The SmartTalk Women’s Series: A Great Holiday Gift, Plus Contest and Discount!

(I am working with SmartTalk in exchange for the opportunity to see these speakers at no cost to me, and for promotional opportunities for my blog.  I am not being monetarily compensated.)

If you are looking for a unique, unforgettable gift for a woman who is special to you, SmartTalk Connected Conversations is a series of five different shows with five individual women who have done amazing, inspiring things with their lives.

The series will be coming to the cities of Cincinnati, DesMoines, New Brunswick, NJ, Tampa Bay, the Twin Cities, and Wilmington, DE.; and the speakers include Arianna Huffington, Andie McDowell, Dr. Jane Goodall, Marie Osmond, and Sigourney Weaver.  Those interested in more information about the series or in purchasing tickets can visit the SmartTalk website.

And if you can make it to The State Theatre in New Brunswick, NJ, Mama Sick is giving away two tickets to see Dr. Jane Goodall for the evening of Monday, January 16, 2012. Dr. Goodall will not only talk to you about her lifelong work with the Gombe chimpanzees, she will also speak about the current threats to the environment facing our planet and why she believes we have a reason to be optimistic in these complex times.

 Entering is easy and you have three chances to win:

1. Leave a comment below.

2. Tweet out the contest.

3. Post this contest on your Facebook wall.  

If you tweet and Facebook the contest, please let me know by leaving two more entries.  In other words, if you have commented, Tweeted and Facebooked, you will have THREE separate entries.  

The contest will run until Wednesday, December 7th at 11:59 p.m. EST.  A winner will be chosen at random.

If you are not a winner in the contest and are still interested in purchasing the series, from now until December 15th you can receive a 20% off discount by calling the State Theatre at 732-246-7469 and mentioning the code SANTA!

Even if you do not live near the State Theatre, there are many opportunities to win tickets and receive discounts to the series in the other cities by going to SmartTalk’s list of bloggers!

And, from now until December 15th, SmartTalk Women is giving away a series of tickets if you “Like” them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter.  One winner from each state will be selected!  

Good luck and Happy Holidays from SmartTalk Women and Mama Sick!

 


 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Flannery O’Connor: A Woman With Lupus Who Accomplished Great Things

It is thanks to the comedian Norm MacDonald and his twitter bookclub @normsbookclub, that I for the past few months have been expanding my mind and reading things I would have never read before if it wasn’t for Norm and his book club.  Unlike most book clubs, Norm’s is unique in that the club mostly reads classical literature. Being a part of the club has “forced me” to re-read and like and understand the behemoth Moby Dick, which I hated when I read it sophomore year in high school.  I have also been exposed to Percy Walker’s 1961 American classic The Moviegoer  and will read The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck for our December 23rd discussion.  I am grateful to the book club and it’s members in that I never would have sought out these books were it not for my respect for Norm MacDonald (@NormMacDonald) who is also a fine writer which I learned when I started to follow @NormsStories.

This month we read the novel Wise Blood by Mary Flannery O’Connor.  I had to get the Collected Works by O’Connor since my library did not have Wise Blood in any other form, so besides reading the assigned book I also read “A Good Man is Hard to Find” and “The Life You Save May Be Your Own”, among other stories.  

I was curious to know about Flannery O’Connor’s background, perhaps more curious than the other writers since this was the first women author we had read.  She is described as an American novelist and short story writer, a Southern writer who wrote in the Southern Gothic style and examined morality, ethics and her own Roman Catholic faith.

In 1937 her father was diagnosed with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, or the most common form of Lupus and the one that I have.  He died in 1941 when O’Connor was a teenager and she was devastated by the loss.

At 26 years old, O’Connor herself was also diagnosed with Lupus.  Expected to live only five years after receiving the diagnosis, she lived for 14 years and died at age 39 from complications of the disease in 1964.

What inspired me most about Flannery O’Connor was that it was during this time between her diagnosis and her death where she wrote all her great works, more than two dozen short stories, two novels and 100 book reviews.

It shows to me that a diagnosis of Lupus, even back in the 1950s, does not mean an immediate death sentence. Although O’Connor did have to return to her home because of the disease, she did not give up her dream of making an impact and succeeded in becoming an important voice in American literature.

