Author Archives: Jen

World MS Day 2009

Today marks the FIRST World MS Day, which is an international attempt to unite the world in MS awareness, knowledge, political action, and camaraderie.

Here are some ways that nations are getting involved:

  • Argentina: requested day be formally recognized by government
  • Australia: reception in Queensland
  • Belgium, Canada, France, Luxembourg, Switzerland: “Roll for MS”
    sponsored cycle/ motorbike event
  • Denmark: fundraising event
  • Finland: city wide awareness-raising event
  • Hungary: event in parliament
  • India: human chain awareness-raising events
  • Ireland: activity to promote member development
  • Italy: moved national awareness week to include the day
  • Netherlands: Global Dinner Party/ Second Life event
  • Norway: research conference in Oslo
  • Romania: Global Dinner Party
  • Slovakia: Dignified Life with MS seminar
  • Sri Lanka: week long awareness raising events
  • Sweden: fundraising event
  • Turkey: concert and gala dinner

Interesting Tidbits:

***The United States National MS Society urges everyone to petition their federal legislators to support comprehensive and accessible health care coverage that includes the Society’s Health Care Reform Principles. This would ensure that all Americans with MS get proper medical care.

For more news, events, and information about World MS Day, visit www.worldmsday.org

Fair Warning for Fair MSers

May has been fraught with car repairs, a very pricey new crown for a cracked back tooth, and a precancerous mole removal/further biopsy. Although the car and tooth stuff have been expensive and frustrating, the mole situation has been far more disturbing.

I grew up and now permanently reside here at the shore. I’ve had multiple bad sunburns over the years, given that one of the big past-times here is, well, SUNBATHING. I’m not one to cook on the beach anymore, but I do enjoy getting a little color and relaxing by the water. Unfortunately (like many fair-skinned MSers), I burn very easily and need to be careful about my exposure.

One of my most vulnerable areas is my chest, since I have a sunroof which I love to keep open and this area also gets continual exposure while wading/swimming, sitting, or lying flat on a towel. I am not a very moley person, but I’ve noticed subtle changes recently with the appearance of a few new moles and one small, dark mole in particular. The mole in question was on my upper right chest, near my bathing suit strap. It was very small (a couple of millimeters in diameter), almost black in color, and in the last month I noticed it had developed an uneven border, which to my knowledge is a definite reason to get it checked out.

The dermatologist did a thorough head-to-toe skin exam and focused in on that black mole. Sure enough, she wanted it removed for a biopsy. So it was removed that day and sent in for testing. When I was phoned a few weeks ago, the office staff let me know that the biopsy turned up “dysplastic” cells. These are not yet cancerous, but they are abnormal in structure. Sort of a turning point towards melanoma, which is the deadliest form of skin cancer. So back to the dermatologist for a procedure to remove tissue (directly beneath where the mole had been) about a quarter’s size in diameter and about the same size in depth. This tissue would be sent back to the lab to be biopsied, revealing whether only the surface mole had precancerous cells, or whether the damage had penetrated the surface and gone deeper.

To make an already long story not too long: I had the tissue removal and second biopsy a couple of weeks ago and just got the stitches out today, after such MAD itching. UGH. My second biopsy came back normal— I’m thrilled and relieved—and now I’m gonna get some Mederma to work on the scarring. I need to return in three months for a follow-up and then have a yearly skin exam thereafter.

Final thoughts: I was dragging my heels for a couple of years getting in to see a dermatologist, even though I know I am a high-risk patient (skin type and amount of sun exposure.) Now I’m so glad I bit the bullet and just did it, because a simple skin exam (covered by most insurances) probably saved my life.

Easy Velcro Clothing for People with MS

I recently attended a local Multiple Sclerosis Society function that included vendors promoting adaptive equipment, support organizations, and self-help books. My husband and I lingered at one particular table where a representative was demonstrating adaptive clothing. We watched as he showed onlookers the versatility of his Velcro shirts and pants. “Quick Change Clothing”, he said, “makes it easy for someone with MS or their caretaker to put on and take off clothing.”

This rep went on to explain to us that the company originally tried to market the clothing— which uses Velcro closures on the seams for easy on and off— to professional athletes, but since major athletic outfitters were their major competitors, the company decided to fill the need for people with physical impairments who could benefit from the clothing.

To learn more about Quick Change Clothing, visit the website www.quickchange123.com or phone 212-362-0393.

Multiple Sclerosis Q & A

I’ve had a couple of recent emails that cause me to now publicly address some important issues. For privacy reasons, only the writers’ initials have been used. Thank you both for emailing me and posing such valid questions:

Hello Jen:

I just visited your website for the first time. I’ve been fairly recently diagnosed w/ MS and am having a hard time dealing with it, but trying to find others and learn of their coping skills. You’ve had it for 11 years, how have you managed to stay so active? Are there local support groups? I just turned 55 last month (was 54 when diagnosed), I believe it is relapsing – remitting (haven’t been able to get a direct answer from my neurologist), and I am working full-time.

