Dancing with My Disabilities!

Title: Dancing with My Disabilities! I had my shoulder and both hips replaced, and I am changing things up a bit on this blog! I began belly dancing in 2010! Yes, you read that correctly!! I am going to be blogging about my experience as a woman with several joint diseases and conditions who had her shoulder and both hips replaced who now belly dances, dances hip hop, performs, teaches dance to children of all ages and abilities, teaches belly dance fitness classes to adult women, teaches chair belly dance movement classes to people with mobility issues and disabilities, and takes a Pure Barre class as well! I still have pain, but I want to blog about how I have fun too! Please read Chronically Mommy (chronicallymommy.blogspot.com) for info on health/pain and being a mom to a 13-year-old son. I have avascular necrosis in my shoulders, hips, and knees, psoriatic arthritis, axial spondylitis, Sjogren's, fibromyalgia, hEDS, POTS, MCAS, vascular/ocular/hemiplegic migraines, pseudotumor cerebri, trigeminal neuralgia, occipital neuralgia, endometriosis, and chronic shingles. I found out that I have autoimmune arthritis in my cervical spine and a bulging disk in my lumbar spine. Fourteen years ago, my spine orthopedic surgeon told me I had a small amount of inflammatory arthritis in my SI joint. The question was if the spinal involvement was due to Psoriatic Spondylitis, which is a more severe form of Psoriatic Arthritis or is it a new diagnosis of Ankylosing Spondylitis? Now, they have an updated term, Axial Spondylitis, which fits my symptoms and diagnostic proof. Whatever the diagnosis, the treatment will remain the same. I had my left hip replaced in 2003; my right shoulder replaced in March of 2010. I gave my right arm to be ambidextrous! LOL! Lastly, I had my right hip replaced on May 10th, 2012, and I began belly dancing two years prior to my right hip replacement surgery. Yes that's correct! I began belly dancing in 2010, just after my shoulder replacement, before my son was born. I performed for the first time in 2012, five days prior to my right hip replacement surgery. Pain is still another part of my life. It is just a question of when, where, and how much, but I would like to use this blog to write about my experience as a woman with several joint diseases and conditions who had both hips and a shoulder replaced and now spends her free time dancing, teaching, and performing! I began dancing with a troupe in February of 2014, Seshambeh Dance Company. I now take a Pure Barre class on Monday mornings, teach ballet, tap, and creative movement on Monday evenings to children of all ages and abilities, take a hip hop class with all adult women on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, teach a belly dance fitness class on Thursdays to all adult women, and teach a chair belly dance movement class to people with mobility issues and disabilities as often as I possibly can. Join me in my journey! At times, I take 16 to 20 pills a day. I give myself an injection each week on Fridays for my autoimmune/autoinflammatory arthritis diseases. Just when one thing is doing better, something else goes downhill! My attitude, however, is always going uphill! I am 49 years old, have been married for 24 years, and my husband and I adopted Mick in Dec. of 2010! I have a lot on my plate right now, but I take it one moment at a time. I believe that God will never give me more than I can handle. However, I do need to learn to ask for help sometimes instead of always doing it by myself!

Blog Title: Dancing with My Disablities!

Formerly Now Read My HIPS, and before that, I Already Gave My Right Arm to Be Ambidextrous.
Help, I need somebody,
Help, not just anybody,
Help, you know I need someone, help.

When I was younger, so much younger than today,
I never needed anybody's help in any way.
But now these days are gone, I'm not so self assured,
Now I find I've changed my mind and opened up the doors.

Help me if you can, I'm feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won't you please, please help me.

And now my life has changed in oh so many ways,
My independence seems to vanish in the haze.
But every now and then I feel so insecure,
I know that I just need you like I've never done before.

Help me if you can, I'm feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won't you please, please help me.

When I was younger, so much younger than today,
I never needed anybody's help in any way.
But now these daya are gone, I'm not so self assured,
Now I find I've changed my mind and opened up the doors.

Help me if you can, I'm feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won't you please, please help me, help me, help me, oh.

Dancing with My Disabilities

Dancing with My Disabilities
Asmara "Beautiful Butterfly"

Blog with Integrity

BlogWithIntegrity.com
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Sunday, April 3, 2011

Help Me If You Can...I Do Appreciate You Being Round...Even If I Don't Always Act Like It!

For this blog carnival, it's our take on help. How do we  help ourselves, get help from others, or even recognize our need of a little helping hand? How do we feel about asking for help or getting some when we haven’t asked for any? Let's explore this topic. smileyIcon

Oh wow! Where do I begin with this topic? Help, I need somebody! This is so difficult for me. I am so independent. I am such an advocate for people with chronic pain and chronic illness that I lose sight of what I really need~HELP! 

