ALS: The Death of Hope

February 2020
Paul and Paulette
If I could pull back life’s curtain-
I am certain;
I would have been there for you more often.
I would have been more attentive and not so proud.
I would have been a better friend, a better namesake.
For sisters and brothers are like celestial stars;
sometimes bright sometimes dim;
but always there.
Though I can say with certainty
my familia love for you
has never waivered,
 I feel such sadness and despair for not being there.
ALS and busy lives made that happen, didn’t it?
I am so sorry my courageous brother.
Forgive me.
                                                       ♥p.o.martig

Why, Why, Why?

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)  is a rare progressive nervous system disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord, causing loss of muscle control.(¹)  My brother Paul was diagnosed with ALS in January of 2019, without knowing why, when or how it started?  ALS is a medical enigma.  There is no hope, no cure, no rainbow at days end; just pain, misery and pre-ordained death.

While I have researched the question of why ALS extensively, I’ve come to believe in a simplistic premise: ALS festers in slow motion when one or more life-threatening events occur. When Paul was in high school he played football and injured his back.  When Paul was a firefighter in his early twenties, he fell through a roof and injured his back once again.  These two specific traumas, I believe, were the seeds planted for ALS to slowly manifest itself in his spinal cord.  Over the years, Paul has endured back surgeries, rehab, canes, and blood clots of the leg and lung culminating last year with an unsustainable weakness of his limbs and an ALS diagnosis at age 69.  Disease doesn’t just happen with the turn of a switch; it evolves, it multiplies, it destroys.

Approximately 2 out of 100,000 population are diagnosed with this rare disease.(²)  There are no cures or miraculous scientific studies promising a cure at this time, nothing but a slow agonizing death for its victims who have approximately 2 to 5 years to live depending on the study.

Noone should ever have to endure the pain or humiliation of a body slowly and methodically killing itself.  When breathing, movement, speech, swallowing and eating start to fail, atrophy takes over.  Gradually most people with ALS die from respiratory failure, which is the case with my brother.  He is now on a ventilator and cannot breath more than a few minutes without its assistance. As of February 2020, my brother has about 8 weeks left on this earth.

The symptoms of ALS may begin with stiff muscles, twitching, general weakness in arms and legs or difficulty in swallowing or speaking.  Erratic behavior may occur within the whirlwind of these symptoms.  Only 5-10% are believed to inherit the disease and approximately 90% of the cases have no known cause depending on the study.  ALS usually affects those from 40 to late 60’s and around 50 if inherited. (¹)

The only solace available to ALS patients is through life sustaining respiratory treatment, rehab, feeding tubes, state of the art wheelchairs and an abundance of family love and support. (³) This my brother has in abundance along with his unwavering faith in God and a better world after death.

Please see the tale of my brothers fight with ALS at Paul Dannels/ Caring Bridge, a site for grieving people writing through the prism of love and fellowship.*

“Of all the ways to lose a person, death is the kindest.” -Ralph Waldo Emerson

*As of 8 pm 3/14/20, my brave and courageous brother passed away and is now in the arms of his beloved.

Just prior to losing his ability to communicate through his keyboard, Paul, prophetically wrote, “You know I have given my life to God and if feels really good.”  What an amazing human being just left our world. 

References

(1) http://www.alsa.org/about-als/facts-you-should-know.html

(²)http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis/symptoms-causes/syc-20354022

(³)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atrophy

 

7 Comments

  1. Gloria Cawlfield said:

    Thank you Paulette for posting such a touching tribute to our brother. I do think you have spoken for all of us. ALS is such a horrible disease and our brother is facing it with such bravery. Truly, he is an example of what it means to be “humble and kind.”

    March 7, 2020
    Reply
  2. Janet Herrala said:

    Polly – a truly touching tribute to your brother, Paul. Having known all of you since our high school days I remember Paul as always having a smile on his face and and a winning personality. So glad his faith in God has sustained him through this terrible fight for life.

    March 27, 2020
    Reply
  3. Cathy Bissett said:

    My dearest friend,
    I cannot imagine losing my own brother. I cannot imagine you losing yours. It is at the stone wall of failure of imagination that I stand with my head bowed and weep for your loss. I love you.
    cb

    March 28, 2020
    Reply
  4. frankciampitt said:

    i never knew him but he seemed to be the best i am at the 3 year mark and i was passed around like a foot ball the time me and my wife wasted no one has done nothing for us i was always the one that would help everyone i went throu every pain ful tests just got married in 2019 nov and its been down hill its new years eve 2022 and i dont think im going to make it a few more days no one cares because of money there is no cure

    December 31, 2022
    Reply
  5. Julie Hilditch said:

    I stopped most of my ALS medications due to severe side effects and I started on ALS herbal treatments from Natural Herbs Center (Visit natural herbs centre ), the treatment has made a very huge difference for me. My symptoms including weakness, difficulty swallowing and slurred speech disappeared after few months on the treatment. I am getting active again since starting this treatment.

    October 16, 2023
    Reply
  6. Meyer Odette said:

    I am a CALS of my 68 year old Husband who suffered from muscle tiredness brought on by chronic fatigue in its early stages. Neurologists first had difficulty diagnosing it until multiple examinations indicated ALS, for which there was no known cure other than the prescription of riluzole medications, vitamins, and therapies. More advancements in breathing difficulties, difficulty pronouncing words, and difficulties eating occurred before we made the decision to try different medications, which significantly enhanced his condition. He received treatment for ALS/MND at vinehealthcentre. com from the U.S approximately four months ago; since then, he has stopped using a feeding tube, sleeps well, works out frequently, and has become very active. Although it doesn’t cure his ALS, it has improved his quality of life. .

    September 5, 2024
    Reply
  7. Hopefully, by next year, even more discoveries will be made to help steer ALS patients to a better future. Thanks for your enlightening comment.

    November 12, 2024
    Reply

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