Monday was gloriously sunny, but cold. I’m so sick of the cold, and I wish it would rain. We’re all worried about the aquifer we draw water from, about losing trees to drought this Summer, and about plagues of insects that often follow warm Winters. I, however, don’t have time to worry about those things, I am too focused on my voice.
Although it’s rather irrelevant, I wonder why my voice has become so bad. I’ll soon be able to ask Dr. S. I’m so glad that I can see here every two weeks for a while. I figure I’ll see her every two weeks until the end of April. I find adapting to lesser capabilities is hard.
I was rather nervous, and yet interested, in what would happen with my friends when we walked. They are the people with whom I am most fluent because I see them three times a week and my brain is used to them. It knows that I am safe with them, so I have always enjoyed fluent, comfortable speech with them.
I often walk in the lead. I like being upwind of anyone who might be carrying a virus, plus I am alone when I am out front, and don’t need to talk. Also, it’s quieter up front. We have two noisy walkers: Freya, the ever-barking dog, and Di, who speaks loudly because she is hard of hearing.
Walking with them was a mixed bag. I was grateful for their company, but I could not say a word. I felt there, but not there. I was grateful when a person would walk with me and tell me something, knowing I could not reply. But I use gestures and I make sounds to participate as best I can. I felt present when they did.
My Rand voice is gone. Rand is the name I gave to the voice that, in the past, gave me fluency. I called it Rand because initially sounded like a South African accent. I can’t speak in French with the two local clerks with whom I speak fluently in French. It’s a total shutdown. I can’t even sing (which most stutterers can do). I tried it at home where no one could hear.
I don’t feel like a stutterer anymore; I’m now a non-verbal person. I am considering dropping out of my two support groups if my speech does not come back. I’m averse to gatherings, in video chats or in person. I just don’t feel comfortable listening but being unable to participate. I like being home alone. I can’t imagine entertaining people here, but Dianne is coming in late April, so I’ll see what that goes. When Dave was here yesterday, just one person, I was able to say things in a very weird voice. But he could understand me. I think the same thing will happen with Di. I hope so because it will make me feel less of an alien. We are very close, and she is accepting and adaptive.
My next challenge is accessing my Facebook account. I need help here as well, from the guy who signed me up. When I signed up, originally, my account was immediately terminated for violating ethical policies of FB. That happened again yesterday. It was an instant blocking for life, and I’d never been on FB before. Now I need my friend’s help to regain access to my account.
Being judged unfairly by Facebook hurt. I shouldn’t take things personally, I know, but I’m very vulnterable at present. I can live without FB, but it’s handy for selling things and getting help.
I get anxious when I walk Sheba now. I’m afraid of running into people with whom I have spoken briefly in passing. Fear of them, not wanting to entertain, not wanting to attend dinner parties, wanting to drop out of my support groups; it’s pretty clear that I’m now wanting to be reclusive.
Beth and Steve are coming to visit this coming Summer. I’m confident that I’ll be able to speak with them. It’s an odd voice, and it is not grammatical. It’s ‘key word’ speech, but people understand. Yesterday, for example, I said to Dave, “Me, forest (and then I used two fingers and I walked them over my other hand) Sheba.” He knew where I was going. It will be interesting to see how things go with Dr. S. on Monday. I’m writing things to paste into the chat function in advance of seeing her.
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One thing that I find interesting about this change in my speech, is that I knew when this collapse of my speech was going to stick right from the get-go last Saturday. What’s odd, is that I feel good about that.
When I interviewed Shel Glazer for SPACE, and he talked about how important it is for doctors to speak to their patients. He said that the patient is the doctor’s greatest resource for diagnostics. What he said reinforces my experience of knowing it was not just a temporary glitch, and anything that makes me feel good about myself is welcome right now.
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I wrote here a long time ago, that FND was once called Conversion Disorder and people who had it long ago were thought to be witches. I was kind of proud to ‘be’ a witch. Now I am a non-verbal person. Until very recently, non-verbal people were called ‘mute.’ But when I was just a toddler, mute people were called ‘dumb’ Deaf people were called ‘deaf and dumb.’ I’d be mighty angry to be called that.
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Today is another quiet solitary day for me. It’s overcast and cool, but it’ll probably not rain. This has been an extraordinarily dry Winter and Spring is proving dry so far as well. I shall read, we’ll walk, and that’s about it.
Come Thursday, the afternoon temperatures are returning to the high teens, so I will clean my hot tub and order water from my supplier in Nanaimo. I can hardly wait to have the spa back in working order. That’ll be a welcome new part of my days.































































