Directions
38 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Directions , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
38 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Nothing is more exciting than a road trip: planning where to go, what to see, what to do, and how to get there. Inevitably the journey presents hazards and roadblocks on the way to the ideal destination. How do you deal with those?

Directions invites you to ride along on the continuing journey that Randy started in unDiagnosed. Better buckle up, though; the road presents many challenges and detours. You'll get a back seat view of the twists and turns on his inspiring journey in coping with MS: the physical and mental ups and downs, career changes, even a new addition to the Beal family!

But don't expect to stay a passenger for too long. Randy's story will challenge you to reevaluate your own path and reinvent your own journey. It's a trip worth taking.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 27 décembre 2015
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780985058760
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0100€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Copyright © 2015 by Randy Beal
All rights reserved
 
Published in eBook format by The Route Group
Converted by http://www.eBookIt.com
 
ISBN 978-0-9850587-6-0
 
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage
and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote
short excerpts in a review.

This book is dedicated to Aunt Sandy.
I can't thank you enough for supporting my dreams.
THANK YOU!
Acknowledgments
Connie, thanks for everything in helping us to have a child. My therapists and drivers, thank you for getting me to therapy and teaching me some new workouts and workarounds. All my friends and family, thanks for accepting me as I am now and making me feel kind of normal.
 
A Path
I've been working on the railroad . . .
 
Or at least I used to. It was a family business, so I grew into it slowly. My dad was a machinist for as long as I could remember, managing a plant that re-manufactured railroad parts. He started me out mowing the front lawn, and I would come in and talk to the shop guys during coffee breaks. By the time I was in high school, my dad had bought his own refurbishing business and I started part-time while I finished my senior year. One week after graduating from high school, I was working there full time. Before long I fell into a comfortable rhythm of faking my way through the ins and outs of helping to run a small family business. Managing payroll, taking customer service calls, keeping the shop guys in line: all this fell to me in some form or another, and I pretended to know what I was doing. "Fake it 'til you make it," I would say.
 
When my dad passed away, things became even more real for me. I had to step up my game and take on more responsibility. I was the man of the house now. I could do this. I had to do this to make my dad proud. So I settled back into a regular routine of splitting my time between the office and the shop, trying to pick up the slack, and trying to grow a new part of the business. Everything was moving along just swimmingly. It wasn't necessarily my dream job. I often thought there was something missing. But it was comfortable.
 
Two letters changed everything: MS.
 
You can read about my journey through illness in my first book, unDIAGNOSED. I gradually found myself in a place where my declining health stripped me first of the ability to walk, then of the power to work. It was debilitating. It was humiliating. It was devastating.
 
But I couldn't stay in that desolate place. I had to do something. My sister and I started documenting the illness, at first just to make sense of all the medical hurdles on the road to a diagnosis of my condition. Soon it became more than that. I felt there was a story here that needed to be told, that could help someone else who might be going through something like this.
 
So I started writing. There were many challenges, not the least of which being that I had no idea what I was doing. I never let that stop me. The "fake it 'til you make it" mantra rang in my head. There were plenty of challenges presented by MS. It was a long road, but with support along the way from family and friends, a new me emerged at the end of the tunnel. Randy, the author. I never would have thought I would call myself that ten years prior. (Nor would my poor, poor English teachers through the years!)
 
I had reinvented myself.
 
Or so I thought.
 
The thing is, once wasn't enough. And twice wasn't enough. I wish I could say it were, but over the years I discovered I had to reinvent myself in numerous areas, multiple times, continuously.
 
As I dove into the topic of reinvention, I discovered a lot of existing material already out there. It was almost overwhelming.
 
This is not a self-help book to add to the collection. I will not be giving you step by step guidance on how to reinvent yourself.
 
But this is an honest account of my journey of reinvention. Everyone has a path to travel and a story to tell. I hope your path is made clearer by having travelled mine.
Here We Go
It wasn't a deep conversation. It might have gone something like this if I put it in play format.
 
Husband: Hey, babe, let's have a kid.
 
Wife: (sarcastically) Right. Because you're not kid enough for me to take care of.
 
Husband: You know you want to. We owe it to the world to pass on our particular brand of crazy.
 
Wife: Well all right then. You know this won't be easy. You sure you want to put up with a hormonal version of me?
 
Husband: Good point. Let's just go to the pound and rescue a dog.
 
(He pauses dramatically to wait for her reaction. She shrugs.)
 
Husband: OK, OK. You win. Yes, I'm up for the challenge. Bring on the Mom-zilla. I promise I'll be a good boy.
 
Wife: OK, let's do this.
 
[End scene]
 
If you think this sounds like Jake and Rachel from my second book, A Family Thing, you're right. Those characters were loosely based on me and my wife and they were dealing with, among other things, the upcoming birth of a child. When Emily and I discussed having a child, it wasn't a very deep discussion either, but it was far from the playful banter of the couple above.
 
We knew it was going to be a challenge.
 
First of all, I was a big part of the challenge. I need a lot of attention with all my physical limitations. I'm like a second kid myself. Sometimes a third kid. That's a lot for Emily to shoulder alone. I didn't want to put her through all that if she wasn't up for it.
 
I had mountains of doubts about whether I was up for it too. My mind zoomed ahead to when my child would be older. Would the kid be embarrassed that I was in a wheelchair, that I talk funny and move awkwardly? If we had a girl, I'd never be able to take her to a daddy-daughter dance. If we had a boy, I would never be able to play a simple game of catch with him. Physically I couldn't be there the way I wanted to.
 
Emily and I are always up for a challenge. We didn't know what was ahead but we wanted to face the future hand in hand and with a tiny hand latching on to ours. So we decided to go for it.
 
The first thing was to find an IVF doctor. Friends of ours recommended a guy to us and my urologist seconded, so we set up an appointment with Dr. Sommer. He ordered up a battery of tests to determine if we could conceive. For Emily, it was a straightforward test to make sure her eggs were healthy. For me, like everything else, it was more difficult. Let's just say I'm a pain in the butt! We had to have a specialty urologist do a sperm extraction surgery. Thankfully, I was out for that so I won't be able to give you a detailed account of what was going on with my junk. I know some of you are disappointed.
 
An agonizing week later we met with Dr. Sommer to go over the results. He was a pretty straight shooter, unlike my sperm, which was apparently dead. I'm not sure I remember much else after he told us this. I was calm on the surface but really distraught at yet another hurdle in my already rocky road. I do remember him saying that the only real option for us to conceive was via a sperm donor. I did not want to hear this.
 
We had decided to have a child and I was still determined to do so. And if we conceived via a sperm donor, I would still love the heck out of that kid. But I wasn't ready to let go of the idea that we could have a child who was part Emily and part me-a true blend of both of us. Again my mind fast-forwarded to an imaginary future in which my son or daughter was old enough that I could tell them my story. This is the story I told in unDIAGNOSED about how I never gave up in my search for an answer to what was happening to me. I struggled for years with various theories and treatments and even went to Mayo Clinic to get my answer. I didn't leave any stone unturned. How could I then look my kid in the eye and tell them I did any less for them? No. I wasn't going to accept the first answer at face value. Life had taught me to take a second look.
 
I told Dr. Sommer's assistant I wanted to see if there was something-anything-we could do to work around this. She understood me and promised to do her due diligence. Within days she called me with a great opportunity; she had found a doctor in Chicago who specialized in fertilization issues: Dr. Berg. We had an appointment before long and the main thing I remember is that his office was very close to a fancy cupcake shop. Chalk it up to my long history of interactions with doctors over the years. I guess I was sort of skeptical. Dr. Berg ran some blood tests and was pretty confident he could help me. I would have to take several months worth of a medication designed to revitalize my li'l swimmers. At the end of this period, I would have another extraction surgery. This wasn't the most elegant alternative, but it was an alternative nonetheless. We went ahead with it.
 
And it paid off, eventually. About a year later, Dr. Berg happily reported that my sperm looked ready to go back to work. As we left his office, he told us he looked forward to seeing a picture of our beautiful baby. Finally, some encouragement! Armed with this news, we headed back to Dr. Sommers to match my now good sperm with Emily's good eggs.
 
On June 16, 2013, as we were about to leave to celebrate my niece Bianca's birthday, we received a call to notify us that the next day was when the embryos would be implanted. My mind raced ahead to the appointment and to all the possibilities it held.
 
"You know what date that is," Emily pointed out. "June 17th." I hadn't even caught it in my excitement. June 17th is a landmark day in Beal history. My blog entry from June 17th 2012 captures the significance of that date well.
 
This day in my life is an unforgettable day. Here’s why, in no particular order. On June 17, 2002 my father succumbed to cancer aft

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents