Managing MS Endurance
This past weekend while hiking in Sedona, I walked
more in a single day than I had since 2009—2.9 miles, over 6,200 gimpy steps. Of
course I realize this might not sound like much, especially if you do the math.
I mean, it would take me nine full record-setting days to accomplish a single
marathon, which apparently any remotely athletic Kenyan can run in under three
hours. But with multiple sclerosis doing a number on my legs, it’s cause for a
minor celebration, like a Snoopy happy dance (sans dance).
Even though these days I'm able to walk for up to
75 minutes straight with my forearm crutches, my legs afterward turn into
floppy rubber chickens—the kind you’d see in an old comedy skit. These two
appendages that presumably make me a biped are beyond hosed for the rest of the
day. The type of hosing that makes you debate whether or not you should have a
beer post epic hike. Yes, a beer would be tasty. Yes, a beer would be frosty
cold and a just reward. And yes, a beer would make you eventually have to pee,
necessitating you to get off the darn couch and walk to the bathroom. On rubber
chicken legs. Honestly, at those times dehydration never sounded so good.
After hiking to exhaustion a few times, I figured
I had two options if I wanted to maintain healthy levels of hydration and still
enjoy cerveza. One, relocate the hall bath so that it was within arm’s length
of the couch or two, find a way to avoid rubber chicken legs. With my wife
Laura nixing option one in the clearest of terms (or any variation of option
one, aka empty Gatorade bottle), I was left with managing my endurance more
strategically.
So to prevent blowing up my thighs just to prove, ostensibly
to myself, that I can still motor for an hour at a time (Oh, Dave, you are so strong and manly even with your disease), I
swallowed that ego deflation pill and figured out how to dole out my energy
output: Force myself to take regular breaks.
Now when I hike, my wife/Sherpa unfolds a small
camping stool every 15 minutes and I take a 3-5 minute break. Even if I’m
feeling fresh. Even if there is a great vista point a few minutes up the trail.
Even if there is a hiker doling out free microbrewed beer a switchback ahead.
(Thankfully that particular dilemma has never materialized.) These regular,
scheduled breaks help to keep the legs from bonking and to avoid the inevitable
implosion at the end of a long (for me) hike.
So how did I manage the record 2.9 miles that day?
Deliberately and patiently. I hiked a little over a mile in the morning (3300 steps),
and then another mile in the late afternoon around sunset—both hikes in cooler
weather as I avoided the midday heat. In between I managed to add nearly another
mile strolling around seeking food, shelter, and toilets. Again, no marathon
sessions, just steady plodding.
With this disease, we all desperately
want to be the hare, to prove to ourselves we aren’t that disabled, we aren’t that
restricted by our multiple sclerosis. But as Aesop’s fable dutifully preaches, it’s
often the tortoise that enjoys the spoils … and gets to celebrate with a happy
dance, albeit a slow one.
Comments
Sometimes God and the universe have strange ways of redirecting you but trusting is the key.
Just re-discovered your side/blog yeterday. I am inspired again to get back in shape. Unfortunately, I broke my foot 3 weeks ago (thankfully not my ankle!). So I'm going to take the rest of my recuperation off my feet to work on my upper body and core.
I also discoered in the deep recesses of my closet a pair of Leki trekking poles! Now I'm really inspired!
In addition to the "Yay - team - Go!" I got, this post reminded me to be judicious. Rest, patience, and slow but steady. I plan on being the most fit turtle with MS my town knows!
I'm an amputee, not an MSer, but we have similar issues. I'm the jointed crutch guy ... Last week, I was at Arches National Park and determined to see the Landscape arch, apparently the longest arch in the world. But a two mile hike stood between me and seeing it. As a high amputee (hip disarticulation), walking isn't easy, particularly with the ups and downs of the trail. You had a stool to rest on; I had my brother's shoulder to stabilize with. At any rate, I was able to see the arch - a big thrill! I think the key for both of us is to simply stay active and to keep pushing.