Life on Wheels (65 page)

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Authors: Gary Karp

Tags: #Health & Fitness, #Physical Impairments, #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Health & Daily Living, #Medical, #Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, #Physiology, #Philosophy, #General

BOOK: Life on Wheels
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Since you don’t have to rush—either because you know your erection is not going to suddenly go limp or because you’ve learned to love the kind of foreplay that your partner wants more of, you might just find your new sexual style is actually—in some truly meaningful ways—more appealing to your partner. You might find yourself being considered more of a man, not less.
It’s no small adjustment. Letting go of such a strong basis of your sense of self as your current masculine identity is heavy stuff. But it’s doable, and there is an even stronger self on the other side, with plenty of pleasure to go around.
Partners

 

You might already be in a committed relationship, have a sexual partner and wonder if it’s going to last, or be thinking about embarking on a search for a new partner. Each relationship has its particular dynamics, but all involve how you feel about your body.
Your Body Image

 

The body goes through certain changes—depending on the given disability—about which you might feel insecure or self-conscious. Muscle atrophy that results in very thin, sometimes skeletal limbs is common with SCI. Amputees have their stumps. There might be scars from surgeries, leftover effects of skin rashes, burns, or other skin conditions. Higher-level spinal disabilities can result in a distended stomach and loss in tone in the abdominal muscles. People with quadriplegia have curled fingers and thin hands that they cannot use for handshaking or for certain sexual activities. Spinal fusions or the insertion of rods in the spine can impose a very upright posture that others may misinterpret as an uptight body language. You might adopt a stiff posture for fear that movement will induce muscle spasms. Your disability might entail different shapes or proportions in your body or limbs. These physical realities all affect the signals put out to potential partners. They also influence your sense of self. For this woman with paraplegia, this was a central part of her sexuality and disability process:

 

I had to work through the emotional process of growing into the belief that my body is a way to be in the world three-dimensionally, but is NOT the ultimate expression of my being. I came to the belief that my metaphysical self is more ME than my physical self. My body is a way of manifesting who I really am, not the TRUTH of who I am.
Over time, you will adapt to your “new normal” because you will no longer have the point of reference to what your body looked like prior to your disability. You become accustomed to your new shape, and it is just your familiar body. This might sound like it’s another quality of loss, but, in fact, it’s a feature of the amazing adaptive capacity of your being human. This, of course, has something to do with how well you take care of yourself: remember, body-image issues are not unique to disability but affect everyone. Your body-image issues are different and particular to your disability, but take care not to fall into the notion that someone who is ablebodied is confident in their body simply because they don’t have a disability and you do.
Your wheelchair becomes part of your body image and is part of what people react to when they first meet you, so body image is a factor in your choice of wheelchair—although it shouldn’t outweigh function. Choose a chair that fits your personality, but make sure that optimal mobility and safety get the highest priority.
Body image is a powerful force in how the world views you as a sexual person, as this paraplegic woman in her 30s found out in the early years after an SCI:

 

It wasn’t easy at all to develop my sexual identity as a disabled teenager. I was 14, so I never got to wear hose or walk in high heels. Our culture defines so much of a female’s sexuality by the appearance of her legs.
She went on to marry, have children, and discover a clear and satisfying sexual identity for herself.

 

I don’t have time to feel sorry for myself as a woman in a wheelchair because I’m embracing life now.
The Baylor study reports:

 

Women with disabilities who had a more positive sexual self image and who perceived themselves to be approachable by potential romantic partners also had higher levels of sexual activity.
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It’s not hard to imagine that these things would be true for men as well. As one woman explained, “The sexiest thing to me is self-confidence.” Feelings of shame and embarrassment can be overwhelming, yet, again and again, people with disabilities have found that these feelings become irrelevant in the presence of a trusted, intimate partner.
Existing Couples

 

There is a cultural assumption that an ablebodied person who stays with someone after the occurrence of a disability is either masochistic or heroic. This is among the most inaccurate of cultural assumptions about disability. Ultimately, people stay together because of love and loyalty, not obligation or sacrifice. Some couples will stay together, some won’t. Staying together is more about people and their values and what they mean to each other, not any social notions about being an “invalid” or a “caretaker.”

 

My doctor told me that I would have to forget about my girlfriend and move on to others. It turned out that he was right, but not especially because of my acquired disability. It was getting time to move on anyway. She might very well have made the transition with me if she were the right partner for me in the first place.
When love is real, it shows, as this wheelchair user discovered:

 

I had a conversation on an airplane with an accomplished businessman who told me about a young couple who were recently married. The man had become a quadriplegic during the engagement, and they still got married. My flying partner said that many people doubted her motives or their chances of success. They saw a woman giving up her future. I asked what he saw. He answered, “Two people in love.”
A sudden disability can be a strain to an existing relationship. Some couples might have allowed sexuality to be so much the foundation of their relationship that, in the presence of a sudden disability, they don’t have enough of a foundation in the other aspects of their relationship to carry them through. The issue of changes in their sexual relations can be the final straw that breaks apart a couple whose relationship was not strong to begin with.
In the Baylor study of women with disabilities,
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several issues with existing partners were reported.

 

A woman with a disability may blame herself for everything that goes wrong in a relationship.
Her husband may take advantage of her self-blame and collude in blaming all their marital problems on the disability.
Nearly half of women with partners responding to the study sometimes felt like a burden to their partners.
Nearly half also felt that their relationship suffered because they were less able to contribute to housework or participate in previously enjoyed activities.
Baylor’s Dr. Margaret Nosek states:

 

You find relationships that go beyond the physical. Many women reported they found new kinds of activities they can do with their partners. If the relationship is good, they’ll find other doors that can be opened.
Some reported cases of later-onset disability, in which the men they were with just couldn’t deal with it, and it broke up their marriage. In other cases, it didn’t, it made them significantly closer. Success in marriage didn’t depend on when the disability happened, whether they were born with it, or if it happened later in life.
Some couples don’t succeed. A man who broke his neck 10 years into his marriage recounts the subsequent breakup of his marriage. His wife had been very supportive during his rehabilitation and return home, but then they ran into severe difficulties:

 

The only thing that I was so disappointed about in her was she was so fearful of making love to me again. And I wanted to please her needs, not worried about my pleasure. Maybe 5% curious to find out if I could do more than I was told. For 14 months, every time I would bring up the subject she would say, “I’m not ready yet,” and end of discussion!
Then two months later, her reply would be, “I don’t know if I’ll ever be ready.” Before I was injured, our sex life was great; we did just about everything to please each other.
In October, we had our 11-year wedding anniversary. The first Friday of November, she came home later than usual and said, “I don’t know how to tell you this, but I want a divorce. If you hadn’t broken your neck I wouldn’t be leaving.”
The statistics about couples staying together are encouraging. The rate of divorce after disability is only slightly higher than in the nondisabled population. Successful couples have achieved a bond that goes beyond simple matters of sexual function. Though important, loss of sexual options have less impact than you might think on an existing relationship that is strong. Such a couple is capable of accommodating the disability and enjoying each other. A woman in her 40s describes her relationship:

 

I married my partner because we communicate so well. Talking about sex is not easy to do, but it’s critically important. At first, all discussions had to take place well away from the bedroom because there’s lots of potential for hurt feelings and misunderstanding in the heat of the moment.
Now I treasure the intimacy that we share. I appreciate the cuddles and the sensations that aren’t painful. Handholding and kissing have always been wonderful. I’ve learned to stop thinking of these as “foreplay” and enjoy them for their own delights.
The right partner—married or not—can make an important difference in one’s overall adjustment to a new disability, as this paraplegic man with an SCI says:

 

Fortunately, for the year prior to the accident, I was in a relationship with a strong woman. She helped me through the hard times and showed me that my sexuality—now different—could be enjoyable. She was there for me and this was very important in my recovering with a reasonable amount of sanity.

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