-
Using Ritual to Navigate ALS Transitions
THE POWER OF RITUAL — My Transition to Wheelchair Life
I was diagnosed with sporadic ALS on July 17, 2018, and I’m sure, like many of you, I was in shock for a few months. We quickly organized a trip to Italy in October, and though I was still able to walk and even hike slowly, I met my first challenge when I couldn’t cross a creek safely; I sat down on the ground and had a good cry while I encouraged my husband to continue on the trail. Hiking was my main form of exercise and spiritual connection, and it felt overwhelming to lose that. I soon realized that living with ALS is an ongoing journey facing loss of function and the resulting experience of grief.
Over the past two years, I’ve realized that balancing a loss of function while also acknowledging the blessings from those same muscles for 66 years has helped me move through the grieving process more fully and hold the loss more gracefully. About a year ago I started writing Odes to my Major Muscle Groups, statements of gratitude for what they’ve enabled me to do for so long. It’s been an amazing process of unearthing wonderful memories and seeing patterns that have stretched over decades of my life, as well as a positive way to do a life review facing a terminal diagnosis
This understanding has encouraged me to pay more attention to what my body is still capable of doing, being conscious that I may lose that function in the future. It has developed into a gratitude practice (when I remember!) – “Oh good, I can still walk if I walk on flat surfaces, then if I use my hiking pole, then if I use my walker/rollator.
Even with this knowing what the future holds, facing that moment when it arrives, is a starkly different experience. One day I was using my walker when suddenly both legs gave way; my body wilted to the ground (no injuries luckily) and my spirit dissolved into tears facing the new reality. Given that ALS symptoms can be sporadic, I knew I had a little time to reflect on how I wanted to face and accept this new stage. Throughout my life, rituals have helped me make transitions (creating a new home, ending a relationship, getting married, starting a new job) more consciously and (I hope) gracefully. I decided to create a ritual to help me navigate this profound transition.
I needed the ritual to encompass the full range of emotions I was experiencing – from acknowledging all the gifts my legs have given me till now, the grief of losing leg function and independence, as well as appreciation that there’s a technological solution that will allow me to stay pretty engaged and independent in the world.
Creating the ritual
I wanted to consciously choose and be aware of where and how I took my final steps. I chose the deck adjacent to our living room, which faces west to beautiful sunsets, and where we grow our tomatoes and basil in the summer. I will still be able to look out the sliding door, but it’s too narrow for my wheelchair.With assistance, I took my last walking steps out the living room door onto the outside deck. I found a prayer someone else had written that deeply resonated with me:
Help me realize and graciously accept that although I cannot walk with my legs, I can still move forward. Open my senses so that I may hear, smell, see, touch, and taste the world around me in new ways. Help me realize the value of being still. Allow me to mourn the loss of my independence, but allow me the courage to know that I do not need to walk with my feet to live a fulfilling life.I then chose a few of the most meaningful of my “Odes to My Leg muscles”, giving gratitude for ways my legs had provided physical support as well as the emotional/spiritual gifts from those experiences during my 68 years of life (e.g. getting into/out of my favorite hot springs, hours spent gardening as a spiritual practice, trekking across Nepal, driving my manual shift car along the California coast). Lots of tears here. I then spent 10 minutes appreciating the view and tending to my tomato and basil plants for the last time.
I re-entered my house and with assistance made a large circle around my power chair, blessing it. On a wildflower hike last year, someone approaching us on the trail, exclaimed “What a beautiful chariot (referring to my manual wheelchair) you have!” I loved that re-frame, and given that I’ll be spending up to 16-17 hours/day in my power wheelchair, I’ve chosen to think of it as my holy chariot. I used dried sage I had collected from a nearby nature area and recited something I had written:
May being in this chair allow me to stay connected with the world; may I have a renewed sense and experience of self-independence, may all my travels be safe, may I find kind ways of interacting with others, may I find ways to help/support others embarking on a similar journey.Then I invited a few close people acting as witnesses to offer blessings as well; they were beautiful and their blessings helped me not feel as alone.
I climbed into my wheelchair and made myself comfortable.
Since the ritual, I’ve been deepening my relationship with my chariot – learning how fast/slow it responds to my moving the levers, discovering all the ways I can sit in it (straight up, recline), how quickly/slowly I can safely turn corners and go down ramps. The ritual helped me transition into this new stage of my life, in this physical body. Now a few months later, I’m inviting close friends to help me decide what to call my chariot and how to decorate her!!
I’m so grateful for the way that ritual has helped me through this transition, and I know that I will return to ritual throughout this disease’s progression. It allowed me to be in control of how I made this change, lessening the feelings of helplessness and powerlessness. It provided me a channel to express and honor the sadness and grief I was feeling. And by including my partner and a close circle of friends, I felt supported moving forward.
I offer this with the hope that it provides inspiration for others to create healing rituals for difficult ALS transitions.
Log in to reply.