As I lay here in this bed, frustrated by my exhaustion after two days of Thanksgiving Day festivities, I think “What can I accomplish in the time I have left here?”  Mary did not have a laptop and she certainly did not have the luxury of typing in her comfortable bed.  She was able to be so prolific, despite the pain and fatigue of Lupus, without little more than steroids to treat her disease back then.

Mary Flannery O’Connor not only inspires me to keep writing this blog but perhaps the novels or other ideas that I have rumbling around in my brain.

There is still time for me to make an impact in the disability/invisible illness community and there is still time for you as well to make an impact on whatever it is that you are wanting to do with your life too.  No one knows how long any of us has to live, whether or not we currently have a disease and the lesson here is that time is precious for us all, and it should not be wasted on “Maybe I will start that blog”, “Maybe I will write that book”, or “Maybe I will take that art class.”

The time to do it is now.

And do it and do it until you can do it no longer.  Mary Flannery O’Connor has inspired me to keep going, and to keep writing, perhaps until the day I die.

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Awkward Thanksgiving Day Moments

The following was heard at and around the Thanksgiving table where we went for dinner:

1.  “You do that again to me and I will take this knife and stab you!”

At the table, said by a man to his five year old daughter.

2.  “It would be cool to get one of those 3D television sets.  Then you could watch porn and watch the guy shooting right at you.”

At the table, said by the same guy, as we watched the football game as we ate dinner.

3.  “This is what I want to get tomorrow.  We have too many rabbits outside our backyard.”

Same guy, pointing to a Black Friday ad for a gun.

I can’t make this stuff up.  This man is not a blood relative and made me extra thankful for my husband.

Photo courtesy of slapupsidethehead.com

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

My Thanks to You

It gets hard to write a meaningful Thanksgiving Day post when one tries to be meaningful and thoughtful every day.  You read my blog, you know I am grateful and thankful for my family and friends (mostly) all of the time.  So this year I thought I would do something a little different and thank YOU!

Yes, you reading this blog, you who come as often as you can to check in on how Grant, Tyler and I are doing. You who really care about us.  You who read me during the fun times or the times that I am not doing so well.

You are the reason I write.  Your comments, whether on my blog, Twitter, or Google+ keep me going and your support helps me when I am low and your “thank you for writing this!” encourages me to keep writing.

With the permission of these ladies, I thought I would name some of you personally.  My mind’s not the greatest as you know, so I looked back on my past posts to people who commented often on my blog to name the following people.  If I didn’t name you or ask you, please feel free to leave a comment to let me know that you are here and that you come often.  Even if you never commented before, take a 30 seconds to let me know who you are!

Okay, here goes…

Most bloggers who tweet do so first and foremost to promote their blogs.  How surprised I was to learn that I actually could make some good friends out of the bargain!  Karen, @KRDRE1974, has been a great friend to me and we crossed that border between friend on the internet and friend in real life earlier this year.  Karen, it has been my pleasure to meet and know you and to commiserate with you!

Another Twitter friend, Cindy, @momBto3, helped me out when I was in a tight spot because she could and because she understood and because she trusted me.  She was there for me when there was no one else and I will thank her and owe her always, even though my “debt” has been paid.

I met Michelle of Hope In Bracelets when I approached her to do a contest with me for the first time.  Not only does she make beautiful jewelry, she also makes a beautiful friend.  Hey Michelle, I was going to ask you about doing a holiday contest, what do you think?

I met Beth through a blog hop and even though the hop no longer exists she hops over to my blog every so often to say she cares.  Thank you, Beth!

I met another blogger through Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop, Caroline of I See You Looking at Me.  We connected because of our mutual mental illnesses and she has given me comfort.

Meredith, I don’t know where I met you…Twitter, through the Blogosphere…but it seems like we have been friends forever!  Even though Meredith has Lyme Disease and I have Lupus, the two of us can get along!  Thanks for crossing over, Mer!

I met Shannon through Twitter.  We have Fibromyalgia in common and Shannon posts some great info about Fibro.  She also comes to my blog and gives me some great advice and it is so evident that she cares!  It is much appreciated, Shannon!

