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Thursday, February 12, 2026

Honoring these hands

Honoring my hands today.

 I have moved into reading, composing and posting here on blog these days. This is from a relatively focused life making things with my hands over many years. In the last 12 years before my final retirement I would wake up at night thinking about creations in clay, and how to sell them. The latter was not half as much fun, nor as therapeutic as the former.

Now I comment on blogs of my friends with whom I catch up frequently, and am among the few bloggers who reply to comments. It has to do with time available, and maybe lack of other interests to pursue. 

I'm basically an echo of my former self. My word-finding ability to express myself usually happens eventually, or I can find a work-around. But my hands will continue to shake more and keep me from doing much but typing on keyboards…avoiding all hand activities which most creativity depends upon.  Even mouse-movements sometimes are difficult. This is the life with Essential Tremor.

I think this leads me to take some photos of my hands and do some grief work - which I may or may not share here. But it has been interesting to go back through a few folders to capture what these hands were doing. The photos miss the actual creativity of my clay work, painting watercolors, and fiber work, like knitting or quilting. But here's what I've found. (Just in the last year.)

Now...as I started this process. Just the right hand for now.

My right pinky finger has begun to bend in a new way from middle knuckle in the last year, and I often have painful joints. I was recently examined at Asheville Arthritis and they say it's osteoarthritis, which still means only pain relief to consider, but nothing will stop it from continuing.

Dec. 2025, these hands show their bones and veins!



Just one glove for this iPhone photographer at the Christmas tree store in November 2025. I can usually capture a photo but have a lot of trouble writing texts on the phone. Thank heaven for audio dictation even with all it's glitches.


In Aug '25 I pushed myself to go see these waterfalls with friends, with my handy walking stick. (Next month I was in the hospital for second time in 6 months with pneumonia!) Having Bronchiectasis means my lungs work harder and cause almost constant coughing to clear the mucous.



July 2025, many Sunday mornings I met friends for coffee and pastries at Four Sisters Bakery, where eating outside was enjoyable. So far I can hold a cup without too much shaking, and most bites of food arrive in my mouth on my fork. Finger control seems to be the worst of my Essential Tremor so far, which is slowly deteriorating, though they work better in mornings than evenings. Drugs do not help though they did for a while! Now I have to balance breathing needs with the shaky fingers in considering drug help.

April 2025 saw me in Colorado and Utah with son and his wife...and borrowed a walking stick for short hikes. Mainly out of breath from the altitude and recovering from first hospitalization for pneumonia in March. (But I  had skipped quite a few years since last time, so I guess that's a good thing.)


A very small silly goal was to make a snowball on the way to Telluride...where snow was still piled next to overlooks.

And this was the take home antibiotic which I carried with me to Colorado, recuperating and yet having a wonderful time. 

So I'll stop with my hands of 2025. Maybe share some more sometime down the road.

How do I feel about the loss of hand-usefulness? I'm sure not happy about it. As an artist all my life, I've had a screeching halt to my creative loves. But I can still see what I like, and for now taking photos can convey sharing beauty with others.

I finally started telling staff at a doctor's office that I have a disability in that I cannot fill out forms (which they want me so much to do!) I'm going to start asking for that to be flagged on my charts.

 I have a daughter-in-law who also has hand difficulties as a result of an accident when she was in her teens. She has proved she can do just about everything as a loving wife and mother of three beautiful daughters. So her drive and positive attitude are an inspiration for me.

Coping. That's the term I think I've embraced as a senior. Coping with life's many changes. Reduced expectations definitely. But finding small things that are satisfying, and sharing gratitude.

I'm perhaps a bit foolish in some of my decisions, but am not going to skip the wonderful times I can have because of my weaker systems. It's strange to find oneself at 83 with some things that still work fine, and others that have decided to just go kerplunk! 

I'm very very grateful for the muscles in my legs which now allow me to climb a flight of stairs, without having to pull myself up with the railing. That's a big accomplishment at this time, and I owe it mainly to staying with my son over Thanksgiving where I had a bed and bathroom on the second floor of their home.  Plus I try to climb a flight of stairs every other day. I still get out of breath, but the handrail now is just in case I should trip.

