Stand Up, Get Knocked Back Down Again – And Repeat

knockedI had an ‘interesting’ taxi ride yesterday afternoon.

The Boss has picked me up for work every morning since early this year, when my symptoms made it too difficult to drive.

Almost a year on, it’s become the norm, which takes a huge amount of pressure off me, yet another adaptation that has slid into my life almost unnoticed.

After a bit of training, he makes sure there’s a fresh coffee in my little cup-holder, and if I’m lucky, a croissant or bacon sarnie.

Anyway, yesterday the job ran over and The Boss arranged a taxi to get me home which I fell into gratefully.

Until the conversation, which went something like this:

‘Been busy today?’

‘Yeah, lots of calls, but most of them for so-called disabled people, I drive them to their assessments? What a joke. Malingerers, the lot of ’em.’

‘Well, some of us do work? Like me?’

‘Yeah, but most of them, they look … normal? Nothing wrong with ’em. And there’s me, working 60-70 hours a week, slogging my guts out, to fund them? I mean, there’s something seriously wrong with the system?’

‘Yeah, but I work?’

‘Not the point, is it? Honestly, you should see them, prancing around, then well upset when they don’t get their benefits. Benefits? Free-loaders, the lot of ’em. And there’s me …’

This went on for fourteen miles. Nothing I said would convince him to see the other side of the debate. He’d read his newspapers and was ‘well-informed’.

It wasn’t only disabled people; students were another pet-hate; ‘four of ’em in my taxi – a quid each to go to town?? I mean, they gotta get used to real life, but they’re living it up like kings at university.’

His views to one side, this was a chilling reminder of the wider view of what people like us have to put up with, especially in light of being reassessed for PIP. Not only do we encounter the DWP rock-face, we also face a monumental societal challenge.

You would think, with such a serious illness as MS, we were somehow ‘protected’ from this bile. A verifiable, quantifiable, certifiable illness? Not a chance. We were all one and the same.

When I got back home, I grabbed the cat and went straight to bed. It’s the best place to be right now and I seem to be going earlier and earlier. It’s the only place I can be at peace.

I’ve been knocked down many times – most significantly in 2011 when MS blasted onto the scene, then the diagnosis in 2012 and my subsequent sacking. You get knocked down. You stand up. You take another blow. Partner’s left? Blam. Income dropped? Blam. You get knocked down. You stagger up again.

How many times can you get knocked down? Just when I think I have created a world that works for me, it’s destroyed. And this happens over and over again.

MS is bad enough, but the DWP should really have their own disease/illness classification – ‘DWPitis’ – : symptoms include:

  • Hopelessness
  • Fear of the future
  • Anxiety/panic attacks
  • Destitution
  • Increase in existing illness symptoms
  • All of the above x 10

And just when I think things can’t get any worse, The Teenager texted me yesterday to inform me he’s applied to be on ‘Love Island’…

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10 thoughts on “Stand Up, Get Knocked Back Down Again – And Repeat

  1. Donna says:

    Just sending you a massive hug.

  2. Annie says:

    A**hole cab driver …. your blog was making me so angry with people. So many are clueless …. but I have to admit … I smiled at the end of it? gotta love the teenager?

    • stumbling in flats says:

      He sure does lighten the mood!
      The last 8 years of Austerity really hasn’t helped the cause of disabled people one bit, sadly 🙁
      x

  3. Joan (Devon) says:

    Just for you Barbara –

    Just like a weighted toy,
    That wobbles on its base.
    So is my present life,
    With challenges I have to face.

    The knocks set me to and fro,
    Then upright I regain.
    Until the next and next knockbacks.
    Why is it always the same?

    Can’t I just be left in peace,
    To teeter on my own,
    To live my life as best I can,
    Fighting the seeds that are sown.

    • Joan (Devon) says:

      PS When I said it was just for you, what I meant was, that although all of us with MS suffer knockbacks in one way or the other, you seem to have had more because of your marriage break-up and redundancy. Nothing more.

      • stumbling in flats says:

        Totally understand! It’s a rocky road at the moment – fingers crossed PIP will be in my favour (Ok, everything crossed!), and then life can get back to some kind of normal! I think it’s really important that I keep in mind everything that is good, in amongst all the bad. Like you guys and your support! X

    • stumbling in flats says:

      That’s absolutely beautiful, Joan! And exactly how I’m feeling right now.
      You’re a great writer 🙂 X

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