Saturday, July 30, 2011

LIVING AROUND IT OR "JUST DO IT"

     After rereading comments to this blog, it seems I have dropped the ball.  I have written about things going on in my life, and topics that have spurred my interest.  I have paid tribute to  loved ones, and our country.  However, as noted by one comentor, I have not written about how I "live around it."


     I spent some time thinking about that.  I coined that phrase because I believe that the illnesses aren't going to budge, so I must live in and around what they throw at me.  I have bitterly accepted my physical limitations.  Once teased for having broad shoulders and being able to lift 100 pounds, I now have...broad shoulders.  Once able to run a mean sprint, I can no longer run.  Not that I want to...never did care for it.


     I refuse to believe, however, that I have limitations mentally.  There are medications and counselling available to keep my mind sharp, witty, and smart.  Just don't ask me what I walked into a room for...  Being able to afford the necessary meds is a struggle at times, but thanks to social network and the kind supportive words of friends and family, I can limp through.


     But, how do I "live around it"?  Other than getting out of bed at the pace I am able, showering when my pain level permits it (without danger of falling), and taking whatever pain medication is necessary (when available), I don't have any steps or wise words to aid others.  I just survive.  I would say "live", because I am, in fact, alive, but doing what I do on a daily basis hardly qualifies as "living".  That is probably as much due to finances as it is to health.  Perhaps if I had any extra money, I'd venture out once in awhile.  But everything must be calculated...right down to the gas in the truck.  So, I get up, survey the land, do what I can, then I sit down and connect with others.  Until sitting hurts.  Then I get up and shuffle a chore or two.  Until that hurts, at which point I lie down and hope for some rest. 


     Rest?  REST??  What did I do all day to need rest?  Survive.  Usually on three hours sleep, through level 7 (and above) pain, with dizziness and brain fog.  Now that's multitasking!


     So, I would tell you to live as best fits you.  Try to block out the "shoulds", and embrace the moments that make you smile.  And always, always be open to help to others with their pain.  Knowing the you've helped someone else to "live" really is living! 



     
     

