Celebrating Life by Doing the Walk to Fight Arthritis
The 2015 Your Life with RA team
Someone told me that
this year, I had the best reason not to do the Walk to Fight Arthritis, what
with still recovering from the crazy
health situation. To me, that means there are so many more reasons to do
it.
I’m alive.
Having built up enough
strength and stamina to do a 5K before I got sick had, according to my doctors,
a lot to do with why I survived and am bouncing back pretty fast.
I’m bouncing back
pretty fast. A month ago, I barely had enough energy to sit in my wheelchair
for two hours. This week, I went back to work.
We’ve done the Walk for
two years. That means it’s tradition!
Earlier this year, I
worked with The Arthritis Society on enhancing accessibility for The Walk to
Fight Arthritis. I want to see our work implemented.
With the exception of
some numbness in my hands, I got through a traumatic health experience
with very little impact in terms of my rheumatoid arthritis. That has a lot to
do with taking Biologics. These drugs have made such a huge difference in the
lives of so many with inflammatory arthritis. They don’t work for everyone, so
raising money for research is very important.
This year is very
personal for me. It is about celebrating the fact that I’m still here. I’m
grateful that several of my friends are joining me on the Your Life with RA
team again this year. We are a bit late out of the gate and that’s reflected in
a more modest fundraising goal. As always, the hope is that we will blow right
past that and this is where you come in.
I’d be tremendously
grateful if you would consider donating either to
me personally or to
the Your Life with RA team. Any amount is welcome, no matter how small. Of
course, if you want to donate pots of money, we’d be more than willing to
accept that, too!
Two caveats about the Walk: Because I’m still
recovering from the ICU experience, I’m leaving it until the day to decide whether
I’m doing the 1K of the 5K. Also, if it rains I’ll postpone walking and do it
in my neighbourhood on a dry day. I’m committed to this cause, but not so
committed that I’m willing to risk getting sick again.
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