AlsDanToch
  • Home
  • Blog
    • Latest post
    • All posts
  • Books
  • Join the fight
  • Whowhatwhy
  • Zoek
  • Menu

Gedenkplaats

Laat een bericht achter op de gedenkplaats van Garmt:

https://www.memori.nl/gedenkplaats/garmt-van-soest/

Doneren

Geef een bijdrage om de film over Garmt te kunnen realiseren. Voor Zoë.

https://www.doneeractie.nl/garmt/-4282

ALS Dan Toch

Garmt was experiencing ALS – so you don’t have to!

Go to the English site

English visitor? Click here!

Blog

De persoonlijke verhalen van Garmt

Book

Van papier, tastbaar, brandbaar, wow!

Join the fight

Kick ALS in the balls, doe mee!

Whowhatwhy

Wie ben ik en alles wat nergens anders past

Heb jij ook ALS? Klik hier!

Latest post

Die Laughing

01/06/2015/10 Reacties/in English, Updates /door garmt

This post is not beautiful or nice. I started it to complain, and that is ugly.

I just got back from eight days in the hospital, to get nighttime breathing measured and assistive breathing configured. Let me start with miniblogs about why hospitals suck.

  • It feels like something is pulling hard at the inside of my stomach, because that is exactly what is happening. It is not a pleasant sensation. At home, the tube sticking out of my belly is always taped to my chest, but here, it dangles all day, which means the dangling end gets caught during transfers. I try to explain this but give up after a few tries.
  • Response time to the call button issometimes higher than my weakened sphincters can manage, so when the nurse finally arrives it is sometimes too late. She sees me and my wet lap and offers to put a towel over it. Answering no means she will leave. I need to literally spell out that I would rather not continue to soak in my own urine, and please could I have dry underpants?
  • One of the toilet visions is so degrading, with pain at every move we make and a total absence of communication so nerve-rattlingly dehumanizing, that I ask my visiting friend to take over their work and put me to bed. I just don’t want them to touch me anymore. Please. I know you need to and I know you are a good person but I cannot take more today.
  • I wake up, pain in my shoulder, I press the call button. The nurse asks how she can help me but answers herself: “Ah, you can’t say. Then, I don’t know.”. She walks away. I feel dread
  • She comes back. She has not read the communication instructions that came with my file but she tries. After a lot of fumbling we work it out. This is a theme that returns so, so often this week. I do not have the energy to explain, and suffer as a result. They ask, “Are you not well?”, and after a week I have memorized which nurse needs a yes and which nurse needs a no in response to get any effect other than “Ok, then!” and leaving me. The instructions were so clear. RTFM, I scream in silence.
  • The fourth time my leg slides out of bed, I trigger an alarm by wriggling the sensor off of my finger, as the call button is out of reach. For the next ten minutes, in an agonizing slow motion that pulls me apart bit by bit, I continue to slide out of bed, in a movement eerily resembling Mr. Bean, funny if it didn’t hurt so much. I look at the camera guarding me, but no one comes. I hear the alarm from my discarded sensor, but no one comes. Finally, with a loud thud, my upper body comes over the edge of the bed and my head hits the floor, ripping the hose from my breathing mask. Another alarm joins the cacophony, and I make the mistake of hoping that this alarm will be different, because it is not. After painful, desolate minutes during which I keep oddly calm, someone passing by in the hallway hears the noise and finds me.
  • The fresh doctor that examines me after the fall does understand the concept of yes/no questions, and is also the first person in this week of fuckups that I hear an actual apology from. When I finally get in front of the computer, I give him the details of the fall, crushing untrue excuses along the way, asking answerless questions such as, why were the guardrails down, and why were they not put up the first three times my legs were heaved back in the bed? Along the way I ask why my drugs have not been administered correctly for one single day, why the pharmacy of this huge hospital is still fumbling to even get them to my room, or why I get breakfast at 3PM. Yes, indeed, grave mistakes. Let us take the ultimate measure, and file an Incident Report.
Attenuating circumstances aplenty as to the why behind all this: the staff is new in this hospital, I could have done a better job myself explaining how to at least communicate with me. The nurses are all upbeat, cheerful, joking, patient, which is not easy when you work in a department where only seriously ill people come. But still, this is how my experience went. And what scares me the most, in my continuing fear of the nursing home, is the following two bullet points:
  • This was an academical hospital and everyone in my department must have treated loads of ALS patients before. This department had a ratio of one nurse per patient for sixteen hours per day and one nurse for two patients for the nighttime. 
  • A nursing home has one nurse for every ten to fifteen patients.
Anyway, enough ranting. 
 
