Print

Print


 for Immediate Release Contact:  Contact: Tara McNally
212.645.6900 x 117
[log in to unmask]

As the Stem Cell Debate Heats Up in the Senate . . .
One Man Urges President Bush To “Walk a Mile in My Shoes”

Caretaker of Wife with Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Asks
Fellow Caretakers and Patients To Send Their Heartfelt Notes (and an Old
Pair of Shoes) as a Message to the White House!

(New York, NY) June 2, 2005 – In the past seven years, Eric Yaverbaum’s
life has changed in ways that he never thought possible. As his wife’s
Multiple Sclerosis progressed, he has started to consider things he never
“saw” before, such as, why are some Doctors’ offices not
handicapped-accessible? He has started to question everything he always
took for granted, from his relationship with his children (What do I tell
them?), to finances (How can anyone afford to provide for a chronically
ill loved one?), to security (Why me? Why her? If I do my best – is it
enough?), and politics (What are stem cells? And why should I care?).

As Yaverbaum and millions of other Americans, caretakers and patients
alike, ask these questions – for the first time in his two terms,
President Bush is threatening to exercise his veto on the bill that would
expand public funding for stem cell research, a resource which suggests a
potential cure for everything from Parkinson’s to Alzheimer’s and spinal
cord injuries. If, like Nancy Reagan, Dana Reeves, or many lesser-known
people, the President had to live with an illness in his home for a year
or two, would he feel differently about this decision?

He won’t tell you about vacations. He won’t tell you about long walks on
the beach with the love of his life. He won’t tell you about tomorrow.
Twenty years after her diagnosis, Yaverbaum will tell you that the world
is a strikingly different place -- and yet -- he will tell you how much
more he likes the guy he sees in the mirror. He will tell you about the
long, long list of people who help him at home so he can continue to earn
a living. He will tell you how much he has grown from the experience of
caring for his childhood sweetheart, best friend and mother of his
children. And he will go on to tell you about his wife -- the only modern
day heroine he has ever met.

Despite his mental and physical exhaustion, to Yaverbaum, his wife’s
chronic illness was a blessing; he hopes to be exhausted for a very long
time to come. “For years, so many wonderful well intentioned and
supportive friends and visitors have come to our home to share in our
experience and lives. But then they leave. My family spends seven days a
week, 24 hours a day doing the very best we can to maintain a
functioning, loving family unit. We’ve been doing it long enough now to
know – until you “Walk a Mile” in our shoes – you cannot understand what
it’s like.”

Therefore, Yaverbaum is asking his fellow caretakers, patients, and
friends to send the White House a message. As Yaverbaum states, “We can’t
have a ‘Million-Caretaker-Walk in Washington! We have to be home when
we’re not working. But we can send the President a million pairs of our
old shoes with an emotional and realistic note of what we do every single
day. Maybe the volume of shoes or one of those notes might just sway his
opinion? Could just one note make a difference?”

Please send all shoes and notes for President Bush to:

“Walk a Mile in My Shoes”
c/o Jericho Communications
304 Hudson Street, Suite 700
New York, New York 10013

Yaverbaum will deliver the notes to the White House and donate all the
shoes to charity -- but not before making sure the White House sees them!

http://www.jerichopr.com/releases/jericho8.htm

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn