Really well stated Don!! Hope you feel better Bobbie, we are all in this 
together. 

Meredith 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Larry Willis" <lwillis82...@gmail.com> 
To: "quad-list" <quad-list@eskimo.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, May 28, 2014 7:26:48 PM 
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] To wake, or not to wake up? 

Don, your reply is eloquent and passionate, not to mention brave. It is very 
easy to fall into despair as a quad, especially as you grow older and see 
friends and family pass away and others become disabled or crippled with pain. 
My mother and wife both have physical problems that make me weep. My wife, 
Melissa, has heart and blood pressure problems plus edema and recurring 
pleurisy that hangs over our heads like a dark cloud. My mom is nearly 81. She 
still gets around, but I can see a difference in her nearly every day. And all 
I can do is be an added burden. I know life is precious, and I have been 
blessed with two beautiful kids and a 31-year job as a teacher. I am causing 
pain and physical damage to my wife as she rolls and tugs me around. She can 
barely walk for the back pain. It just seems to be all downhill for all of us. 
Thanks to everyone for letting me blow steam. Larry 

Sent from my iPad 

On May 27, 2014, at 11:33 PM, Don Price < donpric...@yahoo.com > wrote: 




Bobbie, I've been thinking about your email since you posted it, trying to 
mentally compose a reply. Here's my short answer: No, I've never wished not to 
wake up. In fact, the opposite is true for me--I go to sleep every night 
praying that I get another opportunity to be alive tomorrow. 

But, it's not a simple question to answer, is it? I consider myself extremely 
lucky because 32 years post-injury I don't have the debilitating pain many of 
you describe. I don't have any pressure sores or kidney stones; my bladder and 
bowels function well and I still don't need Viagra. I'm not bragging; I am 
grateful for everything I have. 

My first thought is that you have to be honest with yourself, Bobbie. Is this 
simply a temporary period of 'the blues,' or do you possibly have clinical 
depression? It's a very important distinction because depression does have a 
physiological basis and can be effectively helped with medical intervention. If 
you are having suicidal thoughts I beg you to seek a mental health hotline--I 
guarantee there's one available in your community. 

On the other hand, if you're just feeling down and out, having a rough go of 
things at the moment, then I'm glad you had the guts to mention it here. Yes, I 
honestly think it took great courage to share a weak moment here, to be 
vulnerable. 'Us people' with disabilities are always held up as inspirational; 
we're fonts of strength and wisdom because we survived a disability. We all 
know what a bunch of bullshit that is. Partly, that misconception is fed by the 
media and their fixation on the 'supercrip.' I'm sorry, but if I see one more 
news story about a guy climbing Half Dome in Yosemite using only his tongue I'm 
going to puke! All of us here know we're just regular human beings, getting up, 
doing our business, going to bed. Guess what? Sometimes we even have bad days! 

However, Bobbie (and all), it is my firm belief that--barring medical issues 
causing depression--we (and only we) have the power to make ourselves happy. I 
don't just believe that, I know it. 

It's somewhat ironic that I read your email, entitled "To wake, or not to wake 
up?" the same day I started reading 'The Last Lecture,' by Randy Pausch. For 
those of you unfamiliar with Mr Pausch's Last Lecture, he's a Professor at 
Carnegie Mellon University who learned he had only a few months to live due to 
pancreatic cancer. His accurately-titled 'last lecture' is available on youtube 
and shouldn't be missed. The irony is that this man endured mind-boggling 
surgeries and procedures so he could have even a chance at living a few days 
longer, and here we are talking about throwing away precious days, weeks, 
years. I'm reading the book because my father--the strongest man I've ever 
known--has recently been diagnosed with leukemia. 

I'm not judging anyone here. I can't walk a mile in your shoes (to use an 
exceedingly inappropriate cliche,) so I don't have the right, or desire, to 
lecture anyone. But, as I said, I know that we have the ability to choose (yes, 
choose) happiness and gratefulness in our lives. HOW you do that is going to be 
very much an individual thing. There are a million self-help books out there, 
and a few of them are even good, but that journey is yours to take on your own. 

Having said that, I still feel the compulsion to make a few suggestions (once I 
start typing I just can't stop--sorry!) First of all, one has to make the mind 
shift from what we've lost (or can't do,) to what we still have available (or 
can do.) If you can see, be thankful. If you can hear, be grateful. If you can 
think, praise the heavens. Somebody wrote that they miss the simple things, 
like sitting up in bed and putting their feet on the floor. If you could travel 
back in time you'd tell that guy not to take ANYTHING for granted. Randy 
Pausch, who died from his cancer in 2008, less than a year after giving his 
last lecture, would love to come back and tell you that same thing today. Don't 
take YOUR life for granted. 

Can't go camping alone in the wilderness? Become a scout leader and inspire the 
kids to step away from the X-Box. Can't bed a bunch of babes? Find one you 
really like and write her the greatest love letter ever created--she wouldn't 
stand a chance. Can't move your body? Move your mind! Take a class, read the 
100 greatest books ever written, join your city's council on disability issues. 
If they don't have one, start one. Refute Stephen Hawking's gravitational 
singularity theorem. Or write an haiku. My point is.....well, you get my point. 

"I guess it comes down to a simple choice really. Get busy living, or get busy 
dying." -Andy Dufrenes, The Shawshank Redemption. 

I'm heading off to bed now. My caregiver will be here shortly and I'm bushed. 
Tomorrow I have committed to organize my music collection after I get home from 
work. It sounds mundane but I'm excited! Thirty-plus years of collected music 
will provide both dust and amazing memories. I can't wait to wake up tomorrow 
and see what opportunities await. From the bottom of my heart I wish the same 
for all of you. 

Don 
Tempe, AZ 
c5-6. Diving accident. 1982 



On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 1:57 PM, " linda...@comcast.net " < 
linda...@comcast.net > wrote: 


Oh, yes many times Bobbie I get sick of the pain! 
lindaf 


From: "Gmail" < bobbiehumphre...@gmail.com > 
To: "quad-list" < quad-list@eskimo.com > 
Sent: Monday, May 26, 2014 8:26:39 PM 
Subject: [QUAD-L] To wake, or not to wake up? 

I have a question. 90% of the time when I go to sleep I hope/wish I will not 
wake up in the morning. 
Dose anybody else ever have these thoughts? Bobbie 









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