The Brace
Wednesday, August 19th, 2009Sorry it took me a while to add more. I didn’t mean to leave all of you hanging but sitting is problematic. At any rate…
So I was 13 years old and it was decided we would try to see if a back brace would work instead of surgery. The first thing they did was make a plaster cast of my hips. Sounds simple, right? Nope.
I remember I had to stand inside this “cage” thing (for lack of a better word). Some sort of metal structure where I hung onto the sides and tried to stand as straight as possible while thrusting my pelvis forward. (Not easy when your spine has a 39 degree curve in it). So I had to stand there until it dried then they cut it off me and from that they made a plastic mold with some sort of cushioning on the inside. It covered me from just above the pubic bone in the front, curved up along my stomach to the middle of the sternum then closed over my buttocks in the back. Huh, not too bad you think, right? Well what I left out were the two metal bars in back and the one in front that came up to connect to a “halo” around my neck with a chin rest in front.
I was shocked to say the least. I seem to recall thinking “I can’t wear that” and my father literally cried when he saw what his little girl would have to wear. And wear it I did . For 23 hours a day. I had to wear it when I slept (the only comfortable position was on my side) and the only time I took it off was when I bathed. It was pretty uncomfortable at first but I got used to it. Unfortunately, there were some side effects that I never got used to.
Think about the corsets women wore a hundred years ago and multiply it by 10. Not only was breathing difficult but it rubbed against my skin. I got used to the feel of it and learned to breathe better but despite the tank top I wore underneath, I developed an affliction called “contact dermatitis”. Quite simply with the heat from my skin and the brace rubbing against it I developed a very itchy rash which often got so bad it would “weep”. I won’t go into detail here but I had this on both hips and it took about two years and a myriad of solutions to finally get rid of it. Yes, I went to the dermatologist but when you can’t rid yourself of the source of the problem it’s hard to find an effective solution.
So, there I was, 13 years old, socially akward, in a new school and wearing a brace to boot. Lovely. I had to get some new clothes to fit over it and I soon learned that polyester was not my friend. (This was the mid 70’s you understand. Disco was King). More often then not, my clothes got what we called “brace marks” on them from the fabric rubbing over the metal bars of the brace. This was particularly problematic when said clothes belonged to my sister.
I remember one of the first directives the doctor issued that my parents took to heart was about keeping the back muscles strong . When you wear a cast or a brace of any kind you aren’t using your muscles and you tend to lose muscle tone which is not good when you are trying to straighten the spine. The only solution to that was to swim. Alot. Fortunately, I love to swim (it’s about the only physical activity I was and still am any good at). I was enrolled in AAU swimming that winter, practiced like I was on a team but didn’t go to any swim-meets. I don’t even remember if there were any. Practice was 5 days a week and I enjoyed it not just because I love to swim, but it got me out of the brace for a few extra hours a day.
Back to the issue of school. It’s kind of hard to do P.E. when you don’t have any flexibility but participate I did. Though I don’t quite remember how. I must say though that when I was fitted for the brace in September and it was still very hot in Pennsylvania at that time of the year. I got overheated the first day and had to go home early but after that my mom let it be known that I would simply have to get used to it. And so I did. But it always seemed that just when I thought the brace was getting bearable I’d go to the Doctor’s office and find that I had grown so they had to adjust the height of the Halo chin rest and once again it felt like something was pushing my head back onto my neck.
Since I can’t currently find any pictures of myself at 13 or my brace I managed to get a few from the internet. Have a look and have a drink. It’s a bit to process. That’s all for tonight.

Not too bad

Oh what a lovely contraption(no, this was not me)

A modern day corset of sorts