Spotlight: Maureen Mould
Spotlight: Maureen Mould
SPOTLIGHT:
MAUREEN MOULD
Maureen Mould has broken the rules. Somebody
said "you can't do that, because you're diabetic!" She
wasn't listening.
Now 45 years old, she was born into a family
"pretty much inundated with the disease." Her father,
sister, brother, both grandfathers, and some aunts and uncles had
diabetes, and she was diagnosed with the condition at age five.
"It didn't stop me from doing much of
anything," reports Maureen. "I was a tomboy, very
involved in sports. I wasn't prone to a lot of insulin reactions.
Could be my blood sugar was a lot higher than it should have
been."
Until her daughter, now 19, was a year old,
Maureen tested her own urine ("those little clinitest
tablets"), and gave herself insulin injections with a
reusable glass syringe. "I didn't know any better--I had
never gone to a diabetes education class to be educated on the
new things," she relates.
The stresses of pregnancy and delivery caused
high blood pressure, and many of the capillaries in Maureen's
eyes broke. One day, she dropped her glass syringe. "I had
lost some of my vision at that time...but I was trying to feel
around for the broken pieces on the floor... I was wearing
slippers with an open toe, and as I bent over to try and find it,
a piece went right into my toe. Bleeding profusely, I ended up
having a friend take me to the hospital for stitches. Yeah, that
was the last of my glass syringe..."
As her sight was failing, a friend of Maureen's
husband (a graduate student at Washington State University) found
her an eye specialist in San Francisco. The Moulds were students,
and poor, but people in their community (Pullman, Washington)
raised money for them to go see this doctor, and he operated on
the worst eye first -- "which happens to be the eye I'm now
seeing out of," says Maureen.
"It was a horrendous
year-and-a-half," she continues, "because I had five
different eye surgeries done, on five different occasions, in
that time. Sometimes my vision got better; sometimes it got
worse; then it got better; then it got worse; then it actually
stabilized. After my first eye surgery I was declared legally
blind, and then the state was able to help with paying the
medical bills... My husband's department collected money again,
and paid up all our medical bills."
Once he finished his doctorate, Maureen's
husband got lucky, finding a job right away, in South Bend,
Indiana.
They were there for four years when, as Maureen
relates:
"My husband was getting restless, and
wanted to leave his teaching job there. He was a bicyclist, and
he really wanted to bike across the country and take his family
with him. I thought it was crazy! My daughter was five years
old...
"We decided to do it for a cause. I came
up with the name BETA (Bicycle Every Town Across) based on the
beta cells. Ames Diagnostics [now a division of Bayer] underwrote
our trip. They gave us all the blood testing supplies, and also
$5000 to purchase our bicycle, custom built for three. My husband
sat in front, our daughter in the middle, and I was in back. It
even had a little trailer...
"Joslin Diabetes Center also helped
underwrite our trip... Turtle Top Recreational Vehicle Company
lent us a motor home; that was our support vehicle. A nurse I had
met when I was selling "World Book Encyclopedias," a
single lady with a five-year-old daughter like mine, agreed to
drive the support vehicle..."
Everything fell into place for the Moulds. In
1984 they rode about 3000 miles, from South Bend, Indiana, to
Seattle, Washington, and on the way gave more than 50 talks about
diabetes, and about the need to be aware and educated. They
sought donations for diabetes research, and raised about $13,000
on the trip. Half that figure they donated to Joslin Diabetes
Center, and the other half to "Project Freedom," a
local program in St. Joseph County, Indiana, to purchase glucose
monitors, testing supplies, and pay for diabetes education, all
in the local high schools.
"I kind of feel the money was put to good
use," adds Maureen.
But the adventures were far from over. The
Moulds took the motor home back from Seattle to Indiana, but
before, Maureen's husband had found a job advertisement in
Yakima, Washington, the town he'd grown up in. On the way home,
they stopped for an interview. By the time they reached South
Bend, he had the job!
"When we got to Yakima, my husband started
his job right away," relates Maureen. "His brother and
family were living in Spokane... My sister-in-law told me she
knew of a job in Yakima for me -- only three days after we got
there. I said: `I'm not working. You must think I'm crazy!' But
she persuaded me to call..."
