[NHLakesChapter] Randy Pierce's Facebook post text
Melissa & Todd Abbott
modeanit at gmail.com
Sat Dec 13 17:42:54 UTC 2025
Thank you Andrew for sending this out so we can support our friend Randy
and his family during this transitional period and need for healing.
Kindly,
Melissa
On Sat, Dec 13, 2025 at 12:04 PM Dolllady1 via NHLakesChapter <
nhlakeschapter at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> Thank you Andrew.
> Merry Christmas🌲
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Dec 13, 2025, at 11:33 AM, Andrew via NHLakesChapter <
> nhlakeschapter at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
>
>
> Here’s the text from Randy’s facebook post:
>
>
>
> Good Saturday morning, everyone. This is a longer life update.
>
> After a week here at Mass General Hospital, they will be discharging me
> later today to head home with Tracy and an aggressive outpatient follow-up
> plan.
>
> Unfortunately, we have not yet resolved my situation, but we have learned
> a considerable amount and have established a clear outpatient strategy to
> continue
>
> that work and carefully coordinate how and when to advance treatments in
> ways that can truly be meaningful and effective.
>
> Candidly, this is a mixed bag of news.
>
> Let me start with three significant positives.
>
> First, my sleep continues to be pretty solid, with every expectation that
> this will continue and bring long-term, increasing benefits across every
> aspect
>
> of my life.
>
> Second, we have seemingly minimized or mitigated the migraine challenges
> to the point that I may return to the infrequent level I experienced before
> this
>
> condition began. We will see how that holds up as I transition back home,
> but there is a reasonably high degree of confidence on this front.
>
> Finally, and perhaps most positively, there is a deep comfort in being
> able to return home. I am really looking forward to being there with Tracy,
> Swirl,
>
> and Nama.
>
> All of those genuinely good and hopeful points aside, there are still some
> significant concerns.
>
> I can expect frequent episodes of syncope, meaning I may become
> lightheaded and potentially black out multiple times a day, even with
> minimal exertion.
>
> The good news is that this tends to present as a sliding scale, giving me
> warning to get to a safe place and reduce activity before things escalate.
> Even
>
> so, this makes traveling anywhere difficult, including navigating within
> my own home.
>
> In addition, my vestibular system is not functioning well. This means I
> can become vertiginous and sufficiently off balance to fall erratically and
> dangerously,
>
> often with little to no warning. This is a very significant risk,
> especially as a 6’4”, blind guy. While this is not occurring at the extreme
> level of
>
> the days when I was asked to remain in a wheelchair full time, it is
> happening often enough that I must be exceedingly cautious. This will have
> a meaningful
>
> impact until we are able to address it more fully.
>
> As test results continue to come in and studies are completed, the plan
> will become clearer. In the meantime, the team has asked for a short window
> of
>
> patience while we pursue an aggressive outpatient approach. This will
> involve frequent trips into Boston. Tracy and I will be evaluating how I
> travel and
>
> navigate, and for now that will likely mean using a travel wheelchair
> outside the home, simply because we cannot yet ensure my safety with
> walking alone.
>
> This does not mean I should expect to be relegated to a wheelchair long
> term. It does mean that, for the short term and outside my home, this is
> the safest
>
> choice. I am conflicted about it, but I am also resolved. Safety matters,
> and I want to make the right decisions, even when they are uncomfortable.
>
> Appointments are already lining up, including as early as the coming week,
> which is pretty remarkable.
>
> Am I nervous and concerned? Absolutely.
>
> Do I still have the same level of hope and optimism as when we first began
> this journey here at Mass General? Yes, I honestly do.
>
> This is a complex situation, and it is not surprising that it takes time.
> The team is being deliberate and precise, focused on finding the root cause
> rather
>
> than simply applying a temporary fix that might mask the real issue and
> allow it to worsen.
>
> I suspect many of you may have questions. To be candid, I have plenty
> myself, and I am still doing a lot of processing. I ask for a bit of grace
> and patience
>
> right now. You are welcome to ask, but I likely will not be putting effort
> into answering questions just yet, as I continue to sort through my own
> understanding
>
> and mindset. Perhaps starting next week we can dig into that more.
>
> What I do know, without question, is how incredibly kind, supportive, and
> encouraging so many of you have been. Please trust me when I say I
> appreciate
>
> it more than most of you will ever know.
>
> I expect to head home mid to late afternoon today, and I will likely be
> radio silent until Monday.
> _______________________________________________
> NHLakesChapter mailing list
> NHLakesChapter at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nhlakeschapter_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> NHLakesChapter:
>
>
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nhlakeschapter_nfbnet.org/dolllady1%40ne.rr.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> NHLakesChapter mailing list
> NHLakesChapter at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nhlakeschapter_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> NHLakesChapter:
>
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nhlakeschapter_nfbnet.org/modeanit%40gmail.com
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nhlakeschapter_nfbnet.org/attachments/20251213/13731124/attachment.htm>
More information about the NHLakesChapter
mailing list