
By Andrea Sachs
A walker landed with a thud at my front door a few months ago. All my good-girl positive plans to accept it gracefully fizzled immediately.
Instead, I had a bad attitude and a headache.
I foolishly thought I had made peace with having multiple sclerosis years ago. I had mastered using a cane, after my initial resistance. I had even amassed a colorful collection of fashion canes, giddily proclaiming my adjustment to my new reality.
But this monstrosity was a step too far.
I had made it worse by not listening to my doctor earlier. He had told me softly during my last visit that I needed a walker. I had loudly replied, “No way.” How could I continue to report stories with such a sign of decrepitude and age?
Three weeks later, I fell flat on my face on the corner of Columbus and West 72nd Street. Tired but cheap, I had resisted taking a cab home. Instead, I found myself cheek to ground on the sidewalk, a few feet from a garbage can.
Above me, a dispute broke out. “Get up!” one loudmouth ordered. “Don’t move!” said another. The Good Samaritans argued. How Upper West Side, right? Even in my prone position, it struck me as funny. Then, I was in a police car being driven one block to my building by two of New York City’s finest.
By the next day, my face was black and blue, my cheekbone aching, my wrist throbbing. The whole day was taken up by X-rays and a CAT scan. Amazingly, nothing was broken. By then, I was counting my blessings. I could have broken my front teeth, my nose, or worse.
I silently apologized to my doctor.
It took a village to get me going on the Drive Rollator—yes, that’s the brand name of the walker. It has wheels, a seat, and hand brakes. I needed a rehab doctor to treat me and physical therapists to order and teach me how to walk with it.
Some days, I felt deeply grateful. Other times, I felt like a toddler.
Once I timidly ventured out on the street by myself, I was stunned. Many strangers seemed to know when I needed a hand, and hurried to help. Opening doors is a particular problem, but high-school kids and old people with canes opened doors for me without being asked. Chivalry is not dead – one man unwisely stood in the middle of West 76th Street to give me passage from oncoming traffic. Sometimes the degree of my disability was overestimated; one young woman approached me and almost begged to push me down the street.
Bus drivers were generally agreeable about lending a hand (all but the one who hissed to the whole bus that I was blocking the aisle). I soon learned the terminology, “Lower the ramp, please.” Even most cab drivers were willing to go through the trouble of picking me up and tossing – er – hoisting the walker aboard.
I learned not to speed across bike lanes or to race across streets like in the old days. I reluctantly gave up walking alone at night. I grumbled sometimes about the inconsiderate mobs of teenagers who jostled me. I opined sourly that distracted parents with iPhones who take their offspring on busy sidewalks with scooters should be punished.
As I’ve made peace with my walker, though, I think I’ve become a little less self-absorbed and more open-minded. There are plenty of others on the UWS with canes and walkers and wheelchairs because of age or infirmity. I assure you that none of us signed on with enthusiasm, but we’re trying to meet the moment with grace. At times, we exchange knowing smiles with each other as we pass on the sidewalk. In the front of the bus, we kibitz.
And I can walk more easily now. The walker glides over most jagged UWS sidewalks. Some days, I even exercise by going 45 minutes or an hour on the walker without fading. When I come back from one of those walks, I feel exhilarated, reborn.
I bet you think I’m about to say I’m glad I now use a walker, because I’ve learned so much about myself. Ha! I still wish I could run the New York City Marathon.
But if you see me on the street with a reporter’s notepad, please give me a wave. I’m the one whose walker has a bumper sticker that says, I IDENTIFY AS A FERRARI.
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What terrific story!
This was very touching to read. Thank you for offering your perspective and educating us all. I am sending you all best wishes for continued safe navigation!
Post knee replacement I had to pick up a prescription at Costco. I rolled right in and it was like the Red Sea parting- EVERYONE stepped aside to let me thru. I had POWER!
Yay, Andrea!
Thank you for making me smile!
Hats off – a great story, honestly told. Roll on, reporter, with your Ferrari spirit.
