JOHN: What brought you to Mayo Clinic Connect?
@ray666: I can't recall a time when I didn't know of Mayo Clinic. Mayo Clinic's website is my go-to online resource when I’m need of sound medical advice. As I aged (I'm 78 today) and began to develop an aging man's many aches and pains––in my case, chiefly arthritic pain, but I already showed signs of having balance and walking problems––I found myself returning more and more often to Mayo Clinic's main website. I hadn't yet discovered Mayo Clinic Connect nor seen a neurologist to receive a diagnosis of anything vaguely neuropathic.
At Mayo Clinic Connect, I would frequent forums such as Chronic Pain and Spine Health in those early days. Then, in the summer of 2022, when I posted to tell others I had just received a diagnosis of idiopathic sensory-motor peripheral neuropathy, a member of one of those other Connect forums wisely directed me to the Neuropathy support group. I've been on the Neuropathy forum almost exclusively ever since.
JOHN: What motivates you to take part in Mayo Clinic Connect and makes you feel comfortable to share and to be open with the community?
@ray666: The people! And the rich give and take. There's something about a group of people contending with a common enemy. Even though our peripheral neuropathy (PN) comes in dozens of shapes and flavors, something is essentially the "same" about our experience. That's a bonding quality. I feel a "we're all in this together" feeling every time I'm in the forum.
That bonding quality makes it comfortable. That's why I'm okay with telling anyone most anything about my life and knowing that, in most every instance, other members will do the same. The forum is a bit of a "campfire" experience: Everyone opens up. Honesty flows freely.
JOHN: What groups do you participate in?
@ray666: At the moment, only the Neuropathy support group. Because I also have cervical stenosis (diagnosed as "borderline"), I frequently visited the Spine Health support group. Because I also have arthritis here, there, and everywhere , I once posted and read on the Chronic Pain support group. And, because I'm in the second half of my 70s, I also hung around the Aging Well support group because … well, in the second half of your 70s, just because! LOL
JOHN: Tell us about a meaningful moment on Mayo Clinic Connect.
@ray666: I like adding lifestyle topics in the Neuropathy support group. I'm as interested as the next person in medications and therapies, but I'm especially interested in how people with PN manage their lives. For example, I posed a two-part question only the other day: Are there ways in which PN has given you "gifts" (i.e., encouraged you to slow down and smell the coffee)?
Also, are there ways you've found your PN to be too available as an excuse (i.e., caused you to say no to opportunities because you had convinced yourself your PN insists you recoil from things that––with appropriate caution––you really could do)?
Occasionally, I'll earn a "meaningful moment" when someone posts a reply to one of my lifestyle questions to say, "Thank you. That meant a lot to me."
JOHN: What energizes you, or how do you find balance in your life?
@ray666: Every day, I work to counter what I call my "Wicked Trifecta": (1) growing old with PN, (2) increasing loneliness, and (3) losing a sense of purpose. I exercise to quell concerns about growing old with PN. I phone two or three friends to check increasing loneliness. And I renew my commitment to my writing, vowing to send out two or three stories every month, not to get paid or even to publish but instead to rest easy that I am still participating in the Big World Out There. If I can say at the end of the day, I did some things to counter my wicked trifecta, I'll end the day feeling energized.
JOHN: Tell us about your favorite pastime or activity.
@ray666: My favorite pastime is acting, at least until my PN became too much of a distraction. The last play I did was just before Covid came on the scene. Because my balance had become worrisome, I did two things I'd never done before: I requested handrails alongside any stairs on our set, and I asked the actress with whom I shared most of my scenes if she would keep an eye on me should I show signs of losing my balance. I'd never done either of those things before. My PN was whispering, "time to retire from acting." And retire I did. I've replaced one communication art with another. Do I miss acting? You bet I do! Am I filled with remorse? See my favorite quote.
JOHN: Do you have a favorite quote, life motto or personal mantra?
@ray666: As a fellow who still believes he lives in Edwardian times, I have been scribbling in a commonplace for the past 20-30 years. Consequently, I have got a treasure-trove of favorite quotes. One that might be appropriate for folks like me who have PN is:
“We are what we are given and what is taken away;
Blessed be the name of the giver and the taker.”
– Wendell Berry, The Gift of Gravity
Hardly a day goes by when I don't stop and think of many things that have been taken away from me, but I don't allow myself to feel remorse; those things taken away are still part of me, for which I'm profoundly grateful.
JOHN: What food can you simply not resist?
@ray666: Pizza. I'm from the Bronx. Thin crust, if you please. No exotic toppings and no fork! That's an absolute.
JOHN: If Hollywood made a movie about your life, who would you like to see cast as you?
