Most clinicians prefer residual limb . It is a working body part. It contains bones, nerves, and blood vessels. It must be desensitized (pounded with a fist, rolled on a foam roller) to handle the pressure of a socket.
Well-meaning friends often say the worst things. Here is a cheat sheet: amputee
The interface between the human body and the machine is the socket. If it doesn't fit perfectly, you will get blisters, skin breakdown, or simply refuse to wear it. A good prosthetist (the clinician who makes the device) is worth their weight in gold. Most clinicians prefer residual limb
There is a moment, often just after the initial shock of surgery or accident, when an amputee looks down and sees a new geography to their body. That moment is rarely easy. It can be filled with grief, phantom pain, and the daunting question: Who am I now? It must be desensitized (pounded with a fist,
If you ask an amputee what hurts the most, they won't point to the scar. They will point to the space where their foot used to be.
Learning to walk on a prosthetic leg requires rebuilding the brain’s motor cortex. You must relearn where your "foot" is in space. It is exhausting. A 10-minute walk can burn as much energy as running a mile for a non-amputee.
More than 2 million people in the United States are living with limb loss or limb differences, a number expected to double by 2050 due to vascular disease and diabetes. But statistics don’t capture the reality—the sound of a carbon fiber foot hitting pavement, the smell of a new silicone liner, or the quiet triumph of buttoning a shirt with one hand.