Sunday 30 October 2011

In Good Hands

It seems that I am being looked after by the leading international researcher of Parkinsons Disease and MSA.  Look at this article in the Parkinsons latest magazine.
A new list of the most influential international Parkinson researchers of the last 25 years has shown that UK researchers are among the world’s best.  Four Parkinsons UK funded researchers feature in the top 10, including Prof Andrew Lees from University College London in first place and a further four made the top 50.  This list was based on how many times a researcher’s work had been cited by others in the field.  Research published by Prof Lees has been the most cited by other scientists since 1985.  His work has been funded by Parkinsons UK throughout his career, including research related to the development of new drugs to treat Parkinsons.

This explains why I don't see much of him and he is difficult to get hold of by phone and /or email!  Balancing research projects and the writing up with the patient list must be a nightmare at times particularly given the individualism of this family of diseases.  It is like the balance in universities between research and teaching always a contentious issue.
 This confirms my decision to stick to my guns and request a second opinion and to know who to ask for after my GP said in effect ‘What’s wrong with the local neurologist and who is this Andrew Lees fellow and how do you know about him!’ I hope “Choose and Book” [My daughter, Eve, was involved  in this in the early days] is thriving because it goes a long way to give people like me a stake in our care that’s if we do our homework correctly; that’s our responsibility  I think the more I can be in control the better but I sense  this is not always wanted regardless of government rhetoric about patient centred services.    Appointments are classic, you are given a time and date, you turn up after spending 30 minutes trying to park the car and paying for the pleasure, only to find that you join a queue of other people  and an hour or so later you are seen.  My time does not matter!!
As it happened I have just donated my first royalties for the book I wrote on workbased learning to Prof Lee’s personal research fund. It’s great to know that I’m backing a winner!  The drinks reception at the Reform Club to raise money for MSA research involving Prof Lees that we were planning to have on 30 November has been moved to the 9th February 2012 because of the planned national strike.
Oh yes, I went to the seaside this week, the University of Hull,  Scarborough campus, to give a presentation on the role of universities in the creative industries to the School of Arts and New Media because they are deciding the future strategy for the school and  Scarborough campus.  Liz came with me to make sure I didn't do anything silly and fall over. It was lovely to have her company and it does help a lot.  We had a pleasant lunch and they were a really nice bunch of people, quick to get the heart of things which I like.  However, the presentation was a real struggle with my voice letting me down badly.  But we got there in the end!   The group were impressed by my knowledge and experience not MSA and wrote to me a day later saying they wanted me to become involved with them as they take the development forward.  Great, one in the eye to MSA!











Sunday 23 October 2011

Walkabout


I have signed up to join the disabled Ramblers Association.  It only costs £15 a year and that enables access to a trampster trek whenever you want one.  I am looking forward to that because the landscape means a lot to me - I have decided to show more photographs this week.  It is also to show that I run a responsive blog - my Scottish pal enjoy the images of the Yorkshire Dales and where we have lived for 33 years, and has requested more.  This countryside has always been a spiritual and emotional comfort blanket for me.  When I was working hard and there were problems that were getting on top of me I would put on my boots and disappear most Sunday afternoons for about 2-3 hours on the Chatsworth Estate
grouse moors at the back of our house, whatever the weather.   A really memorable walk was in a white out one January and another was when Liz and our friends Wendy and Ian were with us. We walked through huge snow drifts to Grassington and couldn’t stop laughing because Wendy who is not as tall as the rest of us was up to her thighs in snow at some points on the journey.                                                  



I always came back from walks relaxed and with things in a better perspective.  MSA has killed that, so I only have memories now and some lovely photographs.  I go to the gym instead but it’s not quite the same although the drive there on the scenic route, not the shortest route, is over the moor.
One lesson from this is that visual diaries of favourite places are precious. You don’t realise how precious until you can no longer get to them.

Saturday 15 October 2011

Out and About

I got to have a day out on Sunday for a change.  We drove over to Sherburn in Elmet to see my mother, who is 93 years and lives on her own.  She always wants to make lunch for us – cottage pie this time which was delicious. We do her shopping for her and help with financial and administrative matters.  The only problem is that mum is deaf and uses digital hearing aids.  As a result of MSA I speak much more softly nowadays so we have entertaining conversations where mum pretends she has heard what I have said.  The giveaways are when she laughs at the wrong time.  Nevertheless she is a remarkable woman and is all set to live longer than me as by all accounts I have a maximum of about eight years left.
We left mum in the early afternoon to travel to Harrogate to participate in our grandson Adam’s fifth birthday party.  I must say that I like being chauffeur driven nowadays with no worries about speed traps or parking.  The party was for 18 children, but more turned up, plus parents who wanted to stay and was held in the Methodist church’s recently converted meeting room that is very near to James and Eve’s home.  It was a lovely space with a friendly atmosphere to it.  It was a well organised party [I expect nothing less from my elder daughter] with games to release energy, dinosaur hat making and simple food.  Jamie Oliver approved food which seemed to all get eaten.  It was noisy of course but everybody seemed to enjoy themselves including Adam and Daniel.  Liz got into the swing of it straight away whilst I was parked on a chair that I could get out of to go to the inevitable toilet.  I was an observer not a participant and an object to stare at by some children I think because of my eyes [I’ve had a lazy eye since I was 3 years old] as much as anything else.  When the party started to break up one of James and Eve’s male NCT friends came up to me, introduced himself and asked what I was suffering from, so I wasn't invisible which is usually the case.  He then talked about his father in a caring and concerned way.  He has motor neuron disease, which is far worse than MSA in my opinion.  He said his father was normally grumpy but now he had good reason to be.  His auctioneer friends have set up a rota of visits.  This is another example of the goodness in people.
Monday, found us travelling to the University of Lancaster where I am an external examiner for the postgraduate workbased learning programmes.  The team there know of my condition but they don't treat me any differently than they ever have, they have even extended my contract.   It is so refreshing being treated normally and respected for your knowledge and experience not what your body looks like!
So it has not been a bad week and I have only had one fall but I am still fighting a saliva war!

