Mar 30 2011
Back On Track
In the late innings of the Yankee game in Tampa yesterday, I suffered a sudden and complete lapse of optimism. Duchenne muscular dystrophy had infiltrated my brain and made me a downer. Negativity took me over, and I began to think and dwell and wonder whether or not I will be alive in a year from now. Was this my final Spring Training? Could this be my last visit to Steinbrenner Field? Would I ever see Derek Jeter in-person again? I was struck by an overwhelming sense of melancholy, and my spirit took a punch. When you’re 44 with Duchenne and the clock is ticking in double-time, the question of your own mortality can sometimes hit you extra hard.
I felt an indescribable desire to study my surroundings and began to absorb all of the sights and sounds of the stadium like never before. I paid more attention to the game in progress, the annoying shouts of beer vendors, the advertisements adorning the outfield wall, the cheers and taunts of my fellow fans, the layout of the scoreboard, and the grass, dirt and remaining chalk lines on the field. Funny how you appreciate things more when you imagine what life would be like without them.
On my way out of the stadium, I turned back to soak in the place. Then I approached the right side of the small, roped-off area with replicas of the retired uniform number plaques – like those found in Yankee Stadium in New York – for one potential last look. I passed by the numbers of Reggie Jackson, Ron Guidry, Yogi Berra, Bill Dickey, Casey Stengel, and my all-time favorite Yankee, Don Mattingly. Finally, I came to the legendary Lou Gehrig. Here was a great man and ballplayer who lost his life many years ago to Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), another merciless neuromuscular disease. Gehrig fought his battle hard, with grace and dignity, yet he still went down. Unfair. Frustrating. Disheartening. Obviously, this relates to those of us with Duchenne. And whenever one of us succumbs to this disease, I take it personally. I get my dander up. I get outright pissed!
Thoughts of Lou Gehrig instantly turned my melancholy into anger, and snapped me right out of the doldrums. Inside, I was screaming: This is not me! I’m no downer! Duchenne doesn’t rule my mind! Enough of this shit! Of course, I’ll be around in a year from now! Hell yeah, I will enjoy another Spring Training! See you again, Jeter!
I had a little mind blip, but now Scotty Dawg is back. This existence is far from over, folks, and I’ll even guarantee that Duchenne will never get into my head again!
