MDJunction - People Helping People
 

Why wear a ribbon?

 
"My husband had prostate and bladder cancer within 1st 6 months of being together..." (kmiller01)

MDJunction to me

Peace77"Mdj to me is a place a can visit to talk to anyone while going through a hard time with depression.
I have learned so much from others and I'm grateful to all my special friends here. It truly is a place you can talk to people, and you will never be treated negatively. I have found only, caring and kind support here. Thank you Mdj for a place I call my home, when I need to get away from my life..and have unbiased support..
" (Peace77)

more testimonials
Rheumatoid Arthritis Support Group
A community of patients, family members and friends dedicated to dealing with Rheumatoid Arthritis, together.
Join This Group
Group Home   Forums   Articles   Members (1304)   Diaries   Videos   Leaders   Guidelines
Rheumatoid Group RSS Feed
Rheumatoid ForumsRA and Relationships, Family and Friends5 Things RA Can Teach Your Kids
08/13/2010 11:17 AM
kvnj
kvnj
 
Posts: 3755
Group Leader

5 Things RA Can Teach Your Kids

Surprising ways RA can help you parent.

That doesn't sound right, does it? The last thing rheumatoid arthritis does is help anyone, least of all you as a parent or your kids, right? Some days RA can keep you from doing all the things you’d like to do. It makes it harder to open a jar of baby food, braid hair, or play catch.

But moms with arthritis -- as well as medical experts -- say you may also find that RA can teach your children important lessons as they watch you cope and learn how to help you along the way.

“I’ll often see people who are now in their 40s and 50s, who have vivid memories of being a child and their mother or father suffered from this disease,” says John Klippel, MD, president and CEO of the Arthritis Foundation. “They’re now involved with the Foundation as donors or volunteers, simply because they remember what their mom or dad went through and what it meant for them to have rheumatoid arthritis.”

Here are some of the "life lessons" that your kids may learn from your RA:

Can RA Teach Your Kids To Be Selfless?

The volunteers and donors Klippel regularly works with learned early on that there are people in pain and people who need help. Their childhood memories have inspired them to get personally involved with a cause that means a lot to them. “I think it teaches kids the importance of walking in someone else’s shoes, and wanting to make a difference in the lives of others,” Klippel says. “There’s a great opportunity for kids in a family affected by RA to see life through the eyes of somebody else.”

How RA Can Teach Empathy

Keri Cawthorne, a fitness instructor in Vermont, was diagnosed with RA last year and has seen its impact on her 10-year-old daughter. “She’s very concerned for me, and about the fact that I have to be on medicine for the rest of my life,” she says. “She’s a ballplayer and when we throw the ball outside, she’s always careful to make sure she doesn’t hurt me. She’s always asking me if my hands and feet are sore and if she can rub them.”

Katie Anderson’s 5-year-old daughter Delaney has always lived with her mother’s RA. “I was diagnosed six years before she was born,” says Anderson, who retired as a flight attendant because her travel schedule made her disease worse. She's now a real estate agent. “She’s so compassionate, and I think it’s partly because of what she sees me go through. She hates to see anyone in pain, and whenever someone else is crying, she cries too.”

Learning Self-Reliance From Mom's RA

You know those teeny-tiny Barbie shoes and outfits? Because of her RA, Anderson’s fingers can’t get those little things on Delaney's dolls. Instead, Delaney had to learn to dress her own dolls and do other tasks independently.

“I put her juice boxes and yogurts on the lowest level of the refrigerator, and she’ll go and get her own drinks and snacks for herself,” Anderson says. “At school, I see a lot of moms carrying three or four backpacks for their kids, but Delaney carries her own. Probably because I’ve had [RA] since before she was born, she accepts that this is the way life is.”

She’s also learning, says Laurie Ferguson, PhD, a psychologist and vice president of research and education at the arthritis advocacy group, CreakyJoints.

“Often, we expect too little of our children,” Ferguson says. “We don’t invite them to be partners in activities that will help them to grow up into the human beings we want them to be. Try to look at the illness through this lens, as an opportunity for your child to learn and grow.”

RA: Perspective and Patience

Delaney knows there are a lot of things her mom can’t do. “I can’t open jars, I can’t even lock her into her car seat very well,” Anderson says. “If my husband isn’t around, she has to be very patient with me and understand that it takes a little more time.”

Ellen Shmueli, a fitness trainer, was 28 and a new mom when she developed RA. Her son, who’s now 13, learned early on to adjust to his mom’s limitations. “When I put him in a real bed, he used to want to jump to me, and my hands were so bad I’d have to pick him up under his arms with my wrists,” Shmueli says. “I’d tell him, ‘Mommy’s hands are sick and I have to pick you up like this.’ He got that, and he’d wait for me to be ready for him and have my wrists out, and then he’d jump to me and grab around my neck.”

Seeing Mom's Courage With RA

“Most of us who don’t have a chronic disease have it easy. We think we know what stress means, but if you impose a serious chronic illness like RA on to the normal stresses of life, it amazes me the individual strength and courage that people with RA have,” Klippel says. “When Mom has a severe chronic disease, and yet she’s coping with it, a child will see strength and courage that they might not otherwise see in a parent.”

