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Living with Scleroderma

Reflections on the Messy Complexity of Chronicity

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Feast of Freedom

Evelyn Herwitz · April 10, 2012 · 2 Comments

My hands are in pretty good shape today. A blessing, because I spent all of last Thursday and Friday cooking our annual Passover seder—a five course extravaganza that I manage to pull off each year.

I’ve evolved the menu over decades, based on what works, what doesn’t and what everyone asks for and complains about if I don’t make it. For the past few seders, I’ve switched from a meat-centric meal to fish and vegetarian entrées, creating a new challenge to find great recipes for guests who still wish I’d make that brisket.

And I’ve tried to modify my approach to accommodate my hands, which I’ve managed to wreck a number of times in the past when I went overboard with elaborate menu planning. I pace myself through two days of cooking, choose recipes that are fairly simple but taste terrific, and always wear disposable vinyl gloves to protect my ulcers as I cook.

Al serves as sous chef and kitchen first mate, helping with all of the chopping, slicing, jar-opening, package-ripping, utensil-retrieving and the many, many, many rounds of dish-washing and drying as I power through preparation of each dish. I could not do this meal without his help. Not to mention the fact that he takes care of the huge task of switching over our kosher kitchen to our Passover dishes.

But for all my planning and experience, on Thursday I was struggling. My hands were killing me because much of our Passover cookware is old and cheap (no point spending money on stuff you use only eight days of the year), and harder to handle than our regular kitchen utensils. By the end of the evening, after I’d worn out my right hand from folding all the meringue into the spongecake batter, I sat down, exhausted, and wondered why I was doing this to myself once again.

I could simplify the menu—this year’s included Egyptian haroset, a paste made of dates, raisins and filberts; pickled salmon; Persian cucumber and yogurt soup; a Moroccan salad of fresh oranges and greens with a cinnamon dressing; a main course of Turkish leek patties, Moroccan eggplant and tomato casserole, and steamed asparagus; and apricot sponge cake, strawberries, grapes, figs and chocolate for dessert.

It’s a lot of work. But the truth is, much as it takes a physical toll, I don’t want to give it up. The meal was wonderful. Everyone loved it. There were barely enough left-overs for our Sunday night supper.

My bottom line is this: I just don’t want to give in to my scleroderma. I am incredibly stubborn, a perfectionist and, yes, a card-carrying control freak when it comes to anything I’m creating.

In Gabriel Axel’s 1987 film Babette’s Feast (based on a story by Isak Dinesen), the heroine, a French refugee who becomes the cook and housekeeper for a pair of Danish spinster sisters, creates an exquisite meal for them and members of their small, austere church community, to thank them for sheltering her over the years. I won’t spill the delicious secret twist that’s revealed at the film’s end, except for Babette’s concluding line: When the sisters realize she has spent all of her money to create her amazing gift of a meal, she answers, “An artist is never poor.”

Creating a wonderful meal for people you love is an art form. It’s nourishment wrapped in beautiful presentation and delicious flavor. It’s a gift that makes everyone feel good, that enhances sharing, conversation and connection. For the Passover seder, it’s also a reminder of all that we have to be grateful for, living in a free country. I don’t entertain often because of my hands. But when I do, I go all out. And I’ll keep doing so as long as I’m able.

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: Taste, Touch Tagged With: cooking, hands, Passover, vegetarian

On Turtles and Frogs

Evelyn Herwitz · April 3, 2012 · 4 Comments

When it comes to check-out lines, I’m slow. Really slow. Or so it feels when I’m standing at the register, fumbling to remove cash and slide coins back in my wallet without spilling them, fiddling with the receipt, finagling my wallet back into my purse.

If I’m shopping with one of my daughters, I’ll just let her handle the money so we get through the line quicker. If I’m shopping with Al, he takes care of the transaction. But since I usually do errands by myself, I’m often in this state of fumbling and feeling like I’m holding up the people behind me.

Lately, I’ve taken to hauling my purchase, change and receipt to an open counter where I can take my time to put everything back together. The other day I was in a store, arranging my stuff at an empty checkout counter, when the cashier at the next station asked if I needed help with an exchange.

“No,” I said, “I’m just getting organized.” To which she replied, “I wish someone would do that for me!” We laughed, and I felt better.

Some of this angst about being a slow-poke because my hands are clumsy is in my head. But I’m not imagining people’s impatience in the line behind me, either. We’re a society obsessed with speed.

When I was a marketing director for a dozen-plus years at a small New England college, I would always give my new employees a plastic turtle. Then I’d explain Herwitz’s Turtle Principle:

  1. Take the time to do the job right the first time, or you’ll end up spending twice as long fixing it.
  2. If our internal clients drive you crazy, draw into your shell and let it roll off.
  3. Pace yourself through the day, including lunch and breaks to clear your head. You’ll be more productive and keep your sanity.

