The Day I Became an Accidental Explorer

Which way to Brooklyn?

Yesterday pulled me into a story I didn’t expect. A story that felt heroic and stupid at the same time. A story about bravery, bladder management, and surviving the New York holiday season with MS in a wheelchair.

I had my holiday Christmas party at work. Good people. Good food. Drinks flowing like they were trying to get us all fired. We even played white elephant. I don’t love the name. The whole thing screams “someone’s HR department approved this without thinking.” But whatever, not the point.

I planned ahead. I asked Access-A-Ride to pick me up early so I wouldn’t embarrass myself after a few social drinks. MS plus alcohol is a risky mix. My bladder reacts like it’s in a hostage situation. And I’ve seen enough movies to know company holiday parties end careers.

My ride came.

But I never got a call.

No two-minute warning.

Nothing. Radio silence.

So there I was, stranded in Rockefeller Center during peak tourist season. Streets closed. Police everywhere. Tourists swarming like pigeons with iPhones. The whole place felt like a blitz invasion. And I missed my damn ride.

Where is the train located at again?

I knew if I called Access-A-Ride for a rescue van, I’d be standing outside until 2037. So I opened Uber. It showed 135 dollars to get home to Brooklyn. My jaw tried to quit my face. I blinked, closed the app out of pure shock, reopened it, typed my address again… and the price jumped to 150.

I called my wife and said the words no wheelchair user says lightly:

“I think I’m going to take the train.”

My anxiety slapped me across the chest. My muscles locked. My leg refused to bend. But I rolled toward the subway anyway. I took the elevator down to the platform. The station still looked like it hasn’t been cleaned since the 70s. People stared like they were expecting me to perform a miracle.

The train pulled in.

And my wheelchair refused to get on.

Three tries.

Once back. Twice forward.

Total humiliation. Total stress. Total body lock.

Then I made it. I was on. On the damn train. My first time back since becoming a full-time wheelchair commuter. I didn’t care if I was blocking the doors. People could walk around. Consider it their holiday cardio.

What the actual F**k!

My mind fixated on one fear:

“What if the elevator at my stop is broken?”

But the train kept moving. So did I.

When I rolled out at my station, everything felt unfamiliar. I felt like a visitor in my own neighborhood. I had no clue how to exit the station, even though it was accessible. I figured it out eventually, because survival is a skill MS forces you to learn.

Then came the finale.

I had to wheel myself almost a mile home.

In freezing rain.

Through Brooklyn.

With an MS body that already clocked out.

Dam, ain’t too many people out here.

By the time I made it to my front door, I felt scared, vulnerable, exhausted, and proud all at once. I haven’t felt that mix in years. My body was humming with aches. My mind was done with humanity.

I got home around 6:30. Ate dinner. Showered. Stretched. Threw ice on my back. Grabbed my cat. Knocked out.

What a day.

Will I do it again?

Not anytime soon.

Maybe in a true emergency.

Or if Uber raises the price to 300 and I lose all sense of self-worth.

Yesterday showed me something. I can still push into uncertainty. Even when it sucks. Even when I’m scared. Even when my body fights me.

I survived the New York City holiday transit apocalypse.

With MS.

In a wheelchair.

In freezing rain.

That’s enough adventure for a while.

Comments

4 responses to “The Day I Became an Accidental Explorer”

  1. gleaming32f1bdd58a Avatar
    gleaming32f1bdd58a

    wow what an experience but you’re strong and accomplished it. Life will always have bumps in the road and how you handle those bumps will make you stronger.

    You are a lot stronger than you think.

    Like

  2. gleaming32f1bdd58a Avatar
    gleaming32f1bdd58a

    wow what an experience but you’re strong and accomplished it. Life will always have bumps in the road and how you handle those bumps will make you stronger.

    You are a lot stronger than you think.

    Like

  3. gleaming32f1bdd58a Avatar
    gleaming32f1bdd58a

    wow what an experience but you’re strong and accomplished it. Life will always have bumps in the road and how you handle those bumps will make you stronger.

    You are a lot stronger than you think.

    Like

  4. gleaming32f1bdd58a Avatar
    gleaming32f1bdd58a

    wow what an experience but you’re strong and accomplished it. Life will always have bumps in the road and how you handle those bumps will make you stronger.

    You are a lot stronger than you think.

    Like

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