Posted 2:07 p.m. Friday, July 31, 2015

She sang for arguably one of the most important moments in UWL history. Not only that, she sang publically after months of adapting to new challenges brought on by a neurological disorder that caused her memory loss and anxiety in public.

Experience is a turning point in dealing with memory disorder
Barbara Martin-Stanley, ’06, sat in her reserved seat in UW-La Crosse’s Recreational Eagle Center waiting to sing the national anthem in front of about 2,400 people. She’d sung “The Star-Spangled Banner” dozens of times for crowds large and small, but this time it was different. She’d be singing for arguably one of the most important moments in UWL history — a visit from President Barack Obama Thursday, July 2, the first sitting president ever to visit campus. Not only that, she’d be singing publically after months of adapting to new challenges brought on by a neurological disorder that caused her memory loss and anxiety in public. Martin-Stanley calls it a “miracle” and “a God thing” that she was able to step up on stage and perform that day. “I never thought I’d be able to sing the national anthem in front of all those people,” she explained after her performance. “That was truly a blessing from God.”Coping with a new disorder, new way of life
Only six months before her performance, Martin-Stanley was coming to grips with the neurological disorder, Mild Cognitive Impairment, she was diagnosed with in June 2014. A disorder that sometimes leads to Dementia, would leave her “stuck” in moments as her memory searched for a way out. She’d lose words mid-sentence or forget what she was doing mid-task — sometimes as long as ten minutes. It caused anxiety and depression. It meant simplifying life by stepping down from advising a UWL student group, ending service on two community boards, changing jobs within UWL and taking a month for family medical leave. It also meant a halt to one of her favorite hobbies. After singing the national anthem at a UWL basketball game in November 2014, the crowd applauded and Martin-Stanley knew it had went well. But the anxiety inside her was building even after she sang. As she left that night in her car, she had a mini-melt down. “MCI is such a memory thing that I didn’t know if I would remember the words,” she says. “I didn’t want to embarrass myself and the school.” She decided that basketball game would be her last public singing appearance. Over the months that followed Martin-Stanley continued with medical treatment to reduce the symptoms of MCI, which has no cure. Her neurologist recommended three steps: create structure, routinize and simplify. “If you know Barbara Martin-Stanley, ‘structure, routinize and simplify’ was not in my vocabulary,” she says. “I was involved in anything and everything, and now I felt like I was in this little box.” It was particularly difficult because Martin-Stanley had always had an extraverted personality. “I’ve always been someone who loves people,” she says. “As this was beginning to develop, I couldn’t be around people. It was difficult for me to even be around students for awhile.”A turning point
Martin-Stanley was practicing a new way of living with her disorder when she got an email from Music Professor Gary Walth Monday, June 22, asking out of the blue if she’d sing for a La Crosse Loggers game the following Saturday night. It was a venue where she’d never sung before and she hadn’t sung publically in six months. “My husband and I prayed about it,” says Martin-Stanley. “We decided, let’s simplify, routinize and structure — and go to the game.” She showed up on the third base line that night with the words to “The Star-Spangled Banner” tucked in one pocket and ear plugs in the other in case of any feedback. She didn’t need either. To her surprise, she wasn’t nervous at all. “It was beautiful. People came up to me afterwards shaking my hand,” she says. The next morning, Martin-Stanley got an email from UWL Dean Paula Knudson explaining a “historic figure” was coming to campus and asking if she could submit Martin-Stanley’s name as one of three people to potentially sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” for the event. Martin-Stanley puzzled over the reference to a “historic figure.” She assumed maybe a special visit from a UWL alum. Her husband, Charles, suggested maybe President Barack Obama, who he had heard was coming to the area. “I didn’t believe that,” recalls Martin-Stanley.Singing for a historic moment
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