Category Archives: Stories

The next thing to go…

I mentioned at the end of my last post here, that I thought it was the steroids that were affecting my vision. As it turns out, it was not the steroids. What I had started to notice was that things looked blurry or foggy. It didn’t seem to really bother me until I was driving home from a weekend out of town with my sister. I remember closing my right eye for the entire drive home, because it seemed to help. I do realize in hindsight that isn’t the safest way to drive. I should have known this, given a previous experience with wearing an eye patch, but that’s for another post to come.

This was mid-September of 2013, roughly a month after my hearing loss. I still couldn’t hear much of anything, but I do remember blasting my music really loud in the car, so I must have still retained a small level of hearing. Not enough to be functional, unfortunately.

I had just finished a round of intravenous steroids the day I left for this trip, which is a standard course of action for MS relapses. At this point I had steroids injected into my ears, taken orally, and infused intravenously. None of it was curing my hearing loss. It may have slowed the progression of my vision loss, but did not stop it completely. At the peak of my vision loss, I was left with a VFI (visual field index) of 60% in my left eye and a measly 20% in my right eye. If you’re doing the math, that’s a 60% overall loss of visual field. Meaning I can only see 40% of what everyone else sees. And there’s no order to it. The blind spots are scattered, as if someone had taken a completed 1000 piece jigsaw puzzle and randomly removed 600 of the pieces. You might still be able to tell what’s in parts of the puzzle, but you never get the whole picture. That’s my new literal worldview.

I can no longer drive, and I have an extremely difficult time reading and writing (sadly, those are three of my favorite activities). I’ve had to make adjustments, millions of tiny little adjustments, to make life feel normal again. To feel useful. Capable. Whole again. Rehabilitation is a long, slow process. I’m still working at it but you can bet I’ve come a long way since that fateful fall season of 2013. This was just the beginning…

The Start of My Hearing Loss

It was early August, 2013. The first week, in fact. I remember because I had jury duty. A welcome reprieve from my demanding job as Accounting and Collections Manager. I remember sitting at the back of the courtroom, waiting for my name to be called, and there was this subtle ringing in my ears. The sort that you might have after attending a loud concert. I believe it was constant, but I was able to ignore it most of the time. Until I went home and had the added distraction of children arguing. Kids can be so loud sometimes. I snapped at them to be quiet, which was not unusual for me to do. However, Mike must have sensed that something was wrong because he told me I should call the doctor in the morning. I did call, and was able to get into the family doctor the following day. By this time the ringing was becoming more persistent, and now when people were talking to me, their voices sounded strange. It was hard to describe then, and even more so now after all this time. Tinny is the word I think I used. As if people were talking into a tin can. That’s just a guess of course; I have no idea what that would actually sound like. This all left the doctor thoroughly stumped, and so she referred me to an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) specialist.

I called the specialist to schedule an appointment that afternoon but they couldn’t see me for a few days. “A few days” doesn’t seem like much, but it turned out to be an eternity. That phone call was the last call I made as a naturally hearing human. By the time I went to see the specialist, those few days later, I had lost any ability for word recognition. What I could hear at that point, which was diminishing quickly as well, sounded garbled and distorted. Turning up the volume or talking louder did no good.

A friend accompanied me to the visit with the ENT, and it was a good thing she did, because I had no way of knowing what was being said to me. The ENT pulled his hearing aid off his own ear, held it in his hand, pointing to it as he spoke. I tried desperately to read his lips, while also looking at the hearing device as he pointed. It was useless. Even skilled lip readers only understand 30% of what’s being spoken. Don’t let the movies fool you; lip reading is very difficult, and very inefficient.

I went home that day with a borrowed hearing aid – thank goodness not the one the aging ENT had been using – and was instructed to try wearing it for at least an hour a day. It was no use. It did amplify sound, but the sounds were so distorted it was impossible to understand anything. It was just frustrating noise. Hearing aids were not going to help me.

I was soon referred to an ear doctor, an otolaryngologist to be exact. This office specialized in hearing issues, and was not at all surprised by my rapid onset hearing loss. They got right to work at treating it the best they knew how, and that meant steroid shots. In my ears. Now, I can think of worse areas to have needles inserted, but ears are right up there. I had to lie on the exam table, on my side, as still as possible. The medicine was injected into the innermost part of my ear and I had to sit there for a half hour while the medicine dispersed. It was very painful, and I gripped my husband’s hand for the entirety. He never left my side. After the first ear was done, I had to turn over and do it all over again with the other ear. Once that special torture was over, they sent me home with a prescription for oral steroids where I would wait and hope for a miracle.

The miracle I was waiting for did not come.

Journal Entry 9/11/13: “I am nervous and anxious. Every minute of the day. The tinnitus is relentless and loud. The steroids make my legs shaky, and my vision blurred. I worry because I can’t hear what’s going on around me. If I can’t see it happening, I’m unaware. Where are the children? Is the water boiling yet? Did I remember to turn off the garbage disposal? This is difficult for a control freak. I have to let that go.”

I found out later that it was not the steroids affecting my vision…

Reviving the Blog

Hi there! You may have noticed, you may have not, but I haven’t been posting here on the blog. There are many reasons for this, and I won’t go into them here, but let’s just say a lot has happened since March. For my own mental health and well-being I had to hunker down and focus. But I’ve come through most of it and have been itching to write again. I find myself writing blog posts in my head while I’m working around the house, running around the neighborhood, riding in the truck, etc. My brain is such a nag. It’s getting quite annoying.

So here’s my plan: I have lots of stories, some current, some old, and I’m going to aim to write every day, to re-work that writing “muscle” that has atrophied, and then I’ll schedule a story to post at least once a week. That’s the plan anyway. We’ll try it for a little while and see how well it goes. Okay? Okay. Let’s goooo!