Those: Saljol.de
Thank you for allowing me to be with you today. Today we're talking about the Saljol Living room rollator. Would you briefly tell us what your current situation looks like?
Yes. So it is like that. I have had MS for about 25 years. The first few years were in fits and starts. For about 10 years now she has been in the second phase of the disease, the secondary progressive one. And I'm moving worse and worse. I'm very clumsy. I can't go very far anymore. I gradually had to give up all sports. It is the case that I am also limited in my daily life. For example, when I cook or unload the dishwasher, or generally move around the apartment. And that's where the rollator helps me. Not as a classic rollator, but rather as a seat that is suddenly available. When I'm exhausted, when I can't stand anymore, which happens very quickly, I can just support myself and sit down. And for me that is the great added value. So, as I said, less as a classic rollator, but more as a mobile seat cushion. Or for moving around the apartment by tilting it.
Now you could say that if you want to sit, you could also use a normal chair. What's on Living room rollator better?
I had been thinking about buying a three-legged stool for a long time. But what is much better about the living room walker is the mobility. I can move it right where I am, wherever I work. And maybe you can do that with a normal chair, but it's much, much more complicated. When I'm in the kitchen, I use it to move along the kitchen counter.
You just push yourself with your feet, right?
Feet and hands. This great mobility helps me and benefits me. You have the soft seat cushion and the back roller for the living room rollator.
You have the roll at the back because it’s softer, or why exactly?
I can lean on that very well. I didn't know such a thing existed. I just discovered it. And it just makes it much more convenient and easier to use in everyday life.
Do you use that? Living room rollator also in other rooms or mainly in the kitchen?
Actually mainly there. But with MS you never know exactly in which direction the disease will develop. In this respect, I'm glad that you can also use it as a classic rollator. I don't have a handrail in the apartment to hold on to. But with the living room walker I have a mobile handrail.
What does that mean? Living room rollator in your words?
In short, he's just a real relief. It's a mobile, very mobile, versatile seat. And it makes my life easier. Because you can brake and fix it at any time, you can also use it as a mobile handrail. When I'm moving around the apartment and have to hold on for a moment because I lose my balance or am out of breath, whatever.
Let's talk briefly about the optics. Do you like the design or do you have a suggestion for what could be done differently?
It's subtle. It's inconspicuous. Not gaudy. And it's unobtrusive, visually unobtrusive. I like it very much.
Thank you, dear Claudius, for allowing me to be with you. Thanks for the great statements.