Told "The job closed the other day. We had
very few applicants; we will interview you anyway," Maureen
went. Asked why she applied, she responded: "I really
didn't. My sister-in-law said I had to come in and talk to you
guys. But I really don't want to work."
By the time her bus reached home, the
interviewers had called to offer her the job!
It was with Head Start, and her educational
background in Special Education, plus her Masters in Recreation
for Special Populations, and post-graduate work in the Early
Childhood field stood her well. She kept the job for five years.
Feeling ready for a change, she applied for a
job directing a new childcare center. Her resume arrived at the
last minute, but again, she was interviewed and hired. She has
been there eight years.
But the adventures continued. As she relates:
"Six years ago, my vision had improved to about 20/60, with
all the eye surgeries I'd had. Then It started plummeting, and I
lost 200 feet of vision in a year. At that point, my husband left
me...
"I'd had cane travel training, but didn't
really like using it...one of the denial things... My daughter
made the rule that she would no longer go shopping with me if I
didn't have my cane. Then she really got on my case about going
for a guide dog...
"I had my dog for two years, then he was
diagnosed with lymphoma, with cancer... Everyone who knew me
thought I was going to die with my dog. Again the prayers went
out, and two weeks after he died, when I went to my
already-scheduled eye appointment, I was told I had a
cataract..."
The doctor didn't want to operate, but Maureen
got a second opinion. The second doctor told her it was a high
risk operation, and that he didn't know what to recommend. She
agreed she'd take the risk. Six weeks after her dog died, she had
her cataract removed, and overnight, she gained 700 feet of
vision.
"It was another miracle," she
relates. "Now, with my glasses, my vision is 20/50 or 20/60,
incredible compared to the 20/800! Although I have limited
peripheral vision, and don't see a full picture, when I went back
for a checkup a year after my cataract was discovered, the nurse
went berserk. I told her I believe in miracles..."
When Maureen had her guide dog, she received a
bi-monthly newsletter about "how other people were doing
with their lives and their dogs." In it, she heard of a
woman, also named Maureen, with a yellow Labrador dog like hers,
who had gone to clown class with her dog. She figured she could
do the same.
"I'd always wanted to be a clown. I called
the school and asked if they could get me in touch with the lady.
One person referred me to another, and I found out about a clown
school in Wisconsin. My daughter's godparents lived in Wisconsin.
I made arrangements to go to clown camp in La Crosse,
Wisconsin...
"Off I went with my dog, Clinton (like the
President), to learn about clown ministry. But folks often asked:
`Can you see? Are you training that dog?' When I told them I was
legally blind, they became confused. I started telling folks I
was illegally sighted..."
Maureen and her dog started doing clown
ministry. She worked for eight months, preparing a mime
representing the birth, death, and resurrection of Christ,
incorporating communion. Her first "clown communion,"
scheduled well in advance, happened the night after her dog died.
Since then, without any advertisement, she has
been asked to give services all over Washington, and in Oregon
and Idaho. She's done hospitals, birthday parties, and church
appearances, but wishes to expand into missionary work, like her
church's upcoming trip to Chiapas, Mexico. Money she makes
clowning goes toward this upcoming trip.
Maureen prizes her independence. "I bike
or walk to work... I can get anywhere I need to be. Yakima is the
perfect size... I can really maintain my independence, which is
really important to me. Co-workers and friends are very
supportive in giving me rides in bad weather."
Asked if she has any advice for diabetics,
Maureen responds: "When a person is newly diagnosed, it
seems the end of the world is here, because they hear all the
statistics: Your lifespan will be shorter, your body is going to
start falling apart, it is the silent killer... You read all that
stuff and it is not true...
"I think a positive attitude is the best
gift you can give yourself. The tools are out there. You test
your blood sugar... The lifestyle of the diabetic should be the
lifestyle for everybody. That's the way to go! Regular meals, on
schedule, exercise... Look at it as a positive. I've got this,
but I can rise above it. I can do whatever I want to do: It
really is manageable."
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