The air was already warm  though it wasn't much after 6:00 AM. I was taking my daily walk.

Every morning, nearly 365 days a day I took that walk. I think I missed only 6 mornings summer to summer 2015 to 2016.  At least five miles when I went and often more.

My favorite park was the Brandywine Creek State Park. This morning I was in Rockwood Museum Park. It would ever more become my home base. I'll probably never walk Brandywine Creek again. I don't even know how long I'll manage Rockwood.

Coming down a hill, not steep, there started a strange feeling in both thighs. I had never felt anything like that before. I can't even describe it. This was part of the problem, I never could describe it to anyone. Closest I can come is this:

I use to play guitar. Don't see me doing that again.  My hands are pretty wasted, not delicate instruments any more. Anyway, this feeling was like the low E string, the big fat one on the bottom, came loose. When plucked there is nothing but a dull thud, no note. That was my legs, not in the sense of sound, but a feeling like a dull thud, over and over.


It was in my forearms, too, but I didn't notice yet. Wasn't thinking about my arms, just my legs. Here I stood in the middle of a path unsure if I could walk.

I had to.

 I took a few steps with this strange gait, my toes pointing out, especially on the left. I moved in mincing steps.

I thought it would go away, whatever it was. First my belief was it could be walked off, you know, push through the pain. Except there was no pain. My legs did not hurt, they just felt like they weren't connected. I decided to make it to my car and go home. Maybe with some rest it would go away.

It didn't.

It took six months for doctors to figure out what it was; six months of many specialists, many tests, of  much money spent, and nobody had a clue.

I had a runny nose and cough. Oh, yeah, doctor could take care of a runny nose and cough. Whipped off a prescription for an antibiotic. Bad move.

 I got clostridium difficile colitis or C. Diff. It was terrible. You never want to have C. Diff. I nearly died right then and there. They told me I was septic. Septic means full of infection. Might mean full of death. There is another definition of septic, as in septic tank. I was that, too. How can I put this delicately? I can't. I was a septic tank full and overflowing.

No, you never want C. Diff.

But I  had four bouts  and two stays in the hospital. I also drank a lot of down tasting medicine, expensive medicine that none of my insurances covered.

After my C. Diff. was over; summer was waning. I was now sent from pillar to post, like a pinball, bounced from doctor to doctor for explorations and hopefully an explanation. There were no explanations.


Finally, on the 1st of December, six months after the strangeness began,  a diagnosis came. I had ALS and it was incurable, untreatable, progressive and fatal.

INCURABLE

Nothing I can do about that, so forget it. No one can cure something when they can't even figure out why someone has it. We'll just move on then. Maybe all that money collected from people dumping ice water over their heads will lead to a cure.


UNTREATABLE

Oh, good one. Most illnesses that come along have some form of treatment. An icky tasting medicine. A neetle in the arm. A voodoo dance. Blood letting, at the very least. Not this thing. In some ways this is a blessing. I'm not being prodded or poked or stuck with any sharp objects. I'm not running for tests every third day. I'm not living between doctor appointments. I'm kind of free to live what living is left me.  The only sensible approach is to keep on doing the things you like to do...as long as you can.



PROGRESSIVE

That is where I live now, in the progression. Progression is the part where you do as long as you can do. Progression is where you better be adjustable.

So, where am I this one-year-plus since the E string went flat?

My legs and arms have gotten weaker. I still do a morning walk with the support of my trusty walking stick. I walk short, really short, distances without any aid, but if I start wandering off far without that stick I am in trouble. I will get off-kilter and look drunk. I might fall. I do not want to fall.

If I fall I may not rise to my feet because my arms have gotten too weak to push me up. I can pull myself up if there is something to grasp. I can't carry anything of much weight.

I also drop a lot of things because of my hands atrophying along with the arthritis. When I sit or get in bed I do not lower myself gently. At some point I just drop, kerplunk. Getting into bed, or out of a bathtub for that matter, is pretty funny to behold. Sadly, I may even be beyond able to take a bath. Showers are scary due to weakness of leg and unsure balance.

Fasciculations can be fascinating. These are muscle twitches. I was looking at my thigh last night and there was a lot of jitterbugging going on under the skin.

I am getting many more muscle cramps now. They hurt. I get them everywhere and anywhere, I had them in my fingers earlier as I tried to type this piece. Had to stop for a while.

Been lucky so far. I can still talk. I can still swallow. I can still breathe, but I get winded quicker. I have a respirator I use at night while asleep. It is supposed to help strength my diaphragm. Most people with ALS die of respiratory failure.



DEATH

Which brings us to that term, "Ultimately death". You can say that about us all, can't you? They say the average life expectancy is 2 to 5 years after diagnosis. I don't think about death. I believe in Jesus as Savior; I know where I am going. I don't fear that ultimate. I'm still shooting for 100.

You know, I have a double whammy. I've been my wife's caretaker for years. She has Type II Bipolar Disorder. Sometimes I wonder which is worse, her disorder or mine. I say her's. It is a horrible thing that affects her mind. I just have a deteriorating body. My brain, my eyes, my sexual equipment, my inner organs all are unaffected. I am cognizant of what is going on with me. I would not want the horrors of Bipolar on top of this.

Anyway, here we are. Much lies ahead. Pray for us.



2 comments:

  1. You are a true testimony to our Lord, I have the honor to call you brother, friend, and family, as always love you and praying for you Lois and the family!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Larry,
    I'll post this update to your GoFundMe account.
    Ron

    ReplyDelete

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