Look forward to hearing from you.

Thank you for your time.

~T

This one’s tough. I cope according to the disease pattern. I also (allegedly) have RRMS, and so I get periods of respite. This is not a given for everyone with multiple sclerosis. My MS has calmed quite a bit in the past three years. I’m currently taking a disease-modifying medication (one of the interferons), and it has been working fantastically for me. I have gone from having yearly severe relapses to recently having a “watered-down” (although still frightening) relapse every two years. In between relapses things level off. I experienced severe pain in the past when my MS worsened a few years ago (as I was beginning the injectables), but for reasons unknown—which is a big factor in MS— I have experienced very little or mild pain since. More problems actually with mild muscle spasms, but these are even fairly tolerable. Many people with MS do not get this respite (from physical and/or emotional pain.) This for me is a privilege and not a given.

As you can see, I’m extremely fortunate and this respite gives me the ability to cope. I didn’t cope well at all when I was experiencing the severe relapses and the severe pain. This is when I began seeking the help of a therapist, and I began taking an antidepressant. Both are continual and my lifeline to the “normal world.” I am also on Social Security Disability Insurance now, so my financial/work problems have also evened out. My husband and I are still living paycheck to paycheck, but we are now not in the hole every single month. Just broke. LOL……All of this contributes to my coping and to my ability to stay active: I am currently doing well and several burdens have been lifted. But this can all change in a heartbeat. So I’m not taking any of this for granted.

For day-to-day coping, you can try contacting your local MS Society chapter (if you live in the U.S.), or your own multiple sclerosis organization in your area of the world. Such in-person support groups exist and these organizations can direct you in your local search. Another great resource for support is your local hospital. My own local system posts support group meetings in their monthly bulletins (and a monthly MS support group is listed.) Call and query about such meetings if you don’t get regular bulletins. An online resource you might want to check out is the Carnival of MS Bloggers, a large consortium of MS patients who come together and share MS experiences/writings. Lots of blog links and stories, as well as objective answers and tips. There is also a chat room that I attend on a regular basis (usually two Friday nights a month) that has been great for really bonding with other MSers. It’s for anyone who would like to connect (not just those from Delaware.) I highly recommend it.

Hope this helps, T, and thank you for reading and posing these questions.

Hi:

i was dx in 2006 and now have progressive relapes- my suggestion is this for you to think about-

I would love it if you had a chat room for people with ms besides one other i know of . One where most people are nice and i have been to one that is nice but wish there were more chatrooms on line for people with ms so that when we hurt day time, night time, evenings we could have someone to talk to that can helps us thru the hard times. the other chatroom we can use caps in there and not yelling for folks like me with bad eyesite. thanks for your time and im glad i found your website

~P

Oh, I’m working on it! I have suggested such an idea recently to the National MS Society. I’m waiting for a response. This website is currently trying to morph itself into a non-profit entity. I’ve been swamped with school work but now I’m free over the summer, so my priority will again be searching for ways to make this website bigger, better, more accommodating, and maybe a source for contributions to the NMSS, a huge contributor to MS research. In the meantime, I believe there are continual chats at this location: www.msworld.org. These are specifically for MSers. If you haven’t yet checked this out, I’d suggest you do. As I also mentioned above, there is a twice-monthly discussion at Joan’s chat room (A Short in the Cord), where MSers gather and kvetch–or just crack each other up—and bond. I love it and have participated now for several months. And we are highly accepting of visual impairments as we all know that it often comes with the MS terrain.

I hope that you try the MS World chats. Let me know how it goes. And I really hope that you’ll join us at Joan’s chat room because we all have bonded so well and everyone looks forward to each session.

Thank you too, P, for reading and for sending in this suggestion.

Cathy Needs Your Help!

Cathy, one of my Facebook buddies and the blog author over at Navigating the Journey of MS, is looking for some ideas for her line of MS shirts. So she’s throwing a contest. Have a look:

Attention creative people:

I am looking to add a few new shirts to my product line….I am looking for a few good and clever MS-related sayings to put on these shirts. I want to have a contest so my readers can vote on them and the winner or winners will receive a free shirt.
Sounds good?….

So if you are one of these creative and clever people who would like to win this contest (for bragging rights, of course), please email any ideas to info@themsshoppe.com.

I have a few ideas but I would love your input. A few rules…Nothing religious, nothing political, nothing racist and no swear words (or keep it to a minimum.) LOL…Thanks for your help. I know some of you are very creative, so let’s get that creative side of our brains going! Rah rah rah!

Cathy

www.TheMSShoppe.com

Blue!

I’ve always liked this Keats sonnet. It is actually a response to a JH Reynolds sonnet about the beauty of dark eyes. I just happen to enjoy it for its tranquil qualities, much as I like the soothing color blue. It’s about 80 degrees here already (a little TOO warm in my opinion), but the sky is periwinkle and the sea is dark blue….

