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Living with Scleroderma

Reflections on the Messy Complexity of Chronicity

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managing chronic disease

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

Dropping the F-bomb

Evelyn Herwitz · January 31, 2012 · 2 Comments

Whenever I smash one of my fingertip ulcers—reaching for a faucet, reaching for the gear shift, reaching for a doorknob, any time I’m rushing and not paying attention—I curse.

And the only curse that works is the f-bomb. It’s short, explosive and foul. It’s the best way I know to discharge my anger and diffuse the intense, sharp pain.

My fingertip bones are severely resorbed, so the tips are jagged. When I hit an overlaying ulcer, it’s a double whammy of banging a deep sore on the outside and stabbing it from the inside. Even with my bandages, which provide a little cushioning, it hurts like hell.

But oh hell doesn’t cut it.

I also curse when my hands won’t do what I want.

A spoon slips through my grasp and hits the floor. F-bomb.

Coins slide out of my palm and scatter. F-bomb.

It takes five tries to pick the coins off the floor. F-bomb.

I can’t grab a knife from the flatware tray and have to pry it out with another utensil. F-bomb.

It takes ten minutes to align the zipper pull and zip up my winter coat. F-bomb.

I have a battle with shrink-wrap and the shrink-wrap wins. F-bomb.

I drop my cell phone getting out of the car and the back falls off into the sewer (yes, this really happened once). F-bomb.

Sometimes, when I’m cooking a big meal for company and getting tired and things start slipping out of my hands—like a potato I’m peeling or an onion I’m slicing—I don’t simply drop the f-bomb, I start throwing utensils into the sink and slamming drawers and yelling about how the counters are too cluttered and there’s no place to put anything. My family knows enough to stay out of the way.

I try my best not to curse when others are around or within earshot. I don’t want the f-bomb to creep into my everyday conversation and contribute to the decline of civil discourse.

But I hate this disease. Even though I’ve been living with scleroderma for three decades, and most of the time I can manage quite well, it really gets to me some days. I hate the way it’s wrecking my body. I hate how it’s robbed me of activities I love. I hate all the bandages, the ulcers and infections. I hate all the trips to various doctors and all the waiting in waiting rooms and all the medications. I hate discovering yet one more bizarre complication, like the fact that the roots of my molars are resorbing or the time the left side of my face went numb and I thought I was having a stroke and had to go to the ER and learned that I had an inflamed trigeminal nerve that the ER doc diagnosed as trigeminal neuralgia, which fortunately turned out not to be the case. It was “just” a rare neurological issue associated with scleroderma.

There’s no polite way to put this: When your body craps out on you, it sucks. And with a disease like this, you’re stuck knowing there’s no cure, for now, probably not in your lifetime, and even if, God-willing, there is a cure, your body’s too damaged for it to make a difference, and your health is only going to get worse.

Like aging.

When my sister and I were kids, our family used to travel by overnight train from New York to Cincinnati to visit my grandparents every December. Inevitably at the big family gatherings, all the adults would start complaining about their latest physical ailments. We’d sit on the side and snicker to each other, “When are they going to start passing around their X-rays?”

Fifty years later, I find myself engaged in those same conversations with my friends all too often. The older we get, the more stuff malfunctions, breaks and hurts. It’s shocking when it starts. We all know that our bodies are going to give out and we’re going to die someday, but we don’t really want to believe it until our mortality slaps us in the face. I’ve just been battling the inevitable much longer than most of my peers.

So I guess I have something of an advantage in the how-to-cope sweepstakes. But that doesn’t help on days when my house keys slip through my fingers and I drop the package I’m carrying as I try to pick them up and have to take off my glove to grasp the keyring but it’s too cold and my fingers go into a Raynaud’s spasm.

Then the only thing that works is dropping the f-bomb.

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: coping with pain, hands, managing chronic disease

Whatever You Do, Don’t Treat Me Like an Invalid

Evelyn Herwitz · January 17, 2012 · 4 Comments

Years ago, when I first learned that I had one of three possible auto-immune diseases—either rheumatoid arthritis, lupus or scleroderma, pick your poison—I was terrified. I knew RA could be crippling, and I knew that lupus had killed one of my literary heroines, Flannery O’Connor, at 39. I’d never heard of scleroderma, but the more I read, the more overwhelmed  I felt.

Al and I were newly married, and we were both in shock by my emerging diagnosis and how my body was changing. For a wedding present, knowing I wanted to get back to playing music after a decade of dormancy, Al had my violin repaired—the fallen sound post repositioned, the bridge straightened and the strings replaced. But the first time I picked it up, I realized that I could no longer wrap my fingers around the neck or press on the strings, let alone flex my wrist for bowing.

As my hands got stiffer, my joints became more inflamed and I felt more and more exhausted, the simplest tasks—like pulling on a pair of socks or filling a pot with water and placing it on the stove—became difficult and painful. One weekend, out of the blue, I  experienced a sharp pain with each breath; a trip to urgent care revealed pleurisy. Sensitive to cold from childhood, my fingers and toes now flickered numb throughout the day. I still didn’t have a definitive diagnosis, but my rheumatologist correctly suspected scleroderma.

Neither of us knew how to talk about it. When we first started dating, Al’s mother had warned him that I seemed too fragile. Now it appeared that her words were a harbinger of disaster. We sought help in couples therapy, which opened the lines of communication. But we were both still scared.

When we got together with friends, I would inevitably pick the brains of any health care professional in the crowd (of which there were many, all of them supportive and very concerned). This was before the days of the Internet and before there was much detailed information about scleroderma available to the general public. Al went with me to a scleroderma support group, but I found it depressing rather than uplifting, so I quit after several sessions.

Friends and family were concerned and tried to be helpful. But the reality was that scleroderma is so strange and obscure, that no one had a point of reference. Our physician friends were aware of the severe risks, but they couldn’t predict the course, any more than my rheumatologist.

I soon discovered that, despite everyone’s best intentions, most people really didn’t want to hear about it. We were all in our thirties, friends were having children and building their careers, and most were quite healthy. I was a newlywed the second time around, desperately wanting this marriage to work, facing my mortality. Not the stuff of social banter.

If I did start to share, I would typically get one of several reactions:

People would listen but soon get distracted or change the topic because they couldn’t deal with it. Or they’d listen and then tell me about someone else they knew with an even worse condition, perhaps as a way to relate my predicament to their own experience, but it always made me feel unheard. So I’d shut down.

People would try to offer advice. This was always well-meaning, but most of the time was of no help, since they didn’t really want to take the time to understand what I was dealing with because it was so threatening. So, again, I’d shut down.

People would feel sorry for me and try to mother me with their concern. Of all the reactions, this was the worst. If there is one thing I can’t tolerate, it’s being treated as an invalid.

While I appreciate the underlying compassion, I never want to be handled as if I can’t do for myself. Ultimately, that level of smothering concern is more about the helper’s need for control over the unknown than the helpee’s need to be cared for. It completely undermines the fighting spirit that’s so essential to managing this and any other chronic disease.

There’s a fine line to be tread here, of course, because I also have had to learn to ask for help. There are many things that I can’t do easily anymore, and I’m no longer ashamed to be assertive in requesting assistance.

But my family and closest friends all know by now how important it is to me to continue pushing back, managing this complicating disease, outsmarting it, accepting it, running with it, on my own two feet.

Al, to his great credit, has never babied me, even when sometimes, in weaker moments, I wished he would. For the 27 years we’ve been married, with scleroderma as our third partner, he has always helped me when needed, but never expected less of me than I do, myself. And that has been one of my most powerful medications.

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 Tagged With: managing chronic disease

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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

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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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