Monday, January 31, 2011

Todd...

Well it has been awhile since I have written anything last. Thanks to a rigorous college schedule, I have been reading textbooks and writing essays and such. Not a lot of time for therapeutic scribe.

In my English Comp class, we are writing narrative essays. We are to draw from a personal experience of some sort to write about. While I have oodles of experiences I could write about, none are speaking to me for a five page paper. It seems like a lot of pages. I am not that interesting.

So, I am blogging this morning before I head to campus to see if it will spark anything.

I have been thinking about my friend Todd lately.

Todd was a man I met while I was a Home Care CNA. Todd was my client. He was just months younger than my Dad, and was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease).

Before I went in to start working with Todd, the agency had a little "training" about ALS. It didn't prepare me at all for working with him.

The very first day I went to Todd and Judy's, I walked in through the living room (as I was instructed to do) and when I rounded the corner into the kitchen, I found Todd sitting in his power wheel chair at the dining room table.

I walked up to him, introduced myself and shook his hand. He looked at me and didn't say anything. He just sort of nodded his head at me.

On that first day, I was to make sure Todd got his medications, make sure he ate, and just get acquainted with him and the house.

He didn't say a word to me that first day. I was there two hours and he didn't say a WORD.

Now, they had told me that he had speech issues due to the ALS, but I expected some communication. Nothing from him.

So, as I worked I kept up my cheery chatter. I was starting to irritate myself at the end of the appointment. But, if Todd was irritated, he didn't say anything.

When I left that day, I was trying to figure out a way to communicate with this person. I wanted to know likes, dislikes and so on so I could better help him.

The next day, I came in and did my duties. I chattered less, simply because I figured it was annoying. I was getting on my own nerves, I couldn't imagine what this man was thinking about me.

Day two? Still not a word out of Todd.

Day three went by much the same way. I was beginning to think that maybe it was too exhausting for him to talk, or that his ability was gone. I felt like I was settling into a routine there, and was getting more comfortable. He responded to verbal cues and didn't seem irritated or frustrated with me.

On day four, I walked in and greeted Todd. I started to get busy working on his breakfast and the other duties I had to do.

When I served Todd his breakfast and sat down to make sure his meds were set up, he looked at me, half-smiled and said "you're okay". His speech was a little mushy from the ALS, but it was clear enough.

This man was testing me. From day one.

I heard later from my RN Supervisor that this man ate and spit out several other CNA's. He was a tough one to please.

It was later that I found out they sent me in as a last ditch effort with Todd. He had been so surly and difficult that the agency had discussed referring him elsewhere for care. The RN Supervisor thought he was someone that I could handle, and she thought he might like me.

As it turned out, Todd and I became much more than an aide and a client. We became very good friends.

I learned more in the year or so I worked with him than I ever did in any other setting.

I am not sure if it's the ALS, or if it's just the human spirit in some people...but with Todd and every other client with ALS that I worked with later...there was a spirit, a spark--these people were not going to let the disease win. Or at least they were going to live life for as long as they were able.

Todd used to say that he had a terminal illness, but he was a procrastinator, so he was putting it off. He did, too. He lived for nearly nine years with a disease that claims many of it's victims in two years.

I am not sure why I have been thinking about him so much lately. In his darkest hours, he was an inspiration to me. Maybe I am trying to be inspired by him again.

Maybe I just miss my friend.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Distance and Perception

I was thinking about distance today, on my drive to Black River Falls.

I have to admit, I often isolate and distance myself from others. It is a coping mechanism when my moods are "off". I sometimes can't deal with myself, let alone anyone else in the outside world.

It is rarely about other people. Occasionally, it is. Mostly it is about me trying to get a grip on myself to be able to function like a normal person.

Perception can be a funny thing. I know my perception of things in the past has been flawed and skewed by the moods. It is a realization I came upon a few years ago, when I was in therapy. I actually have to take a step back from things sometimes, and sort of take the temperature of the situation and my gut perception of it. I have been way off base before. I mean WAY off.

I have worked over 30 jobs in my 39 years on this Earth. Mostly left each one because I felt slighted, or perceived I had done something wrong.

I also was not functioning well a majority of the time. Oh sure, on the surface I could do my job. I am a very bright person.

But the roller coaster of the moods and the panic when it sneaks up on me--well, life isn't very fun when things are chaotic in my head.

How am I today? Right this very minute...pretty darned good, thanks for asking! But the moods wax and wane, and tomorrow I may be having an issue with the ups or the downs. Can never tell which way these things will go.