Google Images

Blue! ‘Tis the life of heaven,—the domain
Of Cynthia,—the wide palace of the sun,—
The tent of Hesperus, and all his train,—
The bosomer of clouds, gold, gray, and dun.
Blue! ‘Tis the life of waters:—Ocean
And all its vassal streams, pools numberless,
May rage, and foam, and fret, but never can
Subside, if not to dark-blue nativeness.
Blue! gentle cousin of the forest-green,
Married to green in all the sweetest flowers—
Forget-me-not,—the blue-bell,—and, that queen
Of secrecy, the violet: what strange powers
Hast thou, as a mere shadow! But how great,
When in an Eye thou art alive with fate!

Barbara Brave is an Active MS Patient

Barbara Brave, whom I had the honor of interviewing for the February 2009 issue of New Mobility, has been living with multiple sclerosis for the past 14 years. Previously residing in Roanoke, Virginia, she moved back to New Jersey about eight years ago to be close to family members after experiencing an acute attack that required extensive rehabilitation.

Barbara now resides at the Bergen Regional Medical Center in Paramus and she relishes her close-knit family as well as the new friends she’s made there. “I like to tell other residents that I’m ‘moving with motivation’ or I’m ‘exhilaratingly energetic’ to brighten their days,” she says.

Barbara also stays active with the National MS Society’s NJ Metro Chapter by putting together and sending their mailings at their local office. The chapter makes a big effort to employ medical center residents in volunteer positions, and transports them to and from functions. Recently Barbara participated in a Metro Chapter fashion show, part of an annual fundraiser that is known as the Women on the Move Luncheon. She was the only model to display her fashions from her wheelchair. “It was a grand and glorious day,” says Barbara. “I modeled one outfit and jewelry and I went slowly around the perimeter of the runway.”

Barbara reveals her sources of motivation to keep active and enthusiastic: “I have a wonderful family and a group of friends I can rely upon.”

My Interview at Multiple Sclerosis Central

I’ve been off of the radar lately, and not due to lousy health but because of the TONS and TONS of reading, writing, and discussing I have to do for my online Abnormal Psychology class. It’s been very interesting but time-consuming. That said, I’m ready to sign up for my next class this fall: Personality Theory. I’m hoping to learn more about the ins and outs of introversion/extroversion and what makes us act like we do….why, Why, WHY? LOL

On the topic of MS: I am currently featured at Merely Me’s Multiple Sclerosis Central site as the latest MS patient profile. I’ve given some insight into my various symptoms, my long road to diagnosis, my philosophies for coping, and my “words of wisdom” to neurologists/medical staff. If you have a moment, please feel free to check it out.

Now onto a new article here, because I am COMPLETELY behind….

MSAA: Multiple Sclerosis Association of America

A great multiple sclerosis resource has been around since 1970: the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (MSAA.) Headquartered in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, the association has various regional offices throughout the United States and its main functions are to inform, empower, and assist MS patients and their families/friends. The following are some of the MSAA’s main services:

Programs and Services:

This is a link to such services as a toll-free telephone helpline, reassurance calls, a lending library, information about support groups, events and classes, an MRI assistance fund, information about barrier-free housing, an equipment (including cooling devices) lending service, and program applications.

News Center:

Access the latest multiple sclerosis information here. Learn more about the MSAA, find out about current research, MS-related organizations, frequently asked questions (FAQ’s), and access the MSAA’s news archive.

MSAA Publications:

The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America has a quarterly, free publication: The Motivator. It also has various, free booklets and brochures that cover such topics as depression, complementary and alternative medicines, wellness tips, cooling devices, the MRI assistance program, and MSAA’s services and programs.

Life Lessons: MSAA’s Life Coaching Blog:

This is a fairly new component to the MSAA’s website. A group therapist and life coach provides life coaching sessions (via telephone) and she writes about helpful tips and tricks to live fully and realistically with multiple sclerosis.

Regional Offices:

Contact an MSAA regional branch near you.

Walk MS

It’s April and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society’s Walk MS fundraising event is in full swing. There are many opportunities for walking participants to raise money and support MS research. You can walk as an individual or as part of a team (both as family/friends or as a corporate group.) There are also many volunteering opportunities available to help make the walk days run smoothly. Access these links for more information:

Find a Walk MS near you: This page helps walkers find local MS walks in their areas. There are regional and zip code breakdowns that make the process easy. There are links to register for walks, sponsor walkers, and also to donate.

Challenge Walk: Find one of the nine national challenge walks, which log 30-50 miles over a 2 to 3 day timeframe.

Send a Walk MS eCard: This page allows a participant to email family, friends, coworkers, and so on about registering to walk, joining teams, sponsoring him or her, and thanking sponsors after a walk.

My Participant Center (visit your chapter website and login): A place to email fundraising materials to sponsors, check fundraising progress, and communicate with other team members.

Team Up for More Fun: Find out how to create a team and be a Walk MS team captain. Tips and tools are included.

Volunteer: This is the route I’ve taken for the past three years. I help set up and man the registration tables, then welcome walkers back for the appreciation barbeque. Learn how you can volunteer at a walking event.

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