What you learn when you are unable to walk for a quarter of a year, and also happen to be me

- Living in a rustic unplumbed cabin in
the woods outside of Fairbanks -- accessible only via several hundred yards of
snowy trail and narrow, gappy, and uneven boardwalk – is a really great idea,
until it isn’t.
- Procrastinating about your need to use
the outhouse while on crutches definitely does not improve the situation.
- The fold-down ice spikes on the
crutches work pretty well, but they are not designed for durability over many
miles.
- Those spiky things collect snow. If you try to use the same crutches indoors,
with the spikes folded up, the snow will melt out and make the floor cold and wet
and extremely slippery, which is bad in so many ways. So, so many ways.
- Life is full of this kind of
super-obvious design flaw.
- You need a second set of indoor-only
crutches.
- Put a hat over the open toe of your
leg brace. Then put a plastic bag over
that. That’s it. That’s all you need,
even at thirty below. Those brace things
are sweltering.
- Briefly pause to contemplate whether
it’s actually better to have this injury occur in December in Fairbanks, for
this reason alone. Review all the above
issues. Tough call.
- Your fear that you will become a weakened
couch potato while injured is unwarranted.
Everything, including getting off said couch, takes four times the
effort it used to. The amount of sweat generated by crutching half a mile
uphill in the snow is epic.
- Now you have weird shoulder muscles
that you didn’t even know could happen.
- All this muscle tissue has migrated
directly from your injured leg, which now resembles linguini.
- You find yourself staring at the alien
linguini in the shower, once you can take showers again, which you’re grateful
for. You are especially grateful for the
accessible shower stall in your office basement, the one with the fold-down
bench and hand rails.
- You recall dim childhood memories of
people complaining that making everything ADA accessible would be expensive and
inconvenient, and you wonder about those people, who are now elderly.
- You wonder whether such rumination is
a form of schadenfreude.
- No matter how strong you become on
crutches they still suck because you are a tool-using ape who is really used to
having hands to do things and make things and just carry this one stupid mug of
coffee, and now you need another set, but growing another set is unlikely, and
why can’t you get ANYTHING done?
- You can put the coffee in a Thermos in
a backpack.
- Talking to your upbeat and helpful
coworker who had this same thing happen to him two years ago is, literally, the
best therapy. Because, look, he’s fine
now. Athletic, even. His calves are normal.
- You are not in the habit of looking at
everyone’s calves, but now you are. Stop
looking at his calves, because even though your intent is not weird, that’s still
sort of weird.
- If there’s anything better than positive
and pragmatic advice from your coworker, it’s the orthopedic stuff he loans
you. Specifically, the pirate leg. It’s really called an “i-Walk” but it’s
definitely a pirate leg. Why don’t all
temporarily one-legged people use these things?
They are amazing. Aaaargh!
- Getting through TSA with crutches, a
metal leg brace, and a pirate leg -- in four different cities, because you got really good deals on fares by planning
your trip way back when all of this was most definitely not on your radar -- is
a royal pain, but faster than you would think it would be.
- You get a lot of tight, pitying
smiles.
- You’re going to have to set the tone on
this. Our culture is hella awkward. Crack jokes about your pirate leg.
- Everyone wants to help you. Punk-looking teenagers and old ladies and
people of all races and walks of life want to hold the door for you, just like
they did when you were a week shy of giving birth to twins and looked like a
cartoon dirigible.
- Even if you don’t really need that
stuff with the door or whatever, this restores some of your faith in humanity,
especially if you’ve ever made the mistake of reading the NewsMiner comments
section. Or any comments section.
- People you barely know – the kind of
people you run into near the bulk bins at Fred Meyer -- and whose names you
only recall half way through your three minutes of chit-chat about the price of
pecans – are genuinely concerned, and seem to understand more than you would
expect them to about your particular, peculiar lifestyle and frustrations.
- Being intensely visible can be
exhausting -- but feeling known and understood is not so bad.
- Everyone has a story about their
cousin’s neighbor who also busted an Achilles, or their own time on crutches
after they had bunion surgery.
- These stories aren’t useful the way
your coworker’s advice is useful, but let these stories be told. It’s not about the particular story. Every single story really has the same plot,
which is, hey, wow, we’re all human!
- It’s a good plot.
- The people who help you the most aren’t
necessarily the ones you would have expected.
- This might be because you’re the kind
of pig-headedly insecure person who is pretty much never going to respond to
“Tell me if you need help with anything”.
- Your pride and obstinacy will only
allow you to take up offers from the person who says, “You are drugged to the
gills, post-surgery, so I will walk beside you along the boardwalk, to make
sure you don’t fall,” or the person who says, “You can’t drive, bike, walk or
run to work, to the store, to anywhere – so, what time should I pick you
up?”
- You resolve in the future to be one of
those people.
- All this kindness makes you realize
that if you told people about all the pain and fear and insecurity and loss in
your life that they can’t see, they might actually care about that, too.
- You still aren’t telling.
- You vow to try to remember that other
people aren’t always telling, either.
- Your nearest and dearest –
particularly your children, who are definitely old enough to help out a lot
with the chores that are now insanely difficult for you – suffer from a deep
crisis of ambivalence, guilt, and resentment.
- They want to help out. Totally.
That would, clearly, be the Very Right Thing to Do, and they want to do
Very Right Things.
- They do help. Some.
- But they also want you to be exactly
the same as you always have been, which means doing All the Things.
- One of the things is taking care of
them.
- Actually, many, many of the things are
taking care of them.
- You do the things. You hop up a ladder to kiss your big children
good night in their loft bunks. Every
night. For three months.
- Sometimes love builds fortitude,
muscles, and calluses.
- Your surgeon told you that you’d run a
marathon again.
- Your physical therapist told you that you’d
run a marathon again.
- You tell yourself that you will run a
marathon again.
- You run a marathon again.
Yay! You ran a marathon again! Of course you did. You are Nancy, a powerhouse who would have done it with crutches. But of course did not have to, so full of healing powers are you. This response would be more effective bulleted, which is really effective.
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