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Living with Scleroderma

Reflections on the Messy Complexity of Chronicity

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Waking Up Is Hard to Do

Evelyn Herwitz · May 22, 2012 · 2 Comments

It takes me a long time to get going each morning. No matter when my cell alarm vibrates, I press snooze at least three times before I can fully gain consciousness and know for certain that I am here, in my bed, not hugging a newly planted tree to protect it from a group of strangers who want to rip it out of the soil.

A relief to know I’m not stuck in those early morning dreams. But then there’s the matter of getting up. My body is always stiff, my hands often a bit swollen and my mind is sluggish. In winter, as steam heat slowly rises in our radiators, all I want to do is lie there under the blankets and stay warm.

The first step is, literally, always the hardest. I know my joints will feel better once I start moving, so I roll myself up to sit on the side of the bed, let my normally low blood pressure adjust, then push up onto my feet. This entire process, from first alarm to standing upright, takes about a half-hour. I just have to plan it into my schedule.

Some of this morning sluggishness is due to my scleroderma—unless there’s some kind of emergency and my adrenaline blasts me out of bed, I simply cannot accelerate quickly from zero to even 30 mph.

Some of it also has to do with not getting quite enough sleep. I know I should get to bed earlier, but I’m hooked on the Daily Show and Colbert Report to have a good laugh before turning in. If I were wiser, I’d watch the night’s episode online the following evening. But it’s not the same, and, besides, I prefer bandaging my finger ulcers, a 20-minute process, while watching. It’s become my evening ritual.

Even when both shows are in reruns for yet another vacation hiatus, I’ll find a different reason to stay up too late, like finishing the Sunday Times crossword or watching episodes from the first season of Mad Men.

But mostly, my slow morning trajectory just is. When I used to commute every day to Boston, often an hour-and-a-half drive in morning rush hour, it was extraordinarily hard to get up early enough to beat the traffic.

Now, working for myself and being able to set my own schedule, I have more flexibility. It’s a mixed blessing—the feast-or-famine stress cycle of finding clients for my marketing consulting is offset by the freedom of knowing I can get a few more minutes’ rest in the morning if my body just isn’t ready to move. I set appointments for late morning and early afternoon to maximize my attention and alertness, and work after dinner, as needed, to put in a very full day.

Which is why I stay up until midnight to let my brain unwind, and why I have trouble getting up in the morning. Recently I read an essay by William Zinsser, one of my writing heroes, describing how he used to get to his office at the New York Herald Tribune around 10 o’clock each morning. It made me feel better. At least I’m in good company.

Evelyn Herwitz blogs weekly about living fully with chronic disease, the inside of baseballs, turtles and frogs, J.S. Bach, the meaning of life and whatever else she happens to be thinking about at livingwithscleroderma.com.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind Tagged With: finger ulcers, hands, managing chronic disease, morning ritual, sleep

Everyday Mother’s Day

Evelyn Herwitz · May 15, 2012 · 2 Comments

I’ve long felt that Mother’s Day was a contrived holiday. While it’s nice to be appreciated by your children on the second Sunday each May, do we really need modern day Mad Men (and Women) telling us when and how to be grateful to our moms?

Don’t get me wrong. I was very glad this past Sunday to connect with both our daughters long distance—one working half a world away and the other finishing her sophomore year at college one state over—and Al and I had a great afternoon at the Connecticut seashore, then discovered a wonderful Thai restaurant in Mystic. As we ate, I remembered how my mother would laugh until her eyes teared, and how hard she laughed the last time my father, sister and I had dinner with her in a restaurant, a few months before she died from a relentless tumor 13 years ago.

But I don’t need Mother’s Day for those memories or to spend quality time with the people I love. A holiday rooted in post-Civil War efforts to reunite divided families and organize women pacifists, nationalized in 1914 to honor mothers whose sons had died in war, Mother’s Day now seems like just another reason to feel obligated to buy presents—and a key part of the annual sales cycle for jewelers, florists and restaurateurs.

Anna Jarvis, who lobbied a century ago to make Mother’s Day a national holiday (in memory of her own mother’s dream to do the same), became so distraught over its commercialization that she spent the rest of her life fighting abuse of the day’s original intent. In 1948, she was arrested for disturbing the peace at a demonstration against what had become of Mother’s Day.

