Showing posts with label FEELINGS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FEELINGS. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Nothing to crow about

DRAMATIC DATELINE STYLE REENACTMENT
There's a big magnolia tree outside my window, with a robin's nest nestled in the crook of one of the larger branches. It was empty last year, but a few days ago I woke up to the whoosh whoosh whoosh of bird wings. A mama bird was flying around the yard collecting moss and hopping around the outside of the nest, plugging holes and freshening up the mud and twigs for the arrival of the next generation.

This pleased me, as I saw it as a generally hopeful sign of spring, a time of new beginnings and possibilities and other Hallmark whatnot.

This morning, I heard the mother robin going batshit insane, pacing along the gutters of the roof opposite her nest, screaming towards it. Putting on my glasses, I saw a fat black crow hovered over the nest, shards of baby blue egg and yolk stuck to its gaping maw of a beak. He (not sure why I thought of it as an asshole male bird) looked, if you'll excuse my anthorpomorphization (I know that's not spelled right, DEAL WITH IT) of the animal, pleased with himself, his large glossy body looking especially menacing in comparison to the small nest he was pillaging. To add insult to injury, he took his time with his breakfast, lingering long after the last egg was consumed, the mama bird increasingly, and impotently, furious.

It was a dispiriting way to start the day (more so for the mother robin, I imagine). The mother bird hasn't returned, and the once tidy nest is in disarray, as though tossed in a burglary. I keep the blinds closed so I don't have to look at it.

I'm not going to try to draw some deep and meaningful connection between this little vignette and the current state of my health, both because that is some serious Freshman Lit 101 shit and also because I'm too tired to attempt that manner of pop-psychology gymnastics. But things are not good right now, and it's hard to remain even-keeled and dry-eyed about the whole thing.

Today was one of those days where I wish I had a giant dog bed I could park between the toilet and the tub, so that I could curl up and doze between bouts of angry colonic activity. It was one of those days when I had to practice, in my head, the polite excuses I could use if the furnace repairman tried to ask me a question or hand me a bill when I was about to run to the bathroom.

"If you'll just hold on a minute, I have to run upstairs."
"I have the stomach flu, so if you could just leave the bill on the table that would be great."
"I left my checkbook upstairs, hold on while I grab it!" (10 minute interval and several toilet flushes follow. smooth!)
"Hold on, I'm expecting an important phone call from my doctor's office, I'll be right with you!"

And on and on and on. Luckily he kept himself occupied during the most active part of the morning, far away from the bathrooms.

I am so tired. I'm tired of having to think of excuses for my AAC, of canceling plans, or of actually forcing myself to follow through with plans and meet ups and feeling sick the whole time, or worried about getting stuck in traffic with what my foreign neighbor would call "a dodgy tummy."

I'm tired of waking up with what I call the goat sweats, wherein I'm pulled from sound slumber by a general feeling of dampness and then get a whiff of myself smelling, you guessed it, like a goat who's just gone to Zumba class.

I'm tired of forcing fluids when the last thing I want to do is drink anything because I'm so nauseous, when even the weight of water in my stomach feels like too much.

I'm tired of eating foods that are white, whitish, beige, brown, or taupe. Noodles, toast, plain applesauce, rice. I'm tired of simple foods like hummus tasting like a vacation for my tongue, when there is a great wide world of delicious food that I could be eating.

I'm tired of being tired, to an extent where putting together sentences and remembering specific words feels like work.

I'm so tired, in fact, that I actually called my doctor's office and requested steroids, which I hate, because I want to feel better.

I picked them up today. I'll start them tomorrow. I'm too tired to think about the side effects, or getting work done, or putting away my laundry, or doing anything beyond travelling between my bed and the kitchen and the bathroom and couch.

Tomorrow, I'll take the pills with a swig of Gatorade, hoping for an energy assist from the quick jolt of glucose to my system. I'll eat my toast and hope for better things, Hallmark sentiments and all.


It's all I can do.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Post #118: Colon fear

ooooooh, symbolism
Oops, there goes another month between posts. To be fair, I've had two colds in the last two months, but an excess of mucus does not impede my ability to write. That would be laziness (or forgetfulness, or both).

Tonight I am thinking a lot about fear; more specifically, colon fear. I've dealt with my fair share of anxiety; I know how the body feels when it panics. I know what rational thoughts to tell myself to calm down; I understand that just because something feels scary, it is not necessarily so. Repeated exposure to anxiety producing situations have allowed me to (somewhat) separate the feelings from the reality. It took me years of, for lack of a better word, desensitization to be able to attain this perspective. I've had an anxious brain my whole life; I've had an anxious colon my whole life; but I've only had an ANGRY colon for a few years. I used to think that fear was fear was fear, but lately I'm realizing that colon fear is different. I'm not desensitized to it yet. You would think that after a year or two's worth of daily cramps and pains and other symptoms I would stop mentally packing my hospital bag every time I spend an agonizing hour on the toilet; but (confession time!) I still sleep with a phone next to my bed and a sports bra and sweatshirt by the nightstand, should I need to get dressed in a hurry in the middle of the night. Colon fear is still very real for me.

Now that I've pretty much concluded that my new "normal" isn't very normal at all, I've been putting out feelers into the real world, trying to figure out what I want to do next and how I can balance the unpredictability of my colon with the needs and demands of the rest of the world (friends, employers, etc.). I've been thinking about what I want to do, and what I can do, and I've come to realize that my colon fear has been clouding and confusing my conclusions.

