Becky
Felton reads this column in the Ord
Quiz, of Ord, Nebraska. In 2001, her
experience with a disability began when
she injured a shoulder after tripping
over her dog. Though the soft‑tissue
injury seemed to fully heal after four
months, her doctor nonetheless proceeded
with corrective surgery. The
relatively simple operation didn't go
as expected, and would negatively affect
her for life.
“I
graduated from nursing school in 1995,”
said 52‑year‑old Felton
in a telephone interview. “I had driven
every day 140 miles roundtrip to attend
nursing school because I wanted to be
a nurse that badly. Then I was a registered
nurse for seven years, and was even
Nurse of the Year one of them. Immediately
after the operation (in 2002) I realized
I couldn't be a nurse anymore because
I couldn't move my arm at all.”
After
the operation she learned she suddenly
had permanent nerve damage in her left
arm along with considerable shoulder
pain that exists even today. As for
the nerve damage, she says doctors can
“stick needles on the outside of the
arm up to the shoulder” and she can
barely feel a thing. Like many people
would have, she was asking the question,
“Why me?”
Felton
traveled the U.S. searching for a doctor
to fix her shoulder and resurrec her
beloved nursing career. At one clinic,
which Felton considered the nation's
best, doctors said they could do nothing
other than offer pain pills and physical
therapy. “It was a long car ride home
from there,” she said. “I cried the
whole way. I went out there thinking
they could fix it.”
Besides
being a nurse, she can't water ski
or play golf with her husband anymore.
Her left shoulder dislocates regularly,
and many nights to control pain she
sleeps in a reclining chair. She depends
on her husband to comb her hair, tie
her shoes, and put on her clothes.
In
order to keep her nursing license, which
she greatly values, she took on a part‑time
position as a certified parish nurse
for her Catholic church. In that position,
she now prays with parishioners, reviews
medical tests, does informal counseling
and prepares people for surgery. Though
nothing like her former occupation,
being a volunteer nurse has been fairly
satisfying.
She
added, “I get through it all because
of strong family relationships, friends
and faith.”
For
more, see danieljvance.com
. This column made is possible by a grant
from Blue Valley Sod, bluevalleysod.com.