Monday, July 18, 2011

A Worry Rethunk

     I spend a modest amount of time worrying that people I meet will not accept me because I am currently not employed due to disability.  Because my disabilities are invisible, that I could be disabled brings a look of disbelief to most people's faces.  In fact, recently, when asked if disabled for an assistance form, the woman taking the application stopped in her tracks when I said 'yes'.  And for the first time, perhaps since being diagnosed, her voice softened, and she put her pen down and was genuinely interested in my story.  I felt blessed!
     The fact is, that I did work.  Unpaid, for nine, and paid for nineteen.  Yes, not as much as some, and more than many.  Work conditions during the unpaid were emotionally and physically taxing.  Work conditions during the first 11 of the paid were emotionally and physically damaging.  Had I been treated like a human being, rather than a lowly slave at either of those jobs, I am certain I would not be disabled today.  
     During my preteen through late teens I worked around the homestead doing whatever chore my parents needed done.  Didn't every kid growing up in the 70's?  Of course.  But my father was an obsessive workaholic, and expected that everyone else was, too.  His lists of outdoor chores seemed endless, and on many a summer day, left me with bloodied hands and nasty sunburns...on top of nasty sunburns.  And after he meticulously reviewed the work, came screaming in my face proclaiming that I was dumb and lazy because I'd hoed into some onions.  And as my teenage schoolmates drove by laughing a waving-on their way to swim-I hoed, and weeded, and harvested that damn garden. Every day, all day.  Well, that is, when I wasn't cleaning out the garage/basement, or picking apples, or weeding, or picking blooms off of hundreds of petunias.  Or planting them.  Or helping him haul 100lb stones to landscape.  Or mowing a 6ft hill.  
     During my late teens and twenties, I worked at the leading insurance company in the area. If you had office experience when exiting school, you worked there or at the factory offices.  Unfortunately, this company prided themselves on herding, and treating their employees like cattle.  Little support, tons of work, and few kudos.  This job would define my future physical state in a matter of a few months.  My emotional state had already been defined, but this job sealed it.  Emotionally, however, it would also land me in help's lap.
     I had only worked there for a year, when I began to feel ill.  I had an awful cold, scorching sore throat, and was very tired.  I was warned that missing work would get me fired, so I muddled through, feeling worse and worse.  During a conversation with my Mom, she noticed a tint.  Shocked, she had me stare into her eyes and tilt my head back so she could examine both.  Yellow.  Eyeballs and neck a sickening yellow.  Had no one at work noticed this?  I went to the Dr. the next day, and as he lay me back to feel my tummy, he could see my swollen liver.  He told me to go home and wait for some tests, but by the time I got home, he was on the phone demanding my Mom to get me to the hospital.  I'd had mono for months.  Because it was left untreated, my liver became swollen.  Hepatits.  I spent two weeks in the hospital, and was ordered away from work for two months.  In a shake-my-head sidenote, my co-workers were under the impression that I had the mumps.  A panic ran through the department as everyone tried to remember if they'd had them.  Upon finding out that I had something much more serious, they were relieved.  At least they weren't going to get sick.  As soon as they found out it was Hepatitis-it turned out to be non-infectious-the pressure to get me back to work began.  After just two week home, I got phone calls from co-workers-on behalf of my supervisor-to "get back in here".  After several harassing calls, Mom called work to talk to my super.  The super had the gall to snipe at my mother about my coming back to work immediately.  I was still getting dizzy getting up and around!  Two more weeks passed, and because of the phone calls, the doctor was called to see if I could return to work.  The okay was given as long as I did sit down work.  On day three of my return I was put back on my feet...a six hour trek every day.  I blacked out many times, but was blown off when I reported it.  You see, mumps everyone understood.  Hepatitis they did not.  Therefore, it did not exist.
     My mother was told that I would never be the same.  I'd never have the stamina I'd once had.  I might not be able to fight colds and such as efficiently.  And I was never the same.  Ever again.  There was no name for that result at that time.  Today they call it Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
     So, yes, I have worked.  Since those jobs I've been a nanny, a warehouse stocker, a carpet salesperson, a water department employee, and several more insurance gigs.  Had I not given birth to the light of my life, triggering Fibromyalgia, I might still be working.  But, for whatever reason, God has seen fit for me to be at home. 
     So, perhaps I need to rethink my worry, and wear my disabilities like a badge.  After all, I fought long and hard to get them. 

