Showing posts with label author of the upcoming book EarthBound TomBoy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author of the upcoming book EarthBound TomBoy. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2016

To Anyone Else Who Must Accept a Life of Chronic Pain

FROM THE MIGHTY -- We face disability, disease and mental illness together




By Heidi Johnson-Wright

I live each day with a rotten reality: I will have pain every waking moment until the day I die.
Until they put me in the crematory and reduce me to a five-pound cardboard box of ashes, I will always be in pain. I’ve known this for a long time, but somehow putting it on paper makes it more real. And a little more frightening.

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) cleaned my clock — plain and simple. When it made its arrival my fourth grade year, my disease spread like wildfire, decimating joints from head to toe. By the time I graduated from high school, I had both shoulders and both hips replaced. Both ankles were permanently fused in place. My hands and feet were destroyed.

From the moment of my diagnosis, I battled not just physical pain but also anxiety and depression. I didn’t know that’s what my emotional suffering was called, or that it was linked to fear of my own mortality and anguish at my body’s disintegration. But I certainly understood what it meant to live in a constant state of fear. Even everyday things like meeting new people made me sick with dread. My finger joints were swollen and inflamed. If someone grabbed my hand to shake it, my knees nearly buckled from the pain. My stomach knotted when I knew I had to climb stairs, taxing my already painful knees and ankles. I held a bottomless pit of despair inside me which I tried time and time again to blot out.

The domino effect of the RA’s destruction was more than any kid could be expected to cope with. Yet no one — no medical professional of any stripe — ever suggested to my parents that I could benefit from talk therapy or even pain management skills. That’s astonishing, given that folks in the health professions have long been aware that living with chronic pain makes someone susceptible to depression.

The reality is that virtually all forms of arthritis bring chronic pain and are incurable. They attack, destroy and stay put until they’re good and ready to depart. My disease departed when I was in my early 20s. Although I’ve not had any active RA since Wham! was in the Billboard Hot 100, the damage to my natural joints has been devastating and permanent. I still have to depend on those joints every day to pull on a shirt, walk, stand up from a chair — anything requiring movement. Even the gentlest of activity taxes joints that have been weakened from the damage done.

It’s like a wooden house whose interior support beams have been chewed through by termites. The termite swarm may depart, never to return. Yet at any time, the slightest stress on the damaged and weakened support beams may cause parts of the house to come crashing down.

Most days, my pain is like white noise. It remains at a level which I can mostly tune out. But some days the pain ratchets up. Like Glenn Close’s character in “Fatal Attraction,” it will not be ignored.

I do not write this to elicit pity. I write it out of solidarity with anyone else who must live each day with a painful, irreversible reality. I write it for those who wake up each day, put their feet on the floor and move forward even when they’d rather crawl back in bed and pull the covers over their heads. I write it for those who must accept what seems like cannot be accepted.

You are stronger than you could ever imagine.

http://themighty.com/2016/04/accepting-life-of-chronic-pain-from-rheumatoid-arthritis/

Sunday, March 6, 2016

YOUR SECRET IS NOT SAFE WITH ME



 (What a load of patronizing, belittling crap)

FROM THE WORLD OF THE EARTHBOUND TOMBOY

by Heidi Johnson-Wright
 
Oh, yeah…you know you want to.

You burn to click on that link and watch the video clip with its provocative title. You want it to pull you in, to take your focus off the world around you for a few minutes. Maybe you even keep Kleenex by the computer, just in case.

Finally, you give in to your urges and cue up the video. And there it is: a one-legged guy running a 5K. You feel warmth surging through you. The tears well up and roll down your cheeks. You grab that handy Kleenex and wipe them away.

No, I’m not talking about fetish porn. I’m talking about inspiration porn: the objectification of people with disabilities as inspirational simply because they are living their lives. Non-disabled people do this for their own benefit, as if disabled people are not people but are merely props to make the non-disabled feel good. To make them feel inspired, all warm and fuzzy.

Well, I got news for you. If you feel the urge to compliment me simply for getting out of bed each day and pulling my clothes on, stick a sock in it.

Don’t get me wrong: I enjoy getting compliments. Tell me my blue eyes are gorgeous, and I’ll blush and smile back. But if you tell me I’m fiercely independent just because I drive myself to work, you’ll get a wilting glare.

Might as well tell me I’m a credit to my kind. You know, the gimpy kind. Those handicapped, the wheelchair people who shouldn’t be expected to do more than weave potholders and soil their diapers.

