Shari
and Jack Bender have more in common than
just sharing a home in Phoenix, Ariz. For
one, they both had painful, career‑ending
back and neck injuries.
“On
October 16, 2000, Jack was sitting in his
car at a red light,” said Shari in a telephone
interview. “In his rear‑view mirror
he could see a plumbing truck coming toward
him. He got hit from behind at about 35
mph.”
Though
Jack felt great pain, an emergency room
doctor told him to treat it by taking Tylenol
and seeing a family physician. Doctors didn’t
learn for six months that Jack had fractured
three disks.
During
those six months, “everybody looked at Jack
and said he didn’t look injured,” said Shari.
“The rear end of his car wasn’t badly damaged,
and so people thought he couldn’t be experiencing
that much pain. The doctor thought he [was
faking injury to get] pain pills.”
Today,
48‑year‑old Jack must take a
narcotic analgesic to relieve almost constant
pain, and he likely won’t work again. A
titanium plate and screws hold his back
together.
As
for Shari: She slipped in 1987 working at
a retail store and seriously injured her
tailbone, which led to years of pain management
injections. Thankfully, her pain went away
in 1992.
“Then
in 1999, I was rear‑ended by a drunk
driver in Las Vegas,” she said. “There wasn’t
much damage to my car, so I didn’t think
anything about [my injury]. In 2004, I was
working at a charity event in St. Louis
and fell down on concrete and injured my
tailbone again.”
She
now has to use a cane, walks with a limp,
and has bone spurs in her feet.
Now
that both have nagging disabilities, some
of the Benders’ biggest challenges in life
come from people who don’t believe they
have a disability. For example, probably
because of not looking “disabled” due to
their relatively young ages and outward
appearance, the Benders, after parking in
handicapped parking spots, often receive
nasty comments.
How
do they maintain their sanity through it
all? “I get through it using laughter,”
said Shari. “Jack and I are best friends,
and we laugh about it a lot.”
The
Benders also have co‑authored “The
Waiting Room,” a practical guide to weathering
serious injury. The book covers their dealings
with government, medical professionals,
and insurance companies.
For
more, see danieljvance.com
. This column made is possible by a grant
from Blue Valley Sod, bluevalleysod.com.