In the first few months after diagnosis I'd struggle to draw because of hand stiffness and shakes and found myself constantly failing to communicate my ideas through vague descriptions and frantic hand gestures alone. I lost confidence with clients. There's a time and a place for jelly and that isn't the board room.
I'll be honest with you. I panicked. This was my career, a path I'd slogged hard to forge. I'd been a designer for as long as I could remember. It felt like the brightly coloured part of me that if wiped away would leave me beige.
I made a plan to fight back. By shifting my ideal future I wondered if I could outwit the Parkinson's, effectively sneak past it without it noticing. By making a decision to take my career in a different direction I'd be the one with the power and it would feel planned and considered rather than something forced onto me. I began looking around for creative roles that didn't involve sketching and typography and board rooms and salvation came in an unlikely form. An old friend Sarah, a sewing teacher, came to visit, returning my offer of a sofa bed for the weekend by showing me how to stitch myself a bag. I was hooked. I hadn't sewn since school but all the pride of looking at something tangible I'd made came flooding back.
In the weeks after I began painting fabric and making bags to sell to friends and family, taking requests for other products and opening an Etsy store to deal with orders. This was fun; I wasn't giving up my creativity and there was longevity in it. The sewing machine didn't take any nonsense from my tremor and the stitching was straight and even. I lived every little girl's dream and opened a pop-up store for a week, lovingly displaying my products across its shelves and, for the first time, meeting my customers face to face. I reduced my hours at work to give myself more time to make orders.
All signs were pointing towards this being an idyllic alternative future, one I had full control of at least from a career standpoint. So why did I feel so hollow? Like I was playing at shopkeeper and seamstress. I had cheated the Parkinson's but had I also cheated myself? The fact I had made the decision to change my own career path had once felt like power but now screamed sabotage. I was a designer. And I was pining for pixels.
I toned back the sewing and took a freelance branding project on for a friend of a friend, feeling the blood starting to pump again and my heart swelling at the excitement of bringing something on screen to life. I wanted more. So I attended interviews at agencies and startups and watched them fall in love with my work just as I was learning to do all over again. I opened myself up to networking and pitching and the honesty it forced upon me when introducing my Parkinson's was suddenly intoxicating. I began to feel like with some small tweaks, design could in fact be my forever job.
I couldn't believe I had almost ended my own career too soon. But the fact I'd managed to flex my whole future in a different direction excited me and I wondered if I could do it again, without losing sight of the designer this time, but adding to my skill set. I started to sew again and revived my online store as a side project. I began writing, something I loved as a child, and my book 'Dropping the P Bomb' launched earlier this year. I took offers of speaking opportunities at events. I brainstormed startup ideas. I learnt coping mechanisms, embraced wobbly sketches, waved away perfection, announced my Parkinson's proudly and only worked with people who saw it as an asset.
Nowadays I'd describe myself as professionally gluttonous. I say yes to everything and my career has become a patchwork quilt of things I love to do and people I love to do them with. And I have Parkinson's, and my defiance against it, to thank for that.
http://www.managementtoday.co.uk/i-wont-let-parkinsons-disease-beat-me/women-in-business/article/1407981#p6BXmDiG9JxwgkcY.99
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