Everyone loved these guidelines and our little department mascots, and many of my staff took their plastic turtles with them when they moved on to their next career step. While I’m sure it sounded odd and downright seditious to some of my colleagues who wanted us to jump to meet their demands, whenever we followed the Turtle Principle, we were highly productive, and whenever we succumbed to pressure and rushed to complete a project, we’d screw up.

Problem was, I had a really hard time finding those plastic turtles. I’d search in toy stores and party stores to no avail. It took creative thinking and serendipity to locate them. Plenty of plastic frogs, but few turtles.

Not surprising that the frogs outnumbered the turtles, when you think about it. We’re always hopping, running, chasing to keep up with
everything we try to stuff into a day. So often I hear people complain how busy they are, how exhausted they are—but the complaint often veils pride in accomplishment. How busy you are is also a measure of success. If you’re busy, you must be doing a lot of important things, right?

I get caught up in this cycle, too. Which is why I hate to waste time fumbling at the check-out counter, and why I’m so conscious of holding up people in line behind me.

But, really. What if we all took a few more minutes at the check-out line to stop, organize ourselves and chat with the cashier? Turtles are among the longest-lived creatures on the planet. In this 5-Hour-Energy, instant-download, five-minutes-ago-is-old-news world of ours, scleroderma or no scleroderma, I’d rather be a turtle than a frog.

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: Mind, Touch Tagged With: body-mind balance, life style, turtle principle

Legacy

Evelyn Herwitz · March 27, 2012 · 6 Comments

Last Wednesday, March 21, was Johann Sebastian Bach’s 327th birthday. I know this because I was listening to a J.S. Bach extravaganza on my satellite radio while driving between home and business meetings and doctor’s appointments all day.

I clocked a lot of miles and heard a lot of Bach. Though baroque is not my first choice in classical, this proved a blessing. His music provided the perfect balance to the necessary and supportive but exhausting experience of seeing my rheumatologist at Boston Medical Center. I love all my docs at BMC and here at home—they are wonderful, dedicated physicians. But whenever we talk in great technical detail about symptoms and medication and diagnostics and what may or may not happen next, I’m always drained.

Scleroderma is so complex, involves so much to monitor, that when we discuss my latest issues, much as I probe and want to understand the minutiae, there’s a part of me that doesn’t want to know, that just wants to treat it as the white noise in my life, annoying, in the background, to be ignored.

After my appointment, west-bound on the Mass Pike, as I sorted through our conversation, on came Bach’s Violin Concerto in A Minor. And I remembered playing it. Years ago, in high school. I could still feel the trace of fingering in what’s left of my left hand’s fingertips. As the soloist began the poignant second movement, I recalled the phrasing, how I had loved to bow those notes. Bach’s haunting, wistful melody has been cycling through my mind, since.

So here I am, more that three centuries after Bach composed his masterpiece, and the music speaks to me. And I’m grateful. And awed by the way that a great artist’s creation still resonates, feels fresh, inspires insight, so many years after he set down his pen.

And I wonder, what will I leave behind? I wrestle with this question often. It will be my 58th birthday in a few weeks. I don’t feel old, despite the way my scleroderma gnaws at me. But I do feel that each day is more precious, that I don’t want to waste time any more doing things I don’t want to do. And that I want my writing, my art, to be my main focus.

This is what gets me out of bed in the morning, even on a day like this when I’m still tired after a full night’s sleep and feel like I’m moving through a vat of glue. Writing. Putting one word next to another, one sentence after another, to see where it leads.

Bach described his art this way: “The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.” He reached his lofty goal note by note. I can’t say that I have as clear a vision for my writing, but I know I’ll discover it if I just keep at it, word by word by word.

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: Hearing, Mind Tagged With: A Minor Violin Concerto, J.S. Bach, kinesthetic memory, leaving a legacy

Hula Finger

Evelyn Herwitz · March 20, 2012 · 4 Comments

Decades ago, when scleroderma first attacked my hands, my right index finger began to droop. Over the course of several years, it stiffened into a hooked flexion contracture, bent to an immobile 100-degree angle.

To me, it looked like a claw. It was ugly, hag-like. I hated it. I was constantly smashing my bent knuckle into drawers and cabinets whenever I reached for something. It hurt when I shook hands. It was an embarrassing deformity.

The hardest piece was that it had been my favorite finger, enabling me to maintain deft control of pencils when I drew, of needles when I sewed, anything that involved fine motor coordination. I had talented hands with great kinesthetic feel, and my right index finger was the most talented of all.

