Friday, October 9, 2015

Friday (10/9/2015)

Update:

Back on September 25, I had my ultrasound appointment in Rochester, MN concerning the hypersensitive nerve in my residual limb that prohibits me from wearing my prosthesis.  The doctor found that my nerve was “abnormal” from mid-thigh down to the end of my limb with several places that were “extremely abnormal.”  This result prompted my Physical Rehab doctor to refer me to a neurosurgeon for examination.  I’ve been waiting the last couple of weeks to hear from neurosurgeon to set up the appointment.  Frankly, I was starting to get antsy waiting for the appointment to be set up because I assumed I’d have to wait a month or two to get in to see the doctor.  So I was pleasantly surprised when I got a call this afternoon that I have an appointment for next Tuesday!!!  Wow!  I had just had lunch with a couple of buddies and asked them to pray for me concerning this appointment and the issues I’m having with my leg.  That was a quick answer!  I think I’ll ask them to pray for me more often!!  LOL.  So next Tuesday, October 13th, I have an consult appointment with a world renown peripheral neurosurgeon.   We’ll see what other evaluations and treatment recommendations he has to offer for me.  I view this as the next step on my quest to walk again.

Last week I posted on Face Book that I had swept and mopped my wood floors from my wheelchair.  I’ve done it before and it takes a fair amount of energy.  This time a few hours after I was done, I got a back ache.  By the next morning I was in a lot of pain.  I had to lay flat on my back on the floor for several hours to ease everything back into place.  I’ve taken it easy since then (not going to the gym) to let it heal.  What a mess I am when just a little twisting throws me out of whack!

Since my amputation, I’ve needed more sleep each night than I used to need.  This past week, I’ve had to get up earlier than I am used to doing.  By dinner time the other night I was so weary that I told my wife that I might go to bed as soon as we finished eating because “I ONLY got seven hours of sleep last night.”   Some of you probably hate me right now because you are forced to get by on much less sleep.  If so, I hope you get a few extra hours sleep this weekend!

One of the fun things that I have been able to do this past week is to help out the firefighters that I serve as chaplain by doing fire safety presentations for school children.  That has been an awesome time!  My amputated leg confuses the little ones but after I tell them that I have “a robot leg at home; but it’s broken right now so I cannot walk and I have to ride in this wheelchair” they think it’s pretty cool.  One little guy was still very concerned and kept whispering to his teacher.  I couldn’t hear him but I hear her answer, “No.  He isn’t hiding his foot.  He really doesn’t have one.”  Kids are awesome!  I’m grateful that I have had the opportunity to be with them.   October is Fire Prevention month, so change the batteries in your smoke detectors and talk to your family about what to do in case of a fire!


Thought for the Day:

After seeing the news recently, I got thinking about the 10 Commandments.  I smiled at myself as I realized that I’ve started having trouble with the one that says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s [things].”  I’ve never been overly materialistic and never really considered that I had a problem with this one.  I’ve never really looked at others and wished I had their stuff, so I’ve not felt the sting of disobeying this one overly much.  But lately I’ve wanted other people’s legs!  I look longingly at others who are able to walk either with their God-given legs or on prosthetic ones.  I’m grateful for what I am able to accomplish in my wheelchair and for all the mobility and freedom that I have; but I’d really like to walk in the fall woods, mow my own grass and shovel my own snow this winter.  I want to ride my bicycle, walk into stores, and climb stairs on my own two feet (even if one of my feet is metal and composite materials).  I want to get back to the two-legged life!

I thought that after my amputation that I had the concept of patience down pretty well.  Now as I continue to remain in the wheelchair fulltime since February, my lack of patience is rearing its ugly head again.   Early this year, I had hoped that I would be walking by the summer.  Then it was by fall.  Now it is by Christmas.  But honestly it might be much longer in coming.  And perhaps it won’t happen at all.  I may never walk again or it might be years from now.  I don’t know.  Only time will tell.  So ultimately I have to put all of my desires aside otherwise I will go crazy, becoming unhappy and bitter.

Contentment:  The state of being mentally or emotionally satisfied with things just as they are; a feeling of calm satisfaction.

There is nothing wrong in wishing and working hard towards a better future.  There are some things that we MUST achieve and some changes that HAVE to be made.  But for most things, there is a line that we shouldn’t cross in striving too hard and giving up too much in pursuit of them.   There are some things that we cannot change or that would cost too much of us to achieve.  Learning contentment and striving for a calm satisfaction with the status quo may be the best thing that we can do for ourselves and for our families.

So I am choosing to remind myself to be content and to be at peace with my circumstances.  I hope that someday that I’ll walk again; but I’m not going to waste a lot of emotional energy craving for that day to come sooner than it will.


What are you allowing to damage your calm?

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