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All my life I knew I was
different than all the other kids. I was always clumsy while they
were graceful, they could dance I would fall. At age 3, I started
sleeping with my eyes open, and I have never been able to pucker or
whistle. At age 9, my scapulas started winging, making me look like
a bird. People who didn’t know me questioned it. At times it
made me look sickly because I was so thin as well.

My story might
be different because FSHD was something I always knew I would have
and had accepted it at a young age. My father now 62 has FSHD; I’ve
seen what this disease has done to his body but not his spirit. He
is currently living with only using a cane, even though he falls on
a daily basis, his knees no longer lock together and his leg muscles
won’t hold his weight. He started SCUBA diving at age 20 to develop
his lungs. It works. He rarely gets a cold and is like a fish
in water without the disease. My grandfather also had FSHD and was
diagnosis at age 16 when he had significant weight loss and muscle
wasting. At age 20, he was in a wheel chair. He died at 59 of
a heart attack, secondary to pneumonia. Winters are definitely hard
on us, we are always cold and stiff and our muscles work slower and
stiffer. But the great Northwest is where we want to be and we
adapt.
My parents
always raised me to do what ever I wanted, not hold back, and follow
my dreams. At age 30 I played on a Co Ed baseball team, I was only
able to pitch soft pitch and bat. I had a runner. I managed
one season. It was a blast. I decided at age 28 to become an
Emergency Medical Technician. I figured there was something I could
offer even if I couldn't lift a patient. I am still currently an
EMT but now my focus is on patient care, teaching, training and
record review.
I recently
went to Whistler and I really wanted to rappel between Blackcomb and
Whistler but I was concerned about the terrain and steps, they told
me there were 60 steps, I figured hey I can do that, slow but I
could. It turned out to be 460 steps and my friend was awesome
knowing how badly I wanted this they helped me the whole way and
what a blast we had. Don’t hold back follow your dreams!! Do what
you can while you can, life is too short!
I’m now 40 and
over the years I can say that this disease doesn’t take things
gradually, you just wake up one day to find out you no longer can
climb stairs even with a cane, that it’s difficult to even get off
the toilet. In 1992 I woke up unable to raise my arms, no washing
my hair, shaving my arms etc. I decided to have my scapula’s fussed
together by the late Dr. Doug Harryman at University of Washington.
He was able to give me a new life, my son was 5 at the time and the
thought of not hugging or holding him broke my heart. I have been
hospitalized 4 times for pneumonia due to not being able to cough.
I realize that it is a matter of time before I’m in a wheel chair
but I have accepted it and I’m having fun living and doing what I
want.
I see the
years and how much I have lost and yet how much I’ve gained, how
much stronger I believe this disease has made me. I am a very hard
working, determined person. That’s the one perk I got from the
disease. Ask me if I get scared or feel sorry for my self, you bet
but I’ve decided that my life is mine and I will make it what I
want. The one thing I’m afraid I will miss would be grand kids.
-- Colleen
Rodrigues, Port Townsend, Washington |