Welcome

This blog is about a new walk with my husband Rick & I since he was diagnosed with ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis) or Lou Gehrig's Disease or MND (Motor Neuron Disease) on February 1, 2008.

This blog was started as a way to keep our family and friends and anyone else interested in our battle with ALS updated.
So as you read this blog please keep us in your hearts and prayers.

The blog starts from the most current to the oldest entry. Rick has started to blog now also as of April 1,2008 so this site has become officially "our blog".

My dearest husband Rick passed away on August 13, 2010,
2 1/2 yrs after diagnosis. Now I have to learn how to walk in the courage, strength and bravery that he did in fighting this disease. He promised me he would be waiting for me in eternity on a park bench. Together Forever!

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Joan here...."The Joy of the Lord is my strength".

Over this past 2 1/2 years we have had many people say to us..."I do not know how you two do it!" I found this little ornamental stone cross at the $1.00 store one day and it says it all..."The Joy of the Lord is MY strength". It sits on the little stand by Rick's hospital bed and every time I go to put water or clean the hated bipap machine I am reminded of where I need to focus and it lifts my spirits.

I just returned the manual wheelchair this am. As I was pushing it down the street heading to the post office I felt like I was walking a walk of memories of when we got this first wheelchair and places I pushed Rick in this chair. Remembering how angry I was when I first saw it and how I gave it a quick kick, how I nearly tipped Rick into the puddle of water at the end of our driveway in our first test run...on and on the memories came as I pushed this empty chair. It was so bittersweet!

We have been so busy with getting Rick's meds and bipap machine increased, doctors, health care providers and etc. We have been noticing changes every couple of days in his breathing and comfort level. So with every change there are a lot of adjusting to do in every area.

Our software specialist nephew, David purchased a piece of new technology head gear that reads brain signals. So we will write more on that once we receive it. I keep teasing Rick he will have to watch what he is thinking because we will all see it on the computer screen! :)

We just cancelled out trip to Wpg to visit the Health Science Centre for a meeting with his respirologist Dr. Janice. He just is not up to that length of bouncing around in a van. I am afraid his travelling days are over. They do have a Tele Health System situated in various areas in MB. Who would have thought....Whitemouth has one!

We have been amazingly treated and taken care of by the Health Care System in our area. NEHA has been amazing with sending us incredible people to deal with Rick's care. We have an absolutely wonderful Dr. Spence, Cheryl Palliative Care, Laura Home Care, Alva Registered Nurse, and our home care workers, Carol, Jeannette, Julie and Debbie. Never mind our fantastic OT Louise!

Lets not forgot the most incredible one of all is my husband Rick who has kept his joy and thankful heart through all of this. What he deals with each day is above and beyond what I know I could ever endure with such grace and thankfulness of heart that he always has! He is moved and hauled around by mostly us ladies. He depends upon us to be quick on our toes and keep him hooked up to his bipap machine at all times while transferring him. This becomes especially important when we keep having these summer storms and the power goes out. It takes a bit of strategizing each day before we start the transferring and hoyering process. He sits or lays for 24 hours a day without moving anything but his head.

Rick depends on us for his food (feeding tube feeding) and for a couple of teaspoonfuls of reg food every once and awhile as a treat, his 1/2 cup of morning coffee, meds, his complete toileting, even steering his wheelchair now, positioning him, scratching an itch, reading to him, changing channels now on the tv as the sip and puff is no longer useful, everything he needs he is at the complete mercy of whoever is his caregiver for the hour is. We are his hands and feet! I am so proud of him! As our doctor told me...."He is a brave man!!!!" Thanks for keeping us both in your prayers especially during this more bumpy part of the journey!