What Happens Now?
The answer is, I don’t know. There are many different variables and situations that are wrapped up into sexuality and MS.
Physically, your body is going to do what it is going to do. It is important to remain actively engaged with your health and wellbeing in all regards now. You can seek out medical assistance through your doctor, if you are shy, try to remember that the benefit of speaking up outweighs the risk, so be brave! Physical therapy and medications can help. Also, your body will often go back to normal once a relapse has subsided.
My initial relapse left my body without feeling for three months. Once my body began to feel again, I had additional three months pass before I regained feeling in my hands.
I had a very long time pass. I often believed that this was my permanent condition. I spent those months learning how to enjoy the world again.
Finding More
My sensation of touch changed. I learned that by caressing my husband with my face, I could extrapolate the idea of that touch throughout my body. I converted my remaining sensations to a larger place in my mind.
It is amazing how much we can learn to forget through sheer convenience and limitless access. How often do we hold our lovers and breathe them in? The smell of their hair, their neck, their breath, the way those smells change throughout the moments of our intimacy.
What about sound? Do you listen to the timbre of your partner’s voice while you are together?
I know that these things were not strangers in my bed, but I came to realize how little credence I had given to them in the past.
Today though, I realize that the moments are about everything. Taste, touch, sound, smell, pressure, friction — all of it.
Embracing the Skin We're In
We do not get to decide what the world will take from us. We do get to choose to live a life that is full. It is our choice to fill our experiences with all the beauty and joy that we can find. We all have a paradigm of capabilities in our tool belt.
People with MS have to become very resourceful with the tools that we have at our disposal.
The world may strip away something, but that does not mean that you are left with a void. You have to learn how to make the most out of what you do have, every day.
Sexuality is so deeply personal and important. The loss of something sexually can feel harsher than our normal MS symptoms, but we are not less because of it all.
We are never less of a person because of this disease, no matter how much MS would love for us to believe so. Our love for our partners and our ability to express our love may have to be different. I feel though that it is very worthwhile to put in that time and effort — learning how to love and be loved in the bodies we are given.
Live a Life of Love and Pleasure
MS can change how you feel pleasure; it is not allowed to steal your pleasure from you. You are beautiful people and you deserve to love and to be loved for the rest of your lives. This is how we wander through this crazy, unpredictable, amazing world we live in.