• Where in the world is Tom

    For those of you who like to keep track, July 24th – August 6th encompasses several milestones beginning with July 24th which is the 11th anniversary of my PD diagnoses. Yes, it has been 11 years and Mara and I think I am better now that I was then! Certainly I am in better physical shape due to the 5 – 7 days of exercise each week and my symptoms of bradykinesia and other motor symptoms are better because of taking Carbidopa/Levodopa. The fact that I have been able to reduce my Levodopa Equivalent Daily Dose (total LD per day from all sources) from 1688 mg to 932 mg over the past 5 years is certainly an indicator that something is working right.

    This week we celebrated our 34th wedding anniversary with a superb dinner out and a fine bottle of champagne! (I need to add the champagne tradition to the PD anniversary) I wouldn’t be in the shape I am without Mara’s support. She is not only the love of my life and my best friend, she is also my caretaker extraordinaire!

    Also this week I will celebrate my 78th birthday ( already have the champagne for this one!)

    And on August 6th this blog will be 11 years old, and this will be the first post of 2024! Yep it’s been 16 months since my last post and I have no valid excuse except to blame it on my Parkinson’s Disease non motor symptom of apathy. I have had various ideas or information that I could use to create a post but somehow they never get written. But I am going to make the breakthrough today!

    While I have successfully reduced my Levodopa Equivalent Daily Dose from 1688 mg to 932 mg per day, I haven’t stopped my PD progression particularly in non-motor symptoms. In addition to apathy, my handwriting is working it’s way to a completely illegible scrawl, my speech continues to get softer (I know, I should be using the Speak Out tools to improve this one) and constipation and drooling have become more prevalent. On the plus side, reducing my Levodopa has reduced my dyskinesia and something I am doing has improved my sleep, often getting 6 – 7 hours per night according to my FitBit:

    I wish I knew what I am doing to improve my sleep, I’m pretty sure I could patent it and make a fortune! I don’t follow any of the hints you see like reduce screen time ( I usually get in bed and read on my iPad!) or limit fluid intake before bed, or take melatonin or use CBD/Marijuana. The only thing I have doing different for the past 6 or 7 months is following a version of high dose thiamine therapy or vitamin B1 (HDTT) . I have noticed some improvements from following this therapy and I will discuss the details and process in my next blog post. There, I’ve set myself a task and I will plan to write the next post no later than next week.

    Speaking of tasks, I did update the Now What document with recommendations for persons who have been recently diagnosed with PD. You can click here or at the top right to read or print it.

    Until then, if you are a long time subscriber and wondered where I have been, I hope this finds you in good health and thank you for sticking with me despite my 16 month hiatus. Welcome to my new subscribers that have signed up in the last 16 months , now you know why you haven’t seen any posts.

    “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

  • It’s Parkinson’s Awareness Month – 9th Edition

    Yep, in the 10 years since I was diagnosed with PD, I have written at least one post in April about Parkinson’s Awareness Day, or Week or Month. The only year missing is 2018 when we were moving into our Sarasota home. I thought it would be fun to take a trip down memory lane and see what I wrote about in the past 10 years.

    The first year was 2014 (click on the links to view) and most of the post was about Autism, my colonoscopy, my first dermatologist visit and how nice the weather was that week, Finally at the end of the post I mentioned the local Unity walk.

    The next year, 2015, I quoted paragraphs from another blogger – Corey King. His views about awareness resonated with me and I hope my readers too.

    In 2016 my post was long but all about PD awareness! So after 3 years I have caught on to the program and filled a post with my thoughts.

    2017 was a quick one, with a link to a video about Unite for Parkinson’s.

    In 2019 I had two posts (making up for missing 2018) the first one about our spinning class moving the bikes and holding our class in the lobby of the YMCA which was covered by a local TV station and resulted in my first TV gig! In the second post I covered the YMCA ride again and discussed how the class helps me fight PD. I also talked about experimenting with my medications doses and I am pleased to see that I am taking even less 4 years later!! EXERCISE WORKS!

    In the COVID year of 2020, my World PD Day post was a review of the new book Ending Parkinson’s Disease, A Prescription for Action by Ray Dorsey MD et. al. The book was the basis for the Ending Parkinson’s movement that continues to lobby and push for research funding and has pushed to ban various chemicals that appear to cause PD.

    In 2021 I discussed the book from the previous year and pushed for readers to join PD Avengers, a global alliance to end parkinson’s. If you haven’t joined, it’s not too late, click on the icon to the right and be a PD Avenger.

