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Shoulder, Strength, and the Quiet Courage to Face the Pain (Part 1 of 3)

There’s nothing dramatic about the way functional ability slips away. It’s gradual — barely noticeable at first — until one day you realize that pain and constraints have replaced motion.

Caregiving Reflections
Published on:
October 17, 2025

For years, Mum’s right shoulder had been her quiet adversary. The joint, once easy and fluid, had turned unreliable: clicks became sharp tugs, sharp tugs became pain, and pain became limitation.

She adapted in small, practical ways.
🍶 Placing her mug and medicine within reach.
📦 Keeping everything she needed at table or counter height.

What looked like clutter on the kitchen counter was really a map of adaptation — each object stationed where her body could still meet it. Her desk was similar.

As the discomfort deepened, so did the frustration. She’d always been independent, and the loss of that easy reach was troubling to accept. Kneeling to reach low cupboards was no better; her knees had their own complaints. Over time, the combination of inconvenience and constant pain wore her down.

She’d had other surgeries before, each leaving its own trail of exhaustion. Those memories made her wary of another.

“It’s fine,” she’d insist, even as her arm’s range shrank from 90 to 70 to barely 45 degrees.

But denial only holds for so long.

💭 I think what finally shifted was her perspective, not her pain threshold. Living with chronic illness for decades had given her a kind of pragmatic wisdom — an ability to look at her body without sentimentality. She knew that to protect her future quality of life, she might have to risk short-term pain again.

It helped that her rheumatologist and a trusted surgeon friend both reassured her that technology and techniques had advanced; recoveries were faster and less punishing than before. That softened her hesitation.

When we talked about it, I asked what had changed her mind.

She paused before saying, “I want to paint again. And I want to lift grandkids.” 🎨👶

There it was — so simple, yet so defining. She wasn’t choosing surgery out of resignation; she was choosing life.

Care, I realized, isn’t only about reducing pain. It’s about reclaiming the parts of yourself that illness has tried to take.

Her decision reminded me that bravery doesn’t always look like defiance. Sometimes it’s measured in consent forms, quiet resolve, and the willingness to start over.

That conversation marked the beginning — not just of a medical process, but of a shared journey that would test both of us in ways we couldn’t yet see.

🩷 This piece is part 1 of a 3-part reflection on caregiving, the role you play, and reaching for a better quality of life.
➡️ Read Part 2 — Bridging the Gaps
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