Yes it’s true! You are the masters of your own destiny. You are the epitome of the expert patient the NHS talks of. You monitor your condition and when required you inform all the appropriate services of the help you need when you need it (that is assuming you have services in your area) e.g. an appointment with your Neurologist, MS Nurse etc. Yes the responsibility is all in your lap. It’s all down to you!
This week I have been reminded of my own failings in my responsibility to have all the answers and knowledge on the specific help I need. I do hope you are noting my sarcasm by the way.
On a visit to an Orthopedic Surgeon during the week on a non MS related matter (problem ankle) when asked what Physio I was currently having (I explained about my MS and my right side weakness) he seemed shocked when I confessed I had never had any Physio. ‘Well firstly we need to get you some Physio as you have very little strength in your tendons on this ankle’ was his reply.
My Neurologist, MS Nurse or GP had not recommended Physio and I had failed to inform them that I thought I should have this treatment.
Later in the same week I was informed by my MS Nurse that I have been using the wrong needle in the wrong area of my leg for my Avonex injections. She talked of orange needles instead of blue. Orange needles! This is the first mention of orange needles! I’m using the blue needle that comes inside the dam packet with the injection. I don’t have nursing qualifications and know nothing of needle sizes. Orange, blue, these are just colours of the rainbow to me.
I’m clearly not the expert yet. Only a B+ for me. Must try harder!
Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Monday, 13 February 2012
MS A Life Modifying Condition
MS is a degenerative neurological disease of the central nervous system (brain and Spinal cord) which can cause a very wide array of symptoms. Some of these include: numbness, weakness, loss of muscle coordination, pain and chronic fatigue as well as problems with vision, cognition, speech and bodily functions (bladder and bowel control). The progress, severity and specific symptoms in MS are unpredictable and each person given the diagnosis of this infuriating disease will travel down a different path with their own personal collection of symptoms to cope with on a daily basis.
So if you are reading this and you don’t have MS just take a few minutes to digest this information.
Ok so now you might be thinking ‘Shit that is scary stuff! How can anyone cope with all that fear and uncertainty?
Now think about dealing with that every day.
Multiple Sclerosis comes under the term ‘Long Term Conditions’ however I would also call it a life modifying condition as once you have MS, as the disease progresses you have to learn to modify and adapt to the challenges of the various symptoms.
The facts given to you as a person with MS are that it is degenerative, you will have periods in time when you will experience a wide variety of symptoms and you may or may not recover all the ability you had prior to a relapse ( I should point out I have RRMS). It’s a great pile of uncertainty and fear to mentally cope with.
A huge mind F**K!
Now everyone deals with health difficulties and illness in different ways and all I can tell you is how I put all this into some kind of perspective so that I can carry on with my life.
BUT……. what I can say is that my life is different. I am different. MS has changed me and I have had come to terms with that. I now modify my life to function with MS.
I can admit I have cried, been very low, been angry and scared and also fearful of the future and how I will cope with increasing symptoms and their effects. I have also grieved for the life I wanted to have before MS, but I am a resilient individual and I've found my inner strength.
Now three years with MS I have accepted who I am and the fact I will spend the rest of my time on this earth with MS so I’m not going to fight it... but I still need to manage it.
I have learned to pace myself and know that when I do push myself (e.g. a weekend away full of activities) I will pay for it the next day but I accept that and adjust my life accordingly.
Housework needs to be done in shorter bursts (gone are the days of starting at the bedrooms and working my way down through the house) and now I plan ahead. It’s something that still makes me occasionally angry even after three years but as I have mentioned before I am a bit of a stubborn old goat and getting on and doing things is a fundamental part of my personality.
Before MS arrived in my life, I was never going to climb Mount Everest or run a marathon so I’m not considering that now. I’m just living an ordinary life and find that MS has actually made me really appreciate my family, my lovely fella, and friends and the support they all give me.
So if you are reading this and you don’t have MS just take a few minutes to digest this information.
Ok so now you might be thinking ‘Shit that is scary stuff! How can anyone cope with all that fear and uncertainty?
Now think about dealing with that every day.
Multiple Sclerosis comes under the term ‘Long Term Conditions’ however I would also call it a life modifying condition as once you have MS, as the disease progresses you have to learn to modify and adapt to the challenges of the various symptoms.
The facts given to you as a person with MS are that it is degenerative, you will have periods in time when you will experience a wide variety of symptoms and you may or may not recover all the ability you had prior to a relapse ( I should point out I have RRMS). It’s a great pile of uncertainty and fear to mentally cope with.
A huge mind F**K!
Now everyone deals with health difficulties and illness in different ways and all I can tell you is how I put all this into some kind of perspective so that I can carry on with my life.
BUT……. what I can say is that my life is different. I am different. MS has changed me and I have had come to terms with that. I now modify my life to function with MS.
I can admit I have cried, been very low, been angry and scared and also fearful of the future and how I will cope with increasing symptoms and their effects. I have also grieved for the life I wanted to have before MS, but I am a resilient individual and I've found my inner strength.
Now three years with MS I have accepted who I am and the fact I will spend the rest of my time on this earth with MS so I’m not going to fight it... but I still need to manage it.
I have learned to pace myself and know that when I do push myself (e.g. a weekend away full of activities) I will pay for it the next day but I accept that and adjust my life accordingly.
Housework needs to be done in shorter bursts (gone are the days of starting at the bedrooms and working my way down through the house) and now I plan ahead. It’s something that still makes me occasionally angry even after three years but as I have mentioned before I am a bit of a stubborn old goat and getting on and doing things is a fundamental part of my personality.
Before MS arrived in my life, I was never going to climb Mount Everest or run a marathon so I’m not considering that now. I’m just living an ordinary life and find that MS has actually made me really appreciate my family, my lovely fella, and friends and the support they all give me.
Thursday, 9 February 2012
Happy New Year.............. My Arse!!
So my start to 2012 has been anything but happy actually. I started the year off in a low mood and in pain (muscle spasms in my back which is at its worst in the early morning) and as January moved into its second week things went further downhill. I woke up on the 11th in terrible pain everywhere. I felt like in the night I had been beaten to a pulp by a world champion boxer. As well as the battered and bruised feelings all over me I had sharp stabbing pains in my neck, shoulders and lower back. Just sitting up in bed was a test of endurance. Initially I didn’t have any numbness or MS sensations in my right leg or foot (which I've had with every relapse so far) so I didn’t immediately connect my pain with MS but, after a couple of days they appeared and I realised I was probably fighting an infection.
When you have MS other infections such as a common cold can spark off MS symptoms or make others like fatigue even worse for a while. In this case it was a nasty throat infection. On the Monday morning my throat had closed down and I could hardly swallow so some hefty antibiotics and a few more duvet days and things were starting to settle down again.
I had a massage booked at a Spa a week later (Birthday present from my kids) and I made myself well enough for that. I’m a bit of a stubborn old goat and I didn’t want to disappoint my son and daughter and have to cancel their lovely thoughtful gift for me. Oh and the sound of warm essential oils massaged into my back and neck sounded wonderful as long as I said those essential words ‘be gentle with me!’ to the therapist. My Spa day was heaven and having my son and daughter stay the weekend (they both live in London) was a real boost to my crappy negative mood but unfortunately it was short lived.
It’s now February and I still wake nearly every morning with pain. I have conversations with myself in my head every day
"You should go to the Doctor and try some other medication...."
"Yeah but maybe I should just wait a bit longer and see if it will settle on its own ...."
"I’m ok, and I can deal with it.... "
"Oh God I hope I'm not stuck with this pain.... "
I feel a bit lost in my head at the moment. Everything feels like such an uphill struggle and I know I’m not coping emotionally very well. I need to get my head straight. I need to find the positive Deb in me.
I need my mojo back.
When you have MS other infections such as a common cold can spark off MS symptoms or make others like fatigue even worse for a while. In this case it was a nasty throat infection. On the Monday morning my throat had closed down and I could hardly swallow so some hefty antibiotics and a few more duvet days and things were starting to settle down again.
I had a massage booked at a Spa a week later (Birthday present from my kids) and I made myself well enough for that. I’m a bit of a stubborn old goat and I didn’t want to disappoint my son and daughter and have to cancel their lovely thoughtful gift for me. Oh and the sound of warm essential oils massaged into my back and neck sounded wonderful as long as I said those essential words ‘be gentle with me!’ to the therapist. My Spa day was heaven and having my son and daughter stay the weekend (they both live in London) was a real boost to my crappy negative mood but unfortunately it was short lived.
It’s now February and I still wake nearly every morning with pain. I have conversations with myself in my head every day
"You should go to the Doctor and try some other medication...."
"Yeah but maybe I should just wait a bit longer and see if it will settle on its own ...."
"I’m ok, and I can deal with it.... "
"Oh God I hope I'm not stuck with this pain.... "
I feel a bit lost in my head at the moment. Everything feels like such an uphill struggle and I know I’m not coping emotionally very well. I need to get my head straight. I need to find the positive Deb in me.
I need my mojo back.
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