I love the color.
The MS is getting to my eyes. Now its nowhere near blindness, and I'm not sure what category it goes, but I can tell you this. Color is more powerful. And light, both inside and outside, has been turned down and away from. It just hurts.
Last week the water maintenance classes started up for the fall season. What that means for me is I get a corner of the nice warm pool and I exercise using all kinds of devices for one hour. What I've always enjoyed more is seeing other folks in the pool struggling, some a lot more than me, but making the best of it all. They are ably handled by the physical therapist, Ms. Y.
I bring up Ms. Y because, while doctors have come and gone, she has stayed. She was my physical therapist right after my diagnosis, and we established the exercise regimens I do most days. One area we talked about was Reiki. The International Center for Reiki Training defines Reiki as:
"Reiki is a Japanese technique for stress reduction and relaxation that also
promotes healing. It is administered by "laying on hands" and is based on the
idea that an unseen "life force energy" flows through us and is what causes us
to be alive."
I can attest that Reiki does have some benefit. During my "just bipolar" era, an experienced Reiki Master took me through some tough times, leaving me one time a crying helpless slug. But it had been the first time I had cried, I mean really cried, not the tender tear he-man wipe, but blubbering away since my dog died in 1976. And then I felt better. Some of the monsters within were dispensed with, but not all. They are still here, but know where the closet is.I studied Reiki with that Master for some years and became Reiki level II. I could use my hands to heal, and did. Then MS came, and so did the lesions and the Reiki went away, or as I like to say, the Reiki is helping with the MS, the spirit of healing is busy just keeping me up and moving. So now I try and help other ways.
All right, back to Ms. Y. We decided to try and see how Reiki handled MS and it took only a few sessions to see that MS didn't give two hoots about Reiki. It did its "I am incurable neurological disease (with moves like Jagger)" strut. We abandoned the idea, though please consider Reiki as an option. Remember there 500,000 different MS cases in the USA, and what did not work for me may work for you.
Here's the interesting part. While visiting with my new neurologist, I looked at my MRIs on a far better computer than Albany Med. He told me there may be anywhere from 50-100 lesions in my brain, and one is sitting....
right in the temporal lobe, the area that handles or has a part in dream development. That's a whole other blog column. Anyway, certain neurotransmitters become involved in the sleep/dream cycle, and Reiki can stimulate blood flow and other healing agents, and when you put the two of them together on a guy with MS, you get a chain reaction that results in darker dreams that Stephen King (as proved by this one person writing a blog so take it as gospel truth). Ms. Y placed her healing hands right on the edge of the back of my skull (temporal), and left them there for about five minutes. And something got the message inside.
Result: Nightmares galore and an admonition that we could leave that particular area alone next time. We did and the nightmares faded. Reiki itself was over.
Sometime we'll get to other non-medical (so called) treatments.
Meantime, any lesions that have settled into the Occipital area of my brain are diddling with my eyesight. There's a small optometrist in there going "Is it better this way or that way? A or B? Does the green appear brighter? Good, it'll stay that way, or maybe we'll just turn it off."
Always something. But I do appreciate the beauty of the colors.
Next: Meet the mind!
Thanks for reading. The blogspot counter notes that we're heading to 1000 visits, and I do appreciate it. Hope this is enjoyable.