As the risk of permanent knuckle ulcers and infection grew, I decided to look into corrective hand surgery. I went to one of the best orthopedic hand surgeons in Boston for an assessment. The surgery was doable, but I was scared. What if it didn’t work? What if I lost my finger in the process?

While I debated what to do, our youngest, Emily, expressed a very different view. For her, my digital hook was her favorite. Born a premie and always petite, she had tiny, slender fingers, and she loved to hold my bent index finger like the handle on a tea cup whenever we would snuggle. Her gentle touch was always a salve.

It took me a full year to gather up the courage to have the surgery. All went well, no complications or infections—though my hand surgeon commented that the operation was challenging, my skin as fragile as an onion’s. He shortened the finger so I could still pinch the tip of my resorbed thumb and stabilized the joint with two steel pins.

Emily was disappointed that she couldn’t hold it the same way anymore, but old enough to understand why the surgery was necessary. Gripping the finger, with its internal pins, was painful. So we found other ways to hold hands, as hers grew.

Then the bones in my finger began to resorb. Gradually, the pins poked their way out of the bone and stabbed my knuckle from the inside. I saw another hand surgeon, and we agreed he would remove the pins. As my finger had healed well from the initial surgery, it had formed what he called a “false joint,” and would still be useable.

So, the pins came out. My finger looked a bit squashed and quite stubby, but this time, I was much less concerned about aesthetics and just grateful to have a working finger without pain.

And there was one new attribute that delighted Emily: Since the joint was now more tendon than bone, I could rotate the tip of the finger in a circle, like a hula dancer. I’d hum a tune and make it jiggle, and she would giggle. Another saving grace.

I had my first hand surgery when Emily was five. This week, she turned 20. We still occasionally joke about my hula finger. And we still hold hands when we visit.

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: Mind, Touch Tagged With: flexion contracture, hand surgery

The Cruelest Month

Evelyn Herwitz · March 13, 2012 · 1 Comment

April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.

—T.S. Eliot, The Wasteland

My April started early this season, by a few weeks. With warming weather and spring’s promise have come ulcers and more ulcers—an inexplicable but oft observed trend in medical literature.

No one knows why, in spring, ulcers blossom along with lilacs. Maybe it’s the gravitational pull of the moon. My theory is that my skin expands and contracts as the temperature cycles from cold to warm to cold to warm again, causing it to crack like a concrete sidewalk at the end of winter and form more open sores.

Right now, I have nine ulcers on my fingers: four on the left hand, five on the right. To make matters much worse, an unusual ulcer on the knuckle at the base of my left middle finger got infected last week. The infection bloomed into cellulitis. The back of my hand puffed up and was warm to the touch—unusual for me, with my perennially cold hands—and made grasping painful.

My normal antibiotic regime made no dent within 24 hours. Fortunately, I was able to get in to see my rheumatologist on Friday afternoon (never let an infection go over the weekend—much harder to get medical attention without ending up in the ER), who consulted with an infectious disease specialist, who prescribed Rifampin, which is normally used for treating tuberculosis and to prevent the spread of bacterial meningitis, but is also used, in my case, for treating resistant strains of staphylococcus.

This was a new drug for me, but, thank goodness, it worked. I didn’t have to go on IV antibiotics, which I hate, because my veins are small and roll, making it hard and painful to insert the needle. If I have to stay on IV antibiotics for any length of time, I end up either having to be re-stuck about every three infusions, since my veins give out, or getting a PICC line under my right armpit (the left armpit veins are no good anymore, from past IV episodes), an extremely unpleasant procedure.

So now, thanks to the miracle of a more powerful oral antibiotic, my left hand is almost back to normal again, I’m IV free and feeling better.

Except for the aftermath of yet another frightening episode with infections. On Friday, waiting to see if the antibiotic kicked in, I kept monitoring my left hand to be sure the cellulitis hadn’t spread across my wrist and up my forearm. I had a bout of cellulitis several years ago when I could actually watch the redness move in a swath up my arm at a rate of about a half-inch an hour as I was driving home from work on the Mass Pike, racing to get to the infusion lab. I’ve learned since to catch symptoms early.

But even as I am meticulous with hand care and getting appropriate medical attention, an experience like this always reminds me how vulnerable I am—we all are—to sudden, inexplicable illness, flare-ups, accidents. It leaves me feeling shaken and uneasy for several days, until my body begins to heal and I realize that I’m still quite strong and able, despite the way my scleroderma can muster a stealth attack.

We all walk this earth, not knowing what comes next. Chronic disease just adds to the uncertainty—or perhaps, increases the predictability of uncertainty. If anything teaches that control is an illusion, it’s 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: Touch Tagged With: cellulitis, finger ulcers, hands

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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…

Blog Archive

Recent Posts

  • What Happened to Your Hands?
  • Drips and Drops
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  • Threading the Needle

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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