“Pamela”
lives in eastern Iowa, prefers remaining anonymous,
and enjoys reading this column in the DeWitt Observer.
Over
the years, she’d had a number of physical challenges,
including osteoarthritis in her lower back and
carpal tunnel syndrome, but the spinal stenosis
doctors diagnosed her as having in 2000 was just
too much for her to handle.
“I
worked at the University of Iowa as a program
assistant for twenty years,” said Pamela in a
telephone interview. “I worked at a computer and
sat most of the day.”
After
she began having arm pain at work, doctors in
early 2000 diagnosed her with spinal stenosis
in the neck. A National Institutes of Health Web
site reports that spinal stenosis is “a narrowing
of spaces in the spine (backbone) that results
in pressure on the spinal cord and/or nerve roots.”
Doctors said she also had arthritis and bone spurs
in the neck because of the spinal stenosis.
She
said, “I remember this one day in July 2000 when
I was taking notes at the University of Iowa and
my hands just locked up. I couldn’t write. Two
weeks later, I couldn’t use my arms
because
I was in so much pain. I couldn’t use a keyboard
either because the pain was excruciating. When
I quit working, I was actually dictating to someone
who’d do my typing for me.”
One
doctor suggested up to three surgeries at the
end of which Pamela would have a fused neck. A
second doctor disagreed and prescribed potent
medication that somewhat eased the nerve pain.
She permanently chose that option. After taking
medical leave, Pamela tried returning to work
in September 2000 at age 58, but lasted only a
few hours before the pain returned.
She
said, “We always thought that maybe with time
my back would get better, and I could go back
to work because I had no intention of quitting
that young. I had planned on working to about
age 65. But it never got better.”
Work
had been such an important part of her life, and
she was confused about what to do next.
“Then
in the spring of 2001 I finally began accepting
my condition,” she said. “I told the professors
I’d worked for that I wouldn't be returning.”
After giving up that career, she eventually succeeded
in carving out another life for herself.
For
more, see danieljvance.com
. This column made is possible by a grant from
Blue Valley Sod, bluevalleysod.com.