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Old 02-13-2010, 11:49 AM
keep smilin keep smilin is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 851
15 yr Member
keep smilin keep smilin is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 851
15 yr Member
Smile Thanks Mike..

Quote:
Originally Posted by fmichael View Post
Dear Kathy -

I keep feeling the need to try and connect with you. I guess I was again struck in your last post when you noted that "RSD is not our friend..but it has met its match.."

Please be careful. It's been my experience after living with this for nine years now that the more we struggle "against" RSD, the greater our sense is that life has become unsatisfactory. Which may be the case, seems to be especially so if we express our satisfaction relative to meeting certain pre-set goals and expectations. I know some wonderful women who have withstood the greatest possible challenges of motherhood while fully afflicted with CRPS. It's my sense they have done so by modifying in some subtle sense the definition of what it meant to be a success as a parent, while not losing touch with its essence: maintaining a compassionate relationshio with one's child, through which the child will grow and mature. (Never easy for me in the case of my youngest son, now 12, who has no memory of me being healthy and doing a lot of the expected things with him, and which will bring him to tears in a second if focussed upon.)

But the key IMHO is not to wear ourselves out swimming against the tide. You let the rip tide take you where it's going, and swim into shore where you have the chance, not necessarily where you planned.

I was reminded of this over the last week in two related contexts. Firsts I was discouraged when a doctor changed my psychiatric diagnosis to "personality change secondary to general medical condition" (DSM IV 310.10) until a very wise psychologist who's currently repeating some neuro-psych testing on me in response to increasing complaints of loss of attentional skillls - which were never good - pointed out that I wasn't being told that I had acquired a personality disorder, only that my deep patterns of dealing with the world had changed. Then, case in point, I got my revised WISC III scores back (using the older test for better comparison with old data) and while the spread between my verbal and non-verbal IQ has increased to an almost unheard of 45 points (6 points is considered by some to be probative of ADHD, and 12 points typically conclusive, but 45???)* the thing was, although my non-verbal scores had decreased - as expected - my total verbal score was the highest it had ever been, with the most substantial increase in my ability to spot abstract similarities.

The point being, if we are determined that we are going to beat this thing, then we might as well stop trying to learn anything from it. In the words of Ram Dass, we "take the curriculum."

Of course, that doesn't mean that we shouldn't take advantage of opportunities when they come along, such as the chance that we may soon bave access to potentiated analgesics, with more effectiveness in controlling pain and less opportunity for developing either tollerences or GI/respiratory side effects. Which would be - in my own book of prejudged outcomes - not a bad thing at that.

Peace.

Mike

*This, by the way, is the reason I could never be a doctor.
Hello Mike...

I so appreciate your note and insights... no doubt through your 9 years in having RSD..you must have much education and become quite versed on best we need to view and approach our daily struggles with our RSD.. You are right in that it is an education that we learn over time which must couplink with the process of acceptance.. which is the very first step of this process... I probably should clearify myself when saying "RSD is not our friend and that it has met it's match".. I guess best said.. it was my way of not givng in.. and faking it out... in that it does not have total control...although I have altered and learn to live with my condition..simplified and educated my family and friends on how best to live with it and me but also..accepting it as this is me now (not going against the tide).. but also still keeping the gentler, kind, simple parts of my life matter as much as they did before.. Yes, things have changed in that physically and mentally my life is different but it has met it's match due to not surrending and now living with it.. I guess you and I are saying the same thing... except my approach is different...I insist I need to blend in the soft parts of life ... like laughs.. love..and giving out to others which over shadow my sadness and bring me warmth and pleasure to my heart..that gives me strength... that is something RSD can not get it's hands around and spoil..that is where I say... it has met it's match and it is not my friend.. but I can still enjoy my life inspite of it...again it has mets its match...as we all need to have an out which does not depend on RSD.. RSD is such a big part of us now..but we can't let it consume us... we need to draw strength from it to swim toward the tide and nicer parts of our lives.. gives us the re-newed strength.. to keep swimming... I am not able to support this with numbers or data..just talk that comes from my heart....

Painfree day, my friend...Kathy
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"Thanks for this!" says:
fmichael (02-13-2010), hope4thebest (02-13-2010), RNcrps2 (02-13-2010)