    And last year, I introduced Spark! the new symbol for Parkinson’s Awareness. I also pushed again for readers to join PD Avengers and shared some infographics from the European PD organization on the myths of PD.

    Now it is 2023 and we are getting closer to finding a marker that will improve the results of research trials looking for a cure or at least a disease modifying solution. We know that exercise is the best medicine to slow progression and we have many more options to deal with ‘off’ periods than there were in 2013. There have been significant improvements to DBS and Focused Ultrasound options to help deal with motor issues and tremor. Trials of stem cell implants are at stage 2 and 3 and we know a lot more about the genetics of PD. But I am sorry to report that the cure for Parkinson’s is still at least 5 years away, just like it was 10 years ago.

    Parkinson’s Awareness month will continue into the foreseeable future as the hunt goes on to solve PD. So, join PD Avengers, donate to your favorite PD organization, join a clinical trial and let your elected officials know that you support the Ending Parkinson’s initiatives.

  • We Survived Hurricane Ian!

    We have lived in Sarasota, Florida for 6+ years and have come to believe in the urban legend that Sarasota is protected from hurricanes because the Native Americans who first settled here blessed the lands to stay eternally safe from destructive storms and hurricanes. Fact is Sarasota Bay has not been a bull’s eye for a major hurricane in Florida since reliable records began in 1871.

    But two weeks ago hurricane Ian that was forecasted to hit in Tampa to our North, started slipping south and suddenly the forecast was for it to come ashore in Sarasota. The emergency management authorities started evacuating the barrier islands, and we joined with a few neighbors to install hurricane shutters in preparation for a direct hit. Since 2002, the Florida building codes require new construction be able to withstand winds up to 150MPH. Our home was built in 2013 so it meets the new codes and it looked liked we were going to test the construction!

    We opened our home to couple of friends who had to evacuate and one of them joined us as we hunkered down and got ready to ride out the storm. The Indian blessing seemed to be working as Ian continued to drop to the south and came ashore near Ft Myers’s about 50 miles (as the crow flies)south of us and then tracked northeast thru the city of Northport about 20 miles south of us on its way to the Atlantic, passing over Sarasota with windspeeds of 85 -100 mph. The wind and rain went on most of the night and you could feel the gusts when they hit the house.

    We got up the next morning to find the house was undamaged except for a couple of loose roof tiles. There were lots of trees and bushes down in the area but no physical damage that we could see. Even more amazing was we never lost power! According to Florida Power and Light, of their 287,000 customers in Sarasota 280,000 were without power, so we were one of the lucky 7,000. We did lose our internet and cable for a several days, making it hard to keep up with what was happening as cell reception was spotty due to power being out to cell towers or the towers being damaged by the hurricane.

    It’s been two weeks since the hurricane and most of the debris in our development has been cleaned up. Our tennis courts are back in operation after replacing the clay that blew off and putting the wind screens back up. There are still pockets of the area without power or internet particularly south of us in Northport where a large portion of the city was flooded by the Myakka river which is still above flood stage.

    So, thanks to an Ancient Indian Blessing, good neighbors, and the updated Florida building codes, we survived our first and hopefully only hurricane. We are able to get groceries and fuel again and play tennis and cycle for PD. Life is returning to normal.

Support

When I was first diagnosed,  I had mixed feelings about attending a support group.  I wondered if we sat in a circle and I said “Hi, I’m Tom and I have Parkinson’s”  (Hiiii Tom).  Was there a 12 step program for dealing with Parkinson’s? 😉  And I was worried that seeing PWP’s with a wide range of  symptoms would be like seeing my future.  But as I learned more about Parkinson’s I realized that it is a progressive disease that affects everyone of us in different ways and no two seem to be alike.  And, as we learned at the Kripalu retreat and in Florida,  it is helpful to meet other PWP’s and caregivers to trade experiences, share coping strategies, and for a sense of community

So, last week we attended two local support groups, The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group and the local Kingston Support Group.   Both groups meet at a local church, both meetings included lunch and both provided us with a positive experience.

The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group, PK Hope is Alive, met on Tuesday in Oak Ridge.  There were probably 60 – 70 people in attendance pretty much evenly divided between PWP’s and caregivers.  We opened with some voice exercises led by one of the PWP which included some singing. I didn’t have a signing voice before Parkinson’s and it sure hasn’t improved, but it was fun.  After lunch they introduced Dr.Scott Wylie Ph.D from Vanderbilt University Movement Disorders Clinic, a National Parkinson’s Foundation Center of Excellence. He gave a fascinating presentation on “Cognitive Changes in the Parkinson’s Patient”.  He and his research group are doing research about the effect too little or too much dopamine can have on cognitive functions.

