A Very Public Thank You
Bear with me, please. I need
to publicly thank a few folks. Okay, more than few folks. Diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis in 2006, I’ve had help from hundreds, more
like thousands of people. Every day I can point to individuals who have made my
life just a little bit easier with this disease. Now I know where I am going to
end my kudos—with my caregiver and life partner, Laura. But where the hell do I
start? Why not at the beginning….
So on the night my right side went numb, thank you
to the ER doc for not tip-toeing around the possibility that it might be MS.
And to all the neurologists and specialists and doctors and EMTs and nurses and
therapists and trial coordinators since then who have supported me figuratively
and, that one time, literally, when I passed out taking my first shot.
My family. Karen is at left, Kathryn at right. |
Thank you to my sister Karen for all of her physical therapy work, my sister Kathryn for her unwavering support, and my sister-in-law Eve who is running half marathons in every state of the union including Washington D.C. (51 in all!) to raise money for MS. Unbelievable. And thank you to my parents who back me at every turn.
Thank you to all the people who have opened doors
for me over the years. And to all the people who didn’t just grab the door I
was already opening because they could see that I was using it for support and that
if it were to swing wide open suddenly—picture a rodeo clown throwing open the
gates of a pen holding an ornery bull—the gesture of kindness would have certainly
pulled me along, flinging me asunder and resulting, undoubtedly, in more thanks
to EMTs. I mean, I love those guys, but I’ve seen enough of those heroes.
Thank you to all of the kind and generous members
of ActiveMSers who have written me over the years with notes of appreciation, some
of which have been so over the top I had to forward them on to my parents to
read. And to those members who are still waiting patiently for me to write back,
thanks for understanding that I don’t always respond promptly (I will write,
really!). And to those few who troll me because I need to be reminded that not
everyone in the universe is a fan of beer and Cheetos and my humor (wait,
whaaa?).
Lenny and Claudia, two of our many dear friends. |
Thank you to my friends who invite me to dinner at their home without expecting a reverse invite. To my friends who pass up rocky single track to cycle on pavement with me. To my friends who travel many miles (current record, 8,284 miles) to see me just because. To my friends who continue inviting Laura to partake in those passions that I can no longer easily do (snowboarding, hiking, the works). To my friends who understand.
Thank you to the mailman who waits for me to
answer the door instead of dropping the package at the stoop so I don’t have to
bend down to pick it up. (And inevitably teeter over, hello EMTs!) To my bike
tech who pushes me to the front of the line to keep me riding because he knows
how important it is for me to stay fit. And to my neighbors who insist on
looking after me even though I insist I am fine-ish. (Urban Dictionary has 73 and counting definitions for the word fine, most of which have little to do with actually feeling fine.)
Nicole Lemelle from My New Normals. |
Thank you to all who have offered passionate and “insightful”
advice about diets, Lyme disease, teeth fillings, turmeric, airport metal
detectors, aspartame, and the cavalcade of all of the many cures (CCSVI!) that
have been published on the internet and have mysteriously escaped my notice
these past years. Your advice keeps me on my toes when it comes to vetting
the latest MS buzz. And thanks to the researchers who work tirelessly to
separate fact from the poppycock.
Thank you to all the members of ActiveMSers who
continue to inspire me far more than they could ever imagine. And to those
members who contribute to the website, forums, and social media, further
inspiring all of us with this disease. And to all the champions of our shared
disease (as well as other conditions) who I have had the great fortune to
cross paths with virtually and IRL.
And thank you to my wife Laura—for everything. I
notice. Every moment of every day.
Comments
Good for you tackling Macchu Picchu! I was there long before my diagnosis and it's not for the faint hearted.
I don't know what the world has in store for us all in 2017, but I hope you continue to be happy and well.
Jane