I heard from an old friend today, who has been as understanding as possible about my AAC and the limitations it places on my life. Hearing her voice on my voice mail made me smile and think of the hijinks that would ensue if we lived in the same city. But we don't. I rarely see her, and that sucks. There's a reunion coming up, and a lot of my friends will be there, and part of me would love to go, but then colon fear rears its ugly head and my mind is inundated with the unknowns of travel, the lack of control over food and bathrooms and transportation, the sick people on the airplane, being away from my doctor and a hospital system I'm familiar with.....the list goes on and on. In any given week I have a bad day or two. How does that look when I'm thousands of miles from home?

The reality is that people with Crohn's don't cloister themselves into hermetically sealed living pods (I wish) away from all of the unknowns of the world, from flu-stricken seatmates to closed bathrooms to problem foods (what if all they served at reunion was lettuce!? ahhhhh). I've been trying to stay in the proverbial pod, and it feels safe, but really it's a prison of my own creation (see illustration above). Part of me wants to break free-to live life with reckless, germ infested abandon-but the colon fear wraps itself around my brain, whispering consoling thoughts about missing life's events and doling out a never ending supply of hand sanitizer.

Someday, my hope is that colon fear will just become like any other fear, something to be considered and put in its place. For now, though, it seems too large to conquer. The catastrophes it promises still seem possible to me. Pre-diagnosis, I was always feeling like I was waiting for the next bad thing to happen, for the next shoe to drop. At this point, I've been hit in the head by any number of falling footwear, and I can't shake the fear that they will keep falling and falling and falling.

And it's that thought, that fear, that specific colon fear that will keep me grounded and away from some of my very favorite people in the world. When it's all typed out, plain on the page, it really does seem like a lot to give up.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Post #117: I could medal in this kind of running (or at least place)

Different kind of running.....
Confidential to the lady in the grey spandex-you might want to invest in some different pants because I CAN SEE YOUR REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS geeze. 
Hello again blog! Welcome to 2014! Happy New Year to everyone who reads this blog and their colons/various digestive apparatuses. 

I could go in a lot of different directions in this post; how it's my two year diagnosis anniversary; how it's been a full year on my scary injectible medicine; how various colon attacks ruined both Thanksgiving AND my birthday dinner. 

However, this is a blog post about how people don't know shit about Crohn's (see what I did there? eh? eh?). 

This week I volunteered to help cook a meal for an area non-profit, and I ran into a family friend who I hadn't seen in a decade or so. She and her family were a definite fixture of my childhood; her daughter and I got into all kinds of mischief at various holiday dinners, and amused each other while the adults were being boring by sneaking away to the basement and pretending we knew how to play pool (I still don't). 

I was more than happy to see her, and we shared cell phone pics of our family members while dressed in ugly borrowed aprons, surrounded by huge vats of boiling water. Then came the inevitable question: what have you been up to? 

I kind of came to the decision that I would not lie about my current situation with people close to me, and since this woman had known me since birth I didn't feel the need to rattle off the jobs/hobbies/volunteer work I was into two years ago, pre-Crohn's. I told her I had been diagnosed with Crohn's and I wasn't working that much. 

Family friend (FF): Crohn's? What's that? 
Me: Oh, it's a disease of the digestive system. (blank stare) An inflammatory bowel disease? 
FF: Oooooooh ok. So, you get the runs a lot? 

Let's pause. 

OH HOW I HATE THAT PHRASE. Having "the runs" sounds kind of comical; I picture a comedian with their knees fixed together, kind of crab walking heroically toward the bathroom. Subtext: they probably won't make it, and that's funny! It's funny to lose control of your bodily functions in public! There is a cinematic tradition of using poop as a comedy prop, whether someone gets turned upside down in a port-o-potty (see: Jackass, the movie), clogs the toilet of a potential date (see: Along Came Polly, a thousand others), or just completely loses control of their bowels all together (see: Bridesmaids). In the last two examples, the characters have "the runs" due to food poisoning. They're sick, but it's still funny when they humiliate themselves. I guess I never appreciated that distinction before I got to deal with an AAC on a full time basis; I certainly laughed along with everyone else in the movie theater, but now it seems like kind of a cheap laugh, and one that hits a littttttle to close to home. 

Beyond any comedic connotations, "the runs" is just a coarse phrase. It's one of those cases where the word that describes the act is equally as disgusting or off-putting. Maybe it's because I use the word so much (to my friends, family, physicians, mailman....) but the word diarrhea doesn't gross me out the way "the runs" or (even worse!) "the squirts" do. At least "diarrhea" is somewhat respectable, and compared to the other terms, it's downright dignified. And when it comes down to it, I think that's what pisses me off the most: giving what to me (and a lot of other people) is a painful, unpleasant, occasionally debilitating condition a nickname is not respectful. It makes light of a situation that may be funny in the movies, but isn't funny in my real life. 

Back to the conversation: 

Me: Yeah sometimes. That's a part of it. 
FF: Well, that's too bad. 
Me (not really wanting to continue the conversation): Yup. 

Argh. Part of me wanted to justify just how much more Crohn's is than just a bout of diarrhea now and then: but wait! Don't you want to hear about the daytime pain? The night time pain? The endless doctor's appointments? The invasive tests? The dehydration? The malnutrition? The side effects from the meds? The sore joints? The night sweats? The hair loss!? I CAN TELL YOU ALL THE WAYS THIS DISEASE SUCKS!

But it wasn't the time or place, and I'm not the official ambassador for IBD. It's just frustrating to have someone reduce your experience to a piece of slang that doesn't begin to encompass the day to day struggles of Crohn's. Today, for instance, I ate peas for the first time in like 6 months and worried about that and had a lot of bowel movements and now I have a pain in my right side and I'm tired. And this was a good day! I ate out at a restaurant and ran errands and went shopping, all while keeping in mind where the nearest bathroom might be located. 

The last time I ate out and went shopping, a week ago, I was in the middle of Crate and Barrel when I felt that special feeling (cold sweat, cramps, pain) and knew I had about 2.5 minutes to make it to a bathroom or poop on the showroom floor. I did indeed have "the runs" and I did have to actually run to a bathroom and no, it wasn't funny, even a little bit. 

I know there is no succinct way to express this reality to people. I get it. 

If nothing else, what I take from this conversation is the desire to be more open and receptive when other people try to tell me things about their lives. To not assume I know all the answers, and to try not to belittle or reduce their experiences in any way. I'll try not to be as ass about whatever they disclose, and I'll let them tell me what it's like. 

Which I would have done with this family friend, if I thought she really wanted to know. 

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Post #116: My holly jolly colon

Get in my face, you delicious little sugar grenades. 

Late night, 3 a.m. Awake and in pain. Sound familiar? This, my friends, is the worst kind of SSDD

I drenched the sheets with sweat. I remember, when I was trying to lay perfectly still so that I wouldn't move and make the pain WORSE, that I seemed to be sweating between my toes. Pain twisting my insides, shaking, forcing myself to take slow, measured breaths, failing and hyperventilating a little, and this is what pops into my head!?

Toe sweat: is that a thing? Do you sweat between each toe? Are there sweat glands down there? Is it weird to have sweaty toes? I mean, I always think of feet being sweaty, but not the toes, really. Is each little space between them like an individual armpit? Hmm. 

All weekend I baked (6 different kinds of cookies, in your face MARTHA), and then ate cookies and made myself sick. After a particularly sugar filled binge yesterday morning, I ate a veggie filled lunch to compensate. So, sugar or carrots? Cookies or zucchini? Peanut brittle or celery? What exactly set off my AAC? Hard to say. 

Not that it matters, whether it was the cookies or produce, when you're in bed at 3 a.m. sweating between your toes. 

But oh, that familiar holiday food paradox. I'm talking about the way the holidays (I'm looking at you Thanksgiving and the entire month of December) trick you into thinking that for some reason you DESERVE to eat real food during this specific time period, as if the unwritten (and unknown) laws of your tricky colon suddenly don't apply when the world is decked out in pine boughs and velvet red ribbon and holiday fucking cheer. 

It doesn't matter what your colon did yesterday, or the week before, because all of a sudden it's THE HOLIDAYS and you should let yourself enjoy that cookie, that candy, that giant roasted turkey leg (or whatever). Come on! You're around people who can eat whatever they want, and you soooooooooo want to be like them. The urge to "pass" as a normal eater is never so strong as during this particular season, so you let down your guard a little, relax your strict food rules, and indulge, as though hypnotized by listening to "White Christmas" one too many times. 

You swap Christmas cookies, and go to festive holiday lunches, and sample a few too many of the treats that you bake for other people. And then at 3 a.m., the pain comes, and the natural conclusion is that you DID THIS TO YOURSELF. This notion is further reinforced by the first thing people say when you tell them about your latest setback: "Well, was it something you ate?"

Nothing like a little internal (and external) food shaming to keep your sore colon company!

Here is what I know: my colon does this sometimes, and it doesn't matter what I eat. But it's hard not to draw the reasonable conclusion, especially during this season of unrestricted, mindless eating. I'm not immune to the lure of sprinkles, and I'm a sucker for stuffing. Guilty as charged! But this was not my fault. Fistfuls of Christmas cookies didn't help the situation, I'm sure, but the colon has a logic all its own. 

So now I'm sitting here typing and sipping my meals through a straw. I did have a pretty good run: I managed to swing Thanksgiving, and some of December, before my body got up and slapped me, reminding me that ultimately this is my reality, this 3 a.m. pain, not those few days of gleefully pretending my colon was the same as the other girl's. 

I can (and will!) enjoy the rest of the season, the first snowfall and the exchanging of presents and the visits from family. But now, as pain throbs in my side, I will do so with my mouth closed and my guard up. Depending one when the pain lessens, I might be eating soft foods till New Year's. Like it or not, that's just the reality of the situation, my situation, the one that involves an angry and unpredictable colon. I didn't ask for or cause this (repeat to myself a thousand times), and nothing takes the shine off holiday festivities like a bucketful of Prednisone, so I'll be taking it easy. 

And while I'm being kind to my body, I'll try to remember to be a little kinder to myself, and remember that this season can still be celebrated in a way that doesn't involve the massive consumption of butter, sugar, and eggs. There is, hopefully, seasonal happiness beyond the cookie jar. 

