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Monday, October 24, 2011

A Song for Rachel

As I’ve explained previously, Rachel is what I have named my Fibromyalgia, and in a moment of anger towards Rachel for how she has negatively changed my life and robbed me of so much, I decided to listen to Christina Peri’s song, “Jar of Hearts” to help release some of that anger.  It’s a great song that very nicely expresses anger in such a way that any kind of painful anger can be soothed by the song’s emotive expression.  As I cathartically listened, it occurred to me that the song could very easily address Rachel, rather than the heart braking presumably ex-boyfriend of Christina Peri it is actually directed at.

The lyric, “I’ve learned to live half a life and now you want me one more time” is what specifically motivated this connection for me.  I really have had to lead half a life, and every time I have a flare-up, every time I have another pain, every time someone inadvertently reminds me of something I have lost or of the burden I have become, I feel like Rachel is coming for me one more time, again and again and again.

Obviously not every lyric relates to Rachel, since Fibromyalgia was clearly not the motivation behind the song, but so much of it does fibro-hit home so perfectly, and I think it makes for a good “Eff you, Fibro” anthem, particularly when it’s fibro-condensed as follows:
“I have grown too strong to ever fall back in your arms.
I’ve learned to live half a life and now you want me one more time…
 It took so long just to feel all right.
Remember how to put back the light in my eyes…
You don’t get to get me back…
 Who do you think you are running ‘round leaving scars…
You’re gonna catch a cold from the ice inside your soul,
so don’t come back for me, don’t come back at all.
Who do you think you are?”
I spend most of my life now making an effort to not think about the gory details of the state of my crippled being.  This is no easy feat, since I also have to spend most of my life being aware of avoiding pain, and planning things out, like taking pre-emptive Advil before attempting to go to a family function, avoiding places that have stairs without elevators, or stretching before attempting to do just about anything at all, such as starting my day.

I have to focus on things that normals do with so much ease that they do the things without ever thinking about it, like focusing on how I’m walking or how I’m stepping onto a curb or a small step (since, at the time of this posting, I can’t even attempt a normal sized step without holding onto someone).  I have to consciously work toward increasing function, and when I do increase in function, it inevitably means that I will have to endure more pain, sometimes temporarily, sometimes not.  Despite this, even the tiniest improvement in function is an enormous triumph for which I am endlessly grateful.  Things so easy for normals, like putting on one’s own pants one leg at a time, become the biggest triumph in several years – possibly the biggest triumph in my fibro-life so far.  While this triumph comes equipped with increased pain every day, the joyous triumph outweighs the increased ongoing pain.

I thusly try to focus on the positive things in my life, the improvements, and the hope for more improvements.  But then people innocently and/or well meaningly say things that normally don’t bother me but sometimes do, like when there’s a certain tone in their voice, or there’s a certain context, or (most likely) when I’m in a certain mood.  They say things about their own life (“I don’t’ have time like you do, I have a job”), and they say things about me (“You don’t have to live with your parents” “Yeah, I do, I can’t care for myself…”  “So hire someone”).   They say tings that make me feel like they don’t understand what I go through every day, even though these are the people who are supposed to understand.  They say things that force me to think negatively -- about how crippled and broken I am, what an enormous burden I am to my family and the world, and ergo how crappy my life is.  These thoughts then have the power to push me into the black hole of self-piteous despair.  I have to climb out quickly each time so that I don’t fall too deeply because if I fall too deeply down the big hole of depression, I don’t ‘know if I could get out….What am I saying – of course I could get out, but it would be hard.  I just have to use a few extra spoons to either deal with the negative thoughts or positivize them as needed.

I’m glad Glee had that episode (“Original Song”) where Rachel (the fictional character, not my fibromyalgia) used her emotional pain to write an amazing song (“Get it Right”), for that episode crystallized what I already knew and demonstrated here.  My emotional pain here has turned into this blog posting (okay, so it’s not amazing and was written in two bursts separated by months followed by a non-emotional proofreading).  The writing has helped me to get over and hopefully past the anger and emotional pain, at least temporarily, such that I can now move on to more joyful music, like Lady Gaga’s awesome Born This Way (the whole album, not just the song).  Of course, Gaga is a(nother) artist who probably understands the plight of the chronically pained, since her mother has Lupus, as she mentioned in an interview I saw on the TV some time ago (I think it was on Larry King Live).  I love Gaga, but alas, this blog posting has fallen off topic and so it will end now (you might think the proof reading I spoke of would have fixed this, but such was not meant to be).