132 Acknowledge, accept, release and let go

Yesterday on Facebook memories, this picture popped up and gave me a huge emotional jolt.  It was taken in August 2016 on holiday on the Greek island of Santorini.  It was a wonderful holiday … such a beautiful place, lovely fellow travellers and it was also the last time I felt truly “well”. 


I’d had two MS relapses by this point and had fully recovered each time.  At this time I was diagnosed as having had two episodes of Clinically Isolated Syndrome (CIS) and advised that a further episode was very unlikely.  I’m not sure how two episodes can be defined as “isolated” and it doesn’t seem to fit with the information available online. 

MS Trust: Clinically Isolated Syndrome (CIS)

At this time I was also at a point in my life when I finally felt things were going well in terms of my career and income.  Back in 2002, I had become a single parent, following an unhappy marriage and very messy divorce.  A few years later, I stepped back from teaching for less well paid jobs in order to have more time for my children (at this time I felt I had to be mother, father and grandparents to my kids, which didn’t fit well with working up to 60-70 hours each week as a teacher). This was the right decision for us and I have no regrets about doing it, but it left us rather short of money for quite some time.  

By 2015, my children were both adults and well on their way to independence, so I’d gone back into teaching, working in a local authority team supporting the education of children in care.  It was my dream job!  My experience in the classroom and in child protection was put to good use, I was with a wonderful team of colleagues and I was back on a progressive career path.

My holiday in Santorini in August 2016 was one of the first proper holidays I had been on in years.  I was feeling good, loving life and feeling confident about the future.  

At the top of Nea Kameni, Santorini Caldera


A few weeks after my holiday, I had my third major relapse and have never fully recovered.  This led to further investigations, MRI scans, lumbar puncture and eventually a diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis.  I’ve had a continual increase in symptoms ever since, with new brain lesions identified at each MRI scan.  My next scan is in September of this year … please send positive vibes, in the hope that there is nothing new found.  I need this disease to stop and to leave me alone to live the best I can, where things are now.  

In 2017, I was doing reasonably ok in terms of mobility and moved to my current home, which I expected to be my forever home, in the Summer of that year.  At last my life was settled … perfect job, happy home, kids doing great and I was earning enough to afford the odd holiday. 

Then it all came crashing down.  Three years on, I now find work an increasing struggle and have had to reduce my hours and miss out on promotion.  I live in constant fear of falling down my stairs and no longer even try to get things from the cellar.  My house is going up for sale again soon and I’m heartbroken.  But I need to live safely and try to find a way to manage, if I need to cut my hours further.  

I’ve had counselling recently, which has helped me to see that I need to allow time for myself to grieve and mourn for all that I’ve lost, as I’ve mostly not allowed myself to do this.  Then I need to accept things and move on.  I’m a naturally positive and cheerful person, but in some situations this doesn’t help … I think my positive, ”just keep swimming” approach has got in the way of me being able to mentally process everything. 


I’m still doing daily yoga (except on those exceptionally hot and humid days we’ve had recently) and finding this a huge help mentally and physically.  My current mantra is …


I’ve managed to see a few friends recently, which has really lifted my spirits, but as the threat of a second wave of COVID 19 increases, I am starting to be more careful again and I don’t think it’ll be long before I’m back in lockdown, even if the government isn’t saying we should.

I hope you are all staying as safe and positive as you can, while all this is going on around us ❤️

131 My current thoughts about HSCT

This is going to be one of those posts where I throw a load of my thoughts on to the screen, in the hope that I can make some sense of them.  So, if that’s not your thing – click away now!

As you all know, I was meant to be travelling to Russia on 16th March for HSCT (Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant) … hours of research, numerous discussions with family and friends and huge fundraising efforts had led to this point.  Provisions were purchased, the house was disinfected, visas were obtained, plans put in place for my return, flights were booked and I was all ready to go.  Then along came COVID 19 and everything changed.  With just 4 days to go, my trip to Russia was cancelled and ten days after that, the UK began lockdown. 

Before COVID, I was feeling incredibly positive, full of determination and confident in my decision.  Four months on, I am struggling to connect to those feelings and now find the thought of doing this really frightening. 

Initially, I was keen to get my treatment back on track as soon as possible, but as the full impact of the pandemic unfolded, my thoughts on this began to change.  There was talk of the clinic reopening in July and this has now been put back to at least September, but I wouldn’t feel at all safe going that soon. The Russian borders remain closed and their COVID infection rate is rumoured to be high.

If things had gone ahead as planned, I would be 3 months post transplant now … past the most dangerous, low immune system, phase, hopefully starting to recover, reconnecting with friends, getting back to work and seeing my hair beginning to return.  I was so ready to take this on … but now totally dread that this is all still ahead of me.

Like all of us, I have spent the last few months in lockdown and have experienced a mixture of emotions.  I’m a sociable person, so have struggled without daily contact with others and with not see my friends and family.  I’ve also been unwell during this time, so it’s been quite a challenge.  Maybe this was a glimpse of how life might be in the first weeks and months after HSCT?  Would I want to put myself through that again? Maybe I feel that way because we’re not out of it yet and I’m still missing my old life? ??‍♀️

Before COVID I also felt confident about keeping my house clean and sanitised and about all the extra measures needed to keep infection risk to a minimum during the early weeks and months after treatment, whilst the new immune system is developing.  Now I am super anxious about germs everywhere!  

In my mind, my treatment has been put back until COVID has gone and who knows when that might be?!

In the meantime, all the other worries that keep me awake at night continue to haunt me … Can I really manage to carry on working?  If only I could afford to reduce my hours. Should I move house? Will my steep stairs kill me?!

These are issues I planned to think about after HSCT, but with the delay, I’m being forced to think about them now 

I always feel it’s a bad idea to make important decisions while you have “stuff” going on.  With the COVID pandemic, we all have stuff going on and we are likely to be in this situation for quite some time.  How can I decide what to do??

I’ve been having some counselling (by telephone) over the last few weeks and through that I have realised that I’ve never really come to terms with my diagnosis and carry a lot of shame and guilt associated with it.  Counselling has been really helpful and I am grateful that my employer has funded this for me.  I am now back at work (from home) on a phased return, something I felt was impossible just a few weeks ago. 

The view from my home working desk

So dear friends, if you have any words of wisdom to help me deal with the whirring thoughts in my head , do let me know!

I don’t want anyone to be too concerned about this post full of doom, gloom and confusion … I’m feeling ok day to day and have found some real positives in lockdown (maybe I’ll write about those in a later post). I continue to be so very grateful to family and friends for all your support. I also want to apologise to loved ones I haven’t had much contact with (that includes you Melanie and Auntie Ann) … I’ve had to keep my world very small recently to cope with the madness … I promise I’ll be in touch soon xx

Stay safe everyone ❤️