And finally, there are a couple of people, who behind the scenes, have helped me all year long that definitely deserve mentioning.

I met Amy of Selfish Mom, when we wrote for the now defunct Silicon Valley Moms Group. Any time someone offers me a proposal, an ad or a promotion, or I’ve got a troll on my blog, I email Amy with the subject line usually something like “Heeeellllppp!”  Amy has been blogging a lot longer than I and she is always my “go to” person and she writes back really quickly.  Thank you, Amy, for assisting me with the many questions I had this year, and for helping me make good decisions and for helping me to learn.

Finally, I met Brittney of The Nerdy Nurse, through LinkedIn.  I had put a discussion topic on there asking people if someone could please help me out with some technical issues on my blog that I could not fix on my own.  The only problem was that I could not afford to pay them.  Brittney was the only good soul who fixed my blog for free. Mama Sick’s little quirks were ironed out and looks a little sharper thanks to Brittney!

I know there are many more to thank, again, this is all my foggy head could bring to mind. Please leave a comment today to let me know you are here too!

And to all of my readers and friends who keep coming back to read about my problems, even though I know you have plenty of your own, thank you!

Happy Thanksgiving to all and I hope that those of you who are chronically ill get a break today and are able to enjoy the holiday with your family and friends.

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Why I Just Said No to NaBloPoMo

Every November (okay a few Novembers, I’m not quite sure how many) thousands (maybe millions I’m not sure) of people take part in NaBloPoMo.

For most of the world who do not know what this adorable abbreviation means, NaBloPoMo is short for National Blog Posting Month and was inspired by NaNoWriteMo, or National Novel Writing Month, and what THAT means is that every day in November you are challenged to put up a blog post every day.  It’s supposed to make you a better writer, motivate you, and test the limits of your creativity, and maybe even your patience.

This year BlogHer, the largest association for women bloggers, has decided to become the sponsor of NaBloPoMo.  While I adore this organization and have just become a member of the BlogHer Ads Publishing Network, I just have one question for them and one statement.

Why, BlogHer, why would you put yet another task onto the already broken backs of the woman blogger?  

I did not succumb to NaBloPoMo and I am proud of it!

Aren’t we women bloggers already busy enough trying to fit just blogging into our lives? Whether we are working in the home or outside of the home, aren’t we finding balancing our lives almost impossible?

There goes the quality time with our children that we try to fit in, in the hopes of not driving our kids into therapy. “My mom…just wasn’t…THERE for me.  Whenever we read or did a project together or went to a place that was supposed to be fun, mommy was always taking pictures of us for her BLOG!  Whenever I said, anything, my mother had to stop everything and write it down so she could BLOG about it later because she thought it was cute! I felt so…used!”

There goes time spent at the gym, skipped as we sit, trying to think up a post every single day. Here comes the weight we will gain while polishing off the remaining Halloween candy as we sit at our computers trying to get some inspiration.

There goes whatever “ME” time we had.

Even more pictures will sit in our smartphones and digital cameras, waiting to be shared with God and Facebook.

There goes any understanding by our husbands of while we feel the need to blog or any respect they may have for us as bloggers as we force them to put the kids to bed every night because we need to stare at our computers.

And why in God’s name would someone think of November as the perfect month to put up a blog post every day? November, the start of the holiday season?  How are we supposed to take advantage of Black Friday AND Black Thursday and Cyber Monday?  Don’t we bloggers have enough contests, pictures to post and Thanksgiving memories to write about this month?

Why not do this in January, in the dead of Winter, when none of us have anything better to do except to hole up in our homes as snowstorm after snowstorm hits us, looking ahead to when Punxsutawny Phil tells us how far off Spring is?

And if you are sitting here thinking that I am one of those jealous bloggers that lack for inspiration, that I am just not doing NaBloPoMo because I have enough trouble thinking up topics, you can just get that thought right out of your head.  I have about over 100 ideas to write about, that I have maniacally put into my smartphone just waiting to be written…except I just don’t have the time.

Oh Eden Kennedy,  who admits that she started NaBloPoMo as a “goof”, what madness hath thou wrought?

Image courtesy of Copyblogger.

 

 

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Holding My Son’s Hand

Tonight you sleep next to me because you spilled water all over your bed.

