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Multiple Sclerosis

 

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Real Life Stories

 Diseases that Stay out of Sight

 By RICHARD M. COHEN (Submitted by Luis)

Clean at last. The third colonoscopy was a charm. Two bouts  of colon cancer have ended, the curtain fallen. The  houselights are up. Nobody has noticed that I am still on  stage. A chronic illness remains. Multiple sclerosis, my  longtime companion, has resumed its lowly position in the  hierarchy of suffering.

Chronic illness is driven from the stage by the acute  threat. Its plotline is tedious because action is slow and  the story rarely varies. Attention spans are short, and the  drama can take years to play out. The brush with the white  hot health crisis puts the chronic condition in its place.

When recovery from a life-threatening illness comes, that  tired old standby remains.

Turning tragedy to comedy is one option for coping. The  morning I tried to walk through a large mirror, thinking it  was an entrance to a dining room, entertained the boys  behind the bakery counter. They knew nothing of my legal  blindness. I could write a guide to women's bathrooms I  have accidentally visited. Creeping, crawling illness takes  me to the theater of the absurd. Belly laughs sustain me.

There is a plodding quality to the slower struggle, one  that frequently lasts a lifetime. Chronic illness becomes  prosaic, made clear by the contrast with more exciting  cancer, which wins in the ratings every time. Cancer brings  a sick glamour to its victim

Cancer survivors, and I am one, are wrapped in a cloak of  tinsel that wears thin soon enough. Life-threatening cancer  tends to resolve itself.

The chronic condition is a journey  without end. Many cancers today are treatable and become  chronic more than killer conditions, to be managed and  endured and survived.

Orphan afflictions become the long haul. They have little  cachet but afflict the many. These diseases are boring, not  the stuff of movies and plays, so usually they must rest  outside the culture. Actresses succumb to unidentified  cancers regularly. The Big C is a proved box office winner.

Remember the last hot big-budget film about a man with  crippling arthritis or a woman with excruciating shingles?

I don't.

One president endures M.S. in prime time and we learn  little about the disease. Talk of his shredding brain and a  presidential blackout do not ring true. No matter. M.S. is  but a television device, meant to entertain. And a public  does not understand or appreciate the pace or pain of slow  sickness.

Many diseases compromise the ability to eat and digest, to  walk and speak and a host of other functions. These  conditions remain private because most of us tire of  talking, and no one can see the truth of another person's  life.

 My friend Don Gibson, a senior executive at the National  Endowment for the Humanities, left his job because of a  digestive tract ailment, Crohn's disease. Later, his open  heart surgery became the front page story to friends and  acquaintances. No one has bothered to pay much attention to  the Crohn's, and everyone is quick to jump to conclusions.

"It goes one of two ways," Don says. "If you appear weak,  people think you are useless. If you are functioning, they  think nothing is wrong." Neither is the case.

"If more of us died," says my pal Susan Thomases, who also  has M.S., "people might sit up and take notice." Susan, a  lawyer and political strategist, gave up a career in the  law because of complications of M.S. "The disease is slowly  stealing from me. You know. We just live with it."

That, we do. We are left to battle insurance companies that  resist the steady costs of endless care and the employers  who quickly tire of our bad days. We are compromised. We do  not want to be wretched refuse. We do not demand the  concern of others. Benign neglect would be just fine.

We become a hidden population. We are invisible, except to  our bosses and colleagues and others we engage. Folks do  not want to know. Those who love us do but cannot  intercede.

 I have trouble walking. Don can barely eat. Susan has  memory problems. We will live another day, but the routines  that others take for granted will challenge and  occasionally conquer us. We can only acknowledge our  difficult journeys to ourselves in a whisper and move  forward with humor and grace.

Reach Luis by email to comment on this article from Richard Cohen:  LMN2GKI@aol.com 

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