@ray666: I doubt anyone will ever want to make a movie about my life. If someone were ever foolish enough to want to do so, I would like to play myself. I used to think that would be impossible – after all, how could the 78-year-old me ever play the 22-year-old me? But now that CGI (computer-generated imagery) has made Harrison Ford look young enough to be able toplay his younger self in the latest Raiders sequel, why the heck not? 😃
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Hi, Ray!
What a welcome and happy "find" at the end of a very long day! I feel, like you, as if I have found a community of friends through Connect. Well, not as if -- I have found such a group. Thank you for letting us get to know you better! It is such an encouragement to log in and never have to offer an apology for looking to another person for ideas or recommendations or simply to someone who understands and is "walking in your shoes", pun intended.
By the way, I have a wonderful son-in-law who was into improv for a number of years and actually trained at Second City in Chicago. (Yup, he is GOOD!)
He no longer does this but let me tell you what a hoot he is to be around! 🤣
Happy, Happy Birthday , Ray - though a day late, I think!
Barb
Good evening @ray666
So now I know why I look around for a response to a member from you. You are often the first responder and set the stage for the beginning of a new style of communication. You start with a Yip, Yip, Hurray, and then continue to present a genuine greeting, some realistic history, and at least one or more ideas worth considering. It feels like you also include a cheer for Connect.
Thank you for sharing.
Chris
Good morning, Susan Ellen (@SusanEllen66)
Or now that I know you were born in Brooklyn, maybe I should say, “Hey, wazzup?” LOL I was born and grew up in the Bronx, way up in the NE corner, Pelham Bay. I lived there until my early 20s. I never intended to leave NYC. In a way, I still haven’t. I miss NYC terribly.
Brooklyn was a foreign country to my family. I can still remember my mother pleading with my brother when he started dating a girl from Brooklyn: “Oh, Bill, promise you’ll lock your car doors and roll up the windows when you drive through Brooklyn.” I imagine your friends in Brooklyn said the same thing about driving in the Bronx.
How about a Neuropathy Forum just for us NYers?
Cheers!
Ray (@ray666)
Hola losau
¡Muchas gracias por sus amables palabras! Gestionar nuestras vidas puede ser todo un desafío. Le deseo lo mejor mientras continúa esforzándose por vivir una buena vida.
Los mejores deseos,
Ray (@ray666)
@ray666 you are exactly right!
The Bronx was scary to us. All I knew was the Bronx Zoo, and Yankee Stadium.
Pelham reminded me of the movie, “Taking of Pelham 123”!
I actually spent most of my childhood on Lawn Guyland.
My paternal ancestors settled much of the Island, and Connecticut beginning in the early 1600’s. They were also in Salem during the witch trials. My uncle, Giles Corey was pressed to death! He is the subject of a Longfellow play, and a character in The Crucible by Arthur Miller.
Ancestry is a hobby!
knowing that there are others with the same amount of aches and pains and medical problems, the DIABETIC neuropathy becomes really painful as winter is approaching, and I am awaiting surgery for a hiatal hernia that is blocking my stomach from food if I pass the stress test which I am most doubtful of. WE are getting a serious storm today and my bones feel it. 79 and am hopeful to make 80. Hot coffee and two ADVIL DUAL ACTION will help a lot. Take insulin twice a day and that works. READING QUOTES and trying to keep a sense of humor helps. THANKS A LOT PAL....MargaretOB
FAITH in GOD and my BIBLE helps a lot also...am learning....the BRAIN WORKS...M.
I am from HOBOKEN is that close enough to NEW YORK? THANKS FOR THE ENCOURAGEMNT...MargaretOB
Ray, I have appreciated the mutual learning since your time on Connect, and how we share our Neuropathy adjustments and our quests for answers or suggestions to help find the best formulas for ourselves to be at our optimal performance levels for quality of life. I also enjoy how sometimes we need to be lighthearted while we stay focused on winning the war throughout our many battles. That said, please do not start a NY only Neuropathy group! I for one would miss you. I promise I like Brooklyn style pizza - it’s just that where I’m from, we’ve been known to keep a lot of crab, shrimp, and Old Bay Seasoning in our diet, and I just haven’t found them overly tasty on any type of pizza. Anyway, because I’ve learned from here that you’re very analytical on top of your artistic skills, maybe you should break down that pizza for hidden levels of B6 (the bad kind) or any other neurotoxins causing our medical mysteries. (I checked my seafood, it’s all OK except I need to watch sodium content of Old Bay 😃). Nice article, and thanks for all you’re contributing to help this forum! Deb
Ray - you are an inspiration to remain positive, embrace life, and continue learning. Thank you for all your posts.
Pat