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Post #115: The princess and the (very many) peas

SO MUCH PEA. 
Hello neglected blog! I keep meaning to post, and then getting distracted, and then realizing it's been a month since I last posted. The reason I post at all, and the reason I'm going to try to post more frequently, is that it's helpful to work out what I'm feeling by writing about it-and it's been a long time since I've done that here. Things are a little backed up (cue constipation jokes!). So here goes....

I am now going to tell you a gross story to illustrate some gross realities in my life. 
**TMI warning**, and what not.

I once had a mole removed in the vicinity of my hipbone. It was a standard procedure, with ten little black stitches that look like the fur on a caterpillar's back. I did everything I was supposed to do, but when I went to get the stitches removed.....the wound had not closed. I remember the dermatologist saying, "huh"(add that to list of things you don't want to hear from your doctor). He put a butterfly bandage on, and some sort of sticky glue, and bandaged the whole thing up tightly. I was not to touch it, think about, or even glance in its direction for 72 hours, and then I was supposed to come back.

I'm pretty sure you can guess where this is going. That shit did not want to heal. 

He told me it would close in time, and to keep it dry and clean. I dutifully followed his directions, and it still would not close. It wasn't infected; it wasn't angry; it just wasn't closing. It was on a  part of the body that moves a lot, and even if you stay still most of the time, you're still going to have to get up and pee eventually.

It was during the summer, and I remember laying in the backyard with my pants pulled down on one side, sunning my sad wound in the hopes that the sun would make it shrivel up and close. I felt a malaise-there's no other word to describe it-a deep, unsettling unhappiness that pervaded and discolored everything. I was sick at the thought that I had to go about my daily life with THAT on my body. How could I enjoy the nice weather when THAT was still there? How could I pretend to be happy with THAT laying just beneath the surface of my clothes and a few strategic bandages?

That particular summer, that wound was my pea (see illustration above). Now, just so you don't think I'm being overly dramatic (never!), it wasn't like I had a sword wound on my side. I'm lucky it never got infected; and even though it left a gnarly scar (seriously, it's big), it did eventually close, but I will always remember that feeling-like a sickness of my very being-and how it trumped every other feeling, every other thought. It was like a stain I couldn't wash off. I think that was the first time I was able to articulate and understand how physical problems upset my emotional equilibrium to such an extent.

Side note: you know what finally fixed that problem? THE INTERNET. But that's an entirely different story. 

Now I find myself with a sore in a very Crohn's like place (TMI or not, that's all I'm saying). I'm doing the wound care thing again, and for the first few days I felt that same sickness, that visceral disgust, that soul-dampening weight of a painful, awkward, manifested bodily illness.

It's the pea beneath 100 mattresses, the sharp gravel stuck in your shoe, the mosquito bite that keeps you awake at night: the one niggling imperfection that prevents you from appreciating anything good or happy that is going on around you.

Maybe it's a character defect, but I've always been this way. Even with the Crohn's, there are things that just seem to automatically drag me down into sadness. These things tend to be the more outward/noticeable conditions; they happen, and suddenly I feel totally and completely defeated.

The sore is better; the wound on my hip did eventually close; but when it happens, when these injuries present themselves, I'm like a horse with blinders. In a world full of happiness and joy I plod forward, shoulders sloped, with a singular thought in my head: broken, broken, broken, broken.

And when I'm there, it's hard to see past that revulsion and sickness, to realize they are small (some might say, PEA LIKE) components of a much larger picture. Now, as I've done in the past, I get through it the only way I know how: by plodding forward, miserable and sad, waiting for the day I can venture out and feel normal once again.

This is all a roundabout way of explaining that I recently had some tests that showed things are going pretty well, in AAC land, and could not find an explanation for my current symptoms. To put it another way: the way things are now, the pain and discomfort and symptoms I experience, are my pea. They are still here after (or despite) treatment. They are there, providing me daily reminders that I have an occasionally (although it feels like mostly) dysfunctional digestive system, improved though it may be. 

I can't kick that particular piece of gravel out of my shoe; I can't shake the pea out from under all those mattresses. It is just what remains, and I don't want to live my life being disgusted and sickened and frustrated and held back by something I can't change. 

I've written before about how instead of New Year's resolutions I like to create New Year's mottos. So for 2014, I'm thinking it should be pea related. 

Something like: 

2014: EMBRACE THE PEA (hmmm, too R. Kelly-ish)

or: 2014: MAKE PEACE WITH THE PEA (better)

or: 2014: IT'S JUST A PEA GET OVER YOURSELF (why am I so mean?)

or: 2014: PEAS AND PERSPECTIVE (oooooh)

As with everything else in my life, it seems to be a work in progress. One thing is for certain: the pea is here, and I need to learn how to purposefully incorporate it into my life.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Post #114: In the business

Welcome to my office. 
Yesterday some good friends who live out of town came to visit. Sometimes, with old friends, I'll get portals into what my life was like pre-AAC-little windows into who I was and how I was before my life was overtaken by Crohn's. That last part sounds melodramatic, and it is, but it's also pretty accurate. 

My friends let themselves into my house and kicked off their shoes, raiding the fridge before grabbing my blanket and making themselves comfortable next to me on the couch. My cupboards are a showcase of beige gluten free simulations of real food, but I managed to find some ancient girl scout cookies in the freezer, which seemed to suffice and prevented me from feeling like a total failure in the hostess department. 

