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Living with Scleroderma

Reflections on the Messy Complexity of Chronicity

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One Small Step

Evelyn Herwitz · September 17, 2019 · 2 Comments

I’ve written a number of posts over the years about decluttering—my office, my home, my head. But this past Sunday, I actually did something about it. I Marie Kondoed my closet.

For those who may not have heard of the cultural phenom, Marie Kondo, she is the bestselling author of The Life-changing Magic of Tidying Up and star of a Netflix series, in which she helps people with far too much stuff to pare down to what they really love and need. There are plenty of memes and jokes and cynicism about her key question for each item, “Does it spark joy?” But after my younger daughter encouraged me to watch her show, it only took a few episodes to convince me that Marie Kondo is onto something simple and seemingly obvious, but profound when you put it into practice. When you clear out the clutter, you make room in your mind and life for what truly matters. That, and those of us living in the richest country in the world have far more stuff than we will ever really need in our lifetimes.

It took me about three hours to go through all my clothes. Kondo’s method is to pile everything on your bed and assess it piece by piece. Keep what gives your pleasure and give away the rest, with appreciation for the role it played in your life. Some of the decisions were easy. There were clothes I haven’t touched in years taking up space; clothes that no longer fit; and clothes that I really didn’t like but had kept because they might come in handy some day.

There were also clothes that I really love, and kept. And there were some items, particularly some of my warmer winter clothes, that I’m a bit tired of but can’t afford to replace quite yet, so I hung onto them out of pragmatism. The best finds were two timeless evening dresses that I had worn for each of my daughter’s bat mitzvah celebrations—that still fit. This was quite the miracle, especially because I love those dresses, not only for their style, but also for the memories.

Then there were the shoes. I ended up bagging about a dozen pairs, acquired over the years. Shoe shopping is always a struggle, not only to find the right fit in the store, but also to find shoes that won’t trigger the neuropathy in my feet, due to thinned fat pads from scleroderma. This is an attribute that I can only determine after wearing the shoes for a while, and since most stores only let you try them out around the house, I can’t always assess them until I wear them outside. If they don’t work out, it’s too late. Someone will benefit from my mistakes.

In the end, I brought six garbage bags of clothes to Goodwill, plus a shopping bag full of hangers. It felt good. I gave away some nice things that I hope many someones out there will enjoy. My closet is organized, and I don’t have to struggle to pull a hanger from an overcrowded rod, or dig through piles of unworn sweaters on the shelf. I can see everything, and everything is in its place. It looks pretty, inviting.

Best of all, I feel like I’ve made room in my brain. It’s an aaahhh sensation, like there’s more space to breathe. Less clutter means clearer focus.

Now, it’s time to tackle my office.

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. Please view Privacy Policy here.

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Filed Under: Body, Mind, Sight, Touch Tagged With: body-mind balance, feet, hands, mindfulness, resilience

View from the Acropolis

Evelyn Herwitz · September 10, 2019 · 3 Comments

Two days ago, I awoke at five to the sound of roosters crowing. It was our last day of vacation in Greece, at our last destination, the isle of Hydra (the ‘h’ is silent), and time to finish packing before our early morning ferry back to Athens. We had made a grand tour over two weeks, starting in the nation’s capital, then on to the island of Crete, then north to Thessaloniki, back down the peninsula to Delphi, landing on this Aegean jewel for our final weekend.

Neither Al nor I had ever been to Greece. I’d always wanted to see the Parthenon, the ruins of the ancient temple to the goddess Athena, atop the Acropolis of Athens. More than that, though, now seemed the appropriate time to visit the birthplace of democracy. With so much at stake here and abroad, I needed perspective and inspiration.

We found both. As one of our tour guides explained, democracy only succeeds when everyone participates. When citizens choose not to vote, not to be invested in the business of government, that is when demagogues step in to fill the vacuum. In fact, the ancient Greeks had a word for people who preferred not to be involved in public affairs: the transliteration is idiotes, which is the etymological root of idiot.

Make of that what you will. For me, walking through ancient ruins, contemplating the great civilizations that have come and gone, it became clear as the crystal turquoise waters of this stunningly beautiful country that we can’t take anything for granted. It’s up to each and every one of us to ensure that our democracy survives and thrives in these very challenging times.

Here are a few of my favorite images from our travels. Enjoy.

