© A. E. P. (Ed) Wall, 17333 Deer Point Drive, Orland Park, IL 60467-7821 aepwall@gmail.com
Even after 70 years, veteran journalist A. E. P. Wall still has something new to say...about politics, wars, religion, people and other lively things.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Monday, August 18, 2014
Two heads abetter of one
I’m living a double life. I was talking with my daughter
when I noticed how intently I was trying to pay attention. My duplex head was
giving half of its focus to our conversation, while the other half was dealing
with MSA, the multiple system atrophy that short circuits my attempts to stand
more than briefly, or to walk more than a few yards with my rollator.
While one half of my apparatus is happily punching the
computer keys or reading a timely mystery novel, another half is occupied by
MSA spinoffs, literally a pain in the neck, some hammering on the inside of my
skull (who’s trying to get out?), a punch in the shoulder or the sudden
weakening of an arm, like a pricked balloon.
It is as though every 24-hour day comes in a 12-hour
capsule. Time is always short. Actions often leave no trace.
Why am I telling you this? Partly because I was born this
way, a journalist whose story-telling affliction is as old as the hieroglyphics.
Partly because the more people know about MSA, a rare and incurable disease,
the more likely is support for research. And partly as my excuse for being
slow. My chow hound fame was wiped out, like gravy with a napkin, and I’m now
the slowest eater at any table. I’m slow to answer letters and sometimes MSA
wipes out my memory of a letter that needs answering or a promise made. This is
a disease of falling and then getting up again.
Thanks for being one of the reasons to get back up.
--Notes in an OPCA/MSA Diary
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Losing Robin Williams
Worldwide affection for Robin
Williams, his professional success and personal wealth seemed like dreams
fulfilled. His apparent suicide before he was old enough for regular Social
Security checks was linked to his long-time struggles with depression, along
with his misuse of alcohol and other seductive drugs.
The world has changed inside
and out during my lifetime, which began when Calvin Coolidge was in the White
House. When I was in kindergarten my dad was installing sound systems for movie
theaters making the switch from silent films. Crippling diseases have been cured,
travel has been reinvented with jet planes and interstate highways, television,
computers and the Internet are here—but there’s no cure so far for the deadly afflictions of
Robin Williams.
Troublesome in a special way
is the visibility of those afflictions, painfully evident, and the lottery
effect of treatment for them. Many who apply AA principles in struggles with
alcohol and narcotics are winners. Many are not. Nobody has figured out why one
person gets a winning ticket and another crashes. Prayer is one response to
tragic conditions, and the understanding of prayer may increase right along with
the understanding of atoms, cells and
heartbeats. The evolution of spirituality may not be as slow as it seems. I was
already in my crib in Jamestown, N.Y., when John Scopes was convicted of
teaching evolution in Tennessee.
Life has evolved since then,
conspicuously in the material realm of camera phones and air conditioners, less
plainly in the spiritual realm of loving, giving and forgiving. People still
kill each other, still let people go to sleep without food, suffer illness
without care. Changes are coming. Watch for the time when defects and ailments
will be identified at birth, and the sneaky diseases will no longer wait for
decades before showing themselves as limps, dimmed eyes, cancers, neurological short
circuits or painful disfigurements. They will be healed at birth. And that will be one answer to prayer.
My own OPCA/MSA has been with
me for such a long time that we understand each other, even though we are not
friends. It has been a dozen years since I was diagnosed, but the disease was
present long before that. When I was 63, as Robin Williams was when he died, I
was already using a walking stick. But 12-step programs had no influence on the
disease I did not know I had.
Politicians and moms and
buyers of aspirin tablets think sometimes that all of the world’s problems
would end if each person were given a new house, car and bank account. The
unhappy premature departure of everybody’s friend, Robin, reminds us that a
person’s security is fundamentally spiritual and less fundamentally material.
Men and women of wealth and fame are not immune to suicide or crime.
Thanks to my kids and
grandkids, and to friends, I enjoy the sweet life and get to remember most of
it. Getting old is one thing, embracing personal evolution makes it more interesting. So far,
so good.
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