As we sat around and caught up, a weight fell from my shoulders, and for one brief moment I got a glimpse into what I had before, and what I'm missing now. Easy camaraderie with people who knew me before my AAC came out in full force, and know that I'm not really "like this." People who knew me from a time when I was more social and adventurous and funnier and happier. I was never much of a risk taker, never the life of the party-but I was not what I am now. I feel like I need to be reminded of that, by seeing that old version of myself reflected in the memories of some of the people I know best. It's a kind of gift, to have that easy report, with people who know that I am more than my symptoms and disease and don't treat me differently than they did a decade ago. 

I was catching them up on my latest weird medical testing, and one of my friends, who works in a doctor's office, started discussing a bunch of diagnostic procedures. She was unsure of the difference between two procedures (that I've had), and as I was explaining the differences she laughed and said, "I knew you'd know! You are in the business, after all."

That one little comment, offered without malice or judgement, jolted me out of the portal and yanked me back to reality. 

I realized that my AAC, my illness, was now an established part of our shared timeline. It was, in their minds, what I do now. It was my business, my specialty, my vocation. And they're right. 

I'm in the business because I spend so much time around doctors and nurses, and undergo lots of testing, and allow so much of my daily thought process be devoted to thinking about (ok, obsessing over) my disease. I used to have a different business, a teaching job, but not anymore. I'm in the business because I try to be an educated patient and make the best health decisions for myself, even though I feel like I fail a lot of the time, on both fronts. 

I'm in the business because I don't have a choice. 

My friends still love me, and accept me, new business and all. Still, I don't want this to be my job. 

I'm coming up to my two year diagnosis date, and this whole time, through all of the testing and treatments and medications and special diets and new plans and failed plans, I've been waiting to feel better. I've started to, a dozen times, but it never seems to stick. So I've stopped making plans or trying to structure my life in any way that involves responsibility, because the only thing worse then letting other people down is hating yourself for it. 

But sometimes, it hits you in the face, how other people see you. You see through the portal-how you were-and you miss parts of your old life. You see your present, and there's a lot you'd like to change. And since you can't see the future, you put a smile back on your face and eat a girl scout cookie (mistake!) and reminisce, hoping hoping hoping that at some point your AAC stops being your only business. 

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Post #113: SSDD

It's less offensive with a floral background. 

Welcome to the story of my life: same shit, different day. And I don't mean that literally, of course, because we all know my bowel movements aren't nearly that predictable. 

Last week, I fell asleep on the couch, nbd, when I woke with an alarming, stabbing, tearing, searing pain in my side. Last time this happened, almost a year ago, I was so alarmed that I went to the ER-I had never experienced pain like that before, and it scared the hell out of me. I thought something was torn or twisted or ruptured, and I was both relieved and frustrated when the doctor on call shrugged his shoulders and I walked out of the hospital with a clean CT and no answers. This time, same pain, but you know what? 

Same shit, different day. 

I was alone, and the phone was out of reach, but I calmly told myself to breath through the pain. Some insipid morning talk show was on, and I tried to listen to distract myself while feeling like someone was shivving me in the intestines (can you use that as a verb? As in, "to shiv?" I'm not down on my prison grammar). When the pain lessened a little, I slowly rolled onto my back, then onto my other side, and then sat up. The pain got better. I called the nurse out of habit, but I had no intention of going to the ER. I didn't expect her to have any insight into the problem, and she didn't, and I had already resigned myself to welcoming back my old friend, le liquid diet. 

Same shit, different day. 

That first sip of protein smoothie tasted like sweet, sweet defeat. 

The recovery from this....whatever it was (the doctors don't know either! wheeee) is going more quickly this time, and I've been adding one or two solid foods a day, waiting to see how my AAC will react to the softest, blandest, safest foods imaginable, dealing with the nausea and pain and discomfort that inevitably comes after eating something innocuous (like eggs). Nervously trying new foods, hoping not to wake up in pain or obstruct. 

Sound familiar? Because that's a big, heaping helping of same shit, different day. 

I went back to see my old doctor, and we made up a little-I didn't cry, we traded circumcision jokes, it was all good-but he had no idea what was causing my pain, and little advice about how to proceed. 

You know where to find that book in the library? It's filed under same shit, different day. 

I'm now waiting for insurance to approve the next test that might give me some answers, the one the new doctor ordered. I saw him a month ago, he submitted the claim, something went wrong, it was resubmitted, and now it will probably (best case scenario) take at least another two weeks to approve.

You know how to get there? You just merge onto the freeway, and take the same shit, different day exit. 

Oh, and this test? I have to swallow a tiny camera, which may or may not get stuck in my AAC. It has a 5% chance of requiring additional intervention/emergency surgery, and I have to prep like I'm having an actual colonoscopy. My doctor actually said it wouldn't be such a bad thing if it got stuck, because then they would know where the problem was. 

Hmmm, this room is a little musty. Maybe I'll light my same day, different shit candle. 

So here I am, back to where I was a year ago (minus the steroids, thankfully). I'm uncomfortable, stressed out, and waiting for a test that may or may not yield any useful information, but which will surely be a pain in the ass (literally and figuratively) to go through. Insurance is being difficult, I'm playing phone tag with doctors old and new, and I obsess and worry over what I eat, which makes mealtimes AWESOME. I wait for pain, and I wait for tests, and I wait for answers. I sleep a lot, and the days pass, and I try to find happiness in small things. Every day I turn into myself a little more, and reach out a little less. 