You have trouble getting to sleep because something I have read to you has scared you.  It amazes me what actually scares you and what I think should scare you.

You want to sleep with the lights on but I offer to hold your hand instead.  As we lay there in the dark holding hands I know our times like this are numbered, even though you are only five.

“Do you feel the circle of love that goes around between us when we hold hands?” I ask you.

“No, I don’t feel it.”

“It goes around and around like a mother’s love for her son, around and around like a circle and endless.  You won’t always want to hold my hand so every time you do like this, I treasure it.”

“No that’s not true, I always will want to hold your hand!”

“Okay, honey, you can always hold my hand.  You can stay with us as long as you like.  You can always be with us.”

“I won’t ever want to leave you, I want to live in this house forever.”

“Of course, you never have to leave us, you can live with us as long as you like.”

I say these words to you, knowing that some day it will not be true, so I treasure this time in your life when you think it will be.

I thank God and Jesus once again for giving me you, the most beautiful and best boy in the world and while I am thinking about it, whispering my prayer of thanks in the dark, you have fallen asleep peacefully besides me, still holding my hand.

Source: Metanorn.net

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

A Kitty Wedding Proposal

Inspired by Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop.

3.  Married?  Tell us how the question was popped.

The story of how Grant and I met is so unique it was written about in different countries.  We have told it so many times, one day Grant told a shocked guest at our table at a wedding, “I-I can’t do it any more.  Honey, tell her how we met!”

Although this prompt is about how we got engaged, you do have to know how we met in order to understand the proposal.

I had just turned 30, the “before Grant love of my life” had gotten married a few months earlier and the last two guys I dated both left me to move to Florida.  Did I mention I had met them both at car washes?  Weird.

In a December of 1999 issue of the now defunct Cats Magazine I read a humor piece about a man who thought himself a good prospect for dating and marriage because he was a nice guy with two cats, but instead all he had were dating disasters.  Having nothing to lose I wrote that man, sent him a picture of me with my little cousins so he knew how good I was with children and also included a picture of my cats.  I remember my friend sighing, “Do you really think he’s going to call you, Emily?”  “Yes, I do.”

And he did.

And so here we are, just having our ninth wedding anniversary last week.

Now back to the proposal.  I knew that we were getting engaged.  I had picked out the ring, but the surprise would be when and how.  I knew Grant would have to involve all of our four kitties but was baffled by how he would do it.  Cats aren’t like dogs where you could just strap a ring on them and have them come when you call them.

Some of the cats (mine) came to me when I got home.  Some of the cats (his) couldn’t care less.  One day in April of 2002 which I swore I would never forget, but have forgotten which day, I came home from work.  My cat Rosie always ran to the door first.  She has a little hat on her head which said, “Will”.  Lizzie always quickly followed Rosie when I came home and she had a hat that said, “You”.  Spanky never cared if I came home but she was in the living room with a “Marry” hat on.  Scotty just plain hated me and was so angry at the indignity and part she was forced to play in this proposal that she was hiding.  We had to find her and did in one of her usual hiding places in the closet and she had the “Me” hat on.

I have to admit, after that my memory is somewhat blank.  I have a shadowy memory of Grant getting on one knee and me saying yes, but it is the kitty proposal that I will never forget!

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Tuesdays With Tyler: When Girls Attack!

Ever since Tyler has been in kindergarten he has told me he has not liked a fellow student I will call “Drizella”. This is unusual because Tyler has been in love with ladies big and small ever since he saw women in bikinis on the beach…at not yet two!  How embarrassing to have one’s baby boy starring at women with his mouth dropped open.

But I digress.

This weekend Tyler told Grant that Drizela has been beating him up on the playground.  They chase each other around and then when Drizela catches him she pounds him.  Tyler had mentioned this to whomever the adult on the playground is and he said Drizela would stop for a while and then go back to doing it.  It got to be where Tyler was afraid to go out on the playground.

It is an interesting situation when one’s five-year-old boy is being beaten up by a five-year-old girl.  I have always taught Tyler that you never hit, but that you especially never hit a woman or little girl.