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. Please view Privacy Policy here.

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Filed Under: Body, Hearing, Mind, Sight, Smell, Taste, Touch Tagged With: mindfulness, resilience, travel, vacation

And a Good Time Was Had by All

Evelyn Herwitz · August 20, 2019 · Leave a Comment

For years, Al has been telling me and our daughters about Woodstock. He was 18 in August of 1969 when he accepted an invitation from friends to drive from Massachusetts to Max Yasgur’s farm in Bethel Woods, N.Y., for what he thought was “some kind of arts festival.” Indeed. Amidst 400,000 others, he and his friends managed to plant their sleeping bags a third of the way up the hillside from the huge soundstage, with a great view of all the acts—except for Jimi Hendrix, because they left before he closed out the show, since they wanted to get back home and had tickets for his upcoming Boston concert. But that show was cancelled. A year later Hendrix died of a drug overdose. Al regrets the decision to leave early, to this day.

One of the acts he did see, close up, was the Saturday afternoon breakout performance by Carlos Santana and his band. So when we learned that Santana was headlining the Saturday evening fiftieth anniversary of Woodstock at Bethel Woods this past weekend, Al really, really wanted to go and share one of his fondest experiences with the three of us.

It took some convincing. I’m not a fan of huge crowds. Tickets cost nowhere near the $18 Al paid fifty years ago. (Really. He still has the ticket stub.) Affordable lodgings were hard to find. The timing was not great given other travel plans. And what if it rained? But it meant so much to my husband that I agreed. Our daughters were enthusiastically on board. I found us an Air BnB a half hour away, got tickets before everything sold out, and worked out all the logistics. And, boy, was it worth it.

The grounds at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, now an established performance venue, are beautiful, bucolic, and immaculate. There is plenty of room to stroll around, even with a sold-out crowd. We spent the afternoon checking out the sites, walking down the hill to the spot where Al and his buddies listened to the ’69 show (this is no longer the concert area, but a well maintained lawn with the footprint of the original sound stage at the bottom), had our picture taken at the Woodstock memorial plaque (we got to the head of the line because Al was a “Woodstock Alum”), checked out some arts and crafts, snacked and stayed hydrated (it was very hot out), and listened to pre-concert performances scattered around the grounds.

Two hours before the concert was to start, we picked up our rented lawn chairs (you can’t bring your own) and waited with the crowd for the gates to open. Al found us a great spot, with an excellent view. Everyone was in a festive mood. Lots of tie-dyed outfits, flower garlands, bouncing beachballs, the scent of weed wafting in the air.

Fortunately, given uncertain weather forecasts, I’d also brought along four blue rain ponchos, which came in quite handy for several intermittent rain showers as we waited for the show to begin. I kept checking the radar on my cellphone, hoping the band of severe thunderstorms would continue to travel north of us. Which, thankfully, it did (although there were a few disconcerting bursts of thunder and lightening nearby).

The music did not disappoint. The Doobie Brothers opened for an hour-long set and got everyone on their feet, singing and dancing along to “Rockin’ Down the Highway” and other hits. Although they didn’t perform at the original Woodstock, they were certainly of the era, and can still rock with the best.

Dark skies overtook the event during intermission, but the rain wasn’t too intense and didn’t last long. Then Carlos Santana and his amazing band took the stage, and no one cared a whit about the weather. I have loved his music for years. A CD of Santana’s greatest hits, a mix of rock, blues, jazz, and Latin rhythms, was my antidote to stressful days when I was working in Boston years ago, and would ease my soul and rush-hour commute home on many an occasion.

The man is 72 years old, one of the finest rock guitarists in the world, and living proof that age does not define us. His wife, Cindy Blackman Santana, was featured on percussion, and is equally extraordinary. The band played for more than two hours straight, and we danced—ponchos on, ponchos off—through most of the show. It ended with everyone singing and swaying arm-in-arm to Santana’s version of a ’60s anthem, “Get Together” by the Youngbloods—still as relevant all these years later. The moon emerged from behind clouds. Fireworks closed out the night. We had a spectacular time together. Al said it far exceeded his expectations.

And what, you may ask, does this have to do with living with scleroderma? It’s about living, folks. As is my way, I stressed too much about stuff that never happened, which drove me to plan appropriately for stuff that did happen (rain, getting a good parking space, avoiding after-show traffic). I didn’t get enough sleep. But the show was fantastic, I slept very soundly Sunday night, and I’m so glad I let Al talk me into going. And yes, I thanked him.

