My mother taught me that once you start a job, you need to finish it — or at least do as much as you can — before quitting. With chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), I’ve learned to complete my home projects a little differently. As I mentioned last…
Columns
Most of us with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)Â have probably told our friends that our plans are always penciled in so that they can be easily changed. If that is true, why am I talking about planning? Because having a plan helps us not to fail. The first one…
Progress is often painfully slow when managing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and recovering from exacerbations, but improvement is possible. Please allow me to relate an example from my personal experience. Since I was released from the hospital on Aug. 16, 2022, following an exacerbation of my disease,…
For those of us with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the objective of most of our treatments is to improve breathing. Some medications act to open our airways. These are called bronchodilators. We have other medicines and devices to clear the airways of mucus. And we…
Usually, by this point in the spring, I’ve had at least one upper respiratory infection — a common complication of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). My last one was particularly problematic and led to double pneumonia. I was in the hospital for eight days and required noninvasive ventilation for…
While the name of this column is “Life Tethered to a Concentrator,” so far, I haven’t yet discussed my journey with long-term supplemental oxygen. Today, I’d like to take you along on that journey. I was in denial — one of the five stages of grief —…
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is cruel in that it can cause some of our good habits to be replaced with bad ones. For instance, my mornings used to be very productive, but after COPD turned my life upside down, mornings became a struggle, and I no longer looked…
When I was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in 2013, my first emotion was relief. I had a diagnosis; the feeling that I was slowly deteriorating was not just in my head. I did what I always do and began researching. While studying the disease, I…
Recent Posts
- Living with COPD isn’t a test that I have to pass February 10, 2026
- Mucus-based test shows promise for measuring health of lungs in COPD February 4, 2026
- After a trifecta of illness, I’m again breathing without thinking about it February 3, 2026
- Getting better with COPD means doing the work the way our ancestors did January 27, 2026
- A tip on oxygen concentrator maintenance: Try ‘blowing the drip’ January 20, 2026
- When it came to ‘quilting’ my lungs, I chose lifestyle seams over pleurodesis January 13, 2026
- New COPD trial doses first participant with dual-target drug BBT002 January 7, 2026
- What an old racehorse taught me about being first with COPD January 6, 2026
- A kitchen memory holds a lesson about tenderness while living with COPD December 23, 2025
- What a cat and a kangaroo mouse taught me about living with COPD December 16, 2025