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Woman's Day

'Dance Moms' Abby Lee Miller Says, 'Being In A Wheelchair Makes You Invisible To People'

Abby Lee Miller
Photo credit: Getty Images
Photo credit: Getty Images

From Woman's Day

The past year for me was a blur of spinal surgeries, treatments, and 10 rounds of chemotherapy to treat my Burkitt lymphoma, a form of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma that impacts immune cells. Now, I’m cancer-free. But I’m still struggling with the aftermath of my illness and the surgeries that came along with it. A huge challenge I’m still facing every single day? My seriously limited mobility, thanks to how the cancer and surgeries impacted parts of my body, and the electric wheelchair I currently rely on as a result.

When I was discharged from my first emergency spinal surgery in April 2018, I was able to move my limbs, and my doctors were thrilled with whatever mobility I had at the time. But once I started chemotherapy, I didn’t receive physical therapy like I should have. While I was on the chemo floor, with nurses and the oncologist, my spinal cord injury and paralysis were not even addressed.

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Right away, my mobility declined and my muscles atrophied. I wasn’t able to move my right foot or left arm. By the time I received PT, I wasn’t able to walk or even put a bra on properly.

The only solution? Get used to a chair until I can move on my own again.

Now that I’m out of the hospital and using an electric wheelchair, I’ve lost my flexibility, too. My quad muscles have shortened from sitting for 16 hours a day. I’ve gained back the weight I lost before having surgery.

Right now, I have to use a catheter because it takes way too long to move from my chair to a regular toilet. People always think the worst part of being in a wheelchair is not being able to walk or ride a bike, but for me, it’s just the process of using the bathroom.

The physical challenges are awful, but humanity disappoints me even more.

When you’re in a wheelchair, you’re invisible to people. Picture this: When I’m driving down the sidewalk, people walk right into me and trip over my chair. You’re not at eye-level, so people don’t notice you. Luckily, I can adjust my chair to make myself much taller, and I do that before meetings or teaching a class. I like to come into the room in a regal position. That’s my style.

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That is, if I can get into the room. I’ve learned that the blue handicap sticker is a farce. So many places that say they’re handicap-friendly are far from it. I've already put one airline on blast for the poor service they offered to someone in a chair who needed help—and I could name a whole list of others that need to get it together.

Case in point: I recently stayed at a hotel abroad that was a wheelchair user’s nightmare. I was told the only way I could get in was through a lift that was outside and down an alley, and I also needed a key to use it. Of course, the key was inside (how convenient!), so I had to call them when I arrived to have someone come out and give it to me.

The hassle didn't stop there. The lift was actually part of another building that was attached to the hotel, so I was passed off to them to get the key. I had to make my way through four different doorways, then up an elevator, only to pound on the door of the hotel to finally get inside. All of this was *after* they claimed to be handicap accessible — and I paid $600 a night to be there.

The accessibility issues I've faced stretch even further than that. The lift chairs in hotel or public pools and hot tubs are almost always dead, and the chairs in showers are always too low, which makes it nearly impossible to get back into my chair when I’m wet. It’s incredibly frustrating.

Until these accessibility issues change, I guess it’s on me to get my mobility back.

My goal is to walk again. I know I’ll probably never walk around Disney World or the airport, but I’m hopeful I can walk for short distances and get some normalcy back in the future. I want to be able to use the ladies' room like everyone else.

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My doctors and therapists believe I’ll walk again, and I just went through knee surgery to fix my right knee, which will hopefully help get me up and moving eventually. I’ve been working with several PTs to stretch and do resistance training in the pool by marching against the jets’ current. My physical therapists help keep me pliable, and I’m getting stronger every day.

The good news is that being in a wheelchair hasn’t stopped me from instructing. I raised and trained my dancers to know their terminology, so they don’t need me to show them every move and pose. That’s why I wanted to do the current season of Dance Moms, to prove that I can still teach. I’m not giving up — and I’m not going anywhere.

—As told to Kristin Canning

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