I’m not advocating for similar protests. But for me, Mother’s Day is not about getting a card or flowers. It’s about the sheer miracle that I became a mother at all.

When Al and I first got engaged, we talked about having a large family. Four kids, why not? When we learned I had scleroderma a few weeks after our honeymoon, all of that changed. Having children was no longer a given. I was at risk of kidney failure in the third trimester.

In April, three years into our marriage, we discovered I was pregnant and immediately shared our excitement with our families. About a week later, I miscarried. Soon after, my rheumatologist informed me that my disease was getting worse and that it was too dangerous to get pregnant. I was devastated.

That fall, Al found us a puppy. I went to see another rheumatologist at the University of Pittsburgh and began a new medication. And we decided to adopt.

The following September, our beautiful, blue-eyed baby girl, 16 days old, arrived in a pink sweater and matching bonnet, in a baby carrier on our kitchen table. She was bright, strong, funny and curious, an adventurous explorer from the moment she could squirm off my lap and crawl around the floor.

Three-and-a-half years later, after my skin had begun to loosen and I’d tapered off my meds, following the fifth infertility procedure, I was able to conceive again. It was a high risk pregnancy. At the end, I developed preeclampsia and had to be induced; in the final hours of labor, my kidneys shut down. But our second daughter, a lovely, tiny preemie, was born strong and healthy. She came home from the hospital a month later, fascinated by her colorful new surroundings, happy to be cuddled and carried.

Our daughters are now both in their 20s. I cannot imagine life without them. I don’t need a national holiday to remind me, or them, of what it means for us to be together. I’m profoundly grateful that they came into our world, each arrival deeply prayed for, precious and unique.

Each has her own way of letting me know how she values our relationship, sometimes with words, sometimes with a gift, sometimes with just a gesture. I’m often surprised, always moved. Those are the everyday Mother’s Day tributes—personal, spontaneous, heartfelt—the ones I’ll cherish long after a bouquet has faded.

Evelyn Herwitz blogs weekly about living fully with chronic disease, the inside of baseballs, turtles and frogs, J.S. Bach, the meaning of life and whatever else she happens to be thinking about at livingwithscleroderma.com.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind Tagged With: adoption, birth, high risk pregnancy, infertility, Mother's Day, preeclampsia

Skin Deep

Evelyn Herwitz · May 8, 2012 · 4 Comments

There are some bizarre advantages to having scleroderma. For one, I don’t have as much body hair as I used to, so it take much less effort to shave my legs, and I hardly ever need to shave under my arms, which makes summertime grooming a snap.

For another, although my facial skin has loosened with excellent medical care and time, thank God (within the first five years of my disease, my face became so tight that I was having some difficulty blinking my eyes), I still have relatively few wrinkle lines. Whereas some women pay hundreds of dollars for collagen creams that plump up their skin, I have more than enough collagen to go around.

Which isn’t to say that I don’t fret about my appearance as much as most other women my age. In a culture that values youth and physical perfection, where magazine ads feature models with Photoshopped features that defy wrinkles and flaws, I am quite conscious of the ways that scleroderma distorts my face.

There is the fact that my nose—generous, to begin with, like my father’s and his father’s—has narrowed and looks and feels pinched. There are the red, blotchy telangiectasias (dilated capillaries) that speckle my nose and dot my right cheek. There are my droopy eyelids, which have fallen over the years due to thickening. There is the asymmetry in my facial muscles, so that the right side is slightly weaker than the left, causing me to smile a bit lopsided. And there are the deep furrows around my lips, resembling a cinched purse.

Most of this I can address with some artfully applied makeup. A couple of years ago, I discovered Arbonne products, which are vegan, extremely lightweight and moisturizing, and use a wonderful color palette that complements my skin tone.

But my deep mouth creases are another story. When they first developed, around the time I was approaching menopause, I was, quite frankly, horrified. This sounds shallow, I know. There are many other, much more horrible things that can happen to you than to develop ugly mouth wrinkles. And yet, self-conscious me hated them and wanted to do something about it.