Seriously, if you need people with disabilities to make you feel good about your own situation, I suggest you find a good psychotherapist. 

Just leave me out of it. 

Thursday, January 14, 2016

HEIDI JOHNS0N-WRIGHT A PRIME CONTRIBUTOR TO WOMENSMEMOIRS.COM

TALES OF OUR LIVES: Fork in the Road -- all 5 star reviews on Amazon to date

TALES OF OUR LIVES, an anthology of 81 inspiring true stories, informs woman's desire to record, examine, understand, and report life journeys. In an era of reality shows that aren't close to reality, the authentic voices of these authors stand out, clearly conveying their heartfelt stories. As you read, you'll find yourself laughing, crying, even cheering the women on. And, if you want to compile your own stories, you'll find a bonus writing tool included--Introduction to Writing Alchemy--the document that helped these women go deeper into their own stories. 

TALES OF OUR LIVES brings you life stories in two anthology volumes -- Fork in the Road and Reflection Pond. Put on your comfortable walking shoes for in Volume 1: Fork in the Road, you'll travel down life's path with the authors as they reveal the people and events that made all the difference in their lives, the stories that made them who they are. In Volume 2: Reflection Pond, pull up a chair and sit with the authors as they reflect on their lives across the years--the stories, big and small, that they recall. 

The author's stories may serve as a springboard to writing your own life legacy. As a reader of these two anthologies, you also receive the same material on how to use Writing Alchemy. It is a gift to you so that you can shine a light on the moments that helped shape you using this dynamic methodology. 

AND STILL MORE. In addition to giving you a full description of Writing Alchemy, you also can use these two anthology volumes to enhance your writing skills in two more ways. First, each section includes a series of writing prompts based on the types of stories shared in that part. Volume 1 gives you 42 prompts and Volume 2 includes 56 prompts. Second, you can study these stories to learn about effective openings, titles that foreshadow the story, character descriptions, emotions that pull the reader in, dialogue that moves the story forward, sensory details that bring story scenes to life, and time/place elements that serve as backdrop or become as important as the main characters.

THE ANTHOLOGY AUTHORS provide you life narratives that will delight, entertain, and enthrall you. The telling of these extraordinary stories of ordinary women may trigger memories of your own for these authors speak to our collective experiences as much as they do their own.  

ABOUT THE EDITOR. Matilda Butler is the co-founder of WomensMemoirs.com and the award-winning co-author of the collective memoir ROSIE'S DAUGHTERS: The “First Woman To” Generation Tells Its Story, Second Edition, WRITING ALCHEMY: How to Write Fast and Deep, and other books. Butler is the co-editor of the award-winning anthology series SEASONS OF OUR LIVES (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter) that rose to #2, #3, #4, #5 on the Amazon Kindle's bestseller list. A psychologist, online and in-person memoir coach and conference speaker, Butler writes and teaches in the Willamette Valley of Oregon and Waikoloa Beach, Hawaii. 
  



                          HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT


Wednesday, January 13, 2016

HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT'S AUTHOR PROFILE ON AMAZON




Heidi Johnson-Wright is both a writer and an ADA compliance professional.

(Also a lawyer, but please don't hold it against her.)

She's had severe rheumatoid arthritis since childhood and is a full-time power wheelchair user. She was a poster child for the Arthritis Foundation.

Over time, she's come to the conclusion that going through life in an upright position is overrated.

Johnson-Wright has been a published free-lance writer for more than two decades, writing stories on inclusive design, life with a disability and accessible travel, as well as book and music reviews.

Johnson-Wright is a native Clevelander who got smart and moved to Miami.

She and her husband are two of a handful of Anglos who live in her Little Havana neighborhood.

In addition to her essays in "Tales of Our Lives," she has a forthcoming memoir titled "The Earthbound Tomboy."

FOLLOW HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT AT

Monday, January 11, 2016

MY WIFE HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT IS A BEST-SELLING MEMOIRIST

Heidi Johnson-Wright, author of the upcoming book EarthBound TomBoy, has reached best seller status on Amazon within the first week of the release of Tales of Our Lives: Reflection Pond.

Heidi's excerpt from her upcoming memoir helped propel the Matilda Butler-edited complilation to  best seller #5 Kindle Writing Skills.

The book also is #34 Kindle Memoirs by Women)

Buy the book at: