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Neurologic Diseases: Can They Happen To You? Some Facts About How Society Should Be Dealing With Them

We drift away throughout our lives, trying to please others or our own expectations built upon what we learned that society expects of us. This is not an obvious thing for many, but it pops out when you go through a major setback that makes you review your whole life plan.

We are so anchored in what other people might say of us, in the fear of being treated like an outsider, in that feeling that we might one day be rejected. We do things because it’s been done before, because that’s what people around us or people our age do.

We work ourselves up to put up with an external standard that a lot of times seems so alien to us. This gets revealed to us in the most unexpected ways, but most of the times if comes out as rebellion, frustration or a lack of purpose.

Although we live pretty busy and full lives, something is missing. We get the feeling that something is not quite as it’s supposed to be. Most of us live our whole lives and still don’t find out what that thing is. Hence the disbelief in things like “find your purpose!”, “unleash your potential!”. These are strange things to say when we live pretty decent and fullfilling lives.

But that’s the trick! How much of these decent and fulfilling lives do we really enjoy? How much of these daily activities really make us feel like it’s worth something?

You might be familiar with the feeling you get when you help someone just because he or she needed it. Or when you take the time to listen to a friend who has a major problem and just be there, ready with a kind word and a hug. These type of moments have the power to make you feel at peace. You get that feeling that you’ve done the right thing. Now take that feeling and pass it through each and every activity you do throughout your day. See how that feels. Do you get the same results? Do you feel the same? It’s ok if you don’t. Many people find themselves in the same situation.

Society educates us to be good members of it. It teaches us how to behave, what to believe and what not to do. In order to fit in. And except a few things that spice us up and that we call personality, all that we have is society-crafted.

We are promised a rich life, full of possibilities, products and chances. But is when we face losing all of these things that we get a taste of what society really does. It selects only the useful and productive individuals and discards the others that don’t fit the pattern.

People with chronic neurological illnessess are clearly not fitting that pattern. They become a liability for the social system.

Let’s get a few concepts straight.

What are neurological diseases?

A quote from the World Health Organization explains it all:


“Neurological disorders are diseases of the central and peripheral nervous system. In other words, the brain, spinal cord, cranial nerves, peripheral nerves, nerve roots, autonomic nervous system, neuromuscular junction, and muscles. These disorders include epilepsy, Alzheimer disease and other dementias, cerebrovascular diseases including stroke, migraine and other headache disorders, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, neuroinfections, brain tumours, traumatic disorders of the nervous system such as brain trauma, and neurological disorders as a result of malnutrition.
Mental disorders, on the other hand, are "psychiatric illnesses" or diseases which appear primarily as abnormalities of thought, feeling or behaviour, producing either distress or impairment of function.
Hundreds of millions of people worldwide are affected by neurological disorders. Approximately 6.2 million people die because of stroke each year; over 80% of deaths take place in low- and middle-income countries. More than 50 million people have epilepsy worldwide. It is estimated that there are globally 35.6 million people with dementia with 7.7 million new cases every year - Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia and may contribute to 60–70% of cases. The prevalence of migraine is more than 10% worldwide.”



Dissabilities mean costs, and society has a sore spot for that. And not just only that, but the actual cost for a business that employs a dissabled person looks to be in danger in this situation.

But they have it all wrong! There is an actual bigger cost if you put people on wellfare instead of helping and accommodating them to keep their jobs or make a living fo themselves. Think about all the people that have to financially sustain a dissability cost through their monthly tax contribution. Think about the actual costs of the dissabled person: medical care, facillities and money to help that person pull through life. That cost is actually adding up to be higher than allowing dissabled people to keep working or open their own business.


“Workplace interventions can lead to large gains, both in the short and long term, for employees and employers. Improvements can be seen in worker productivity, reduced levels of absenteeism, and employer cost-saving. These interventions have the added benefit of creating a workplace environment that is health-conscious, providing for easier follow-up with participants.”


(read full WHO.int report here)



Because, let me tell you: people don’t change at all after getting a neurological chronic illness. Neither after they actually get disabled. Ok, they might be a little more changed, but those differences are just emotional, the intellect of that person doesn’t get affected in all diseases. There are a few exceptions, like Alzheimer’s, dementia and so on, but what about the rest?

How can you tell a person that has been working all his or her’s life to be independent and to make a career that you have no place for him or her now that he/she’s ill? How is that fair?

Society runs away from difficult situations. It prefers to be a functional machine that keeps the system into place for as long as it can. But if you throw away people who have chronic illnesses, as a society, you’ll end up with more spare parts than an actual functional machine. You’ll get broken. You’ll stop working.

These people might not be the thing that you need or are used to, but with the number of chronically diagnosed people getting higher as the years come by, we’re facing a real problem of not being able to live a sustainable life as a society anymore.