You all know the chorus: SAME DAY, DIFFERENT SHIT. 

I want a new song. 

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Post #112: The results are in....

Thanks Doc!

Last week, after hounding my nurse/her assistant, I got back the test results I've been waiting for.....and they're normal. I was hoping they were not. I was hoping to get a justification to switch meds and a piece of paper to shove in my tiny doctor's face so I could say, HA! There is something wrong! I was right, you were wrong, and here's the proof (drops mic). 

Fucked up, no? 

To wish that you were, indeed, actually more sick so that your doctor will listen to you? Now I feel kind of defeated, like I made such a big fuss at the last appointment about how something isn't right, and the medicine isn't working, and now one tiny number on a lab slip has rendered my objections worthless.

Ever since I got the news I've felt like a half deflated balloon, the kind that floats dejectedly halfway between the ceiling and the floor. 

A sad balloon. 

I get teary eyed for no reason, and I'm having a bad colon week. Everything seems harder than it really is, and it turns out that it's much easier to hide in bed or watch bad TV than confront the realities of my current circumstances. Realities that include the fact that my doctor may have helped me as much as he can, or that I feel like I have hit a mark where people are essentially expecting me to just get on with my life already, sick or not. 

I see a new doctor next week to get a second opinion. I'm seasoned enough not to get my hopes up too much; I'm not expecting this guy to have all (or any) of the answers, but it will be interesting to hear his thoughts. It certainly can't hurt to have another pair of eyes pour over the paper trail of my sad colonic adventures. 

And while I wait, I will try to focus on the things that don't suck. The weather is getting cooler, which means it's time to break out the fleece. My AAC is tolerating pho again (wooo!). And, my city got a new radio station that plays the 90's hits I remember from 6th grade dances; I mayyyyyyy have almost been late for an appointment last week because I was rapping along with Salt N Pepa. I defy you to be depressed when Shoop comes on-it's just not possible. Seriously. 

Also, and most importantly, I'll keep reminding myself that no matter what any doctor tells me, I feel how I feel, and that can't necessarily be quantified by a lab. After that last appointment, I need the reminder. 

Friday, September 6, 2013

Post #111: Late night lightening lessons

GAH. 
Last night, a big storm swept through, and all day the news channels were wetting themselves with excitement over the impending atmospheric drama. Consequently, I spent the day in a state of agitated expectation, awaiting the coming fireworks show that would play out in the sky above my house. 

I really don't like thunder and lightening. They unsettle me. We get strong storms here, and the thunder is so loud the house actually shakes and quakes with every giant BOOM. I know some people love thunder storms; they throw open the windows so they can smell the electrified air, feel the wind kick up, watch every flash and strike and have their hearts beat with an elemental excitement instead of fear. I am not one of those people. 

I was alone in the house, and determined to act like a freaking adult and get on with my life. I was in bed reading-distracted, as the heavy rain began, when it happened: a totally unexpected, LOUD, house shaking body rattling clap of thunder. I literally jumped up in bed and grabbed my heart. The shock of it all was probably more frightening then the thunder itself, but my first instinct was to turn off the light, roll into a ball beneath the covers, and scan the horizon for future lightening strikes, so I could count the seconds and miles between light and sound, to gauge when the next BOOM might hit. 

I was trying to control my breathing, trying to get my heart to stop sprinting and return to a peaceful stroll, when the lightening strikes started coming closer the closer together. It looked like a giant strobe light had been installed in the neighborhood: light/dark/light/dark. I curled into myself further, already painful joints pulled closer to the body, stomach tight and nervous. 

The lightening kept coming, as did the thunder-closer and then further away, or far away and then closer. It was hard to gauge where anything was happening. I was taut, waiting for the next onslaught, but it was difficult to determine a rhythm. Better to stay ready, I thought; better to stay small and stressed so the scary things won't be so scary when they happen. 

And then, a tiny voice in my head: you can't control this. Any of this. 

You can't control this. 

You are not in control. 

The thought was like a shot of Valium. Instant calm. I unfurled. 

The more I thought it, the calmer I felt: I can't control this. Come on loud noises and bright lights! I can't control ANY OF THIS. I am not in control. 

I turned over and stopped watching the storm, and as the light show played out across the walls of my darkened room, I fell asleep. 

I woke up cold, tangled in damp sheets, only to fall back asleep and  wake up for the same reason. Night sweats. Was it the storm or the Crohn's? Hard to tell. 

Either way, I couldn't control it. 

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Post #110: All by myselfffff......

But Brad! I thought you.....CARED for my colon!
I think I maybe just broke up with my doctor. 

A few things I know for sure: 

1.) During this appointment, I bypassed the ugly cry and proceeded straight to the bawling, hiccuping, snotty sob-attractive!
2.) I don't feel like having to fight to be heard or understood anymore
3.) I felt stupid and foolish for DARING to have a different opinion
4.) I need a second opinion

I came into the appointment prepared, as always, with a nice little information sheet and list of questions. Things started off as usual, but at a certain point I found myself tuning out the doctor's responses as an angry chorus repeated in my mind: LISTEN TO ME! LISTEN TO ME! WHY ARE YOU NOT LISTENING TO ME?