I am trying to continue on a therapeutic path. I am finally doing some things for myself (and in turn my family) by going back to school. This is one of those things that I have seriously self-destructed on in the past. I mean, I really blew it up. I don't want to do that this time. It is very important to me.

I have to prove to myself that I am capable of following through.

So far, I think I have.

I have been goal setting:

My overall big prize--the Master's Degree--my ticket out of this frozen wasteland.

My smaller carrots--each successful semester--one down, thirteen to go. It actually doesn't sound that bad to me when broken down like that.

Then I have each semester, broken down into weeks. Sixteen even smaller goals. Check 'em off the calendar as I get through the work.

My perception is working right now. It was a good weekend.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Lucky fishies and contemplations about the past...

Kaity went to Port Edwards today to visit overnight at her friends' house.

Bill and I drove her to Black River Falls and just dropped her off!

Seriously, her friends and their dad met us there to make the exchange. We give them our kid, and we get four hours of playtime at Majestic Pines. Sounded like a fair deal to me. After all, I can't go to Black River and NOT go to the casino, right?

Anyhow, it was nice to have a few hours just with the hubby. We don't get that much alone time just to be together. It certainly doesn't hurt that we were winning!

We were playing this super cute video slot machine--they are new ones where you have all these little fish, and these random fish bonuses come up all of the time. :D We had a good time taking someone else's money out of the casino and not leaving ours there!

On our way home, we were talking. We were talking about before we had our kids, and the friends we used to have. I say "used to" because we had one couple we were pretty close with. We did tons of stuff with them, but sometime after Mike was born they started to distance themselves from us. I know it was a conscious effort on their part that they distanced. Not exactly sure why though. I have always tried to figure it out.

Today, I think I did.

There was this one time--we went to the cities and spent the night in a hotel with them. We were heading to the Minnesota Renaissance Festival the next day. The trip had almost been called off for us because for the week or so before, I had been sick with an upper respiratory infection. But because it was going to be a fun weekend, and I was feeling better--we went.

The morning of the Renaissance, I still had a bit of a cough. So, I took my prescription cough syrup and didn't think twice about it.

It was wine tasting weekend at the Renaissance.

Needless to say, the wine and the cough syrup didn't mix and I was really sleepy and nearly passing out for a bit. It was not an intentional mix...

When we got back to the hotel later, the guy and I went to go to get snacks, while the gal and my hubby stayed back. On the car ride over to the store, the guy starts giving me this talk about how he "used to do that (mix alcohol and codeine) and how I was being stupid for doing it". I was confused at the conversation, because it was like a lecture--and it wasn't as if I did it on purpose. Maybe that wasn't evident to this person.

It was around this time that I was also struggling with the bipolar disorder, and had not even come close to being diagnosed yet. I don't think I had even been to a therapist yet, and if I had I hadn't liked the fact that he wanted me to see a shrink--I was not ready to face it.

Now, we used to drink and party. And I could drink with the boys and keep up. But I never EVER mixed prescription medication with alcohol intentionally to get drunk and high.

I think I have figured out the root to why these people, who were once very dear friends, distanced themselves from us.

I think they thought I was doing drugs.

I was erratic at times, yes. But it was the bipolar disorder that was the root of it all.

I just wonder what the truth to this situation is.

It is kind of sad, really. They stood up at our wedding as our witnesses, they were our very best friends. We put it off for awhile that our lives were becoming different when our son was born--theirs was getting older and in middle school by then. We didn't have all of the disposable income to travel and do stuff like we were able to before, they did.

And because we were starting our family, money was an issue. Maybe even more of an issue because I was struggling with the bipolar disorder. One always plays off the other with me. Handling money is my achilles' heel.

We have reached out to them over the years since. A couple of times sent Christmas cards, invited them to parties we had. Not a word back those times.

I wonder if maybe I said or did something unintentionally to upset or hurt them directly? I mean besides my erratic behavior and mixing of booze and cough syrup. I mean, if I did...I am sorry. I would have never intentionally did anything to piss off or upset these people. They were very good friends.

Does it even matter anymore?

Through Facebook, I have had little "chats" with the guy again, and the gal is on my friends' list too. Which I guess is good, forward progress.

It would be nice if we could all get together like we used to. But, maybe that is just the way life is and people go their separate ways for whatever reason. Maybe I over think everything and just shouldn't care.

Oh, I know I over think everything...

I may never know the whole truth.

Maybe I don't want to...

Friday, January 21, 2011

Okay, so where's my prescription for a plane ticket outta here?!

I did get the results of my MRI.

I found out on Wednesday that I have to start making some serious lifestyle changes or I will likely be very crippled up by the time I am sixty.

