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Welcome Ray

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Welcome Ray. Thanks for the introduction. Your email looks familiar,

were you here once before?

For sure use our Chat here. If you want to, set up a time you can plan

on being there, then post so others can join. Remember, we have nearly

1,400 members spread out in 29 countries and all world time zones.

I hope you find helpful and hopeful.

~ Gretchen/Founder and Moderator

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  • 3 years later...

Thank you Gretchen - I might have joined a few years ago. I had stopped going

online about CMT a few years ago in an effort to not let it consume me. At that

point, a little knowledge was not a good thing. Nowadays, I think will ne

good for me. Thanks again.

Ray

>

> Welcome Ray. Thanks for the introduction. Your email looks familiar,

> were you here once before?

>

> For sure use our Chat here. If you want to, set up a time you can plan

> on being there, then post so others can join. Remember, we have nearly

> 1,400 members spread out in 29 countries and all world time zones.

>

> I hope you find helpful and hopeful.

>

> ~ Gretchen/Founder and Moderator

>

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Ray,

most of us on here are in the same boat, aleast i am. i have CMT 1A. it is

terrible when you have no balance, i fall all the time. i do have AFO and that

does help, but they are heavy with the shoes. as for the cold feet and hands, i

just got an electic blanket to use while awake. my quilt i got on my bed is

light weight. but it is really warm at night. i can no longer work i am to much

of a risk to myself.

i started this group i think in august and it has really helped. i love the

people on here. i dont read all the emails. but most of them. they have helped

alot.

i did apply for ssdi in sept and i did get approval a couple of weeks ago. i not

sure if you are in the same boat for that right now.

one of the things on here that got me was the 3 g's

get up

get dressed

get out.

i have been doing pt for 5 months. it has helped.

good luck to you

tina

cmt1a

michigan

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Hello Ray,

Your note has struck a resonance in me and I wanted to respond to the how

do you live with it question.

I am a 74 year old HNPP " problem " . The letters do not make much

difference because the variability between individuals of these

peripheral neuropathies range from so slight that one does not know of it

and the other is crippled for life. Neuro-docs like to smile and say,

" You know it won't kill you. " Well that is a crock of B.S. as far as I'm

concerned. This genetic thing has the power to make bad situations deadly

in the area of side effects. i.e. falling off of a tall ladder or hitting

the accelerator instead of the brakes with your foot can be very deadly

indeed and how about a poor heart brought about by the lack of exercise.

Well that is all true but it only means that you have to be more

inventative in order to have a satisfactory life. That's more than is

required of " normal " people, but it is the price we pay.

Now, how do we get at this thing which should not discourage you from

having a life. It only means that we must get to know the enemy so to

speak and learn how to do what our heart desires in something different

than a normally healthy manner. Here are some of the rules.

Doctors who have not personally experienced the neuropathy know only

the averages and the phenotypes. Accept what they can give but work at

learning from people who have the disease. This is a good place for that.

Protect yourself by knowing your limits and what activities aggravate

the condition. By all means test yourself to find out, but do it like a

scientist with a limited budget. Be smart and conservative. Obvious

things are dismissed out of hand. Set a good regimen daily and keep an

eye on long term effects that advance with age. Exercise as much as you

can but don't overdo. Make a comprehensive plan to optimize what you have

and conserve it in the long run. Back off a bit as you go along as

needed. Smoking, drinking, chemical exposure, muscle overloads, obesity,

etc. are much more serious for you than a " normal " person so be well

aware and control them tightly.

Protect yourself with a mental attitude that is more carefully

constructed. Find the things that relax you or make you ward off the

blues and angers or accomplishments that make you feel good about

yourself or those things that give you respite when it's needed. In the

long term the way you run your life is the measure of what you can have

in the future. One thing is sure, your younger years are the best time to

take some chances exploring, but keep it in mind and use a diary or a

chart to prevent mistakes.

Protect yourself by carefully choosing work conditions. Maybe wanting

to be a tennis pro is not the right thing. An occupation that allows you

to vary your day's activity and give your body a chance to recover is

essential. Being on your feet as a store clerk all day is a bad choice.

Protect yourself by making use of support resources, your going to

need them! Family, friends, coworkers, doctors, faith people, altruistic

endeavors, clubs, etc. are the networking groups that will help you to

find a satisfactory life. There is a time to laugh it off and there is

time to be serious with those who surround you. In the long run this is

what everybody should do but you need to do it more specifically.

Protect yourself by taking conscious aim at your objectives in life.

Don't aim too high or too low. This is not something you can " bull " your

way through.

Fine you say, but " Tell me what exactly I should do? " Well I could write

a book about what I've done so far for myself but it would be only good

for me or my clone. Even then the world around me would be different for

another individual and another time. I guess my best advice is to think

about this as a mode of life necessarily different from the norm and very

personal. One thing I do know is that it is needed until the day you die

as it truly colors most all of life's decisions and it is a cumulative

effort that determines what you end up with, to each one of us very

personally.

EdM from NH

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Hello Ray,

I think you came to the right place, this is the place for TIPS and tips do make

the difference.

About balance get ready for a long journey, at the end you will find the support

you need (i mean the good therapist and feet support), sometimes it takes a

while, but fixing a bio-mechanical problem is a difficult task, just don't give

up and try to learn all you need.

About the emotional part i found myself that meeting people with similar disease

helps a lot. I do not have exact explanation for this, i suggest you try to go

to some meeting or see some other people with similar disease: there is a sort

of " magic " about this: many people feel a lot better.

You won't offend anyone! Take care

your freak-friend

Ron

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