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Justice Failed

     Beyond a reasonable doubt.  A part of our justice crafted to protect the innocent.  But, our justice system is not always fair.  Innocent people are convicted.  The guilty, with help of crafty defense lawyers, go free.  Two high profile cases of that come to mind.  OJ Simpson.  Michael Jackson.  All it takes is one person to think that maybe, just maybe the accused did not commit the crime.  Today, we add another name to that list.  Casey Anthony.  She was found not guilty today of murdering her young daughter, Caylee Marie.  I was, upon learning this, stunned.  I then became angry.  As I watched the disbelief spread across the nation, via Facebook, I thought, 'If all these people are outraged, then how did 12 people not find guilt?'  But, I was not there.  
     I did not watch the trial.  The entire situation made me angry, sick, and as a mother, outraged.  The press showed mostly the same photos of the defendant playing happily with her child.  Or, if you preferred, partying in the 30 days before she reported her daughter missing.  Or tapes of the defendant's mother scolding her daughter on the phone.  I thought I was "keeping up" with the trial by watching the updates unfold.  After the verdict today, it was clear that I had not been paying close enough attention.
     If I had taken the time to really think about it, I would have quickly remembered that the Burden of Proof was on the prosecution, and that they had no solid evidence.  The ball was set firmly in the defenses court and they played it perfectly. 
     I have decided that being a defense attorney must require a lot of showers.  That much sleaze has to leave one with a stench.  It must also require a vivid imagination.  One such that a lawyer can take few truths and build them into reasonable doubts.  And cause a jury of seven women, and five men to question what seemed obvious to casual followers.  That this woman murdered her beautiful, God-given daughter.  Not only that, but she didn't report her baby missing for a month.  And during that month, went out with friends, danced, enjoyed life--the very thing she robbed her daughter of.  Was this an "oops!" moment for her?  "Damn if I don't write things down I just forget."?
     Oh, she's not off scot-free...No.  She is guilty of lying to authorities, or providing false information.  And reports state that as she was printed for those convictions, she was grinning widely.  Really?  Her daughter is still dead.  Grinning widely would not be on my list of things to do for years if I lost my son.  I just keep thinking that she must be thinking "Nanner, nanner, nanner, you couldn't catch me!"  And that makes my stomach turn.    
    Perhaps the most disturbing part of this verdict is the law of Double Jeopardy.  If any solid evidence presents itself, or she drunkenly tells a friend the truth, she can not be tried again for First Degree Murder.  OJ Simpson just confessed his crime and people simply said "I knew it" and shook their heads.  There will never be real justice for two-year old Caylee Marie.
   In most instances, I think our Justice system works.  But, when it doesn't, it really doesn't.  Innocent Until Proven Guilty is the rule.  But, we must, must remember that just because a jury voted Not Guilty, does not mean they believe she is innocent.  It simply means that they could not be convinced Beyond A Reasonable Doubt that she was guilty.  But she knows.  And so does God.  And her final sentence will be one to be reckoned with.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Two Hundred Thirty Five years and still going, and going, and going......

     Happy Birthday USA!  Two hundred thirty five years old?  Just a pup on this Earth...A mere toddler, by comparison, complete with tantrums and the "mine, mine, mine" mentality.  You are still learning, developing, and tripping on your own feet.  So, is it any wonder you are in a state of political chaos much of the time?  No, but one can only grow from trip-ups and fall downs...I trust you will.
     Today, I celebrate the "founding fathers" that bravely demanded independence from a country they could no longer support.  I also celebrate their ancestors, who 164 years earlier risked their lives to sail a ship across an ocean to start anew.  And to the keepers of the land before them, I say thank you.  Truly, the spirit of the America I now know, began long before the signatures on that famous scroll. 
     That spirit wanes at times.  We the people are guilty of becoming complacent-taking for granted the freedom that has been tested time and time again.  But, surely as the seasons change, we come together as One Nation when the going is tough...or heart wrenching.  Together, we become a formidable force.  We celebrate our country's victories together.  We grieve our losses as One.    
     We are a country born of, and growing due to, immigrants that have heard the rumors and want to have a piece of that apple pie.  Today hundreds of those immigrants will be sworn in as Americans, after years of struggle, prejudice, and studying the history of this country.  Most of them know more about the history of America than those born to this country.  That is because being a citizen of this country is, to them, a privilege.  One worth memorizing "how many amendments have been made to the Constitution?'  (It's 27). Are there bad apples?  Of course.  But, as the saying goes..."One bad apple don't spoil the whole bunch (girl)...wait that was a song...but the point remains.
     Today families will gather for cookouts and parties.  Friends will gather for cookouts and parties.  At the end of the day, all eyes will be on spacious skies as fireworks gallantly gleam...and BOOM!  And this year...this year we can celebrate our country's stubbornness.  A stubbornness that brought down the leader to an evil, American-hating, murdering group.  A stubbornness that will continue to protect this country from further harm and "haters."  We can be proud of that toddler mentality.  
     So, today, forget "bi-partisan lines", mudslinger politics and anti...anything.  Be one.  Be proud that so many young people are willing to protect your country.  Be mindful of "those that gave all."  Stop for a moment and remember how blessed you are to be allowed to disagree with what government does, without being jailed, maimed or...killed.  Listen to Lee Greenwood for the hundredth time, and take in those words, "where at least I know I'm free."  Because you are.  WE are. 
     God, continue to bless America.  Because we love Her...warts and all.