Just keep wheeling


13 July 2021

For some people newly diagnosed with MS, one of the first questions might be, 'Will I eventually need to use a wheelchair?' In a guest blog, Emily, also known as The Wibbly Dinosaur, discusses her feelings on mobility aids and how using a wheelchair provides her with the freedom to continue doing the things she enjoys.

The first time I used a wheelchair was in an airport. We'd just landed in San Francisco and were greeted by a smartly dressed porter and an oversized 'chair. I felt like a hobbit as I clambered onto the seat, which could easily have accommodated both myself and my husband. The relief of finally being off the plane was boosted by the joy of whizzing effortlessly along the vast walkways and past the long, winding queues at Passport Control, as if I were royalty. Ten years on from this first experience, and many borrowed and owned wheelchairs later, the novelty has worn off somewhat, but the overwhelming sense of relief has not.

It had taken me a long time to even accept that I needed to use crutches.

My legs took the brunt of my MS right from the start, running soon became an impossibility and walking - an agonising nightmare. Being active was one of the most important things to me and remains my biggest loss. However, things did improve for a while after my diagnosis in 2010. I was treated to the wonder drug, Tysabri, which calmed my MS down enough to enable me to walk short distances, sometimes with a stick, sometimes without.  

It had taken me a long time to even accept that I needed to use crutches. I didn't want to look 'disabled', I didn't want to be different, I just wanted to be 'normal'. I was far happier to cling onto rails, fall against walls and crawl stubbornly along the floor than I was to concede that a walking aid would help. I must have looked anything but normal in those denial filled days!

Over the past couple of years my spinal cord has taken a bit of a battering and walking has once again become unbearable. One of my nurses gently nudged me towards my local Re-Enablement Centre and I was blown away by the care and support I received there. Within weeks I had my very own made-to-measure, swanky new wheelchair and the difference it has made to my life is phenomenal. Everywhere I go I have a seat!  No more sitting on the floor in queues, no more desperate and fruitless searching for an empty bench and, most importantly, no more missing out on fun! I can spend longer with my children at the park, I can enjoy a full day out shopping, I can join in on family 'walks'.  

Why the heck didn't I get one sooner?

Looking back, I'm not at all surprised by my own reluctance to embrace such things. Using any kind of mobility aid takes a lot of courage. For many, disability is still a taboo subject, and I think I was a tad bit embarrassed by my MS and more than a tad bit scared. Using a stick, or indeed a wheelchair or scooter, transforms this so-called invisible illness into something very visible, and I wasn't ready for that.

I'm sure most MSers have worried about being 'stuck' in a wheelchair, or of being 'wheelchair bound', but as an official wheelchair user, I no longer see it like this.

Now that I have my very own wheelchair, I think nothing of it. I happily hop (unsteadily) in and out of it and share it with my three children, who love to have a 'go' in it. It has become a normal part of our lives and I wouldn't be without it.

There are so many negative connotations associated with wheelchairs and scooters. I'm sure most MSers have worried about being 'stuck' in a wheelchair, or of being 'wheelchair bound', but as an official wheelchair user, I no longer see it like this. Using a wheelchair has not taken away my life. Rather, it has given me my life back.

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