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Dislabeled

by Philip Yancey

| 260 Comments

My memoir, Where the Light Fell, tells the saga of my older brother, in whose shadow I grew up. Marshall was blessed with an off-the-charts IQ and preternatural musical gifts, including absolute pitch and an auditory memory that enabled him to play any music he’d ever heard. Everything changed in 2009 when a stroke cut off blood flow to his brain. One day he was playing golf; two days later he lay in an ICU ward, comatose.

Philip and his brother MarshallOnly a rare type of brain surgery saved Marshall’s life, and thus began his new identity as a disabled person. In a reprise of childhood, it took him a year to learn to walk, and more years to speak sentences longer than a few words. He persevered, coping with a useless right arm and a speech condition called aphasia. Now he proudly wears a t-shirt that says “Aphasia: I know what it is…I just can’t say it.”

From my brother, I learned the challenges of disability. The vexation of being unable to get words out. The indignity of needing help with simple activities like taking a shower and getting dressed. The paranoia of knowing friends were making decisions about him behind his back. In public, strangers averted their gaze, as if he did not exist. Only children were forthright. “Mom, what’s wrong with that man?” they’d say before being shushed; bolder ones approached his wheelchair directly to ask, “Can’t you walk?”

The frustrations grew so great that Marshall researched how many Valium and Ambien pills a suicide would require, then downed them all with a quart of whiskey. His desperate attempt failed, thank God, and he ended up in a psych ward. Since then he has gradually rebuilt his life, aided by many hours of therapy, and now manages to live on his own and drive an adapted car.

A year ago, while skiing in Colorado, I gave clear instructions for my legs to turn downhill, and they disobeyed. Instead, I slammed into a tree, breaking my boot and ski and badly bruising my left calf muscle. Strange. My brain had given orders, and the legs simply ignored them.

Over the next few months, other symptoms appeared. My walking gait and posture changed. My handwriting, already small, grew even tinier and sloppier. Some nights I had mild hallucinations during sleep. I made many more mistakes while typing on a computer keyboard. My miserable golf game became even worse. I mentioned one possibility to my primary care physician, who replied, “You’re in great shape, Philip. You can’t have Parkinson’s Disease.” (Always get a second opinion.)climbing, before dislabeled

By last Fall, I was living in a time warp. Tasks such as buttoning a shirt took twice as long. I felt as if some slow-moving, uncoordinated alien had invaded my body. When other people began noticing, I knew I had to get checked out medically.

In my insurance network, no neurologist was available for six months. So I changed insurance plans to one with a wider network and leaned on a friend to arrange for an appointment in her state-of-the-art facility. Last month a neurologist confirmed a diagnosis of Parkinson’s, a degenerative disease that disrupts connections between muscles and the brain. I began a dopamine-based treatment along with physical therapy.

As I informed a few close friends, I feared that now I had acquired a new label: not just Philip but Philip-with-Parkinson’s. That’s how people would see me, think of me, and talk about me. I wanted to insist, “I’m still the same person inside, so please don’t judge me by externals such as slowness, stumbling, and occasional tremors.” In fact, I coined a new word—dislabled—in protest. I had seen others judge my brother by his cane and withered arm and shyness to speak, unaware of the complex and courageous human being who exists behind the screen of those externals.

Then, less than a week after my diagnosis, reality forced its way in. As if to prove nothing had really changed, I decided to try the new sport of Pickleball, kind of a cross between tennis and ping-pong. Within five minutes I dove for a ball, stumbled, and pitched forward. Any reflex to break my fall kicked in too late, and I landed face-first on the hard surface. Waiting in a packed emergency room for eight hours, I realized that I had undeniably joined the motley crew of injured and disabled people who visit such a place on a Wednesday night. I’m not dislabled after all.

From now on I will be making adjustments. No more leaping from boulder to boulder on one of Colorado’s 14,000-foot mountains. No more kamikaze runs on a mountain bike. Ice skating? Probably not. Definitely no more Pickleball!

In a preview of aging, disability means letting go of ordinary things that we take for granted. I shouldn’t even climb stairs without using a handrail, and walking is now my safest form of exercise—as long as I watch my feet and don’t shuffle. Just as I’ve had to slow my pace when walking alongside my brother, now others must slow their pace for me.

A friend who heard my news sent me a reference to Psalm 71, which leads with these words:

In you, Lord, I have taken refuge;
let me never be put to shame.

Although the poet wrote in very different circumstances, harassed by human enemies rather than a nerve disease, the words “let me never be put to shame” jumped out at me. Other psalms (see 25, 31, and 34) repeat the odd phrase.

