Sunday, February 26, 2012

I stay away

I know I should be exercising.

practicing my b's and all that.

but I am at the point where I think it's pointless and all that.

I just got an email in my dizzy support email that said people like me have to do these kinds of exercises every day for the rest of our lives.


really?  I am not feeling it.

because this is not a cure.

it's just bobbing my head around and looking at checkerboards so I'll feel less dizzy some days.


but other days I may fall on the floor.

what a load of crap.

I know I should not feel this way.

I'm just a little frustrated.

I guess because, at this point in my life, I was planning to move on with things, and I'm not.

I had hoped that VRT would be a solution and not just a Band-Aid.

blah.


because I entitled my blog "I stay away" today, I started thinking of this song by Alice In Chains.  This video is just the lyrics.  the first video I found on youtube was quite weird and was about a circus and I don't know what.  it cheered me up a lot, actually, and I'll post it next, if you want to watch it instead...



I liked that one of the lyrics are "I am enlightened..."  I was actually in the middle of writing about that in one of my other blogs.  see you over there.

guess I have to get motivated again...




Friday, February 17, 2012

some concerns

I've been in vestibular therapy for several months now and here's where I'm at.

There are days when I seem to do the exercises pretty well.  And there are days, like yesterday, when a simple walk on the treadmill barely more than ONE MILE PER HOUR can make me go into horrible spins.

It's frustrating and confusing.

As usual, the staff are extremely supportive and encouraging, so that helps.  Still.  I can't help but wonder.  I am going to be among those that cannot be "cured" because it has been too long since the initial damage to my vestibular system?  I know that even if this is true, this time won't have been wasted since I've learned so much here, but I wonder if some day this "truth" will become a "reality."  This scares me.

I also wonder if it is possible that there hasn't been enough done to discover the underlying cause to the dizziness, too, and this frustrates me as well.  We are guessing that the cause is labrynthitis because an ENT said so when I first got sick, but what if HE was wrong?  I mean, does it really make sense that I would remain dizzy all these years from ONE case of labrynthitis?  I can't find much to support that truth.

At the suggestion of the neurologist, I saw the vision therapist.  He decided I would be a good candidate for therapy.  He said it *might* help with the balance issues; it often does in cases like mine.  He actually was very optimistic.  Cautiously optimistic.  I guess he has to be.  There is a lengthy evaluation process, so the therapy won't begin for a while.

I also talked to my "main" physical therapist about adding strength training to my balance therapy.  I also suffer from fibromyalgia and have been having it rough.  I was hesitant about going somewhere else for physical therapy, considering my balance issues.  She thought I was being smart (I did, too!) and said she'd talk with the doctor.

After some hard thinking, I've decided I have to do a couple of things, even though it's kind of "admitting" my state of disability...which...apparently is a bad thing to do.  Anyway, I am in the process of obtaining Medicaid taxi in my area so I can alleviate my partner from having to drive me from appointment to appointment, and so I can make more appointments during the week if I want to.  I also am applying for SCAT (Suffolk County Accessible Transit).  It is a paratransit service that will provide door-to-door pick-up for rides around my county.  I've had this service before; in Florida, and when I lived in Nassau County and, while it is not the ideal way to get around, it can be very helpful and is much more cost-efficient than a taxi.  I also gave my doctor paperwork to fill out to have my student loan forgiven. This was a killer for me.  Since I graduated almost 13 years ago, I think I've been able to work a combined total 4 years...IF that.  What a disaster.  No one plans for things like this.  I certainly didn't.  And now, I keep having my loan put into forbearance and deferment over and over again because I certainly can't make payments while I'm living off of social security disability checks.  Meanwhile, the interest has ballooned my loan to well over $40,000. It may as well be a million.

While these things are, in and of themselves, quite depressing, I'm dealing pretty well most of the time.

I did, however, have to field this conversation with my mother yesterday, and it threw me for a loop:

MOM: "I saw something the other day about domestic violence.  When you are ready to go back to work, I think that would be a good field for you to go into, considering all you have been through..."

ME: "I definitely think I would volunteer in that field, but, considering everything I've had to do for Tara (my adult autistic daughter), I know I that I would go back to what I HAD been doing."

MOM: "What you HAD been doing What? Sitting on your ass?"

Now my stomach tightens.  I see red.  I try not to throw the phone through my glass doors.

ME: "I said what I HAD been doing.  You know perfectly well what I mean.  Working with developmentally disabled individuals.  You know, when you get like this, I don't want to talk with you anymore..."

MOM: "Oh, I didn't hear you..."

ME: "You heard me perfectly well.  You even repeated exactly what I said.  What I HAD been doing.  Not what I HAVE been doing..."

The thing is, my mother sees my not working as a FAILURE of some sort.  Same for my not driving.

It's hard enough for me.  It's absolutely TORTUROUS when I don't have the support of someone so important to me.

Does she think I don't WANT to work?  Does anyone think I WANT to be dizzy?  To have my thoughts scrambled constantly?  To fall out of nowhere?  To be a shadow of my former self?  To be dependent on other people?

I used to be Supermom!  At one time, I worked full-time and went for my Masters degree and was in the Community Choir and volunteered for my Church while raising two kids.

This illness has invaded my head and my body in such a way that I can't think and don't know which way is up.  I don't want this.  AND I AM DOING EVERYTHING IN MY POWER TO TRY AND FIX THIS!

However...it has been so many years, with so many WRONG treatments, WRONG medications and just so much time has passed.  What if it is just too late?

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

My New "B" and Other Therapeutic Torture

The other day, I was stepped up to a different "B" in therapy.  For those of you who have no idea what I'm talking about, I'll explain (and, hopefully, provide a visual aide if I can figure out this blogging thing right).

You see, when I started balance therapy, among many of the exercises I have to do, one of them is the "dreaded B."  Basically, you're given a point to look at (in this case a letter "B"), and made to do things that normally evoke a dizzy response while focusing on this damned letter.  For example, moving your head from side to side, or up and down.  The basic "B" looks like this:

I had worked on the simple "B" for a while until I, apparently, mastered it, (got less dizzy while working with it), and then I graduated to this "B":

This "B" was supposed to be torturous, apparently.  When different therapists would see what "B" I was working on, they'd say stuff to me like, "Oh, God, poor you."  Or, "That one makes me dizzy."  But, for some reason, it didn't evoke any more of a response from me than a regular "B."  My guess is because of my crossed eye and my inability to see things 3-D like the rest of you people.  Since it's black-and-white, maybe it's not such a challenge for me?  I don't know...

Anyway, so I had my setback, and I went back to the simple "B" for a little while.  I also was working on some "B's on sticks."  Yep, that is just what is sounds like.  

I had to do some eye exercises and tracking with these lovely letters.  The purpose of these exercises were to try to strengthen my eyes, try to get them to work together, try to increase my peripheral vision and also to desensitize my responses to movement.  I am sure I will be doing lots more of this in visual therapy (I go for an evaluation February 6).

So, I saw my regular therapist on Monday and she re-assessed my progress.  She decided I could "graduate" again to this wonderful "B":

Yes, it's a checkerboard.  This one is supposed to be between a regular "B" and the crazy black-and-white one.  But for me this thing's a killer.  I can barely get through my exercises with it.  Hell, I can barely look at it right now on this screen!  It's that disturbing!

So, I do these lovely eye things in addition to any other physical torture they decide I need to endure that day.  It may be the treadmill or the stationary bike (physical exercise is important to everyone, but for us dizzy's, who tend to shy away from it, it is even more so...the benefits are enormous), standing on a wobbly board, walking around cones, balancing myself on a rocking board, standing on a cushion (simulating uneven surface), walking around while turning my head, throwing a ball, and on and on.  

More days than not, I leave there telling my partner, "they beat me up in there."  But I know it's for a reason.  

I laugh and call it  "therapeutic torture".  I'm trying to stay positive because it's the only way to stay out of the pity pot.  And because I feel I owe it to these therapists, to my partner, and especially to my kids and, yeah, to myself, to keep at this and try to get better.