So I consulted with my rheumatologists and a couple of specialists. A plastic surgeon advised me not to frown or look down, because it exaggerates my creases, and suggested Botox. The idea of injecting a substance that would relax my face into a mask seemed ridiculous, so I passed on that (and him). A cosmetic dermatologist suggested a more promising alternative, injecting hyaluronic acid (HA), a natural filler used to smooth out “puppet mouth” (those long creases that run from either side of the nose to the chin), crow’s feet and other facial flaws.

Al was supportive, though he assured me I looked fine the way I was. He understood how I struggle with the way scleroderma has distorted my body and was willing to go along with my experiment. After doing a test of HA on the inside of my arm to be sure I wouldn’t have an allergic reaction, I went ahead and had the procedure.

This was not fun. First, the cosmetic dermatologist marked the worst creases with a felt-tip pen. Then, after numbing the skin, he stuck a very sharp needle beneath each line around my mouth to fill the furrows with HA. It hurt like hell. He gave me a stress ball to squeeze, which didn’t help much. Neither did the anaesthetic. I quipped how we’ll do anything for beauty, and he just nodded. Of course. I wondered what he really thought of me and all the other women who came to him, in vain, to try to reverse the aging process.

As expected, the skin around my mouth reddened and swelled for several days (I did this at the end of the work week, so most of the evidence would be gone by Monday morning). As the swelling receded, I checked my reflection frequently. Were the furrows gone? Did I look like my younger, healthier self again?

Alas, as weeks passed, I realized that all I’d gained were small lumps where the deep wrinkles had been. The effect wasn’t smooth and youthful. In fact, the HA caused the skin around my mouth to feel a bit tighter, because of the extra filling. When the substance fully absorbed, after about five months, I was relieved. No one ever noticed the difference (or if they did, they never commented), I could open my mouth more readily again, and we were going to save a ton of money.

And, at the risk of sounding Pollyannaish, I discovered a much wiser, free solution: My mouth furrows disappear when I smile.

Evelyn Herwitz blogs weekly about living fully with chronic disease, the inside of baseballs, turtles and frogs, J.S. Bach, the meaning of life and whatever else she happens to be thinking about at livingwithscleroderma.com.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind, Sight Tagged With: beauty, body image, body-mind balance, resilience, telangiectasias

Stream of Consciousness

Evelyn Herwitz · May 1, 2012 · 2 Comments

It’s after 1:00 a.m. and I can’t sleep. One of my ulcers, that stubborn one near the tip of my middle left finger, won’t stop smarting. I try shifting positions, rubbing my hand, warming it under the pillow. Sometimes the pain is caused by a Raynaud’s spasm and eases as soon as my blood flows more freely.

But not tonight. I have to get up and redo the bandage. I don’t want to. It’s chilly in our bedroom, because I’m a fresh air freak and left the window cracked and it’s windy outside. But the ulcer stings and I can’t sleep. So I pull myself out of bed, grab all my hand stuff (bandages, Aquaphor ointment, Sorbsan dressing, cotton swabs, manicure scissors) and go into the bathroom so as not to wake Al (even though an overhead thunderbolt won’t disturb his slumber), turn on the light, cut off my bandage and redo the dressing.

This works, thank goodness. I must not have used enough Aquaphor the first time to salve the sore. Or maybe I didn’t cover the ulcer with a large enough piece of Sorbsan, an ecru-colored, felted material made of processed seaweed that binds with the ointment to create a gel-like cushion of protection. Or maybe it was the cheap CVS fabric bandages I use at night, which have some kind of waterproof coating that can irritate on occasion. I’m using my good, soft Coverlet bandages for this round. Not worth the night-time rationing routine.

So I go back to bed, snuggle under my blankets. And am wide awake.

Maybe it’s because I had to get up, even though my ulcer has finally quieted down. Or maybe it’s because I was writing well into the evening, eight hours of solid composing at the computer, working against a deadline to finish a client’s web content. Too much light from the computer screen before bedtime can affect your ability to sleep, I’ve read.

Maybe all that typing is why my finger was irritated in the first place. Except I don’t use it to type. I’ve become a master at touch-typing with only the fingers that can stand the pressure—and since I use a Mac wireless chiclet keyboard, the pressure is very light.

Maybe it’s because I’ve been immersed in words all day. When I write, I slide into a zone where an hour or two will disappear as the words fly from my mind, through my fingers to the keys onto the screen, and I won’t know what time it is. Even when I’m finished writing, the words whirl in my head, narrating story lines, fantasies, worries, what I have to do tomorrow, what I forgot to do today.

