Man, let me tell you, when my mom’s MS really started to kick in a few years back, our whole world just flipped. One day she’s still mostly herself, just a bit wobbly, the next, it felt like we were navigating a minefield every single day. I thought I was prepared, you know? Read a few pamphlets. What a joke.

The first thing that hit me was how much I didn’t know. Doctors would talk, and it was like they were speaking another language. Medications, side effects, therapies… it was a constant barrage of new stuff to learn, and honestly, most of it went in one ear and out the other at first. It was pure chaos. I remember trying to set up her room to be more accessible, and I just stood there, completely overwhelmed. Moved the bed, then moved it back. Put up a grab bar, then realized it was in the wrong damn place. Total amateur hour, and I felt like a complete failure.
Figuring Stuff Out the Hard Way
And the communication, oh boy. Mom got frustrated easily because she couldn’t always say what she wanted, or her body wouldn’t do what her brain told it to. I’d get frustrated too. I’d try to finish her sentences, thinking I was helping. Newsflash: I wasn’t. She’d just shut down. It took me ages to learn to just be patient, to actually listen, even if it took her five minutes to get a single thought out. I had to stop seeing her as ‘the MS patient’ and remember she was still Mom. Sounds obvious, right? But it’s easy to forget when you’re knee-deep in caregiver mode. I learned that just talking to her, like a person, not at her condition, made a world of difference. If you’re not sure how to talk, well, just starting by seeing the person first is a good bet.
There were days I just wanted to scream. Like this one time, I’d spent hours cooking a meal I thought she’d like, something easy for her to eat. She took one look and just pushed it away. Didn’t say a word. I nearly lost it. I stomped off to the kitchen, muttering under my breath. Later, my sister called, and Mom had told her she was feeling too nauseous from a new med to even think about food. She just couldn’t get the words out to tell me. I felt like such a jerk. That was a real wake-up call for me. It wasn’t about my effort, or my feelings. It was about what she was going through.
- Patience became my new superpower. Or at least, I tried to make it.
- Learning to ask for help was huge. I’m terrible at that.
- Celebrating the small wins. Seriously, a good day was like winning the lottery.
We eventually found our rhythm, sort of. It’s not perfect. Some days are still a total mess. But we manage. I learned to anticipate some things, she learned new ways to communicate. We use a whiteboard a lot now. And honestly, a sense of humor, even a dark one sometimes, helps get us through. It’s not the life either of us pictured, but it’s our life. And you just keep putting one foot in front of the other, because what else are you gonna do? You learn on the job, every single day. And that’s pretty much how I’ve been dealing with it – one messy, imperfect day at a time.