Never having been forced to use one unwillingly I am an unambivalent fan of the Rollator. What a great invention. For balance, for rest as needed, for exercise, independence and continued safe mobility indoors and out…and they fold up, and the seat has a little storage. My favorite sighting was of an older couple coming home from grocery shopping. He was walking fine, slow but no worries thanks to two hands on the Rollator in front of him. She, smaller, but a little straighterand steadier, just had one hand tucked lightly under his arm. On the seat, riding for free, two brown paper bags of shopping. Next to curb cuts, the best street scape addition of recent decades.
<3
Brava! It ain’t easy.
Terrific story about meeting life’s changes with humor and grace. Thanks for sharing.
Lovely article and wonderful example of attitude adjustment, Andrea. My best friend and her husband both use walkers and I use a cane, and we have learned to walk shamelessly three abreast in a sidewalk-clogging phalanx.
I hope to see you and your Ferrari so that I can salute you with my L.L.Bean trekking pole (aka cane) and wish you many years of safe walking.
As I navigate my walker, I curse those children using my sidewalk as the Indy Speedway. But mostly I’m just jealous. Keep rolling Andrea. Great story
You roll, girl! Thank you for sharing your story and indomitable spirit.
What a GREAT article.l use a walker also.I hate it but we’ve become good friends.
God Bless you and keep trucking.
Kudos to you for your bravery.
I love this story and will be on the lookout for Andrea! We remember our 94-year old mother with her walker when our little grey kitty loved to jump into the seat as Mom moved from room to room!
Thanks for an important article, Andrea, as our community ages and we will see more and more of these useful devices that help keep folks safe and independent!
🥲 👍🫶
Thank you for sharing this very personal experience. Believe me you have helped a lot of others with your story. You are brave and fabulous.
Andrea, Loved your story! I also use a walker, I use one like you have inside my home, don’t want to fall, anywhere. I lived on 87st and Amsterdam until I graduated from college. I’ve run races as long as 50 miles long in my younger days. I am now 87 yrs old and live in another state where there are lots of varied surfaces, grass , dirt, concrete, macadam, and boardwalks. For those I use my TRIONIC Walker, which has inflatable wheels and especially important, front wheels that work together, preventing wobbling. You might look into them. I warn you, they are not cheap, but worth every penny!
According to the Administration on Aging (federal) and the NYS Office for the Aging, the UWS is the nation’s second largest NORC (naturally-occurring retirement community), after Co-op City. A greater percentage of its population (particularly in such a comparatively small area) is over 65 (the age at which NORCs “start”).
Setting aside that Ms. Sachs obtained her walker as a result of her physical condition (and we know neither her age nor how long she has lived on the UWS), this is why the buses that travel through the UWS – M104, M7, M11, M5 et al – often have half a dozen or more seniors with walkers, many of which cannot be folded. And why it can take longer than usual to board and unboard passengers along the way.
We need to be kind and gentle – and patient – with our seniors and others with special physical needs. After all, not only may they be someone’s mom or dad, but we, ourselves, one day, may hope for the same level of kindness and patience when WE are using a cane, a walker or other mobility device.
I ride the M11 regularly and always wonder why, with all the strollers and walkers, the MTA doesn’t configure the seats to accommodate them.
This is downright inspirational. Thank you so much for sharing it with us.
Here’s to making do with what is needed, and keeping on keeping on! (from a fellow needed-a-walker and crutches and a cane at some point and still needing to tote a folding cane in a purse for incline/slope emergencies, where the 4×4 in my legs won’t engage. Hey, it is our UWS, and we’re gonna WALK IT!
The walker is very cute.
When I think about all the people involved, the engineers and workers who designed it, and built it, and shipped it, all of these people trying to help Andrea, even though they never met her, then the walker becomes an object of affection.
She might even want to give it a name…
I have. Bubba!
I’ve been through the same battle with my “rollator” and ended in the same place, it positively changed my life but I still hate that I have to use it. I’m not as stormy as you are. Mine is a red Rolls Royce.