“The health of the world is generally improving, with fewer people dying from infectious diseases and therefore in many cases living long enough to develop chronic diseases. Increases in the causes of chronic diseases, including unhealthy diet, physical inactivity and tobacco use are leading to people developing chronic diseases at younger ages in the increasingly urban environments of low and middle income countries. Disturbing evidence of this impact in many of these countries is steadily growing. They are ill equipped to handle the demands for care and treatment that chronic diseases place on their health systems and so people die at younger ages than in high income countries.” 


(read full WHO.int report here)


So what’s there to do? Accept. Adapt. Overcome.

Accept that we have this situation. It has been a public health challenge since 10 years ago. Adapt the social system to it. Overcome the future societal disfunctionality.

Avoid the day when you’ll find yourself in the same situation. It’s uncomfortable, I know! But little did I know almost two years ago when I was happily working in sales that it will all change as I got diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

Although it’s not an easy thing to go through, because of all the possible stigmatization and rejections you might face (among other things), it helped me to see the bigger picture.

I’m sure the fact of being a licenced sociologist helped with analyzing society, but it was the emotional part that did the trick. It’s awful to feel like society doesn’t really care about any of us. It’s an eye opener that we are our own safety nets. In the end, relationships are all we have. And in the most desperate cases, even these ones fail, and people are left behind. Are discarded. Just because we don’t teach people about these conditions, their implications and how to manage them.

How did the world become such an awful place to live in? We have expressions like “survival of the fittest” and “the law of nature” to describe the natural selection on which nature thrives.

But what happens when the fittest is not you because you get a dissabling disease? What happens when the law of nature gets you in a wheelchair? Does the world seem fair and just then? Are those beliefs doing you justice?

We must understand that although the strongest are the ones who survive, we are human beings which have a heart and feelings. Helping people to have a chance, to reintegrate them back in the social system or to keep them there for as long as possible is the honorable thing to do.

I’m gonna stop this article now, before my eyes get all blurry because of my tears.

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Until next time, make the SMart Choices that suit your lifestyle!

Love,

Alexandra

Reasons Why Fear Makes us Aggressive Because of Multiple Sclerosis & Why We Must Fight Social Injustice

All human beigns feel fear at one point or another durng their lifetime. But so do other mammals and creatures on this Earth. Even plants do it. So why do we sometimes think we have the right to be aggressive only because we are afraid and frustrated with our MS or with situations that correlate at some point with this condition?

In Romania, there is a strange case of social injustice that happens right before our eyes. Each year, there is a Government budget being decided for each of the ministries administration needs. Healthcare is underfunded for all that it needs to do and take care of, including the National MS Treatment Programme, which enrolls MS patients on lists, in order to receive (or wait for) the treatment they need.

Given this situation, many sufferers are left behind and without treatment for many years to come, only making their condition worse, depending on the state they are on or on the evolution of their MS. This situation has numerous ripple effects, from the person’s own health, to the national GDP (PIB in some countries) and society’s efficiency at large.

It’s pretty simple actually: many people get diagnosed with MS between ages 20 and 40, that period of time when one is supposed to be at the most active stage of life, when you get on top of your career, when you start a familiy and basically just when you are at your most productive, and paying the most social contributions to the state. 

And all of a sudden, because you are not given treatment, you risk not being able to work because of your growing dissabilities. You are no longer able to contribute to the national GDP. In the situation you get worse, you’ll need a caregiver, person which will also need to be payed by the state to take care of you.

Instead of focusing on keeping people functional as much as possible, they put people on lists and in the long run end up paying even more money to and for them, resulting in less money to go around next time, and so the problem goes deeper and becomes worse. Exponnentially worse.

The point where I was headed with this article is that in this context, fear causes even more trouble than just physical dissability. It destroys emotional and psychological wellbeing. It trashes mental welbeing not only of the person that has MS and no acces to treatment, but of the people around them as well: family, friends, life partner, etc. The emotional wellbeing of a person diagnosed with MS is very delicate. I have written about it before and I will write about it again.

These people enter a downward spiral that puts them on a very powerful deffensive, and they become aggresive to anyone who can be blamed for their tragic situation. Knowing the corruption that still exists in this country, they get to think that all the people who do receive treatment are bribing for their meds, surpassing everyone who has been waiting for many years.

Given the eligibility criteria in MS, and trusting in the competence of the medical specialists that are taking care of this illness, I can’t help but wonder what’s happening here? Why aren’t these people receiving their rightfull treatments? Is it dependent on country area, on neurologist, on MRI’s or on what? I accept that there are cases of people who are influent enough to pay extra to get in front, but that’s not a general rule.

This year I’ve once again saw what extreme frustration and fear can do to people in this situation. They just want to live a normal life for as long as they can, and they are being refused this simple human right. 

Here at SMart Choice Lifestyle, we’re going to start doing something for these people even sooner than we planned. We will investigate the right ways and strategies on how to do it. We already have some ideas in mind and were planning to act on them later this year. But this has got to start sooner.

In due time, making sure that we have a strong strategy in place, we’ll get there. You know what they say: “Rome wasn’t built in a day!”. We are aware that MS is a condition that does not get well with time, but we take that risk in orded to do things right.

Thank you for your understanding and please share this article so that many more people get to know how things are here in Romania for some people living with MS.

Subscribe to be sure you receive every article we publish.

This was a collective article, to let you know that we hear you. As fellow MS patients, we understand what you are going through and plan to make a change. Stick with us, have faith and let us know if you want to help.

Thank you for your understanding!

Wishing you the best health,

Alexandra & the SMart Choice Lifestyle team

#SMartWednesday - #Colectiv Halloween & Proud of Being a Romanian!

#SMartWednesday is here a little later than usual. So, this was supposed to be one of those articles where I talk to you about smart things relating to lifestyle and health, right? Or some sort of psychosociological reference in between life, diet and exercise. But I can’t today. I just can’t put my head up right to write something that given the current Romanian state of mind sounds and is not so important.

WHERE TO START?

We all look inside ourselves for health, ideas and a good lifestyle. But there is another side of the coin. A thing called social responsability. Plus another two things called empathy and solidarity. But most of all, I want to talk to you about love. Of oneself and of others. I want to talk to you about the love of life.

Society has us in a state of dormant acceptance. We consume all that the current economical, mass-media and political institutions offer us and grow complacent of our beautiful and well-put lives. It’s all so shallow. It’s all so mindless.

All that should count is what and how we do to and for one another as human beings. Everything else is secondary.

#COLECTIV HALLOWEEN

Last Friday, during a Halloween concert at the Colectiv nightclub in Bucharest, people lost their love of life. They lost their lives alltogether. 

Burnt alive and envisioning scenes of the Walking Dead, they rushed out of the flaming building and ran, crawled and begged for their lives to the ambulances and firefighter units that were present at the scene. People who were there and went through that tragic event, say that they saw Hell itself. Dense and toxic smoke burned them from the inside out and some of them had burns that covered 90% of the skin.



As I write this, from the almost 300 participants at that concert, 32 have lost their lives, and the rest are either hospitalised, fighting for their lives, or having to deal with the emotional trauma in the aftermath of the disaster. How was this possible? Read on!

A ROTTEN SOCIAL SYSTEM THAT NEEDS CHANGE

The situation is delicate in Romania. Communism died 26 years ago, but its spirit still lingers around and drowns a developing country. It perpetuates corruption, bribes and lack of interest in anything else but having something to gain either way. It forces young people to give in to these infamous ways and endanger all of us.

This was the situation at club Colectiv, this Friday night. The club was open in an ex shoe factory’s great hall, that had no ventilation or windows, a minimal fireproof system or even a second exit.

Investigations are still moving forward, but it seems like the authorities who had to check that all the conditions were in due order, did a superficial job, declaring the club ready for use, in exchange for a certain amount of money.

This is the reason why yesterday, young Romania got to the streets and asked for a change. The system is the one to blame for the death and pshysical injury of so many people, and the emotional and mental scarring of thousands more. Because, you know, empathy is real.


As a response to yesterday’s manifestations, the Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister and the Mayor of the 4th District of Bucharest (where Colectiv was situated) all resigned and Romanians are now confrunted with somehow changing the system, and transforming for good the decaying administration structures that don’t let them live as they deserve, since the December 1989 Revolution.

People are very angry, very sad and want revenge. It’s all normal. It’s… colective behaviour at its best. The community defends itself of what it sees as a common enemy. 

Real social change unfortunatelly never came through well-thought initiatives. No. It mostly came along with a tragedy, a social shock of some sorts. That is the way people learn, that's the way people wake up and react. 

It's what sociologists call the Conflict Theory. It states that social change happens only through social class fight, through... conflict. Unfortunatelly, we need shock to make us react in any given situation. We need fear, to gain anger and start to move. It's human nature.

The situation must change. Corruption must be erradicated, a new and functional country needs to be built. A country in which its citizens wouldn’t have to die because of the incompetence of its administration.

Romanians are as European as any other nation on this continent. We are like you: young, with dreams and plans and SO ALIVE!

Our national anthem literally says:

“Wake up, Romanian, from the sleep of the death,
Into which you have been sunk by the barbaric tyrants.
Now, or never, make a new fate for yourself,
To which even your cruel enemies will bow.”

Thank you for the time you spent reading this.

Sincerely,
Alexandra Celic

Bucharest 04/11/2015