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Quest Issue 2, 2022 -
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Recent Quest Articles
Helping Hands
An MDA partner since 2001, Lowe’s takes great pride in improving the communities it serves. To date, Lowe’s and its loyal customers have raised more than $63 million to support MDA’s mission. Lowe’s also supports MDA by encouraging their employees to volunteer throughout the year and to join together in select improvement projects. This year’s projects included helping to construct new decks and ramps for the MDA Summer Camp at Camp Calvin Crest in Nebraska.
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Carry On
For Ed Walsh, who has been a U.S. Postal Service letter carrier for 23 years, getting involved with MDA came naturally. Walsh is a member of the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 358 in New York. NALC was one of MDA’s first national sponsors, originally partnering with MDA in 1952. Beyond that official partnership, Walsh and his fellow branch members have found personal connections to MDA.
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In Sickness and in Health
Have you seen the ridiculous meme going around the internet that asks people if they would stay with their spouse if their spouse ended up in a wheelchair? Every time I see it, it makes my blood boil, especially when people hesitate with their answer. It is upsetting that this is even a question to be asked. Marriage is a commitment, and a disability should not change that. But not everyone sees it that way. Fortunately, my husband Russel and I both do.
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Career Starters
For Victoria Haire, landing a summer internship in the Dallas MDA office this year wasn’t simply a way to see what it was like to work in the business world; it was life-changing.Haire, who hails from Louisville, Ky., was diagnosed with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) at age 5. As part of her five-week internship with MDA, she got to work in an MDA Care Center alongside MDA’s family care specialists. “I knew right in that moment that this is what I need to do,” says Haire, 21, a University of Southern Illinois student studying communications with a minor in social work. “I texted my parents on the first day and said, ‘This is my calling.’”
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Caregiving: Choosing with Care
Amid the wave of anxiety and emotion that can accompany living with a neuromuscular disease, Bill and Sharon Sumner saw a few things clearly the day they learned of Sharon’s ALS diagnosis. “I knew we would keep her at home, and I knew I would be the one to take care of her,” Bill says. The Sumners were in a prime position to make such choices. Having sold his successful manufacturing business, Bill had the time to devote to his wife and the money to hire personal care attendants (PCAs) as her condition progressed. But for many families, when a diagnosis is made or a disease progresses to the point where daily care is needed, the decision isn’t as clear-cut. Financial means, work schedules, family dynamics and the extent of a support system are among the many factors that go into planning in-home care.
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Pursuing Your Passion
When he was younger, Andrew Baker, a 21-year-old junior at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., who has Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), knew he wanted to compete. He tried baseball and soccer, but found that with his CMT he was unable to be a competitive player. Serendipitously, he was recommended swimming as a form of physical therapy, and with some encouragement from his younger sister who also has CMT, he decided to try swimming competitively.
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From Apples to Advocacy
For Dayniah Manderson, a teacher, writer and mother with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) from New York City, being in a pageant at age 37 wasn’t really on her radar. But when she received a nomination for Ms. Wheelchair NY 2017, she was taken aback — at first.“Initially, I was disinterested because I didn’t know what the world of pageantry is about,” she says. “But after someone contacted me and explained it to me, it became more appealing. They had to do a little convincing, but ultimately I appreciate them pushing me to do it.”
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A Strong Tradition
Like many kids, Vince Van Binsbergen, 26, wanted to be a fire fighter when he grew up. “I used to run around with a fake EMT bag,” says the California native, laughing.Van Binsbergen never outgrew that dream, and at age 15, he enrolled in a fire explorer program, where he learned what being a fire fighter is all about. After high school, he moved to Colorado and served as a volunteer fire fighter for the Elk Creek fire department while working as an EMT. After about three years, a paid position opened up, and he’s been working for the Elk Creek Fire Department Local 4710 ever since.
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CITGO Gives Back
At the 2017 MDA Scientific Conference in Arlington, Va., on March 20, MDA presented CITGO Petroleum Corporation Assistant Vice President of Supply and Marketing Alan Flagg with a special research award to honor CITGO’s unprecedented contribution to MDA’s research program over the years. In the past 30 years, CITGO has donated more than $200 million to MDA to support the search for new treatments and cures for neuromuscular diseases.
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Surviving and Thriving in College
College is a blast, but it can come with a pile of challenges the size of a mountain. Just look at the hundreds of articles there are advising students on how to conquer stress, manage time and deal with that one professor who may as well have been stripped from an ‘80s movie. College can be the best — and the most draining — time in a person’s life.
Read MoreMDA Resource Center: We’re Here For You
Our trained specialists are here to provide one-on-one support for every part of your journey. Send a message below or call us at 1-833-ASK-MDA1 (1-833-275-6321). If you live outside the U.S., we may be able to connect you to muscular dystrophy groups in your area, but MDA programs are only available in the U.S.