Your So Strong...: What does that mean to... - My MSAA Community

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Your So Strong...

Jesmcd2 profile image
Jesmcd2CommunityAmbassador
β€’32 Replies

What does that mean to you?πŸ€”

πŸ€—πŸ’•πŸŒ πŸ¦ˆ

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Jesmcd2 profile image
Jesmcd2
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32 Replies
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RoyceNewton profile image
RoyceNewton

Strong, no determined. I will do as much as I can to have the best life that I can despite the circumstances.

rjoneslaw profile image
rjoneslaw

despite what ur going through you have achieved so much or you have pushed yourself beyond the limitations

carolek572 profile image
carolek572CommunityAmbassador

Never heard it mentioned to me, Jesmcd2 except by my neurologist and I take it as a good thing πŸ˜‰

A friend of mine tells me that all the time. I take it as compliment .😍 In addition to having RRMS diagnosed in 1993. I was involved in a traumatic accident in 1977 (prior to diagnosis of MS) 45 fractures, 15 surgeries and many months to regain strength. Couldn't walk for several years. Pelvic fractures, femur, left foot crushed/ foot drop, Lumbar vertebra, left arm, teeth, nose on & on I won't bore you. I suspect this injury pushed me to be resilient I worked myself very hard and learned to walk again! Now that I think of it I had Numbness and tingling while I was in the hospital. I do believe all of us are strong, focused, not willing to give in, it's a beautiful accomplishment being strong.

jimeka profile image
jimekaβ€’ in reply to

You are incredible, what an inspiration to us all, you definitely give the meaning of strength, meaning. What you have been through, thank you for sharing, blessings Jimeka πŸ€— πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘

hairbrain4 profile image
hairbrain4

To me, it means you are pushing through whatever life throws at you despite having MS or any other disease for that matter. A week ago I was at the point where I just wanted to throw in the towel & give up. But thanks to friends & the people here I was able to pick myself up by the bootstraps & keep moving forward. I didn't give up & let MS win. I'm still fighting it but with a little more confidence.

falalalala profile image
falalalala

It's meant as a compliment but sometimes I can't help but wonder how bad they think it is for me-or how they themselves would handle MS.

It depends on who is saying it too as some people freak out if they catch a sniffle so an MS diagnosis is the absolute worst thing that can ever befall (pun intended) a human being.

So, if you're not b!tching about it 24/7 they might there is some incredible strength involved along with some astounding stoicism.

πŸ˜†

I'd like to think that the people I care about would handle it just as everyone on this site does. Day by day. :)

Klutzy profile image
Klutzy

It depends on the context it was said. If you’re helping someone move furniture and he/she said that. Then they meant you are physically strong. Yet if it was said about dealing with a difficult situation, like your MS, then I’d take it that you are emotionally stable, able to adjust to changes and you are resilient.

BettysMom profile image
BettysMom

You're

mrsmike9 profile image
mrsmike9β€’ in reply toBettysMom

Ha! I'm not the only grammar police!!!

BettysMom profile image
BettysMomβ€’ in reply tomrsmike9

I'm so happy to have your company!

mrsmike9 profile image
mrsmike9β€’ in reply toBettysMom

I drive my kids (and husband) crazy. Kids say all kinds of things. M says things like, "it needs fixed". Argh!!! No, no, no! It needs TO BE fixed!!!

BettysMom profile image
BettysMomβ€’ in reply tomrsmike9

The husband is likely a lost cause. But, please continue to correct your children. Good grammar is a valuable asset in professional life. Whereas, bad grammar will always look stupid.

mrsmike9 profile image
mrsmike9β€’ in reply toBettysMom

My shirt today.

T-shirt
BettysMom profile image
BettysMomβ€’ in reply tomrsmike9

I love it! Thanks for the chuckle.

mrsmike9 profile image
mrsmike9β€’ in reply toBettysMom

My mom’s shirt I got when she died. She was the English queen!!

BettysMom profile image
BettysMomβ€’ in reply tomrsmike9

My mother's bachelor's degree was in mathematics but she had excellent grammar and writing skills. I'm so happy that she instructed me in grammar from a very young age. My neighbor and good friend who died in May was a real grammar Nazi. She was an English major and a high school English teacher. I doubt that her grammar was really any better than mine but she knew the all rules verbatim, knew all the parts of speech, and could diagram any sentence. I miss commiserating with her about the current state of American English and about what public education has come to. (Yes, I know I just ended a sentence with a preposition.)

ekelks profile image
ekelksβ€’ in reply toBettysMom

Thank you. I am a nut about this too. I wanted to think it's a typo and I have committed many in my lifetime but I think it's the internet shortening our sentences into miniature pictures and the fewer punctuation marks the happier the twitterverse will be.

Strength: I wish I was strong. I am not that strong. I wish I could go out and help people again. I know I can't and that when I wish that I'm really feeling sorry for myself.

If I were strong I'd stop watching so much television and go back to reading books. But I'm not, and I haven't.

goatgal profile image
goatgal

When people say that to me, I always assume they don't know what else to say. I don't hear it as a real compliment.

ahrogers profile image
ahrogers

My husband has said I am the strongest person he knows a couple times. He is just trying to relay he knows I am dealing with a lot even when I don't complain about it.

What I hate is when somehow the fact I have MS comes up in conversation with someone I don't know well (or at all) and they say something like "wow, you're doing great". I know they mean well and have likely seen people with MS in worse shape but it bothers me that they base their judgment on the fact I can still walk.

kycmary profile image
kycmaryβ€’ in reply toahrogers

I hear that & understand!

kdali profile image
kdaliβ€’ in reply toahrogers

Yes πŸ‘ As long as my EDSS says I’m great 😜

MsBoo profile image
MsBoo

It means to me that someone has considered in their own mind what it might be like.. and that they think that they could not deal as I do with all of it.. maybe one thing, but not all of it at once.. and I take it as a compliment.. and walk on with my head a little higher, for that one person, has even thought about what it might be like to be in my shoes...

kycmary profile image
kycmaryβ€’ in reply toMsBoo

Good thoughts thanks!

kathyrags profile image
kathyrags

I read somewhere that you have to climb a mountain and you can complain the whole way or not, either way you still have to climb... I choose not to complain. ms is a crazy mountain... I've been told I'm so positive they admire that... really my thought is, the only thing I can really control is my outlook. I'm climbing everyday.

falalalala profile image
falalalalaβ€’ in reply tokathyrags

Yes! :)

kycmary profile image
kycmaryβ€’ in reply tokathyrags

I agree!

Sandydemop profile image
Sandydemop

What it means to me is the pains I go through have made me stronger. Do I need to carry the pain? I don't know. It's part of me. MS is part of me. Other pains are part of me. I am a survivor.

DIsneyQueen profile image
DIsneyQueen

I hear that from a lot of people. It often comes with β€œ you have such a great attitude and are so positive β€œ I have PPMS and can barely walk with a walker. I take it as a compliment and tell them thank you but I am truly blessed and have a lot of Faith and even though this is not where I envisioned myself in retirement, it is where I am supposed to be.

kycmary profile image
kycmary

Depends on who said it & what was going on!

twooldcrows profile image
twooldcrows

not much it is just what we have to do to be able to enjoy our lives ....love and much happiness....

Sandydemop profile image
Sandydemopβ€’ in reply totwooldcrows

YOU have a great attitude. Always sharing love and happiness. How do you do it?

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