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I did a quick search and found that exactly two years ago I had an Occupational Therapy evaluation of my hands, so here's that post, though really not that interesting.

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21 comments:

  1. ...I always worked with my hands and they show the wear and tear!

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    1. Which reminds me of one of the clay professors I met, who had lost the tips of two fingers (I think) and carried on creating wonderful art. Hands are remarkable!

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  2. You do carry through well on your themed posts. I upped my Celebrex one day this week because my hands were so achy, taking the maximum dosage that my doctor prescribes. This morning, I will be off to physio for my wrist. Good times abound.

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    1. Hope your wrist is healing well, and you hands don't give pain.

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  3. I have hand issues, largely from overuse over a lifetime. So I'm glad for what I can do. And I'm so surprised to see how transparent my hands are now!

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    1. I Had a young girl asked about what was all over the back of my hands. Her grandmother said those are just veins. I forgot that maybe 20 years ago they didn’t show like this

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  4. I JUST wrote a comment on Boud's blog about my own hands and how the long years of their constant work have affected them and what I can do now. I have the same crooked little finger but on my left hand. It does not hurt, however. I have toes doing the same. Gnarly toes.
    We adapt, we change what we cannot adapt to, we use work-arounds, and yes, sometimes we must grieve.

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    1. I don’t know about other disabilities, but having written this has given me the courage to actually tell people that It is a disability – and I can’t write anymore

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  5. Hello,
    I have been having pain in my hands and arms lately, too much snow shoveling, computer use? Not sure. Take good care of yourself. Take care, have a great day!

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    1. Yes, we all have to take care of our hands as best we can. I have many bottles of hand lotion available wherever I sit down for a minute.

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  6. Thank you for this post. I found it inspiring. Dealing wth some life changes myself and trying not to feel so negative.

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    1. Just like losing a friend or a pet this ability is one that I need to recognize and Grieve.

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  7. I find so much beauty in aging hands--that third picture of your hand is a prime example.

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    1. I guess I didn’t look very hard at many of the hands of the elders in my family. But yes, they are certainly beautiful.

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  8. For me this was a moving tribute to your hands and to the hands of aging women. Thanks. I had to give up playing musical instruments about ten years ago and while it was only ever my personal and not very skilled pleasure, I do miss it a lot to this day. My hands are typically rheumatoid now with crooked fingers and swellings here and there but I can still knit and type - for a while - without agony. I often get up at night to hold my hands under running water for a while.

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    1. I feel for you. My hands do not give me any pain. They just don’t work. Attempting to sign. My name is like shaky, shaky shaky

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  9. I have that ET tremor too in my hands and getting shakier. I have trouble writing very small neatly.
    I appreciate your responding to comments on your blog. i'm not on this computer enough to keep up with that and comment rarely.

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    1. As you can see, I don’t look on the computer all day, but usually when I get up and start the day and sometimes it’s at the end of the day. I can dictate while I am doing my breathing nebulizing, which is what I’m doing right now. It makes a lot less boring!

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  10. I work/ed with my hands and they definitely took the brunt - it is one of the reasons I finished working at my last place, my hands were beginning to suffer and I did not want the rest of my life to be unable to use them as I want to. I was once told to thank my hands (and my feet) at the end of each day for all that they do every day - I realised then at that point, I just took for granted my body, Not any more.

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  11. This was a moving post, Barb. I was reminded of my father's hands, how arthritis drew his fingers to one side so he could barely do the things he needed to do. And Mom's, such swollen knuckles that she had to get big-handled flatware to eat with, and she was younger than I am now.
    Your hands are beautiful, the hands of a woman who has worked and created, and now must rest. I think I will be right behind you, as my knuckles too are larger and often quite painful. Gripping things is not easy, especially in the mornings! And writing? Also not easy in the mornings. Ah, aging.

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  12. My mother and my sister both have essential tremors and I may get them some day. They do indeed change the way you do somethings.

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