Off
the seat of a
bicycle
Chapter 60 First years in Texas and arthritis hammers my body
My
wife and I got married in her hometown Cincinnati; and afterwards I
packed a U-Haul with my tools and some starter furniture, and drove to
Houston, dragging along my dirty Chevette on a pull-behind dolly.
I
was still driving that Chevette I bought in Chicago in 1978. I never
once washed that thing, and by 1984 the floor under the driver’s feet
was completely rusted away. I’m not kidding … this was a Fred
Flintstone car … you could put both feet on the pavement while sitting
in the driver’s seat. I wedged a 2x4 under the seat so it wouldn’t fall
to the pavement while I was driving around … and when it rained, I got
wet.
In 1985 when I traded that car in, the salesman couldn’t
keep a straight face. They gave me a $100 trade-in, and when I
protested, the guy said, ‘that car is used up.’
The car had
boards and tools and little pipe fittings and all kinds of crud under
the hatchback. I had money in the bank … enough to pay cash outright
for a new vehicle … but there was no need because the Chevette worked
fine … I must have been the tightest guy around for a hundred miles.
You
see, I had a dirty old car and a dirty old suit, and cut my own hair,
and that’s why I didn’t get those sales jobs in California … it’s
because people measure others by their exterior gloss … and my patina
has always been ruddy and cruddy … and I never knew any of this shit
about myself before writing this book.
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A lot happened in the following three years.
I
found a suit-and-tie job selling postal equipment, but kept thinking; I
could hardly wait to retire and build stuff in a shop … so after six
months I went back into the repair and remodeling business. The big
energy-recession had its grip on Houston in 1984-6 and business was
dead everywhere, but my business took off and never skipped a beat; 7
days a week, year-round except major holidays.
The bicycle path
along Braes Bayou beckoned and I loved the serenity and safety of that
route, riding nearly 10 miles every night, and sometimes further. I
started riding the long miles into downtown Houston, but it exhausted
me so I cut back.
Then in late 1985, at age 35, Rheumatoid-Arthritis hammered my body.
My
left eye turned red and hurt. My wrists hurt like broken bones and I
actually thought they were somehow cracked from bicycling.
The
eye doctor smartly directed me to a rheumatologist, who ran the tests
and stabbed me through the heart with his diagnosis. I had a disease
that rarely lets go; and it comes back each day and takes a nibble, and
finally crumples you into a worthless shape in a wheelchair unable to
wipe your own ass.
It was a slow-motion bike crash under the wheels of a car.
He
said, ‘twenty percent of people get better and twenty percent get
worse’ … but I knew, soon as he said it … I was in the twenty percent
that got worse. I told my wife and cried because I wanted more for her.
It was her dream too, that we’d work together and buy a house.
A
few months later the capsula in my right knee ruptured at work and
filled my lower calf with blood and joint fluid. The doctor put me in
the hospital, and I laid out ten days then went back to work. But the
knee ruptured again and my whole body shook.
I raced home and
called the doctor. He calmed me down … but I didn’t know what to do.
For once in my life, I had goals, but everything was being stolen by
disease.
Rapidly my condition worsened, and no medicine touched
it, so my doctor said we would try the strongest drug: Gold. He didn’t
come out and say it, but I knew if it didn’t work, my chances were slim.
The
most important person in my life rallied around me. My wife never
hesitated. She pulled off my socks at night and pulled them on in the
morning. She wrapped me with heating pads and pulled up the covers to
help me sleep. I sweat out a powerful ugly odor every night, and was
soaking wet by morning.
I hired two guys to work in my business
and wandered along every day to help out and usually by three in the
afternoon, I could do a little bit of work.
One evening in the
summer of 1986, I went out for a slow 8-mile bike ride on the Braeswood
path … and ran square into my doctor who was walking near his house. He
described the event as incredulous. How the hell could someone be
hospital-sick with RA and riding a bike, but I was a street fighter and
you know that’s true.
The Gold would take six months before we
knew whether it would help, and time had dribbled away. Five and a half
months were gone, and then one night we were painting an office at the
mall, and I could barely walk out to the van, but suddenly felt the
medicine working. Something lifted off of me and I can’t tell you what
it was.
Here I was, barely able to walk and totally unable to
hammer a nail, and my body said, you got lucky and I told my wife that
night, and slowly over the next three months my strength returned … but
never like it was before, and my right knee never did repair.
Avidly
I ignored the daily pain that arthritis brings, and threw myself back
into work, then asked the doctor, ‘how long do I have?’
He
threw the optimistic face and said, ‘some people take Gold for twenty
years.’ But I needed the truth. So he looked me square in the eye, and
said, ‘5 years … and after that, the medicine will stop.’
There was a lot to do.
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