I live each day with a rotten
reality: I will have pain every waking
moment until the day I die.
Until they put me in the
crematory and reduce me to a five-pound cardboard box of ashes, I will always
be in pain. I’ve known this for a long time, but somehow putting it on paper makes
it more real. And a little more frightening.
Rheumatoid arthritis cleaned my
clock – plain and simple. When it made its arrival my fourth grade year, my
disease spread like wildfire, decimating joints from head to toe. By the time I
graduated from high school, I had both shoulders and both hips replaced. Both ankles
were permanently fused in place. My hands and feet were destroyed.
From the moment of my diagnosis,
I battled not just physical pain but also anxiety and depression. I didn’t know
that’s what my emotional suffering was called, or that it was linked to fear of
my own mortality and anguish at my body’s disintegration. But I certainly
understood what it meant to live in a constant state of fear. Even everyday
things like meeting new people made me sick with dread. My finger joints were
swollen and inflamed. If someone grabbed my hand to shake it, my knees nearly
buckled from the pain. My stomach knotted when I knew I had to climb stairs,
taxing my already painful knees and ankles. I held a bottomless pit of despair
inside me which I tried time and time again to blot out.
The domino effect of the RA’s
destruction was more than any kid could be expected to cope with. Yet no one –
no medical professional of any stripe – ever suggested to my parents that I
could benefit from talk therapy or even pain management skills. That’s
astonishing given that folks in the health professions have long been aware
that living with chronic pain makes someone susceptible to depression.
The reality is that virtually all
forms of arthritis bring chronic pain and are incurable. They attack, destroy
and stay put until they’re good and ready to depart. My disease departed when I
was in my early twenties. Although I’ve not had any active RA since Wham! was
in the Billboard Hot 100, the damage to my natural joints has been devastating
and permanent. I still have to depend on those joints every day to pull on a
shirt, walk, stand up from a chair -- anything requiring movement. Even the
gentlest of activity taxes joints that have been weakened from the damage done.
It’s like a wooden house whose
interior support beams have been chewed through by termites. The termite swarm
may depart, never to return. Yet at any time, the slightest stress on the
damaged and weakened support beams may cause parts of the house to come
crashing down.
Most days, my pain is like white
noise. It remains at a level which I can mostly tune out. But some days the
pain ratchets up. Like Glenn Close’s character in Fatal Attraction, it will not be ignored.
I do not write this blog post to elicit
pity. I write it out of solidarity with anyone else who must live each day with
a painful, irreversible reality. I write it for those who wake up each day, put
their feet on the floor and move forward even when they’d rather crawl back in
bed and pull the covers over their heads. I write it for those who must accept what
seems like it cannot be accepted.
You are stronger than you could ever
imagine.
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