Thank you for this…..Aging and decrepitude are such shameful things for Americans….We should stay as 50 year olds…..what’s wrong with us that we find ourselves lame and halt. I started using a cane during Covid..(was born with feet that didn’t work right and you don’t get better physically when you get older). I didn’t want to fall and be taken to the hospital where everyone seemed to be dying and furthermore, I didn’t want my children to have to come to my rescue one more time. So I hobble about with my cane longing for those long ago long walks all over the city. I know it would be better with a walker. And you make it seem almost like fun. If only they made them stunningly artistic I would be tempted to buy one and glide about. Aesthetics are everything. Would someone please design an absolutely delicious walker…..Everyone would want one, I’m sure.
Jean
Your “stunningly artistic” rollator has been designed in Copenhagen. and is available in the U.S. It weighs 10 lb., folds side to side in a flash, .and is a delight to use.
After a back injury, my doctors advised that I use a rollator outdoors. I felt inhibited with the currently available rollators. I searched and searched and found the ByAcre website. After moving around the site and exploring the options, I chose the carbon ultralight in white. There is a nice choice of several colors. This rollator makes me feel healthier, freer, younger and eager to get out, It is effortless. to push as it glides easily up and down my hilly local park and smoothly over the city pavements cracks and bumps, and I always have a seat anytime I want to rest. I enjoy showing it off as it is eye catching and everyone is interested.
The only drawback is that the significantly improved quality, functionality and style comes at a higher cost. I had sold my car, as I could no longer use it, and now I have this ultimate set of new wheels.
This company makes not only fabulous (though pricey) rollators and more rugged outdoor rollators, but a one hand operable, even more turnable super slim “Scandinavian butler” model for small space indoor use.
On Wednesday I was on the M104 bus uptown when a woman with a broken walker got on. One of the back wheels was broken; a woman sitting next to her tried to fit the two pieces of the wheel together, with some success but the first woman had to get to West End Avenue and fortunately a young woman got off with her and accompanied her home (I didn’t actually see them getting as far as WEA but they did make it across Bway and 88th street at least). Life is difficult but everyone on the bus was very supportive; a man got off with her and the walker and then got back on.
I have been using a walk for the past month due ot a severe pinched nerve but had the type with just 2 wheels and golf balls on the bottom of two of the legs. Walking outside was definitely a bit of a challenge. Luckily I have healed to where I don’t need it that much and can walk on my own outside.
Some readers will know – what Lenny describes is a “walker” in most hospital and rehab terms. Helps you stay upright, allows you to take a few steps and, slowly, more. The Rollator of the article, and related devices, are four wheeled mobility aids – they require more energy and hip, core and leg strength to safely maneuver, but they offer safe, balanced mobility at a speed you control on many surfaces and through any 24” door. (Most doors are wider.) They are so light that some users lift them on to buses 2 wheels at a time, while others request and use a ramp – either approach is fine, depending what is safest for the user.
Great story! Hope you have recovered from your fall.
I’m so glad I read this article. It could have been written by me. I got a walker because the walking cane just wasn’t cutting it anymore but, unlike you, I just can’t bring myself to use it. I feel too feeble and old if I were to walk down the block, neighbors wondering what happened to me and probably thinking “oh how sad”. And I too, took a major fall leaving me with a huge black eye. So I’m just going to have to suck it up and go outside with the walker. Getting on the bus is going to be a whole other story.
What a fantastic piece — Hoping to see you around the neighborhood so I can wave hello! You should totally deck out the rims.
Thanks for an instructive and interesting piece, Andrea. I’ll be sure to watch for you in the neighborhood with your “Ferrari”.💕
Very good story!
Andrea – Great article & so relatable!! As a fellow westsider who recently started using a walker myself, I also resisted the idea when my doctor first recommended it. I didn’t want to look like an old lady. When I finally decided to try it, I felt so much more secure and stable I threw caution to the wind: I AM an old lady (almost 80) and darn proud of it! I have also found westsiders to be kind and helpful across the board, as you have & cab drivers and bus drivers as well. Rock on, girl! You’ve got this!
It’s always a joy to read your stories. You have such a lovely style.
I’m still in the cane phase of life, but sometimes I use my shopping cart, which gives me more stability. I feel pretty secure with it.