When I did get home, I felt worthless. Not in the sense of, say, hung over. I felt I was without worth. Without value. Guilty to exist. Guilty about everything I did wrong, totally insecure about everything. Guilty about existing. That sort of mindset can be dangerous, because you start to act desperate. So when I find out that my close circle of friends is having dinner without me, I make the wrong move. I feel shut out, jealous, hurt, and knowing that I have nothing to get mad about (was I really expecting an invitation for a meal in an appartment on the third floor of a liftless building?), I whine and bitch, then catch myself doing it and stop. Close call, I could have ruined something there. I think. I am better now, I can see how pain turns into anger and escapes my body through destructive action, but as I write this, some twisted part of me wakes up and still wants to shout at them that I hope they choke on their perfect steak and drown in their fucking champagne.
 
Oh, you motherfucker, I moan to the disease. He grins, enjoying himself, whispers, hey, it is your personality, I just tickle it.
 
He is right, the motherfucker.
 
We take Zoe to the playground, I feel so horribly useless, I know better than to cry and draw attention, so I hold the pain inside, where it numbs and festers (hey, I may be at a low point in life, but at least I get to write pseudo-death-metal lyrics: “the pain inside numbs and festers” (really??)). The road upwards begins when the mother of another ten-month old makes contact by pointing out the extreme coolness of my wheelchair to said ten-month old. That ten-month old meets our ten-month old and a small nuclear bomb of cuteness explodes as they explore each others face with tiny fingers. On our way home Zoe is fascinated by a neighborhood cat, and I wonder, how come she so clearly recognizes a living thing from, say, the motorbike it is resting on? 
 
After a few nights in my own bed and my own environment I have recovered enough to take stock. Where am I now and what has that hospital visit cost me? Well, I am really getting to the last chapters in my book, that is where I am. I am also behind my monitor, almost all of my waking hours, in fact. Do I want to spend my last days like this? Do I have a choice? The challenge is still: don’t get bitter. Ok. Let’s give it another go. As for what this hospital visit has cost me: more than I care to admit. I have no idea how much lust for life I have left, but now I at least understand it is not infinite. And the burden I create for my loved ones is getting more and more difficult to live with. So, the hospital knocked some reality into me. I have always wanted my experiences to be as real as possible, so, thanks, I guess. Heh. You know, writing this stuff down is almost like Therapy? I start out with complaining and along the way something transformative pops up. 
 
Oh, as for the subject line, I stopped explaining them a while ago, but they are still relevant. Karma police, the song, expresses the quiet desperation I felt while writing the post, and the immature insanity of Die Laughing is appropriate for feeling worthless, and isn’t it Therapy?, too?
http://alsdantoch.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/ALS-dan-toch-logo2-300x138.png 0 0 garmt http://alsdantoch.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/ALS-dan-toch-logo2-300x138.png garmt2015-06-01 15:55:262015-06-01 15:55:26Die Laughing

Sesshin bij Garmt

28/05/2015/2 Reacties/in Guest Author, Updates /door garmt

Een nieuwe gastblog! Van zensensei Meindert. Hier te vinden: http://zenamsterdam.nl/sesshin-bij-garmt

http://alsdantoch.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/ALS-dan-toch-logo2-300x138.png 0 0 garmt http://alsdantoch.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/ALS-dan-toch-logo2-300x138.png garmt2015-05-28 12:45:562015-05-28 12:45:56Sesshin bij Garmt
Pagina 31 van 80«‹2930313233›»

Full story

Klik en koop!

ALS DAN TOCH - Laatste Boek - Garmt van Soest

ALS DAN TOCH

(LAATSTE BOEK)

Dit tweede – en laatste – boek schreef ik grotendeels afhankelijk van beademing en knipperend naar het toetsenbord van mijn computerscherm. Mijn lijf lam, maar mijn geest glashelder. Vol ophopende gedachten, want schrijven ging steeds moeizamer. Het gaat over uitrazen en neerstorten. Over leren genieten van het genot van anderen, naakt en weerloos betast en bepoteld worden, tot last zijn en me daar schuldig over voelen. Over de opbeurende lyrics van Nick Cave en Skunk Anansie. Over voortleven – in anderen.

Doodgaan is heel eenvoudig, een moment, iedereen kan het. Sterven is andere koek. Sterven is afronden, teruggeven voordat het uit je handen wordt gerukt, vrede bereiken. Maar het is ook een startpunt: je kunt pas echt leven als je goed kunt sterven. Dus STERF, GVD!

Overtuigd? Klik hier om ’m te kopen

ALS DAN TOCH

(EERSTE BOEK)

Het eerste boek van Garmt van Soest.

ALS DAN TOCH is de herziene, gereviseerde, van taalfouten ontdane en van meer dan honderd voetnoten, een voor- en nawoord, en een extra appendix voorziene bundeling van zijn blogposts.  Garmt vloekt, tiert, vecht, wint, zucht, huilt, breekt, hoort, ziet, voelt en deelt. In krachtige taal en rake bewoordingen vliegt het boek je haarscherp en loepzuiver naar de strot.