I lie in bed and the words swirl and swirl, until I remind myself that everything I’m thinking about will still be there in the morning when I wake up. I pour all the words into a large square box—this one is sea-foam green—close the lid, lock it and put it on a high shelf in the back of my mind where I know I can access it tomorrow.

Usually this works. Sometimes it doesn’t. Tonight, with God’s grace, it does, and I fall asleep. In the early morning, when my dreams are so sharp that I’m certain they’re real, I’m convinced I’ve been awake all night.

The sun shines through our bedroom shades, then slips behind a cloud. Wind puffs the curtains of the one cracked window. Half an hour after my cell alarm vibrates, I realize that I did sleep, for six hours, after all.

Evelyn Herwitz blogs weekly about living fully with chronic disease, the inside of baseballs, turtles and frogs, J.S. Bach, the meaning of life and whatever else she happens to be thinking about at livingwithscleroderma.com.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind, Touch Tagged With: finger ulcers, hands, insomnia, Raynaud's

Cutting Bandages

Evelyn Herwitz · February 29, 2012 · 1 Comment

Every morning and every night, when I get dressed and before I go to bed, I cut bandages for my ulcers. I divide them lengthwise to layer over my fingertips, then wrap a whole bandage around each finger to secure the half bandages in place. It’s become a ritual, this hand management, a routine essential to avoiding infection, a pit stop for damage control, a meditation.

For the past two weeks, as I traveled in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and London, this ritual-of-necessity anchored me. No matter where Al and I were staying or who we were with, twice a day I had to stop and take care of my hands.

I cut bandages on my fold-out tray in a British Air Boeing 777 en route to Tel Aviv, on a bed in Al’s cousins’ apartment in Ra’anana before sundown on the Jewish Sabbath, at the kitchen table in our friends’ Tel Aviv pied-à-terre over a 1:00 a.m. heart-to-heart about letting go of your adult children, at an old oak table in our cousins’ London flat after our late night arrival from Israel, wanting only to go to bed and knowing I couldn’t, yet.

I was in the midst of cutting bandages when Mindi came to greet us at our friend’s apartment in Tel Aviv, the morning after we’d first arrived. I hadn’t seen her for nearly six months, since she’d left to make a life for herself in Israel, so I jumped up from the table, fingers half-done, to give her a big hug.

And I was cutting bandages last night, sitting on our own bed once again, relieved to have peeled off the day’s grubby dressings, blackened by twelve hours of travel. Were we really at the Tate Museum in London that morning?

Sometimes, the bandaging ritual during our journey was a damn nuisance, the last thing I felt like doing before leaving the house for the day’s adventures or when all I wanted to do was go to bed.

But at other times, it was peaceful, a time to collect my thoughts when everyone else was either asleep or away, an island of quiet to sort out what I’d seen and done and learned that day. As I’d cut the bandages, I’d listen to the familiar sounds of an unfamiliar setting—a wall clock’s tick, a dog’s bark, the click of heels on the floor above, the subterranean rumble of nearby Tube trains—and feel grounded.

I needed that stillness. Travel is so packed with newness, the unpredictable, the need to process so much information quickly and make snap decisions based on estimates of how your experience of your own world approximates this one, even though the two may be only tangentially related. Much as you’re constantly on the go, to fully appreciate the experience, it’s essential to slow down and just be.

So, I guess I have my bandages to thank for that.

Evelyn Herwitz blogs weekly about living fully with chronic disease, the inside of baseballs, turtles and frogs, J.S. Bach, the meaning of life and whatever else she happens to be thinking about at livingwithscleroderma.com.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind, Touch Tagged With: finger ulcers, travel

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About the Writer

When not writing about living fully with chronic health challenges, Evelyn Herwitz helps her marketing clients tell great stories about their good works. She would love to win a MacArthur grant and write fiction all day. Read More…

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I am not a doctor . . .

. . . and don’t play one on TV. While I strive for accuracy based on my 40-plus years of living with scleroderma, none of what I write should be taken as medical advice for your specific condition.

Scleroderma manifests uniquely in each individual. Please seek expert medical care. You’ll find websites with links to medical professionals in Resources.

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