I told myself I wouldn't be combative, that I would be able to have a polite, dispassionate, constructive discussion of my disease and current symptoms. But guess what? I have no polite, dispassionate, or constructive feelings towards my health at the moment. I wanted to be noticed, and heard, and most importantly, believed. I left feeling pitied, discounted and embarrassed for having been so emotional. 

I wish I could have held my own during that appointment. I wish I could have had a rational conversation with my doctor without the hysterics, because crying in front of medical professionals makes me feel weak. But I wasn't able to, and halfway through the appointment I just gave up. I kind of dumbly nodded my head and said I understood, because I wanted it to be over. I didn't want to fight and argue and push back against anything. 

I don't think I have a bad doctor; in fact, I think I have a really good doctor.....clinically. But as I managed to spit out during the appointment, "I am more than my test results." The sum total of my experience cannot be accurately captured in a relatively clean colonoscopy or unremarkable lab results. I wish he could understand this. 

Finally, he asked if I wanted a second opinion, and I said I thought it was time. 

I could go into more of the specifics of the appointment; how he did, indeed try to blame my symptoms on my IBS instead of my IBD; how he recommended a dietary approach like he invented the fucking diet I'm on; how he invalidated my opinions because they were things I just "knew" and couldn't prove, or because "time of onset doesn't equal causation;" how he said he was sorry, and I believed him. 

It doesn't really matter. I cried all through the appointment, and then all the way home, and then in bed a little under the covers. I felt alone and disappointed and emotional and angry. 

I don't have the energy for this. I don't have the energy to advocate for myself with an entirely new doctor at a different hospital. I don't have the energy to start all over again, and repeat tests and conversations and spit out a list of symptom after symptom. I could stay with this doctor; things didn't end badly enough that there is irreparable damage, but it was certainly a turning point. I could pretend nothing happened and continue on, but we would both know things were different. 

I don't have the energy to push forward, but I also don't have a choice. 

Friday, August 16, 2013

Post #109: Welcome Home!

Does hamburger guy kind of look like Roger Ebert? Maybe not. 

Thankfully, my colon was pretty chill on vacation. 

It waited until I got home to freak the f-out. Hooray! 

This is just example #1596 of the complete mindfuck that is Crohn's. After a relatively stable month, where you eat out all the time, and tolerate a wide range of foods, and have no pain, suddenly: BAM! Your angry colon strolls into the joint and bellies up to the bar, orders a few shots of tequila, and TEARS THE PLACE DOWN. 

Try to limit my stress, you say? Try to stay positive?? YOU TRY STAYING CALM WHEN YOUR COLON IS UNPREDICTABLY ANGRY. Also, bite me. 

It has not been a good week. Last week was worse. 

I am so, so tired of all of this. 

I got some blood work done, to see if I can figure out why my AAC is being an AAC, but really? Those numbers won't give me much clarity. I have a doctor's appointment next week, and I doubt I'll learn anything new there either. I have been avoiding going back, first  because I was feeling better, and now because I'm feeling worse......it doesn't make sense to me, either. I don't want to see my doctor, because I don't want to hear what he has to say. I don't want to get my hopes up. I don't want to hear anything that will make me more afraid or stressed out. I don't want to hear any of the familiar platitudes, or get fed any of the familiar lines. For instance: 

If he says I'm in clinical remission.....

If he blames this on my IBS (lucky girl, I have both!).......

If he tells me to give this medicine more time........

I will probably slap his tiny doctor face. Or leave. Or, realistically, start to cry, because I am too tired and frustrated to do anything else. 

I was going to try to write a funny post about how I always read food magazines in the bathroom (true), but I don't have the energy. I had a bad colon day. 

And judging from the state of things down under, I might have a bad colon night. My AAC is on another bender, soused to the gills and looking to start a fight. 

And there is nothing I can do. Welcome home, indeed. 

Monday, July 8, 2013

Post #107: A failure to communicate

Here comes the bride.....all dressed in CONTROVERSY

This week has been hectic. I have family visiting-two adults, two young kids-and it's been a whirlwind of sticky apple juice fingers, trips to visit the pear trees in the backyard (or parrot trees, as one kid calls them), dashing around the playground, touching ALL THE THINGS at the children's museum, dark chocolate birthday cakes, and organic mac&cheese.

It's not the mess or the chaos I mind, although I have to frequently resist the urge to wipe down all the surfaces of everything in the house (how did cherries get smooshed into the upstairs carpet?!)-it's not the lack of privacy (closed bathroom doors? ha!), or even the invasion of my personal space, something I am usually wary about. When a tiny person wants to snuggle with you on the couch and watch nature programs, you stop worrying about the fact that he probably didn't wash his hands the last time he peed and just let him curl up next to you and put his little feet under your butt, to keep them warm.

What has me kind of depressed is an interaction with one of the grown people. Somewhere along the way, I picked up a flu like illness-my joints are swollen and painful, and my throat feels as though I've been gargling with glass chips. I'm guessing that despite copious amounts of hand sanitizer, my immune system was no match for the DECADES worth of germs coating every surface of the children's museum, and someone probably sneezed on me when I wasn't looking and there you go (update: I have strep throat! ugh).

Naturally, all of this occurred half way through a jam-packed visit with planned outings to the aquarium and zoo, dinners out at favorite restaurants and various other adventures. I could feel the illness coming, and as I hobbled out to the patio my family member asked what was wrong, and I told her.

