Trite

Phrases I don’t ever need to hear/read again:

Shamelessly stolen from a thread on an MS support board that prefers to remain anonymous.

Comments

20 Responses to “Trite”

  1. Jeannette Randall on August 13th, 2005 12.03

    “You’re so brave. I would’ve killed myself.”

    “Isn’t using a wheelchair for this a bit extreme?”

    Definately need some cans of whoop-arse. :)

  2. denise on August 13th, 2005 12.33

    “You don’t have children….do you??”

    And from the more timid:

    “So (long pause)….how did you…um…you know….get it??”

    The paternalistic:

    “You don’t live alone do you??”

    From the ‘I’ll-cheer-you-up-even when your not down-person’:

    “Ah heck! You’ll be okay! Just don’t think about it–that’s all!! (laughter, pat’s you on the head)”

  3. denise on August 13th, 2005 12.46

    That’s “pats” not “pat’s”

    We can probably come up with 100 more if we really stopped to think about it. They sure get old fast, don’t they?

    We forgot about those who do this number:

    “ARE….YOU…..O..KAYYY?”

  4. Kim on August 13th, 2005 14.55

    Brillant, and I couldn’t agree more with all of them! Thanks for posting. :)

  5. Doug Lee-Knowles on August 13th, 2005 21.53

    “Never eat/drink (fill in the blank)” is my favorite. Until I pleaded for a truce, a family member used to email me crap about how MS was cased by Aspartame, saturated fat, wheat gluten, refined sugar, etc.

    May I suggest another phrase for the list? “You should eat/drink (fill in the blank)”. Some people really think it’s as simple as that.

  6. Rayna on August 15th, 2005 6.00

    “You’re always so cheerful/positive.” This even when I’ve never said a cheerful or positive thing around the person - in fact deliberately go for the opposite out of bloody-mindedness. I swear they would say this even when I’m strangling the life out of them…

    I’m glad I’m not the only one who gets the - you’re so brave, if I was like you I’d kill myself - crap. Used to get this one a lot in my late teens (who the hell says this to an *adolescent*??!!), when I was actively suicidal. Not because of my CP, but because I couldn’t bear the crap I got from the rest of the world because of it.

  7. mdmhvonpa on August 15th, 2005 9.53

    LOL! You know, after hearing boat-loads of this tripe I’ve given up on telling people that I have MS. When they ask I just tell them that I got a slow-acting, highly contageous form of polio while practing devil worship in Hati during a blood drinking ritual. The questions stop a predictably short time.

  8. Erik on August 15th, 2005 17.05

    See you’ve got it all wrong. You need to combine Glyconutrients and LDN to he healed! ;-)

    The winner for me is usually:
    “ARE….YOU…..O..KAYYY?”

  9. camille on August 19th, 2005 19.48

    I had a co-worker tell me if she had the diagnoses of ms like me, she would of left this job a long time ago…..Unfortunatly i wanted to work forever but my last exacerbation put me on temporary disability. i am still out, but i dream of working……

  10. Michelle on August 19th, 2005 22.48

    You forgot “I’m so sorry”. Seriously, they are sorry for what??? I didn’t say I was growing a horn from my head that’s purple, I said “I HAD MS”.

  11. Tapetum on August 20th, 2005 19.11

    My personal favorite - probably because it’s the one that impacts me as an aide. “What does she need?” by store personelle, to me, while my client is sitting right there. Sometimes they will persist even after I wave them over to her. Glah.

  12. Katja on August 22nd, 2005 21.39

    I had a co-worker tell me if she had the diagnoses of ms like me, she would of left this job a long time ago

    I had a co-worker who said, “If I had what you have, I would quit my job and spend all my time looking for a cure.”

    Frankly, I enjoy working at what I do, and there are lots of people out there looking for a cure. As I have no particular desire to retrain as a neurologist or molecular biologist, or whatever, I think I’ll delegate that work to them.

  13. D Bunny on August 25th, 2005 0.42

    I can’t believe some of the comments that your commenters have heard in real life. Ugh, I just want to slap some people.

    I have not said “I’m so sorry” to anyone, but I’ve wanted to. Sorry if that’s wrong, but I am sorry that anyone has to deal with MS. I know now that someone will get offended by it, so I’ll make sure I’ll never say it. But in my heart, I really am sorry to hear of anyone dealing with it, or facing the fear that comes with a new diagnosis.

  14. Katja on August 25th, 2005 9.03

    I appreciate hearing “I’m so sorry”. I am sorry I have MS, I’m sorry anybody has MS.

  15. Andrea on August 29th, 2005 20.25

    “For having MS, you’re doing great!” or “I can’t believe you were able to do that with MS.” Implying, of course, that I’m only special because I have MS. If I accomplished something before the MS, it was just cool that I accomplished it. Now my identity, talents and personality are forever married to a disease? Pitiful.

    Great list. Loved it. And lived it!

  16. Katja on August 30th, 2005 9.53

    Hey, Andrea, good to see you here!

  17. Adam F on August 31st, 2005 19.21

    Love the list! It’s sad but true, I’ve heard almost every one of these.

  18. Eliza on September 3rd, 2005 18.24

    Well, duh, Katja: you don’t need to retrain as a molecular biologist; you just need to work at GNC. ‘Cause taking the right vitamins will make you better, doncha know. A related fave: “I have this great naturopath/chiropractor/hypnotist/horse whisperer who I KNOW.”

    (These others are all so true, too, of course. Another fave of mine is, “So how long will it take for you to get better?”)

  19. piny on September 7th, 2005 13.02

    My aunt died of MS last year. Like everyone else in our family, she was never an easy woman to get along with. She was also not happy about spending every day in a tiny room with nothing but her DVD collection to keep her company.

    She told us about a nurse, a tiny little woman “looked like a quail” who was shocked, shocked! at my aunt’s bad attitude: “I don’t understand where all this RAGE is coming from! Can’t you just be happy?!”

  20. Katja on September 7th, 2005 13.17

    I’ve been contemplating rage a lot lately. I think the yearly MDA telethon dustup has stirred it up a lot.