Last week, I received an email from a newly diagnosed ALS patient asking questions about rollators (walkers with wheels). “I think it’s time I begin using one,” he wrote, “but I don’t want to. What can I do instead?” I immediately felt empathy and sympathy for his situation because I can remember feeling that way, too.
I’m no rollator expert, but I’ve been depending on one to help me walk for the past 14 years, so maybe I do have some street cred on the topic. Once I got past the initial emotions that were holding me back, I found that using a rollator to help me walk has been essential to my success while living with ALS.
My rollator journey
My ALS symptoms began in 2010, and by the end of that year, my neurologist had diagnosed me. I had weak leg muscles and had fallen a few times. My right foot dragged with each step, and I needed to grab the furniture as I walked through the house. My doctor recommended that I start using a rollator.
Being told I needed one meant I had to accept that I wouldn’t recover from ALS. It was a permanent condition, my new normal. I had lots of negative notions about rollators, such as “only old people used them,” “my friends will think less of me,” and “they’re rickety, clunky, and always-in-the-way.”
But having to be helped up from a fall was no fun, either, so I gave in and bought one.
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Newfound success
With a rollator, navigating through our house became easier, and I learned little tricks to add to my safety. At the bathroom sink, for example, I swing my rollator directly behind me and lock the brakes. This transforms it into an emergency landing pad should I happen to teeter backward. Or, when doing my daily exercise routine, I stand directly in front of a sturdy chair with my rollator parked in front of me, wheels locked in place. I can perform any number of simple calisthenic movements knowing that if I should lose balance, the chair is behind me and my rollator is an easy grab in front.
When out and about, I discovered that my friends were relieved I was using a rollator. They were fearful of my previous tendency to fall and didn’t mind at all that it showed up beside me in our group photos.
Looking back, I realize that the evolution of my mindset from initially disliking rollators to acceptance and even sharing my tips has come a long way. Emotionally, I applied my principles of adapt, learn, survive.
A-L-S
I took the time to reflect on my feelings about how ALS has changed my life. I thought about how my ability to walk had been limited, and because I wanted to continue to be socially active, a rollator was the answer. I adapted.
Then I practiced walking with my rollator, learning what I could and couldn’t do with it. For example, rolling through lumpy grass and gravel is treacherous, and I need someone to hold my elbow while rolling along a downhill walkway.
Mostly, though, the more I used my rollator the more I saw its worth. Now I can’t imagine my life without one.
I probably overwhelmed my ALS friend with too many tips and resources on rollators. But I think he appreciated knowing that using a rollator was so helpful for me.
Do you use a rollator, or have you just begun using one? Please share your tips in the comments below, or try a few of mine. Together, we can help each other as we learn to live well with ALS.
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