Here’s to what’s left of summer, for those of you in the Northern Hemisphere—or the end of winter, for those down under. I’m taking my annual summer break for a few weeks, and will be back in mid-September. I hope you can make your own great memories. Carpe diem.

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. Please view Privacy Policy here.

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Filed Under: Body, Hearing, Mind, Sight, Smell, Taste, Touch Tagged With: anxiety, body-mind balance, resilience, travel, vacation

Women Are Different from Men

Evelyn Herwitz · August 13, 2019 · Leave a Comment

Yes, of course, women are different from men. But I’m not referring to obvious, observable gender differences. Nor to sexual identity or gender fluidity. No, I’m talking about how women and men experience disease in very different ways, and the implications for health care.

Let’s start with scleroderma, and systemic sclerosis, in particular. The vast majority of individuals who have this disease are women. Indeed, the vast majority who live with autoimmune diseases of all kinds are women. Why? Recent studies suggest that the male sex hormone, testosterone, helps to protect the body from turning on itself. Women have about one-tenth as much testosterone as men. But that’s still just a strong theory. The fact remains that women account for the preponderance of patients with autoimmune diseases—which often present with ambiguous symptoms that are all too often misdiagnosed or dismissed as being the result of stress, anxiety, or worrying too much.

Women also experience different diseases differently than men. Heart disease is the greatest killer of women, yet the “classic” symptoms of a heart attack—crushing chest pain, radiating pain down the left arm—are atypical for women. More likely, we might feel nauseated, dizzy, upper back or neck pain, light-headed or fatigued, short of breath.

But because protocols for treating heart attacks are based on male symptoms, women experiencing heart failure often go undiagnosed and are sent home. Women also dismiss their own symptoms until it’s too late, or receive treatments that are less successful for women than for men. All of these factors combine to increase the mortality risk for women with cardiovascular disease.

Then there’s the issue of how women experience pain differently from men. We tend to have more intense pain and to verbalize our pain more readily and frequently than men—and be dismissed for complaining too much. With pain as one of the body’s most significant signals that something is awry, the fact that women are not taken as seriously as men has major consequences for appropriate medical care. This is relevant for both diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune disease and heart disease, along with a host of other medical conditions.

How women experience disease differently from men can no longer be ignored, and we need to be educated health care consumers to properly advocate for ourselves. In recent months, I’ve become much more aware of the issue thanks to one of my clients, Terry Hush at Roji Health Intelligence, and a significant series of blogs that she wrote and I edited. You can read the entire collection in this eBook. (And no, I don’t get any kick-back for promoting this work; it’s free, it’s really important, and that’s why I’m sharing the link.)

Here’s to the power of knowing.

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. Please view Privacy Policy here.

Image: Ryoji Iwata

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Filed Under: Body, Hearing, Mind, Sight, Touch Tagged With: gender disparities in health care, managing chronic disease, resilience

A Sliver of Moon

Evelyn Herwitz · August 6, 2019 · 2 Comments

Saturday night, we were sitting with friends by a fire pit, near a pond, watching the flames, watching a sliver of moon sink beyond the trees. The same moon sinking beyond the horizon, two hours later, in El Paso. The same moon that would be absent from the sky, early Sunday morning, in Dayton.

In the U.S., in 2019, so far, there have been 255 verified mass shootings. Nearly 8,800 people have died from guns. That total just increased by 31 souls.

There’s a lot I can do to increase my odds of living a long life with scleroderma. I’ve managed it for nearly four decades, now. Some of my resilience is genetic. I’m fortunate to have access to quality health care. But I’m also vigilant and diligent about making healthy choices.

None of us can control whether an active shooter with a semiautomatic weapon of war decides to show up at a Walmart, or a bar—or a school, a church, a mosque, a synagogue, a movie theatre, a festival—and spray the crowd with deadly fire. But we can make our voices heard. And we can vote to end this madness.

The Earth turns, unceasing, on its axis. Nothing in life ever remains the same. We cannot control the world around us, only our response.

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. Please view Privacy Policy here.

Image: Terry Richmond

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Filed Under: Body, Hearing, Mind, Sight Tagged With: managing chronic disease, mindfulness, resilience

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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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