Ferguson says, “When you deal with a chronic debilitating illness like RA, many things in life are triumphs. It gives your child a great sense of ‘I can.’ Illness doesn’t have to run your life. You can still be in charge, deal with things, and bounce back. Those are enormous life lessons.”

Karen

**** I am not a doctor or medical professional. You should consult a physician in all matters relating to your health, and particularly in respect to any symptoms that may require diagnosis or medical attention.****
Reply

01/15/2011 02:20 AM  Top
claphappy
claphappy
 
Posts: 3373
VIP Member

I have seen my youngest grow in many of these lessons. He sure needed it, so if there is any good that can come from an illness it can be found in what he learned. When RA attacked me he will often come to me and say I'm sorry mommy that you have such pain. He checks back on me during the day just to ask if I need anything. what a wonderful change in him. The older son has compassion and is concerned for me. He drives me places and carries everything. He'll wait on me hand and foot if I let him. so blessed that both are terrific kids, Thanks for the posting CLAP
Charlotte CLAP are my initials.

Therefore do not loose heart, though outwardly we are waisting away Yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day 2 Corinthians 4:16

"Teach me the glory of my cross; teach me the value of my thorn. Show me that I have climbed to Thee by the path of pain. Show me that my tears have made my rainbows." ~Streams in the Desert

Previous discussions I participated in:
could it be bipolar
Volunteering...
Joke A Day

01/15/2011 06:18 AM  Top
kclark
kclarkPosts: 26
Member

Thanks for posting this! So many days I feel like I've cheated my son, because I can't do all the things we use to do.

Previous discussions I participated in:
Letter to People Without Chronic Pain

06/18/2011 12:52 AM  Top
sbdzx2
Posts: 2
New Member

KClark, I used to feel like I was cheating my kids too. I spent alot more time in bed and felt guilt for not being able to be as active doing the outdoor things we used to do. I decided I was going to be the best mom I could be from my bed if that's where I had to be that day. We rent a movie from the cable company, my daughter will pop popcorn or we will make lunch or order lunch to bed. My kids have also become fantastic readers. We spend alot of time in bed reading together. I take them to the library on my good days and stock up on books. Their teachers applaud us all for their reading abilities. On a day that I feel ok or good I make it a point to do something "physical" with my kids. Physical is in quotes because it doesn't mean what it used to. I will take them to the park, or for a walk (we also love car shows). I find if I push myself and make the time to do the active things with them when I can it gets done more often. My motto I have learned through my illness is, " If I tried my hardest I can look back with no regrets whether it worked out the way I wanted it or not at least I did everything I could do" Make the best of your "downtime" and savor your pain free days with energy.Smile

06/23/2011 09:10 AM  Top
nzawyn
nzawyn
 
Posts: 24
Member

Thank you so much for posting this!!! Everyday is a day I feel guilt for not being all that I used to be and all that my son deserves. This was definitely a warm fuzzy...thank you!!!
Be miserable. Be happy. Remain stagnant. Pursue change. Whatever happens, it's our choice. And that makes it a gift.
SLE, RA, Fibromyalgia

05/30/2012 07:35 AM  Top
CHL25
Posts: 1
New Member

This is a great reminder and it is absolutely true. My three daughters and I were very close in a healthy way - we were the home everyone came to play at and I was the mom the girls confided in. The disease struck so hard that I was in bed in agony for months and then it took heavy medication and a full year before I was able to be present again. The girls lost their mom and had to figure a lot out on their own - too young, too fast. My oldest, who was 12, found other families to "join", which was actually a pretty good coping mechanism and once I was able to engage again, we spent many years dealing with the ramifications of their loss but we did deal with it. And they are incredibly empathetic and are great friends to their friends.

Recently I heard one daughter say to another, "Mom is so strong - she'll look like she is struggling and I'll want to help her and then she'll get that little smile on her face and keep going and I know she can take care of herself." The other one said, "I know, I love that smile." I did not even know I was doing that. And, guess what? They face challenges without blinking an eye - I guess strength can be passed on with a smile!


05/30/2012 10:30 AM  Top
libyana
libyana
 
Posts: 266
Member

What a wonderful posting Laughing It made my heart sing to read it....I guess we spend so much time protecting our children from the "bad" things in life that we forget they are people too & have feelings just like us.......

Thank you

Libyana


Previous discussions I participated in:
second time hope it works
New Here
Neck/head pain

05/31/2012 04:26 AM  Top
Molly5
Molly5
 
Posts: 1119
Senior Member

Thanks for posting!
Reply

Share this discussion with your friends:
Members who viewed this page also read:

RheumatoidRheumatoid ForumsRA and Relationships, Family and Friends5 Things RA Can Teach Your Kids

Disclaimer: The information provided in MDJunction is not a replacement for medical diagnosis, treatment, or professional medical advice.
In case of EMERGENCY call 911 or 1.800.273.TALK (8255) to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Read more.
Contact Us | Bookmark Us | FAQ | Awareness Ribbons
About Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy | Spread the Word | MDJ Advocates | Advertise
Copyright (c) 2006-2013 MDJunction.com All Rights Reserved