The winner’s circle brings accolades, awards, attention, and
all sorts of amusement for those who arrive there. Crowds cheer. Cameras and
smart phones snap smiling shots.
Not so with the
whiner’s circle.
Maybe misery loves company, as the old saying echoes. Sure,
there is comfort and consolation in commiseration.
But ask any multiple sclerosis warrior (or anyone valiantly
battling a chronic medical condition), and you will find few that want to wallow
in misery. We struggle, we strain, and we slug it out the best we can – on our
good days and our truly terrible ones.
It's hard. There's no denying that. Living with MS, we have days when it seems impossible simply to show up. Sometimes we don't. We may even moan and groan a bit with a few trusted ones. But we don't linger long in the whiner's circle.
It's hard. There's no denying that. Living with MS, we have days when it seems impossible simply to show up. Sometimes we don't. We may even moan and groan a bit with a few trusted ones. But we don't linger long in the whiner's circle.
I live a few blocks from a wonderful woman. Bette was
diagnosed with relapse-remitting MS five years ago. She’s had some doozy
exacerbations, but she hasn’t let them run her off course. Bette and her
husband have taken in one foster child after another for maybe a decade.
Consider my friend Bart, who has primary-progressive MS. He
has used a wheelchair every day for many years. But Bart shows up for worship
band rehearsal at his local church every week, toting his drumsticks. He’s on
the platform each Sunday, sounding out holy happiness like there’s no tomorrow.
How about Arlena? She drives an adapted vehicle, parking in
special spots to run her own errands and to report to her full-time job.
Despite her difficulties, Arlena shares her surplus of smiles with pretty much
everyone she encounters.
My friend Micah used to run in track meets. Sidelined by MS,
he still never misses a meet. Using his crutches, he shuffles to the track with
braces on both legs and cheers his former fellow runners to victory.
These MSers belong to the winner’s circle. No whining. They
are kicking MS to the curb. I wanna be like them when I grow up.
Image/s:
Adapted
from public domain artwork
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