Saturday 8 October 2011

Reactions to my blog and me.




Well, nothing much has happened to me this week since I wrote my last blog, in particular very little falling about!   I did however have a very pleasant lunch with Ian, my economist friend, in a pub in a nearby village, Appletreewick.  Subsequently, I thought I would share with you some messages I have received over the last few months that have encouraged me not to give in too early to MSA. The quotes are in no particular order and unsolicited.
I cannot imagine what it might be like to have MSA but reading your blog does help me to understand what you are going through. So, first of all, thank you for writing it. It is so full of joy and hope. More than anything despite the explanations of symptoms and the degenerative nature of the disease you experience the blog is full of joy and hope which gave me an enormous lift when I read it. Hope for mankind, and hope for living the moments we are all given.

I am keeping up to date with your blog. I admire your positive attitude to it all, not sure how I would cope.

 I was very sorry to realise what your father is going through with MSA. I read the blog and remembered him as highly active, always on the ball, funny but slightly scary D of E leader. It was good to read he is still so active however physically constrained. Levens Hall [Cumbria] has listed gardens which are fantastic and accessible with a scooter - I'd recommend it for your mum and dad if they haven't already been. Weird thing is it's only thinking about it now I realise how good those times were.                  

I read your blog for the first time this evening and was saddened that you have been hit by this, but at the same time heartened that you are clearly fighting it with great gusto. I am now working for King's and was on  tour of our Institute of Psychiatry last week where the focus was on Parkinson's. It was good to hear how much progress is being made.

And I just thought botox was for women! I enjoy keeping up with your blog Simon and I like the way you combine humour with such insight into your day to day activities which must be so very hard to cope with at times. Have you thought any more about fund raising for the MSA Trust!

LTK invited us to follow your blog - and I have. It´s very honest and sometimes it´s painful: painful for you as you relate your experience of MSA and painful for your readers. Certainly, I felt hugely frustrated for you after reading the 27 August contribution. Thank you.

To finish a quote from my most dedicated Scottish facebook pal, Joanna:
You’re  getting good at this
I think we can leave things as they are for another week and dwell on other people’s histories. We know so little about each other I am privileged to be sharing more than most.          
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Saturday 1 October 2011

Falling


 I have been doing a lot of falling about this week.  With the weather being so good I decided we should take advantage of it and go for a walk through the fields to the Yorkshire Dales ice cream parlour, which is about 2 miles from home.  I have done it before - there and back - in my MSA state, no sweat, so we set off happily down the lane.  It was a bit muddy and wet, but passable.  I was slow but no different than any other day.  Near the end of the lane there is an incline to the barn with a gate to the fields and we met our neighbour there, walking her dog and checking the route for horses.  I was now struggling to get up this tiny incline so much so that our neighbour offered to get her 4x4 drive up the lane and take me back home.  I was with my wife Liz so I was not too concerned, so I turned down her kind offer.  We carried on an open track with a slight incline across the fields; it was beautiful warm and a lovely blue sky.  I began to speed up and couldn’t control my legs, so needed Liz’s arm to maintain my balance, which was becoming precarious.

 We got to the first stile and I lost my balance and fell into a bed of nettles which was a bit of a surprise.  It's not so much falling into them but trying to get out of them is the problem because every time you move there’s a nettle waiting to do its best to  make your life as uncomfortable as possible.  I don’t recommend it but at least you do know you’re alive. Liz swung into action like a team of men changing tyres on a formula 1 car and I was up in no time at all.  Given the way my legs were performing it was not time for heroics; we turned around and headed back the way we came.  Going back was hell; I fell at least five times between the stile and the gate into the lane.  My posture is a problem the bending forward makes me very unstable so that combined with the legs not responding to instructions makes it all very difficult.  I was not capable of walking any distance .This posed a problem of how to get home.  I managed with a great deal of help from Liz, who was beginning to become exhausted, exasperated and concerned, especially because we were being surrounded by an increasingly curious herd of Holstein cows including a young bull. Eventually we  got to the gate and however I have found thewe were just contemplating what to do next when our neighbour’s 4x4 appeared coming towards us up the lane.  When she got out of the vehicle she said that she had an inkling that something was not right, what luck.  It is another example of the goodness in people which I wrote about in one of my earlier blogs.  We have not always seen eye to eye as neighbours so it is even more special that she bothered coming out to check.  So I was bundled into the back of this vehicle a bit like the movies and driven home for a nice cup of tea and a cream doughnut.  I have been told by pyshio and gym trainer that my body is strong including my legs so it not to do with strength but control.
I suppose this now marks a negative watershed, but I don't want to believe it just yet and maybe test it out again but I think that will take a lot of persuasion to win Liz over!
On a lighter note I thought you might be interested in some of the statistics for the site.  There are 18 followers, and today’s page view by country looks like United Kingdom 90, Canada 28, Taiwan 11, Australia 1, and France 1. The most popular blog is ‘Early days’ with 199 page views.  The all page grand total is 3033.

Bye for now,