Guest guest Posted July 29, 2000 Report Share Posted July 29, 2000 Hi Everyone: I've enjoyed hearing your stories so far - it's nice to know I wasn't alone out there as a kid because it surd did feel lonely at times. My Neuropathy was not diagnosed until I was about 15 but it had been there much longer. I think I was in fifth grade the first time I remember someone saying something about it - some girls picking on me because I stomped when I walked. Prior to that, I had actually been somewhat athletic -never successful with team sports, but a very active " tom boy. " I was certainly clumsy, but since I had problems with my eyes too, that was often blamed on them. In third or fourth grade I was even one of the fastest runners in my class!! Wow, I can't imagine that now.... My arches had always been hight and somewhere along the line, my left big toe lost the ability to move up as well as down. It hangs lower than my other toes and started getting in the way of gymnastics and diving and such and I kept stepping on it. As a kid, I loved heights and I used to be able to do flips and stuff off the diving board at our lake. As I lost the ability to spring off from my toes, I began to come painfully close to the diving board when I tried these moves and therefore had to stop.. I noticed the foot drop ever since fifth grade or so but didn't know how to put it in to words and so it wasn't noticed by others until much later. By Junior High (middle schl. in many places) I had become one of the slowest runners in PE and really hated gym class... Nonetheless, in my town the popular kids were involved in sports and having felt like an outsider most of my life, I wanted to take up a sport too. In High School I tried to play Lacrosse because it was a sport that one could learn at that late an age (no leagues for younger kids). I ran way behind the rest of the team with my ankles turning several times a day it seemed. The baseball team that practiced next door would laugh at the way I ran.. Somehow I actually made it through a JV season with even a few assists. This sport requires fast running so I'm totally amazed by that - I'm totally amazed they allowed me to stay on the team.. Anyway, the Lacrosse experience brought the problem to my parents attention and that's when all the doctors and tests began. After they discovered the Neuropathy, I didn't have to take PE for the entire rest of high school! It's pretty funny to me that one year I was on the Lacrosse team and after that I never had to take Gym again. I hated Gym so I was psyched. I am still pretty proud of myself though thinking back on that, that I actually had the tenacity (or insanity) to make it through all those practices and all with my CMT. After the diagnosis, they gave me big AFO's (bigger than the ones I have now), and the style then was jeans that were really tight around the ankles (a rebellion from bell bottoms) - some even wore socks over their pants to achieve this look (including me)! To accomadate my AFO's my Mom brought my jeans to a seamstress and had zippers put in all the ankles so that I could put my AFO's onm some pants even came that way from the store. It was also fortunate that High Top shoes and boots were in style because these accomadated the AFO's well. All my shoes were boots and high tops. Socially, I had boyfriends and friends but after what I thought was my failed lacrosse experience, I hung out with the delinquent crowd - I think it was a learned helpless reaction - we all felt the same way about life at the time, that somehow we'd been punished or cursed for some unknown reason and nothing we did seemed to make a difference. I was a bit different than that crowd though because I never really got in trouble for anything and I did a bit better academically. A few years later I pulled out of the learned helplessness, and away from that group, but that experience really helped me to understand people better... Anyway, back to the CMT, after my first or second summer with the AFO's - I was too self-conscious to wear them with shorts and I ended up just not wearing them for many years. They did give me orthotics too but I didn't wear them that much - I just recently found them again. My walking did not get better though and the frustration of being behind everyone despite my best efforts and my foot dragging was pretty constant. I remember going out to a bar for Halloween with College friends and being shut off after one beer because of my poor balance - they thought I was drunk. I was so angry that I made a big stink and got an apology and free drink but that experience hurt a lot because it reminded me that I really can't hide my disability. I remember as a teenager I tried to tell my Orthotist's how I felt about wearing the big, clunky AFO's and they told me to just " accept my disability.. " When I went back after college (and had my own health insurance), the reaction was entirely different: " We don't blame you, of course you want to wear something that you can wear dress clothes and non-orthopedic shoes! " Then they gave me some new AFO's - they're not as supportive as they could be (I may need bigger ones again at some point), but they do allow me to wear more clothes and shoes with them and I don't feel as likely to totally neglect taking proper care of my condition. I'm still working on that now - being more public about my CMT (I probably really don't have a choice as people will notice anyway I think). Before my CMT, I was born with cataracts and had to wear " coke bottle " glasses until I was 13. I was picked on as being the " ugliest girl in the class. " Once I got my contact lenses, the entire world treated me differently and while I hated that, I also liked it (getting positive attention for a change). The glasses had made me painfully shy and I had to learn to socialize all over again. Sometimes I feel like wearing the AFO's when everyone can see them is like putting those coke bottle glasses back on - I regress to childhood and expect that all the teasing and mal treatment will begin again. When I was diagnosed with the neuropathy, they told me that it probably would not progress.... Finding out that I have CMT changed that... I do notice that my calf muscles have really atrophied. I may not have much longer to have any choice as far as the vanity goes so I'm trying to work on this acceptance business... I will say I am SOO glad to be done with school!! Sorry I've rambled on so long.. I like the topic. : ) Marti Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.