Hi mary ,
It really sounds like you have cp, and Itotally relate to how you describe
walking. I used to walk like a cp-person, but in my 30's it became
extremely painful and hard to walk. when i turned 40, I got my first
powerchair, which is great, a year ago I injured myself, thought it might
be sciatica, but xrays finally show that it is just extremely tight hip
muscles pulling my hip the wrong way. I am in the works to see if a
baclofen pump will ease the hip and leg muscles. another disability that
looks like cp is dystonia, you might want to read about that.
good luck, keep us posted.
Mag
Tamar Raine
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> [Original Message]
> From: Mary Katherine Powers <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: 9/2/2006 6:12:01 PM
> Subject: other questions
>
> Hello,
>
> I hope you don't mind yet another email. there are a couple of other
> odd things I do and I was wondering if anyone can relate:
>
> a lot of the time, I don't like to have my feet flat on the ground. I
> feel a pull that is uncomfortable in my lower legs. so when I'm in the
> bathroom, I usually lean on the floor with the balls of my feet and sit
> with my feet pointed upwards. when I'm sitting at the computer, I
> often end up pulling my legs back and curling my toes under, or sitting
> with my lower legs bent so that the balls of my feet touch the floor
> and the rest of my feet is up at an angle. sometimes I'll sit with the
> outside of my feet touching the floor, and everything else lifted up.
> these things are more comfortable than sitting with my feet flat on the
> floor. I do have flat feet and I wear orthotics for them.
>
> maybe I've gotten really used to having poor posture and with the
> stretching, I'll sit in a more standard position. it pulls too much on
> my legs. I guess the flat feet could account for it?
>
> I toe-walked for a while as a child and my mother talked to the doctor
> about it, but he said a lot of kids do it. But I was told by a PT that
> I was essentially still doing it, because she said something about my
> ankles not coming up all the way so I was pushed forward on my toes. I
> don't understand what she meant because I put my heel on the floor.
> but she said I'm pushed forward too much, or something like that. she
> said I was out of alignment due to bone structure. I'm completely
> clueless on that.
>
> I also walked late - after age 2. I walked on my knees for a year. I
> forget whether I said that already.
>
> can anyone else relate to not wanting to put your feet flat on the
> ground? in shoes with the orthotics in them, it is easier. just in my
> bare feet, I don't like it.
>
> also, when I said I have to fight my legs to walk a lot of the time,
> that is how it is. when I try to walk faster, my back stiffens up and
> my legs "lock up" if anyone knows what that means. the resistance gets
> harder.
>
> I know this may all sound very trivial. I'm sorry if I'm offending
> anyone by posting these emails - it's just there is really no one to
> talk to who understands this stuff, and some of the things I do seem so
> minor that I don't bother mentioning them for fear a doctor will tell
> me I'm being ridiculous or oversensitive, or something like that.
>
> thanks
>
> Mary Katherine
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