Rob,
You do hit the nail on the head with this..We can all probably define what we 
think "normal" is but as you said, maybe just being normal is overrated. I 
certainly feel that way, and you also bring up another very valid point and one 
that I feel VERY strongly about. That is the statement about "taking things for 
granted". 

I have always been a person that appreciated something or someone and showed my 
appreciation for it. I am moreso that way now after having TM. I have certain 
circumstances in my life that involve family members that show no appreciation 
for anything. It's almost that they have entitlement issues and feel that they 
have no need to help around the house or just assume that their clothes will 
get washed or whatever...
It makes me crazy....!! Even after seeing, with me, how quickly a persons life 
can change it still doesn't sink in...Aaarrrggghhh

Well, thanks for writing what you did...   I think that we can all relate to 
it..
Take care,
Kevin




________________________________
From: Robert Pall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, November 6, 2008 12:41:27 PM
Subject: [TMIC] Normal

Normal 
I tried sending this as an attachment ..but I just found out you can not do 
attachment on the list…anyway I am going to try and cut and paste a small essay 
I tried to write about TM & me…as always I am open to comments.

NORMAL
        Normal….what a simple word! This is a word I took for granted until one 
week past my 50th birthday. What did normal mean to me? Normal meant being like 
everyone else….it was being  able to run, walk, exercise, climb up stairs, play 
sports…basically being able to do everything that “normal” people do without 
giving it a thought. I guess I figured as I got older I would slow down a 
little…maybe replace basketball with golf. Perhaps I would have to exercise a 
little longer to stay in shape…no big deal…this was “normal”. Sure like all 
normal people I would get sick from time to time and maybe break a bone or 
two….but I always knew that I would get better…and until one week after my 50th 
birthday that was just how life was…normal.
        Now let us go back 11 or so years where in a period of several hours I 
went from “normal” to cripple. In a few hours I had zero feeling from my waist 
down….that can’t be possible…I had played  ball all  weekend…there had to be a 
simple answer. Maybe a pinched nerve or something like that…..the idea that I 
would never be normal again never crossed my mind…I was sure it would be just a 
matter of time until I was all better…and “normal again “. Even after 3 MRI’s 
and 2 Lumbar Punctures I was certain that Dr. House would figure out the 
problem, give me some medicine and I would be all better…I would be normal 
again…just like everybody else I knew. 
        Three weeks after being crippled from the waist down I was told what I 
have…..Transverse Myelitis….what the heck is that…I never heard the words 
before and had no idea of their meaning. The Neurologist at the top New York 
City hospital explained it to me…he said he was sure I would eventually walk 
again…but he could not say for sure what assistance I would need. Perhaps a 
walker (how embarrassing), maybe a quad cane (better but not great) and if I 
was lucky perhaps I could graduate to a straight cane (better but not normal)
        After spending 3 weeks in the hospital I was transferred to the Kessler 
Rehabilitation facility in West Orange, New Jersey (same place Christopher 
Reeves rehabbed in). Slowly over a period of 3 months I started getting a 
little better…I went from a walker to a quad cane to upon leaving the rehab 
center a straight cane….I was surely getting better. I would prove all of the 
doctors wrong…..oh just one little side note…while it was true that I was 
learning to walk better there also came some small side effects. When I first 
came down with TM I had no feeling and therefore I had no pain or 
discomfort….but…as some feeling came back these feelings were so so bad. Where 
previously I felt nothing…now one of my legs was pins and needles and numb (how 
is that possible?)…whereas my other leg was numb with excessive banding 
(tightness) which caused me to walk with a “stiff leg”. But at least I was 
walking and it seemed that I was getting
 better everyday…soon I would be all better…I would be normal. The improvement 
was constant for the first 6 months…then it continued to a lesser extent over 
the next 6 months….then I just stopped improving. How can this be? I know…I 
just have to work harder at getting better…just keep exercising harder and 
longer…I was so determined to prove the medical profession wrong! But it turned 
out that they were right and I was wrong…I hit a plateau where all I could 
accomplish was abnormal fatigue…I was not getting better and worse yet I 
probably never would! However I would keep all of the pain and discomforts 
probably for the rest of my life! 
        Now for most people walking with a limp, and being in weird discomfort 
24/7 would be bad enough…but not for me, for me not being “normal” was the 
worst part of the condition. I did not want people to see me as crippled and 
feel sorry for me so I did my best to look normal…even though this hurt and 
fatigued me more. As far as my friends and family were concerned I had made 
such great strides in getting better….they could not see the unrelenting pain 
and discomfort that never went away…but I guess I was happy that they still 
thought of me as normal…after all is that not what I wanted to act and be 
treated as normal people and not someone to be pitied? 
        I don’t know! I drive 40 miles each way to work in New York traffic. 
Work an 8-10 hour day and yet when I get home my wife still doesn’t understand 
why I am so tired. Just a couch potato! I suppose she just wants me to be 
normal. I know she tries to understand how I am and what my limitations are 
…but unless you walk in my shoes how can one truly understand.
        That is probably the main reason I have started the New Jersey 
Transverse Myelitis support group. We had our first meeting in the spring and I 
was amazed at how many of the attendees had never before met anyone else 
suffering from TM. It was both enlightening and emotional to be with other 
people who truly understood what I was saying and they were saying. I was also 
amazed by how normal most of them looked. Until they started discussing the 
horrors in their lives they looked and acted perfectly normal…in some cases 
just from outward impressions I was jealous. Until they spoke and in no 
uncertain terms convinced me they were as bad if not worse than me.
        Ok…after never ending story I have come to see being “normal” somewhat 
differently. The people I have come into contact in the TM community are 
probably more normal than most….we are a people who struggle with life yet 
embrace it. Most of us do not let our condition define our lives. Instead we 
value the little things that normal people take for granted as wonderful gifts.
        Maybe just maybe being “normal” is overrated! 
  
Rob in New Jersey 



      

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