Over at my aunt’s July 4th party this past summer, Tyler was playing with my cousin’s three-year-old and took one of those mini footballs and bopped her on the head.  She just looked up with him with her innocent baby blues and I couldn’t get over there fast enough.  My cousins must have thought I was crazy.  “Tyler, you never, never hit a little girl, NEVER, especially your cousin who is younger than you, and especially because she is a little girl!”

My cousin’s wife said, “Oh, that’s okay, it was no big deal.  ‘Amelia’ is an equal opportunity hitter.”  “You have two daughters and I have one son”, I told her, “I want to teach my son from the beginning that you never hit a woman and it starts with never hitting little girls.”  I made Tyler apologize to his cousin.

So now my son is on the receiving end of a tough little girl’s blows.  It’s not exactly something you let two kids settle on the play ground by themselves, and some may say even if it was a boy hitting Tyler, the issue should be raised.

New Jersey has one of the strongest antibullying laws in the country which just went into effect this school year. So we have decided to go through proper channels and have made an official complaint against the little girl.

I still don’t want my son hitting a girl, but I also don’t want anyone hitting my son.  I want Tyler to know that he can always come to us when he feels bullied, even if it is by a five year old little girl.

Photo courtesy of Obsessive Mom.

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

M is for Methadone

On and off, depending on the severity of my pain I have been taking a time-release narcotic in pill form.  It is a pill that is stronger than morphine and is given to me under the care of my primary physician.  I take it in two doses, a high dose three times a day and a smaller dose as needed for when my usual dose isn’t cutting it, or, for “breakthrough” pain.  It has no acetaminophen or ibuprofen so does not damage my stomach from long term use. I have had no side effects and I think it is one of the greatest pain drugs for people in chronic pain.

The problem?  Just my CO-PAY for my regular dosage for one month is over $400.  If I add in the smaller dose, which I do not always take, that runs me about an extra $250 per month.

Sure, these time-release opioids work great, but they are all new and there are no generic brands for them.  My wonderful pharmacist breaks my prescription up into amounts of $50 and now that we have Grant’s disability money, in amounts of $100.  You can read about a time when a pharmacist was not so nice to me about helping me with this enormous expense here.

No matter how you slice it, I am still paying about $650 per month out of pocket.  So, what do people do when when they can no longer afford their outrageously expensive meds?

They go on Methadone.

Yeah, you read right, that Methadone.  The legal drug they give to heroin addicts which works on them the way heroin works but is legal.  Methadone emerged in the 1950s as a primary treatment for opioid addiction and is still the primary therapy for it.

For people who use it for chronic pain it is given in a different way and can be very effective. It would cost me about $30 a month, instead of $650.

Yeah, but it’s Methadone.

Several months back I talked about going on Methadone.  My doctor said that if I could afford to keep paying for my current treatment, that he really liked the way it worked in conjunction with the rest of my medications.  I love it because I have never felt any side effects from it.  Grant and I talked it over back then and we decided it was important for me to stay on my drug.  Who wants to fool around trying to figure out the right dosage, and run the risk of possibly life-threatening side effects when you start on a new pain med?

But now is now, and I just can’t keep paying what I am paying to manage my pain.  My doctor said that at first he would start me off at a lower dosage to work my way up to the amount that is right for me. During this time I’m “not going to do well” because I will be taking roughly half of my usual pain medication to work my way up and I worry that I might end up in the hospital with mind-blowing pain.  I worry that I will be able to function even less than I usually do and I worry that my son might see me screaming in pain.

And of course, it’s Methadone.

Everyone knows what that drug is, everyone knows the primary reason people take the drug. My doctor did say that it is many patients’ experiences that their friends and family look at them differently when they find out they are taking Methadone for pain management.  That in their minds this confirms it, that their sick loved one is truly a drug addict.

Of course, I don’t have to tell anyone I am taking Methadone.  But maybe I should because that’s what I am all about; breaking down stereotypes and educating.  How many more friends can I lose anyway?  What do I care if a stranger knows I am taking Methadone?

All I know is, I cannot go on paying this outrageous amount of money every month.  I must make a decision soon, but I pretty much already know what that decision will be.

Yeah, but it’s Methadone. 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Forgetting Everything I Knew

I read Expecting Adam as a member of the From Left to Write book club.  I was given a free copy of this book. This post is inspired by the book.