Dus hop. Met een paar luttele drukken op de knop, een makkie voor wie geen ALS heeft, ligt dat spiksplinternieuwe boek binnen twee dagen naar je te lonken op de deurmat.

Overtuigd? Klik hier om ’m te kopen

Klik en koop!

Geen fan van papier? Lees alles online, hier!
Ik heb het boek al en wil gewoon de extra content zien.

Voor wie is het boek?

Het boek is uiteraard voor wie gewoonweg geen genoeg krijgt van zijn blog, maar ook voor hen die onder een steen geleefd hebben en pas net op de hoogte zijn van het feit dat er überhaupt zoiets bestaat als de blog van Garmt. Het is ook voor een ieder die inmiddels een muisarm heeft ontwikkeld van het vele doorklikken op de website en natuurlijk voor de vrienden van de oude stempel, die het ouderwets geil vinden om een potje aan ècht papier te snuffelen tijdens het lezen.

ALS DAN TOCH is voor iedereen die Garmt en de stichting ALS een warm hart toedraagt. Want uiteraard gaat de uitgeversopbrengst van het boek naar de stichting ALS. Vooruit, en de royalties gaan naar dochter Zoë. Dus je doet met het kopen van het boek niet alleen jezelf of je moeder een groot plezier, maar maakt tegelijkertijd de wereld een klein beetje mooier.

Win-win.

Zijn beschrijvingen zijn scherp. Geestig. En eerlijk.

Volkskrant

“...wrange humor en stoere vechtlust…”

Algemeen Dagblad

"Een boek waar alles inzit."

Jeroen Pauw

dadablblblblrrrr, die!!!!!??!

Zoe L. van Soest

Join the fight

Hello, dear reader. ALS is currently incurable, but I’ll be fucked if I’m taking this lying down. I’m also trying to be realistic about this, but still, a bit of a battle does a person good every now and then. The fight I’m fighting is summed up pretty neatly here in this video (februari 2014).

There are a few ways you can help out with a small donation:

232Km in 2016

Sponsor James Faust as he participates in 4 races in 4 countries to raise money toward research.

While I swim, bike, and run, you can show your support by donating.

Project Mine

The biggest genome research project known to date. My biggest bet that we’ll find the cause. Once that is known, we at least know what we’re shooting for.

Stichting ALS

Of course, the big constant factor is the Dutch Stichting ALS; they welcome your annual donation; small or big.

Your idea here?

Are you swimming, cooking, cycling or walking against als? do you know someone who is a millionaire and wants to make money? Mail to info@qurit.org or press the button.

Sponsor James Faust
Visit Project Mine
Visit Stichting ALS
Contact Me

My friend who’s really on top of the fight is Bernardus Muller and you can find him on https://twitter.com/BernardusMuller. His twitter feed is the best place to hear what’s going on with ALS. If anything can be done or if we or someone else have managed to achieve something, you’ll hear about it from him first.

Follow the latest updates on ALS

Who?

Garmt van Soest

Garmt van Soest is a versatile manager with a strong background in business strategy and technology. He has advised Fortune 500 companies in the US and Europe since 2000. Garmt joined Accenture in 2010 as a Senior Manager in Strategy where he has been leading engagements in different industries, solving complex problems, advising on strategic direction setting and leading organizational transformation programs. Since his diagnosis with ALS his full-time job is to fight this disease with everything he and Accenture can muster.

Do you have ALS yourself? Click here!

Pers

Volkskrant

Ik ben niet gek of dronken, ik heb ALS

Trouw

Vechten tegen verbittering

Algemeen Dagblad

Garmt slaat keihard terug naar dodelijke ziekte ALS

PAUW

Garmt bij Jeroen Pauw

GIEL!

Garmt bij Giel Beelen

RabRadio

Garmt bij Paul Rabbering

Tot slot, een hoekje met zenboeddhistische dingen.

  • Een interview met ons clubblaadje, voorjaar 2014, waarin Maurice best goed mijn toenmalige gedachtes over Zen wist te beschrijven. Interview.
  • Een stukje voor hetzelfde clubblaadje, waarin ik wat losse gedachtes geef over Het Woord: Het Woord.
  • De beschrijving van mijn motivatie om zenbuddhist te worden: Jukai.
  • Een hapsnap verzameling van tekstjes en gedichten, alhier.
  • Ik gaf ooit een megalomaan praatje aan het einde van een rohatsu, in IZC De Noorderpoort. Bekijk het hier: Filmpje
  • Een stukje over het liefhebben van je lot: Amor Fati.

This website was made possible in collaboration with:

Scorpius Webdevelopment
Unleash The Monkey webdesign
Linelle Deunk photography
Hester Doove photographer
Nowsales hosting services
© Copyright - AlsDanToch | Credits
Scroll naar bovenzijde