It is a truism since the dawn of man that a huge cost of getting old is the incalculable pain of losing friends. I have lost two dear friends in less than three weeks, one of whom I want to write about at length. His name is Dr. Robert Slayton, Professor Emeritus of History at Chapman University and for the last fifteen years of his life, paralyzed by the same rare disorder responsible for my own paralysis, transverse myelitis. Dr. Slayton read the book I wrote about my own ordeal way back in 2008 and picked up the phone and called me. We began meeting for lunch about once month at a Panera’s halfway between Chapman and LA and became fast friends. Though he was from the Bronx and I grew up in a small oil town in Oklahoma, we had a lot in common: paralysis, writing, and endlessly curious minds.
Bob’s condition was much worse than mine. Initially, his myelitis was not specifically transverse, i.e., across the spine, but down the left side of his body. He was a hemiplegic, with both his left arm and leg without feeling or function. This didn’t seem to slow him down a bit. He continued teaching at Chapman, writing one book after another, and driving his custom-made Honda Element and lowering his power chair with a power lift and zipping across the Panera parking lot. He never complained about his condition. Not once. He complained about the accessibility problem at Chapman and the state of American politics, constantly, but never about the paralysis.
As all paralytics know, this is the kind of fellow paralytic you want to hang out with. The whiners and complainers and self-pitiers can sap your energy and erode your spirit. Except for pushing tables around to fit in two wheelchairs, one a monster power chair, paralysis rarely came up in our chats. Usually I just ate my panini and listen to him tell me about the historical nuances of 20 Century America. I could have gotten college credit for those lunches. In turn I often spoke to his class in “The History of Everyday Life.”