Dr Wylie pointed out that James Parkinson, in his 1817 ‘Essay on the Shaking Palsy” described the disease as ” Involuntary tremulous motion, with lessened  muscular power, in parts not in action and even when supported; with a propensity to bend the trunk forward, and to pass from a walking to a running pace: the senses and intellects being uninjured.” (Underline added) He expects that last bit would be revised if James Parkinson were alive today.

While most of us were aware that lack of dopamine is at the root of our motor symptoms, his research has shown that it may also have an impact on our cognitive symptoms too. I hope to get a copy of his presentation and will provide more information in a later post. After the presentation, he answered questions from the group which meant we didn’t get an opportunity to break out into smaller groups of PWP’s and caregivers for discussion but the meeting was fun and we plan to attend again.

The local Kingston Support Group met on Wednesday.  We first heard about this group during a Tai Chi lesson when someone mentioned that they were aware a group met in the same space but didn’t know the day or time.  So I had planned to call the church when we returned from Florida to get the information but, as luck would have it, the Monday edition of our local paper made mention of the meeting’s day and time.  We found out later that they had been trying to get it published for quite awhile and Monday was the first time it was finally inserted in the community calendar page.

This group was quite a bit smaller than the Oak Ridge group.  There were about sixteen attendee’s including another couple who were there for the first time after seeing the mention in the paper.  We sat around three tables and had a great opportunity to discuss symptoms, medications, exercises and care giving tips while enjoying lunch.  After lunch we had a short presentation by the founder of the group who is a speech pathologist and had just returned from a conference.  She gave us some tips on how to stand erect and a simple stretching routine that will strengthen the neck muscles and help prevent problems with swallowing.  Again an interesting and informative meeting and we will attend again.

So I didn’t have to announce my problems to the group(s) and I didn’t see my future, but I did get a lot of good information and a chance to meet other PWP’s and caregivers and exchange information.

We have been working at keeping up the exercise routine since we have been home and are doing pretty well, averaging about an hour a day.  We continue to walk or ride the bike and try to include either Tai Chi or Yoga routines everyday.  We purchased another Tai Chi DVD that is more advanced and not quite as easy to follow but we are getting there. Yoga continues to be difficult with my stiff muscles but I know continuing it will help me to gain flexibility and it will get easier (I hope).

April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month and I hope to post informational items as the month progresses.  We will be walking in the East TN Parkinson’s Walk on April 5th.  This walk is the local version of the Parkinson’s Unity Walk held in NYC April 26th.  One hundred percent of the funds raised are donated to Parkinson’s research foundations.  You can find out more about the walk by clicking here or if you wish to support our team, you can click here.

April is also Autism Awareness Month, another cause that is important to me, so next month’s posts should be chock full of information!

Support

When I was first diagnosed,  I had mixed feelings about attending a support group.  I wondered if we sat in a circle and I said “Hi, I’m Tom and I have Parkinson’s”  (Hiiii Tom).  Was there a 12 step program for dealing with Parkinson’s? 😉  And I was worried that seeing PWP’s with a wide range of  symptoms would be like seeing my future.  But as I learned more about Parkinson’s I realized that it is a progressive disease that affects everyone of us in different ways and no two seem to be alike.  And, as we learned at the Kripalu retreat and in Florida,  it is helpful to meet other PWP’s and caregivers to trade experiences, share coping strategies, and for a sense of community

So, last week we attended two local support groups, The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group and the local Kingston Support Group.   Both groups meet at a local church, both meetings included lunch and both provided us with a positive experience.

The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group, PK Hope is Alive, met on Tuesday in Oak Ridge.  There were probably 60 – 70 people in attendance pretty much evenly divided between PWP’s and caregivers.  We opened with some voice exercises led by one of the PWP which included some singing. I didn’t have a signing voice before Parkinson’s and it sure hasn’t improved, but it was fun.  After lunch they introduced Dr.Scott Wylie Ph.D from Vanderbilt University Movement Disorders Clinic, a National Parkinson’s Foundation Center of Excellence. He gave a fascinating presentation on “Cognitive Changes in the Parkinson’s Patient”.  He and his research group are doing research about the effect too little or too much dopamine can have on cognitive functions.

Dr Wylie pointed out that James Parkinson, in his 1817 ‘Essay on the Shaking Palsy” described the disease as ” Involuntary tremulous motion, with lessened  muscular power, in parts not in action and even when supported; with a propensity to bend the trunk forward, and to pass from a walking to a running pace: the senses and intellects being uninjured.” (Underline added) He expects that last bit would be revised if James Parkinson were alive today.

While most of us were aware that lack of dopamine is at the root of our motor symptoms, his research has shown that it may also have an impact on our cognitive symptoms too. I hope to get a copy of his presentation and will provide more information in a later post. After the presentation, he answered questions from the group which meant we didn’t get an opportunity to break out into smaller groups of PWP’s and caregivers for discussion but the meeting was fun and we plan to attend again.

The local Kingston Support Group met on Wednesday.  We first heard about this group during a Tai Chi lesson when someone mentioned that they were aware a group met in the same space but didn’t know the day or time.  So I had planned to call the church when we returned from Florida to get the information but, as luck would have it, the Monday edition of our local paper made mention of the meeting’s day and time.  We found out later that they had been trying to get it published for quite awhile and Monday was the first time it was finally inserted in the community calendar page.

This group was quite a bit smaller than the Oak Ridge group.  There were about sixteen attendee’s including another couple who were there for the first time after seeing the mention in the paper.  We sat around three tables and had a great opportunity to discuss symptoms, medications, exercises and care giving tips while enjoying lunch.  After lunch we had a short presentation by the founder of the group who is a speech pathologist and had just returned from a conference.  She gave us some tips on how to stand erect and a simple stretching routine that will strengthen the neck muscles and help prevent problems with swallowing.  Again an interesting and informative meeting and we will attend again.

So I didn’t have to announce my problems to the group(s) and I didn’t see my future, but I did get a lot of good information and a chance to meet other PWP’s and caregivers and exchange information.

We have been working at keeping up the exercise routine since we have been home and are doing pretty well, averaging about an hour a day.  We continue to walk or ride the bike and try to include either Tai Chi or Yoga routines everyday.  We purchased another Tai Chi DVD that is more advanced and not quite as easy to follow but we are getting there. Yoga continues to be difficult with my stiff muscles but I know continuing it will help me to gain flexibility and it will get easier (I hope).

April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month and I hope to post informational items as the month progresses.  We will be walking in the East TN Parkinson’s Walk on April 5th.  This walk is the local version of the Parkinson’s Unity Walk held in NYC April 26th.  One hundred percent of the funds raised are donated to Parkinson’s research foundations.  You can find out more about the walk by clicking here or if you wish to support our team, you can click here.

April is also Autism Awareness Month, another cause that is important to me, so next month’s posts should be chock full of information!

Month: March 2014

  • Support

    When I was first diagnosed,  I had mixed feelings about attending a support group.  I wondered if we sat in a circle and I said “Hi, I’m Tom and I have Parkinson’s”  (Hiiii Tom).  Was there a 12 step program for dealing with Parkinson’s? 😉  And I was worried that seeing PWP’s with a wide range of  symptoms would be like seeing my future.  But as I learned more about Parkinson’s I realized that it is a progressive disease that affects everyone of us in different ways and no two seem to be alike.  And, as we learned at the Kripalu retreat and in Florida,  it is helpful to meet other PWP’s and caregivers to trade experiences, share coping strategies, and for a sense of community

    So, last week we attended two local support groups, The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group and the local Kingston Support Group.   Both groups meet at a local church, both meetings included lunch and both provided us with a positive experience.

    The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Support Group, PK Hope is Alive, met on Tuesday in Oak Ridge.  There were probably 60 – 70 people in attendance pretty much evenly divided between PWP’s and caregivers.  We opened with some voice exercises led by one of the PWP which included some singing. I didn’t have a signing voice before Parkinson’s and it sure hasn’t improved, but it was fun.  After lunch they introduced Dr.Scott Wylie Ph.D from Vanderbilt University Movement Disorders Clinic, a National Parkinson’s Foundation Center of Excellence. He gave a fascinating presentation on “Cognitive Changes in the Parkinson’s Patient”.  He and his research group are doing research about the effect too little or too much dopamine can have on cognitive functions.

    Dr Wylie pointed out that James Parkinson, in his 1817 ‘Essay on the Shaking Palsy” described the disease as ” Involuntary tremulous motion, with lessened  muscular power, in parts not in action and even when supported; with a propensity to bend the trunk forward, and to pass from a walking to a running pace: the senses and intellects being uninjured.” (Underline added) He expects that last bit would be revised if James Parkinson were alive today.

    While most of us were aware that lack of dopamine is at the root of our motor symptoms, his research has shown that it may also have an impact on our cognitive symptoms too. I hope to get a copy of his presentation and will provide more information in a later post. After the presentation, he answered questions from the group which meant we didn’t get an opportunity to break out into smaller groups of PWP’s and caregivers for discussion but the meeting was fun and we plan to attend again.

    The local Kingston Support Group met on Wednesday.  We first heard about this group during a Tai Chi lesson when someone mentioned that they were aware a group met in the same space but didn’t know the day or time.  So I had planned to call the church when we returned from Florida to get the information but, as luck would have it, the Monday edition of our local paper made mention of the meeting’s day and time.  We found out later that they had been trying to get it published for quite awhile and Monday was the first time it was finally inserted in the community calendar page.

    This group was quite a bit smaller than the Oak Ridge group.  There were about sixteen attendee’s including another couple who were there for the first time after seeing the mention in the paper.  We sat around three tables and had a great opportunity to discuss symptoms, medications, exercises and care giving tips while enjoying lunch.  After lunch we had a short presentation by the founder of the group who is a speech pathologist and had just returned from a conference.  She gave us some tips on how to stand erect and a simple stretching routine that will strengthen the neck muscles and help prevent problems with swallowing.  Again an interesting and informative meeting and we will attend again.

    So I didn’t have to announce my problems to the group(s) and I didn’t see my future, but I did get a lot of good information and a chance to meet other PWP’s and caregivers and exchange information.

    We have been working at keeping up the exercise routine since we have been home and are doing pretty well, averaging about an hour a day.  We continue to walk or ride the bike and try to include either Tai Chi or Yoga routines everyday.  We purchased another Tai Chi DVD that is more advanced and not quite as easy to follow but we are getting there. Yoga continues to be difficult with my stiff muscles but I know continuing it will help me to gain flexibility and it will get easier (I hope).

    April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month and I hope to post informational items as the month progresses.  We will be walking in the East TN Parkinson’s Walk on April 5th.  This walk is the local version of the Parkinson’s Unity Walk held in NYC April 26th.  One hundred percent of the funds raised are donated to Parkinson’s research foundations.  You can find out more about the walk by clicking here or if you wish to support our team, you can click here.

    April is also Autism Awareness Month, another cause that is important to me, so next month’s posts should be chock full of information!

  • Beach Time is the Best Time!

    Beach Time is the Best Time!

    We are on our third week of hanging at the beach in Siesta Key, FL  We were scheduled to leave on March 1 but decided to add one more week.  We had to change units but the move was easy and we get another week away from the cold weather predicted again for Eastern Tennessee.

    While we are here we have met up with Judy and Fred Metz, old high school friends of Mara’s for a nice meal and a walk on the beach. They recently relocated to the area from Washington DC and live in a lovely home on Sarasota Bay.

    We have also joined up several times with Joel Gordon and his wife Rabbi Melissa Wenig whom we first met at the Kripalau Wellness Retreat last October. They came down from Cambridge, MA in January and are staying until May. It has been a great opportunity to discuss how Parkinson’s has impacted our lives with another PwP.  One of our outings was to the Venice Rookery, a small island on a small lake in Venice where hundreds of Egrets, Herons and other birds roost at night.  We went at sunset and watched the flocks fly in from where ever and take up residence in the bushes on the island.  This picture gives you an idea but doesn’t do justice to the whole experience.

     

    After the Rookery, we paid a visit to Olaf’s ice cream shop in SiestaKey Village. Yum!

    The warm weather has been  great, allowing us to get out more and we have upped our exercise to at least 1.5 hours a day, primarily walking along the beach and doing Tai Chi which we both enjoy, in fact we ordered the next DVD so we can expand our practice.  We have been averaging 4 – 5 miles per day walking on the beach, plus walking to our favorite restaurant, Captain Curt’s, for a spot of their world famous clam chowder for lunch!  I have definitely noticed improvement in my walking and balance with the warm weather and increased exercise.

    We also have started doing Yoga using Introduction to Yoga and Meditation, a DVD by one of our instructors from Kripalu, Megha-Nancy Buttenheim.  The meditation instruction is great and the yoga practice is challenging for my stiff limbs 🙂

    In between all of the exercising, I’ve found time to complete more of my genetics course, enjoy many a beautiful sunset, catch up on my magazines, read a few books, and enjoy the beach.  We have rented a cabana chair for the week and we spend a few hours each day out on the beach reading, soaking up the Vitamin D and people watching. Oh and I finally found time to complete a blog post!!

    We head home Saturday and hope that spring arrives at the same time 🙂

    Until next time, I end with one of my favorite quotes by Virginia Satir- “Life is not the way it’s supposed to be.. It’s the way it is.. The way we cope with it, is what makes the difference.”