The difficult part of this topic is that no matter how independent, self-assured, and secure we are, there is always a time in our lives when we feel down, fall down, have a door close in our face, and go through a life-changing event. For me, pain is constant and daily, so I have learned to live with it as a part of my life which is good and bad. It's good for me because I have learned to deal with life as a person with chronic pain, meaning that I know how to make plans and choices that fit my lifestyle. It's bad because those plans and choices will likely change in an instant. When those plans and choices have to change due to extreme pain days, weeks or months, it would be smart to ask for help. However, the stubborn side of me will almost never ask for help. It's not that I don't want it or need it. It's not that I think people like family and friends should be able to read my mind and automatically know when my pain is so bad that I have to start canceling things. I always feel like it makes me weak. Silly isn't it. The reason I think this is a silly thing is because here I am living with several pain conditions daily, which makes any person that does this strong, but I can't find the courage inside me to ask for even a little help.
This week, I was so stressed out. I went off my fibromyalgia medication. The pain was severe. I was so tired and fatigued but couldn't sleep. We have a 3 1/2 month old. Need I say more? Actually, I will give you a little more info. My hubby, baby and myself all live 9 1/2 hours away from any family member. We mostly hang out here with the hubby's friends from work, which have in turn become my friends, and I have made a few friends of my own as well. I feel bad asking people from his work for help because I don't know them that well. I also hate asking friends for help because I would rather help them. So that leaves the hubby. I guess I got so stressed out from not asking anyone, including my own spouse, for help that I lost it. I told my hubby that I couldn't do any of it. It was too hard. I was behind with getting bottles made, doing laundry, running the dishwasher, going to the store, sending birthday cards out, making meals, and putting stuff away. I couldn't or wouldn't even admit that it's been months since I cleaned, dusted or vacuumed the house! I was wearing the same clothes for the third day in a row and hadn't showered in I don't know when. I needed help!

He literally said to me that he couldn't believe how helpless I had become! I was furious! I was not helpless, and yet I was because I wasn't asking for help! I don't know if I ever looked at the word that way before, but at that moment I did. I was helpless. I was not taking any one's help or asking for any one's help. I was helpless! He told me that he wasn't a mind-reader. He couldn't tell what I needed help with unless I asked for it. Ah! That is the secret behind asking for help, you see. Help doesn't just come to you. You must get the courage up and ask for it. He told me that he just assumed that I had everything under control and didn't need any help. He said that on the outside looking in, I appear to have it all together. Hmmm...interesting, to say the least. It's kind of like our pain conditions. We look just fine from the outside until we let people know!

I realized this day that I had it out with my hubby, after he called me helpless, and then I felt hopeless for a while until I really got my senses together. To ask for help will only help keep us independent. Here is where I'm going with this...If we don't ask for help while our world is crumbling around us, and we lose all sense of reality until someone has to literally take over for us, that is not the answer. If we see that the foundation is beginning to crumble, we should ask for someone to please help us to strengthen it again so we do not fall apart and lose everything that we ever were or ever worked to be. It's kind of like when you press the refresh button on your computer!




3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dana, Everything you say is true. We hesitate to ask for help, and at the same time our loved ones feel like they are butting in. ASK FOR HELP! If I could come over and sit with Mick just so you take a shower, shave both legs, blow dry your beautiful hair and put on clean clothes I would be so happy. Sometime thats all you need. Maybe someone from your church would be thrilled to come and play with the baby while you take a quick nap. Or take a load of laundry home and do it for you. Something simple is always the best kind of help. I hope tomorrow will be better!
xoxomo

Anonymous said...

I hope you found some help; I know asking for it is very difficult, but some times we have to allow others in. It might seem at first admitting weakness. But, it takes a strong person to ask for help from others. I hope you found your "refresh" button!

Dana Asmara Morningstar-Marton said...

You are very kind, Mo. After this post, I explained to Jim exactly what kind of help I needed. It is working out great, esp now w/ a flare. He wakes every morn to feed Mick, change him, & put him back down for his morn nap. All the while, I'm still sleeping. I really don't fall asleep until it gets light outside anyway, so I get sleep when I need it. Jim goes to work. I handle things for the day. He returns & takes over w/ Mick in the eve~playing & feeding. we both get him undressed & have together time, bathtime, put pjs on, read a book, & tuck him in w/ his lullabye music. I make the bottles & prepare his cereal bowls for the next day while Jim does dishes & then we switch roles every so often.

2012

2012
Performance 5 days before my Hip Replacement Surgery!

2012

2012
Performance 5 Days Prior to my Hip Replacement Surgery.

Belly Dance

Belly Dance
Before the Performance 5/6/12
Watch live streaming video from arthritisfoundation at livestream.com