Followers

Tuesday 27 June 2017

RETURN to the OKANAGAN


For Ron and me our Stroke Month Saga was the first major road expedition that we had attempted since his stroke in November, 2012. It had been eight years since we had headed up the Coquihalla Highway. The first feature that struck me as we neared the Nicola Valley was how green and plentiful the trees were. The last time we had passed this way evidence of the pine beetle infestation was everywhere. The orange and dying boughs on most of the pine trees suggested that this forest was in trouble and the prospect of a major forest fire loomed. Now it was obvious some kind of regenerative miracle had happened. Could the trees have healed themselves? I wondered.
            As we approached Kelowna the second feature we noted was how green the hills were. Where was all the sun-browned grass of yore? Could we be in Lancashire and not in the Okanagan? I wondered.
Actually I did know that the region had experienced record rain fall and snow pack melt. Kelowna was on flood watch when we arrived. Boating and swimming in the lakes were prohibited due to the high waters which were erasing beaches and concealing snags and other newly submerged hazards. The high waters were even challenging the clearance tolerances between Okanagan Lake and the nine year old William R. Bennett Bridge.
We found our hotel, The Fairmount, with relative ease. The weather was hot when we arrived. The outside temperature on our Toyota’s dash registered in the low thirties. After checking in we dined in the air conditioned comfort of the nearby Cactus Club and retired early. Could this trip be the one when I actually spotted Ogopogo, the legendary lake monster, kin to Nessie, famed in cryptobiologist and tourist lore? I wondered as I drifted into dreamland.  

We rendezvoused with Deborah Rusch, Manager Promote Recovery of the Heart and Stroke Foundation in BC, in the reception area of the Vernon Jubilee Hospital. As Deb went to pick up the lunch, Ron and I made our way to the Polson Tower for the first of the Lunch and Learn sessions.
            The purpose of Deb’s talk was to acquaint the health care professionals who attended with the new program which the Heart and Stroke Foundation began offering two years ago–Living with Stroke. This program is a community-based support and educational program designed for stroke survivors and their care partners. Each program runs for 6 – 8 weeks and is led by trained stroke survivors or professional therapists or a team of both. Unlike people who suffer from heart disease and who are usually able to return to their former lives easily, Heart and Stroke Foundation research shows that stroke survivors need and want support programs to help them cope with their recovery and with their re-integration into their communities. If this program had been offered five years ago Ron and I might not have felt like we had been abandoned and left to flounder on our own.
Ron’s subsequent talk immediately demonstrated that recovery from a stroke is a lengthy and challenging process. A stroke alters the brain, the mind and the self. The good news he shared is that the brain can heal itself and that recovery never ends. AND, he argued, if the stories of stroke survivors were taken seriously, if the anecdotal accounts of their stroke experiences were collected and collated by computer, the results would be scientifically significant. The results could teach us much about ourselves and about how the brain works. At the moment, the brain and the universe are our last two, equally UNKNOWN ZONES.

(Ogopogo not withstanding.)



Sunday 25 June 2017

STROKE MONTH SAGA


It all started innocently enough when Donna Hastings, CEO of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Alberta, the Northwest Territories and Nunavit, invited Ron to speak at a meeting of her Regional Managers to be held in Calgary on June 8. Ron accepted and Donna suggested he also contact Vicky Jones, President of the Stroke Recovery Association of Calgary. Ron did and Vicky promptly invited him to speak at their annual “convention” on June 10th at 10 AM SHARP.  Ron accepted. When Betty Jane Hegerat and Tyler Perry heard that Ron was coming to Calgary they arranged for Ron to read at Shelf Life Books on Wednesday evening, June 7th at 7 PM or thereabouts.

In the meantime, Marg Dietrich, a facilitator for the Heart and Stroke Foundation’s Living with Stroke program, had already written to Ron, telling him how much she had enjoyed The Defiant Mind, and, with the assistance of Head Librarian, Anne DeGrace, the two ladies arranged for Ron to read at the Nelson Public Library on June 1st at 7 PM.

I was pleased. My cousin, Cheryl, lives in Calgary and I thought this would be a good chance to see her. Also, I have always wanted to visit Nelson for many reasons: My long time friend, Suzanne, lives in Nelson and I thought that this would be a good chance to see her. Also, I am old enough to be a fan of the movie, Roxanne, starring Steve Martin, set in Nelson, and I thought that the reading would give me time to see the city first-hand.

When Deborah Rusch, Manager Promote Recovery of the Heart and Stroke Foundation in BC, heard that Ron was heading east she suggested that the two of them join forces. Deb would set up Lunch & Learn sessions at a number of hospitals in the BC Interior. Heart and Stroke would provide the lunch. Deb would talk about the Heart and Stroke Foundation’s new Living With Stroke program for stroke survivors, caregivers, and other interested parties, and Ron would follow with his personal story and a reading from his book if he were so inclined. He was.

So, on Saturday, May 27th Ron and I packed up our aging Silver Toyota with baggage and bed bar and headed for Vancouver to pick up books from Ronsdale Press. After an overnight stay with our good friends, Bill and Peggy, we departed for Kelowna the next morning and our Stroke Month Saga was under way.