Welcome to all of my fellow book club members or anyone coming here for the first time!  I am a chronically ill mom married to a chronically ill man and we are raising our five-year-old son, who also has some special needs. My blog focuses on the challenges parents with chronic illness face, but also speaks about being a mom and a woman in general. )

In Expecting Adam by Martha Beck, Martha and her husband must let go of all they have learned from their Harvard education and open their hearts and minds when they learn that Martha is five month’s pregnant with a baby with Down Syndrome.  Martha especially must face judgements from the Harvard academia and even her doctors when they are shocked to learn that she has decided to keep the baby.  Along the way, Martha discovers a way of living and thinking about a life that not only can be just as good, but is even more rewarding than she could ever imagine.

Before being diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) in 2003 at the age of 33 I, while no Harvard graduate, had always excelled in everything I did.  In 2000 I had decided to give up my on-air radio personality career and go in a completely new direction, taking a job with no experience necessary, in order to train as a Recruiter.  I enjoyed the business, learning everything I could about recruiting and of the niche I was recruiting in.  In a couple of years my position changed to where I reported directly into the President.

Two months after I got married I felt the first pain of what would wind up being the rest of my life, ironically while I was on the treadmill in the gym.  It took me six months to get a diagnosis of RA, in between which my feet were swelling so badly I would have to take ice packs to work and even on business trips.  I worked in this manner for a few years, sometimes just being at my job numb from so many pain killers.  I tried to never miss a day, even if that meant vomiting in the morning and then getting ready for work.

In 2005, I appeared to be in remission, and feeling that I was in the best health that I would ever be in, my husband and I decided to try to conceive, which we were successful at on the first try.  My pregnancy went very well from a Rheumatological standpoint and I continued to do well until my son was about a year old.  My pain started to increase by the day, my hands swelling.  I would fall asleep driving to and from work, I was lucky I didn’t kill myself or anyone.  I was swallowing narcotics two at a time just so I could feel some relief from the pain. But I was a full-time working mother and I thought it was just my 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. hours of being a mommy and working.

Through the five years I had been working with my diagnosis, and with the help of the internet, I had seen hundreds, even thousands leave their full-time jobs.  That was unthinkable to me.  I was the main breadwinner in the family.  We were going to buy a home, help our son with college.  Not working was just not possible, not in the way I wanted to live my life.

In 2008 I worsened.  At the same time, my satellite office of the new job I had been at for a year was closing and I was laid off in March.  In July I got my diagnosis of “Lupus with RA overlap”.

I never went back to work.

And I lost everything.

My 401K, my son’s college fund, my credit rating.  In fact, this month the woman with a credit rating in the high 800s is filing for bankruptcy.

I always used to think “those people” with chronic illness who stopped working were just not as strong as I was, that my will was mightier than theirs.  That their families did not depend on their salary the way mine did.

Turns out I was wrong.  It wasn’t that I wasn’t any better than those who had just “given up”.

I just hadn’t become sick enough yet to the point where my body said, “This is it.  I am not going to do this any more for you.  I just can’t do it any more and I won’t.”

People wonder what I do all day, especially while my son is in school.  What I do all day is…be in pain…have trouble walking…thinking…sleep and rest.  I go to doctors, I apply for disability which is akin to writing one’s dissertation.  I wait, so far for over two years to see if the United States government decides to declare me disabled.  I file paper work for WIC and Food Stamps, things I never dreamed my family would be on.  I advocate for myself and for those like me.

At 42 years old, this certainly isn’t the life I thought I would be leading.  But with the pain, with the worry of living under the poverty line, there is also joy.

I get to spend more time with my child than most working mothers do.  I am home when he comes home from school and I am always there to watch my child walk in the Halloween parade or to partake in the Mother’s Day tea.

I get to write.  Something I never knew I wanted to do and something that I never knew I could.  Was my brain so full of thinking about work that there was no time to let my creative side be free?  Would I have ever even become a blogger if I had not become disabled?

And finally, I get to make a difference in people’s lives.  For those mothers who are sick like I am and for those who are mothers of special needs children.  For those who are mentally ill and need a voice.

Life certainly did not work out the way I planned it, but it is certainly not all bad.

 

 

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments