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Showing posts from May, 2026

Dancing With Life Quote Of The Week

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dancingwithalsandlife.blogspot.com AI ART, “Community United” 🇺🇸Happy Memorial Day!🇺🇸 Honoring those who made the ultimate sacrifice.   “Even when the body grows still, the spirit continues to speak—through love, through care, through awareness, and through action.” 5/26

ALS Awareness Through Lived Experience

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AI ART, Ice Bucket Challenge” Life with ALS isn’t something I planned for. It doesn’t fit neatly into the timeline I imagined for myself. Instead, it interrupts—quietly at first, then more loudly—until forced to look at my life through a completely different lens. ALS, or Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, is often described in clinical terms: a progressive neurodegenerative disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. But those words don’t capture the lived experience. They don’t explain what it feels like to slowly lose physical abilities while your mind remains fully aware. They don’t describe the emotional landscape—the grief, the fear, the resilience, and, surprisingly, the moments of deep clarity and gratitude. The Reality Behind the Diagnosis At first, life becomes a series of adjustments. Tasks that once felt automatic—buttoning a shirt, walking across a room, lifting a cup—require intention, patience, and sometimes help. Independence begins to shift, and with tha...
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dancingwithalsandlife.blogspot.com AI ART, “The Iron Horse “ One of the most famous lines from Lou Gehrig comes from his farewell speech at Yankee Stadium in 1939: “Today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.” He delivered it after being diagnosed with ALS, speaking with gratitude rather than bitterness despite the career-ending illness.  5/26

ALS Awareness Month

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                                         dancingwithalsandlife.blogspot.com AI ART, “Blue coneflowers symbolize ALS and are used to raise awareness of the disease.”  ðŸ©µðŸ’™ More Than Facts: The Heart Behind ALS Awareness 🩵💙 There are facts we can learn.   And then there are truths we can feel. ALS Awareness Month in May invites us to do both. Because understanding ALS isn’t just about knowing what it stands for or how it affects the body—it’s about connecting those facts to the real, human experiences behind them. It’s about seeing the person, the caregiver, the love, and the strength that lives within every single day.