Recently, a young boy was studying my fingers. “Why do you have so many bandages?” he asked.
“I have problems with my hands,” I answered. For a pre-schooler, that seemed the appropriate explanation.
He looked concerned, or perhaps afraid. “You don’t have fingernails,” he said.
“No, I don’t,” I said. Not exactly true. I have a few left, but they certainly don’t look normal, more like moon crescents. He seemed perplexed, but then he got distracted and that was the end of our conversation.
A friend who overheard our chat checked to see how I took it. “Kids say what everyone else is thinking,” I said. “He’s just curious.”
It really doesn’t bother me anymore when people ask, after all these decades of living with odd-looking hands and way too many digital ulcers, especially since my hand surgery eight years ago that necessitated some partial finger amputations. Most people who know me don’t pay any attention to my hands. When a stranger (often a cashier or someone else I’m handing something to) asks, Oh, what happened to you? or clucks about my bandages, I just take it as a mix of natural inquisitiveness and compassion.
My standard answer is something like, “I have chronic ulcers.” I don’t bother to go into an explanation of scleroderma, because the occasion doesn’t call for a lengthy discussion, and I’d rather keep it simple. Sometimes the person will ask a follow-up, Does it hurt?ย To which I say, “Sometimes.”
I realize that such inquiries can be much more challenging for those with severely tightened skin. Before my skin relaxed somewhat on my face, hands, and forearms (a miracle, truly, as it was beginning to get uncomfortable to blink in the early years, and the skin on my hands was like leather), people who knew me casually would ask with concern whether I’d lost weight. They sensed something was different, but couldn’t figure out what.
I was very self-conscious during that first decade. When I began to see wrinkles in my forehead again after several years on penicillamine (a since-discredited treatment because research samples involved too few patients to prove a positive response, but I believe it saved my life), I was thrilled. But my hands were already deformed by then.
It wasn’t until I began writing this blog in January 2012 that I started to overcome all the embarrassment that I felt about my appearance. There really is so much more to living with a chronic, deforming disease like scleroderma than your looks or your diagnosis and treatments, although I don’t in any way mean to minimize the very real physical and emotional pain and stress of literally being trapped in your own skin, when scleroderma takes its most virulent form.
What I have learned in my nearly 45 years of managing this disease is that people take their cues from you. The more accepting you are of yourself, the more accepting they are of you. It’s a journey. I’m grateful to be sharing it with you.
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: Alex Skobe
Beautiful. And so inspirational to me. Thank you.
Thank you, Patrice. ๐
You are beautiful inside and out.
Thanks, Kathy ๐
Beautifully said. Thank you for your uplifting words.
Thank you, Connie. ๐