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A chameleon among diseases

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Powell used a cane and then an arm crutch and finally a wheelchair. He and his wife divorced, a split that Powell blames, in part, on financial problems and his stubborn refusal to accept help as the disease grew worse.

Now, Powell can no longer move his left arm or leg and must use a motorized scooter, which he said sometimes creates a spectacle of sorts when he is chaperoning his two young daughters and son.

“If it’s raining, for instance,” Powell said. “I’ll have a big golf umbrella and I’ll have one of them on the foot plate and the other two on each knee.”

To get by one handed, Powell uses elastic shoelaces, a button threader and a special cutting board that has a vice for holding food. When golfing, he rides in a chair that can position him over the ball. If he wants to sail, there is also a local group that runs an adapted boat he can help operate.

Beyond mobility, Powell struggles to speak for long periods of time and multi-task. He has received disability payments since about 2005.

Some of Powell’s most difficult moments have been when his kids have had to help him, especially if he falls out of his wheelchair. But Powell believes his struggles with MS have also made him a better father in certain ways.

He is not as quick to answer his cellphone, for instance, when his kids are visiting. And he tries to talk to them more about life and the mistakes he has made that they should avoid.

“MS definitely puts things into perspective big time,” Powell said.

Beverly Johnson

Beverly Johnson dreads summer.

The heat seeps into her body, tweaking the nerves that cross her brain and wind down her spinal column.

So during hot spells, Johnson, 64, relaxes in her air conditioned Southside home. She devours dozens of mystery and romance novels on her Kindle. She waits until evening to water her Impatiens and Hydrangea.

“I have found out that two things really trigger me to not do as well: heat and stress,” Johnson said on a recent night, sitting beside her husband on their backyard deck. “So I really try to do everything I can to take care of myself.”

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