PARKINSON'S
DISEASE
I have talked about the fact that this
is Parkinson's Disease Awareness Month, as well as the Blogging
Challenge from A to Z month. What I haven't talked about is the
advancement of and discovery of my own manifestations of this
complex, progress and elusive disease. It's different for everyone in
the way it develops and how we choose to react to it. Simply put, Parkinson's Disease is a condition where your brain ceases or slows it's production of Levadopa, a sort of "governor" endocrine chemical that regulates several of your autonomic bodily functions. Without it, weird things happen.
Well, not quite this weird. I thought I was taking a picture of the cat in the next room. This is the stove. It's fun being legally blind, or bland as my "friends" tell me. One of them said I had a future in Paranormal TV.
Depression and other mental
aberrations are a frequent companion, as well as the physical
symptoms. I have more trouble with tremors and later in the day, in
my hands and my head and neck than any other part of my body. I do
have dystonia (fancy-shmancy for cramps) in my feet when I sleep and
have horrific sleep disturbances and pain in my shoulders, chest,
neck and back. The pain is atypical from normal aches and pain of aging and often mimics heart attack or
stroke. The back pain is not at all typical and is a deep throbbing,
almost to the beat of my heart and so deep that it can become
incapacitating. I have had most of these symptoms going back for the
last 15 or 20 years, which would put me in the category of
young-onset. They were never constant and months would pass without
any symptoms at all. I did not have tremors until last March.
A little history is necessary here. I
was homeless from September, 2010 until August 2011. I spent 2 months
in the hospital, taken from my then-house in a domestic. I had to
learn to walk again. Lots of stupid on my part, but I learned and
learned for good. I have a great life now. I was already legally
blind and had been since 2004. Anyway, after all the trauma and an
admission that yes, I was clinically depressed, I started treatment.
I received my full Disability based on my hospitalization, after 5
months, a highly unusual move by the SSA.
So, after all the trauma and drama and
blah blah, I moved out of my homeless shelter. That's actually how
this blog started; with my Homeless Tales, but, my sweetie and I got
moved and life was good. Until February of 2012, when for some odd
reason, I started being just hyper. All the time. I couldn't slow
down, I couldn't sleep. At all. I don't think I slept for maybe 1
night out of 8. I was doing ridiculous things like solving quadratic
equations, blogging, gaming and watching “X-Files” all at the
same time. I had always multi-tasked, but this was ridiculous.
At some point, I slipped and I don't
remember a thing. Just huge hunks of time are gone. The next thing I
do remember, is being in the Mental Ward of St. Joseph's Hospital and
I had an attendant. I was not restrained. Pretty soon, a psychiatrist
came in, and asked me “What were you trying to do? Kill yourself?” I said, “No, but I couldn't sleep.”
I had been out of sleeping pills and taken a bunch of benadryl,
according to JC and I believe him. The doctor talked to me for a few
more minutes, and he decided then and there to lift the Baker Act. He
was nice and visited me a few more times. I noticed then, that I was
having some tingling in both hands and the psychiatrist brought in a
neurologist to look at them. I have very strong hands and there was
no weakness in either of them. So, they kept me for a few more days
and sent me home. My own psychiatrist tested me and said I was
bipolar, which I know now to be true, although at the time, I
thought, WTH?
Medication helps that. But, that
psychotic break was a point in time for me. Pre-psychotic break, I
did not display overt Parkinson's symptoms. Post-psychotic break, I
do. The tremors started, very faintly at first, a week after my
hospitalization, and have only worsened. Having this has made me dig
into the literature and watch a lot of really horrible videos on
YouTube, with boring doctors from the 60s, wearing giant suits from
Robert Hall and huge black, plastic-rimmed glasses. But the
information is sound, if you can stay awake through their lectures..
Nobody has the same PD. We all have
designer PD. My friend Jim Adams and his wife Penny who run the P.A.N.D.A. foundation for Parkinson's have similar symptoms, but others are present as well that I don't have. My symptoms have tremendous psychological overtones. I have periods of dementia and have learned how to deal with them and overcome them. They are usually brought on by a precipitous drop in my sugar, although, I am not diabetic.The great thing is, I remember them now. Actually,
to me? The hilarious thing is this; I'm legally blind. Before all of
this, I had trouble getting the mascara wand back into the tube. Now,
it's like a midway carny game. Some days I can't comb my hair. Not
that it's an improvement anyway. Now, instead of being 15 minutes in
front of, or behind my next or last stupidity or gaffe, it's more
like 7 minutes. When I'm in Chat rooms, I tell everyone to get out
their Mary decoder rings and live with it, 'cause I ain't fixin' no
typos. And it's great for those nights when I don't want to cook,
which is happening more and more frequently. “Honey? Do you mind
cooking?” “No dear. Here's a nice bowl of Cheerios and water.”
It is what it is. I love life and this
is just another speed bump. I have to think back to when I first was
blind. I was incredibly angry and frustrated. This hasn't been so
bad. There are times I get down. I had an incredibly dark period, not
so long ago, but it always passes. Time will fix it. As Stephen Frye
says, it's the only way to approach a bipolar condition. That can be
applied to anything. The choice is up to us. My fabulous friend YumaBev, who writes "Parkinson's Humor" is one of the most singular upbeat, terrific people I know. Her life has been one of tragedy and heartbreak. She recently had DBS, which is short for Deep Brain Stimulation, to help curb her symptoms. Like most brain surgeries, you have to be awake. That right there is reason for me to NOT have that particular procedure. If you are going to be poking around in my noggin, I want to be stone-cold out. "To each his own," said the pig as he kissed the cow. Anyway, Bev blogged about it and she was scheming trying to figure out a way to live-blog her surgery. It was pretty hilarious. But, that's Bev, one of my true joys and inspirations in a world that has few.
This is pretty much how Bev always rolls! My hero!
3 comments:
Thank you for sharing your story. Now I understand a little more of how Parkinson's Disease affects someone. Thos pictures are pretty strange. I guess you rely on memories of how things should look.
Francene.
A - Z Challenge
http://francene-wordstitcher.blogspot.co.uk/
Francene, Thanks for coming by. I'd like to say that I'm relying on memories. What I'm doing is taking bad pictures. I was terrible when I could see. Not seeing hasn't helped, or made it worse. I just roll with it!
Thank you so much for sharing your story. It's so nice to get to know you better!
#atozchallenge, Kristen's blog: kristenhead.blogspot.com
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