Veena and Sushma Nijhawan are sisters
who teach, love shopping and eating out, despite being rendered immobile by
myopathy. By Purabi Shridhar
When Veena did not roll over and crawl
like other infants, her parents accepted that there was something wrong. She was
diagnosed with the relatively unknown disease — Skeletal Myopathy —
a congenital disease where the muscles degenerate leaving a person physically
immobile.
Veena, at 54, has no mobility but the brilliant scholar
with a double MA in English and Hindi, a BEd, and former schoolteacher who
tutors students at home, has never let it affect her inborn joie de vivre.
Sushma, younger to Veena by seven years, is also a victim of
Myopathy, which began to manifest only when she was seven years old. But
displaying the same indomitable spirit, Sushma, also a postgraduate and former
schoolteacher, tutors children like Veena.