A measure of shame seems to accompany disability. There is an innate shame in inconveniencing others for something that is neither your fault nor your desire. And a shame in having well-meaning friends overreact: some may treat you like a fragile antique, or complete your sentences when you pause a second to think of a word. Though still experiencing only mild symptoms, already I anticipate shame over how these may worsen: drooling, memory gaps, slurred speech, uncontrolled tremors.

Shame can sometimes goad to action. After my diagnosis, six friends wrote that they had observed something unsound about me, but didn’t mention it. Only two risked being as blatantly honest as a child. During a restaurant dinner one said to me, “Have you got the slows, Philip?”—earning a look of reproof from his wife. Another, more blunt, asked, “Why are you walking like a decrepit old man?” Those two comments spurred me to intensify my search for a neurologist.

“Do not cast me away when I am old; do not forsake me when my strength is gone,” Psalm 71 adds. That prayer expresses the silent plea of all disabled persons, a group that now includes me. The CDC calculates that 26 percent of the U.S. population qualifies as disabled. Now that I have joined them, I try to look past the externals—as I do instinctively with my brother—to the person inside.

In the first month of my own acknowledged disability, I have become more self-conscious, which can be both good and bad. I do need to pay close attention to my body and my moods, especially as I adapt to medication and learn my physical limitations. Yet I don’t want to obsess over one part of my life, letting a disease define me. Warning sign: the other day I opened a newsletter and mistakenly read Daily Medication instead of Daily Meditation.

Time magazine recently ran an who has written a book on “Disability Pride.” A newly vocal generation wears the disabled label as a badge of honor. Members of the deaf community, for example, scorn such euphemisms as “hearing impaired” and refuse medical procedures that might restore their hearing.

In contrast, I admit I would be delighted to have Parkinson’s magically removed from my life. I would hold a pill bonfire, cancel my order for a cane, and dust off my climbing gear. However, I don’t have that option, and perhaps the disability activists are simply focusing on accepting the reality that some things can’t be changed.

Although I still cringe at the awkward euphemism “differently abled,” I understand it better now. The phrase points to the fact that life is patently unfair and people are unequal in their abilities. My brother played piano concertos while I was struggling to master scales. Compared to Tom Brady or Venus Williams, we’re all athletically disabled. And, though Parkinson’s may eliminate some of my favorite physical activities, I can enjoy others that a quadriplegic person may envy.

No two human beings have exactly the same set of abilities, privilege, intelligence, appearance, and family backgrounds. We can respond to that inequity with resentment— or somehow learn to embrace the gifts and “disabilities” unique to ourselves.

In my writing career I have interviewed U.S. presidents, rock stars, professional athletes, actors, and other celebrities. I have also profiled leprosy patients in India, pastors imprisoned for their faith in China, women rescued from sexual trafficking, parents of children with rare genetic disorders, and many who suffer from diseases more debilitating than Parkinson’s. As I reflect on the two groups, here’s what stands out: with some exceptions, those who live with pain and failure tend to be better stewards of their life circumstances than those who live with success and pleasure. Pain redeemed impresses me more than pain removed.

This latest twist in my life involves a disease that could prove incapacitating or perhaps a mere inconvenience; Parkinson’s has a wide spectrum of manifestations. How should I prepare? I was blessed to know Michael Gerson, a New York Times columnist and White House speech-writer who lived with Parkinson’s for years before succumbing to cancer. A colleague said of him, “At the peak of his career, he used his influence to care for the most vulnerable, spearheading the campaign to address AIDS in Africa. When he was at his lowest point physically, he never complained but focused on gratitude for the life he had lived.”

Dislabeled with Parkinson’s DiseaseThat is my prayerful goal. After a bumpy childhood, I’ve had a rich, full, and wonderful life with more pleasure and fulfillment than I ever dreamed or deserved. I have an omni-competent wife of 52 years who takes my health and well-being as a personal challenge. Sixteen years ago, when I lay strapped to a backboard with a broken neck after an auto accident, Janet drove through a blizzard to retrieve me. Already she was mentally re-designing our house in case she needed to prepare for life with a paralytic. She shows that same selfless, fierce loyalty now, even as she faces the potentially demanding role of caregiver.

My future is full of question marks, and I’m not unduly anxious. I have excellent medical care and support from friends. I trust a good and loving God who often chooses to reveal those qualities through his followers on earth. I have written many words on suffering, and now am being called to put them into practice. May I be a faithful steward of this latest chapter.

 

 

 

 

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Discussion

  1. Tobie Avatar
    Tobie

    Reading your post, I was reminded of Jill Bolte Taylor’s My Stroke of Insight, one of the most fascinating memoirs I have ever read. Who could possibly be more qualified to be at the receiving end of a massive stroke, experience the loss of a brilliant mind, write a riveting account of a gruelling recovery over an eight-year period, and, in the process, impact the lives of millions of stroke sufferers worldwide, than a Harvard trained neuroanatomist? What seemed like a cruel trick of fate (why her of all people?) turned out to be a triumph. The reason is that Bolte used the last fragments of her shattered awareness to keep on reminding herself that she had been granted “the research opportunity of a lifetime”. Reflecting on this remarkable book, I was reminded of another who approached the great existential crisis and philosophical obsession of humanity – death – not by constructing an elaborate theory but by entering into the experience. This is the way of the cross, it seems. As Paul explains, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. For as we share abundantly in Christ’s sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too. If we are afflicted, it is for your comfort and salvation; and if we are comforted, it is for your comfort…” I have a shelve filled with your books, well-read and note-scribbled, and I have recommended Where Is God When It Hurts? more times than I can remember. Yet, for me this post carries a weight and authenticity that transcend all of the information in those books (and I love all of them). Perhaps, like Samson, your greatest contribution to the work of God will take place when you are at your weakest.

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      I’ve read Bolte’s book, and agree with you. It gave an inside look at what my brother experienced with his stroke.

  2. Jono Avatar
    Jono

    Dear Philip
    Thankyou for your powerful post and im sorry to read about your diagnosis.
    Its hard to hold on and stay faithful when tough things happen and you write about that so powerfully. Like so many others im just an ordinary guy, a pastor as it happens who gets stuff wrong and struggles to lead a congregation but voices like yours that are so honest and authentic really help guys like me so i’ll be remembering you at our weekly wednesday communion tomorrow and i hope you know how greatly you are loved and admired around the world. Thanks for helping me so much through your writing. Jono

  3. Curt Pegram Avatar
    Curt Pegram

    Philip: My younger sisters and I walked with our father over the 20-year course of his Parkinson’s experience, as nurses and devoted children, along with my brother-in-law, who loved him like his own dad.

    I retired after 30 years in medical-surgical nursing last year because of degenerative changes to my spine from injuries and aging, many hours of flight time, high mileage and a sometimes sketchy maintenance record in an active lifestyle. I feel the pangs of empathy for you as you face yet another mountain rising into the clouds ahead of you and your wife.

    There is little doubt in my estimation that you will both summit with grace and all joyfulness. I have remembered Billy and Ruth Graham as I write this. Never underestimate the reach and impact of your calling and ministry, my brother. Your influence upon my life continues even now after my first encounter with your work in 1997.

    I am eternally grateful.

    Be strong and of good courage, my brother and sister.

    Every Grace and Joy to You and Yours in Christ Jesus, With Love, Respect and Great Appreciation,

    Curt Pegram, Henderson, NC

  4. Pauline Swindells Avatar
    Pauline Swindells

    Thank you as always for your honesty, I’m sad that you are facing this. There are many times when we’re not sure what God is doing when we struggle with health & other issues.
    9 Years a go I was diagnosed with a rare condition called Cushing,s Disease caused by a pituitary tumour, following surgery I developed Adrenal Insufficiency, another rare condition which can be life threatening necessitating the need to carry an emergency injection of steroids.
    Like you I was very fit, enjoying walking my dogs for an hour each day, hill walking & swimming a mile front crawl, I now have to use a stick or a mobility scooter to get around, due to this condition & also psoriatic & inflammatory osteoarthritis – life has changed.
    There is a silver lining though, there were no support groups in the UK for this condition only in the US where your health care system is so different to ours. We’ve now grown to 1900 members in 6 years, helping members in the diagnostic process & supporting them following surgery. If I’d regained my health I wouldn’t have been able to do this, due to my lack of mobility I spend a lot of time on my laptop. It’s wonderful to hear how the group has helped others & although I would love better health God has provided me with another way to reach out to others. I could extend this to other situations I have been in due to my health where I have been able to help others going through a tough time.
    God is good – all of the time.
    Go well Philip with every blessing.

  5. Michelle Scott Avatar
    Michelle Scott

    Thanks for sharing. I know this comment will seem out of the blue but have you been vaccinated or boosted for COVID. The vaccine has a lot of neurological injuries associated with it. Not just the myocarditis, pericarditis and sudden death that you see with athletes. If you had the vaccine and especially boosted recommend try treating for vaccine injury.