I have Osteoarthritis (OA) in my cervical spine (neck), and likely everywhere else that I have had pain (ie: knees, hands, wrists, feet, back, even migraines and headaches etc).

While I am thankful it isn't Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) and that I have an answer to many questions, I am not very happy that I have an "old person's disease" and I am not even 40 (yet!).

So, I am shopping for an elliptical or a treadmill. I am also researching diets for a lifestyle change that way. Not just for weight loss, but to feel better all of the way around.

Seems the extreme deficiency in vitamin D can cause you to feel the pain more acutely.

And the thyroid thing? Well, it is just enlarged. No explanation. The TSH was 1.67 (normal range is 0.35 to 4.50), the T3- free was 3.3 (normal is 2.1 to 4.1). The T4- free was 1.1 which is on the high side of normal (normal is 0.7 to 1.2). No nodules, no cysts, no tumors. The good news is, it isn't anything. The bad news is...it isn't anything. So we watch and wait.

So, I hurt when it's fricken cold outside.
I get to take Meloxicam for the rest of my life, or until I hurt worse. Whichever comes first.

I can no longer take my usual medication for migraine, so they are trying something else. I want to have a positive attitude about this, but my usual medications have worked pretty well for a long time. I am worried that whatever it is they give me may not.

Okay, enough with the pity party. Off to price out exercise equipment and figure out the diet thing. I said 2011 was going to be a year of change. I guess this is God's way of making me stick to my word.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Not the way to start the day...

I woke up over an hour late.

Ten minutes later, I started getting the 'aura' of a migraine in my eyes. For anyone who has never experienced this--I don't recommend it. The 'aura' is like looking through milky stained glass in my left eye and if I am not careful, it will continue into a crushing headache.

Well, I am happy to report that the headache hasn't hit, but I still am having vision difficulties in my left eye. So much so that my kids are getting a free day off from school because at this point, I cannot drive. Does that make me a bad mom? I hope not.

I am not sure why I overslept. The alarm was set (I thought).

I am super edgy today because I have to go in for the ultrasound on my thyroid and the MRI on my neck and shoulder. I am claustrophobic, so I will have to take some Xanax before the MRI. I just hope this gets to the bottom of what is going on...I am sick of feeling tired, cold, and just plain crappy.

Well, with an enlarged thyroid (can't miss it, not sure how I did!) there is definitely something going on.

Here's to good news coming my way...

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Psychology of Facebook Relations

Facebook is truly a microcosm of life.

Through my connections, this weekend I have seen life, death, birthdays, celebrations, the good...the bad, and the ugly...

(I consider the Packers win one of "the ugly". LOL)

Facebook has made the world just a little smaller. Sometimes that is very good, because when you are looking for someone to bounce things off of, or that have things in common...it has made it much easier to do that.

Sometimes it isn't so good when you get bombarded with invites from all of the different applications--but that is just a part of life on FB. I say, deal with it.

I have reconnected with old friends and gotten better acquainted with people who were just acquaintances before. Of course, there is that occasional person that I don't really want to know more about...but overall, I find the status updates, the photos, the connections very interesting.

I wonder how long til there is a college course studying the psychology of Facebook relations??

Happy Monday! :D

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Here comes the sun...and I say: it's all right! :)

The sun was a welcome sight today. I needed it. If it were warmer, I would go and sit in it.

Something new I am adding to my goals for the year is to sit in the sun more. Obviously I need to with a low vitamin D level--maybe I can go off the pills in the summer time and if not, D is a hard vitamin to OD on...so I will just get some extra!

My day started out rough. I was achy and hungry, but nothing sounded good. So I went to the grocery store, and then ate some yummy broasted chicken ($1 with $5 in deli purchases at Gordy's...quite the deal) and a really tasty deli salad (Turkey club). Felt pretty good for a few minutes, then the headache came on...grrrr.

Took the requisite 800mg ibuprofen, took Kait to her sleepover birthday party, and visited with her friend's mom (whom I just met today). The girl's mom and grandma were super nice and interesting to visit with. :) I am glad my daughter has such good friends!

By the time I got back, my headache was gone. :)

My son's friend, Rob is over now and I just met his mom for the first time today too. It is amazing how you can meet someone and just get along. :) We sat and chatted for awhile before she had to leave. We have a lot in common, which is cool. And her son is a super great kid :) I am glad my son has such good friends too!

It is neat to be able to meet nice people...I met three all in the same day!

Get some pizzas for the teenage boys...they are going to play Wii Madden NFL '11 til the sun comes up, probably. :) Tonight, I will just chill.

A good day. Gotta document those, too!