    God BLess

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260 thoughts on “Dislabeled”

  1. Reading your post, I was reminded of Jill Bolte Taylor’s My Stroke of Insight, one of the most fascinating memoirs I have ever read. Who could possibly be more qualified to be at the receiving end of a massive stroke, experience the loss of a brilliant mind, write a riveting account of a gruelling recovery over an eight-year period, and, in the process, impact the lives of millions of stroke sufferers worldwide, than a Harvard trained neuroanatomist? What seemed like a cruel trick of fate (why her of all people?) turned out to be a triumph. The reason is that Bolte used the last fragments of her shattered awareness to keep on reminding herself that she had been granted “the research opportunity of a lifetime”. Reflecting on this remarkable book, I was reminded of another who approached the great existential crisis and philosophical obsession of humanity – death – not by constructing an elaborate theory but by entering into the experience. This is the way of the cross, it seems. As Paul explains, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. For as we share abundantly in Christ’s sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too. If we are afflicted, it is for your comfort and salvation; and if we are comforted, it is for your comfort…” I have a shelve filled with your books, well-read and note-scribbled, and I have recommended Where Is God When It Hurts? more times than I can remember. Yet, for me this post carries a weight and authenticity that transcend all of the information in those books (and I love all of them). Perhaps, like Samson, your greatest contribution to the work of God will take place when you are at your weakest.

    Reply
  2. Dear Philip
    Thankyou for your powerful post and im sorry to read about your diagnosis.
    Its hard to hold on and stay faithful when tough things happen and you write about that so powerfully. Like so many others im just an ordinary guy, a pastor as it happens who gets stuff wrong and struggles to lead a congregation but voices like yours that are so honest and authentic really help guys like me so i’ll be remembering you at our weekly wednesday communion tomorrow and i hope you know how greatly you are loved and admired around the world. Thanks for helping me so much through your writing. Jono

    Reply
  3. Philip: My younger sisters and I walked with our father over the 20-year course of his Parkinson’s experience, as nurses and devoted children, along with my brother-in-law, who loved him like his own dad.

    I retired after 30 years in medical-surgical nursing last year because of degenerative changes to my spine from injuries and aging, many hours of flight time, high mileage and a sometimes sketchy maintenance record in an active lifestyle. I feel the pangs of empathy for you as you face yet another mountain rising into the clouds ahead of you and your wife.

    There is little doubt in my estimation that you will both summit with grace and all joyfulness. I have remembered Billy and Ruth Graham as I write this. Never underestimate the reach and impact of your calling and ministry, my brother. Your influence upon my life continues even now after my first encounter with your work in 1997.

    I am eternally grateful.

    Be strong and of good courage, my brother and sister.

    Every Grace and Joy to You and Yours in Christ Jesus, With Love, Respect and Great Appreciation,

    Curt Pegram, Henderson, NC

    Reply
  4. Thank you as always for your honesty, I’m sad that you are facing this. There are many times when we’re not sure what God is doing when we struggle with health & other issues.
    9 Years a go I was diagnosed with a rare condition called Cushing,s Disease caused by a pituitary tumour, following surgery I developed Adrenal Insufficiency, another rare condition which can be life threatening necessitating the need to carry an emergency injection of steroids.
    Like you I was very fit, enjoying walking my dogs for an hour each day, hill walking & swimming a mile front crawl, I now have to use a stick or a mobility scooter to get around, due to this condition & also psoriatic & inflammatory osteoarthritis – life has changed.
    There is a silver lining though, there were no support groups in the UK for this condition only in the US where your health care system is so different to ours. We’ve now grown to 1900 members in 6 years, helping members in the diagnostic process & supporting them following surgery. If I’d regained my health I wouldn’t have been able to do this, due to my lack of mobility I spend a lot of time on my laptop. It’s wonderful to hear how the group has helped others & although I would love better health God has provided me with another way to reach out to others. I could extend this to other situations I have been in due to my health where I have been able to help others going through a tough time.
    God is good – all of the time.
    Go well Philip with every blessing.

    Reply
  5. Thanks for sharing. I know this comment will seem out of the blue but have you been vaccinated or boosted for COVID. The vaccine has a lot of neurological injuries associated with it. Not just the myocarditis, pericarditis and sudden death that you see with athletes. If you had the vaccine and especially boosted recommend try treating for vaccine injury.

    God BLess

    Reply

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