"Why are you sick??" she asked in an accusatory tone, her brow furrowing in annoyance.

I was in no mood. I believe I told her to ask my mucus, because I had no idea how or why (really?!) I got sick.

Later, as I was curled up on the couch watching reality bridal TV (no judgement! I'm sick!), my temperature rising, she came and sat down next to me. There was a story about a bride with an autoimmune disease trying on dresses. She had huge bruises up and down her arms, and she talked about how from day to day, she didn't know if she would lose weight, gain weight, have hair, have no hair, or be covered in sores.

She tried on dress after dress with one particularly large sore on her arm, something she was obviously self conscious about. Simultaneously, we had opposite reactions; I commented, "Poor lady, that looks painful" while my family member said, "Ewww, gross, why are they showing that?"

It was then that I had a moment of realization: this family member will never, ever understand my Crohn's.

It may seem like a leap, but I realized she just doesn't have the compassion chip necessary to process chronic illness. It will never be anything other then an imposition on her, an annoyance, something to be irritated or disgusted by.

Some people try to be empathetic but just can't understand because they have no experience with chronic illnesses, and some don't even try. They may be sympathetic on the outside, but on the inside they are mentally watching the clock and waiting to change the subject. Maybe this is because of discomfort, or impatience, or the feeling that chronic illness is an inherent weakness (WHY are you sick??)-but they will never approach the issue with anything other than their biases and impatience.

I had been trying to explain things to this particular relative, to bring her into my experience, because it's an important part of who I am right now. That stops today. It's kind of freeing to stop putting myself out there, making myself vulnerable, because I know that she doesn't care to understand.

As much as I would like to, I can't simply excise this part of my life. Since my diagnosis, it's frequently been the most time consuming, emotionally draining, physically exhausting reality in my life. I think this family member has been waiting for things to go back to normal (that's what I want too!), but in the meantime-this is who I am, and this is what I'm going through. 

I won't pretend that these things aren't happening. I won't sugarcoat the truth. I don't have a choice about going through this, but people in my life do have a choice about whether or not they want to hear about it. I forget that, as I tend to go with a full transparency approach. But in the future, I'll be more watchful and wary. I guess I just assumed that people who cared about me would want to know, but as with anything else, I guess there's an interest threshold, one that i have apparently exceeded with this particular person. 

This person has a choice. I keep telling myself that. 

But it still feels like rejection, of me, my disease, and the way I live my life. 

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Post #105: Dispatches from the land of wheat

This bread is sad, much like my colon. 

I spent over an hour wandering through the aisles of my local hippie mart, stocking up on bags of eight dollar gluten-free cereal and quinoa porridge, wheat free English muffins the weight of hockey pucks, and more produce than I have consumed in the last six months combined. 

I came prepared with double sided lists; I scrutinized each label for offensive additives, valuing purity of ingredients over taste and texture. I circled round and round the bins of dusty flours, spent far too much time choosing nut milks, and was so overwhelmed by the whole process that I didn't even think to head over to the cosmetics section for an impulse purchase (per usual). Exhausted, I loaded my purchases into the car and drove directly to the nearest pizza place. 

As I was somewhat guiltily eating my margarita pizza (sans cheese), I chose to ignore the shiny new wheat free foods banished to the dark corners of the trunk. As I sit here now, head pounding, body flushing, trying to keep said pizza down, three things are abundantly clear: 

1.) I am more afraid of this new diet experiment than I thought
2.) Emotional eating doesn't go away, no matter what your current relationship with food
3.) In some ways, I am more afraid of things changing (despite the possibility of improvement) than things staying the same

Isn't it interesting that when there is stress involved, the body overrides the mind's innate wariness about food and does a face plant into the nearest source of fat and carbs? In this case, food was both the cause of and (temporary, stupid) solution to the problem. Anxiety about changing my diet led me to eat a food with a high likelihood of making me feel like shit (mission accomplished!), all to avoid thinking about the other new foods I will be eating on Monday, which are healthier and probably less likely to make me ill. It's all very confusing. 

To put it another way: I am worried about eating almond butter when I have spent over a year ingesting/injecting a number of powerful immunosuppresents and other scary drugs with page long lists of potential side effects. 

It makes no sense. I know this. 

I could chalk this all up to nervousness about "rocking the boat," of taking any chance at altering the current, relatively stable (or at least predictable) condition of my bowels. I could say that I was worried about placing all of my hope in another plan, when other plans have failed so miserably. I could admit that I worry about making things worse, or messing up my body somehow, though the latter is unlikely. 

Those things are true, but I think the real reason I'm anxious is that this is the first proactive step I've taken beyond my doctor's guidance in quite some time, and as such is an acknowledgment that I want more, from my medicines, from my diet, from my life, from myself. 

It feels risky to not want to settle anymore. 

Especially when I know that more, in whatever form, might not be possible. 

And so tonight, as I try not to hurl, I am going to remind myself that any relative risk is worth any potential benefit. Just like I have to talk myself into trying a new pill, I will talk myself into this. At the very least, all of the new foods sitting benignly on my dining room table, sequestered from the rest of my pantry, are unlikely to give me nigh sweats, high blood pressure, joint pain, or tremors, and there is some comfort in that. 

Monday, May 20, 2013

Post #103: Shield your eyes....

Because my life is SO GLAMOROUS you might need shades, y'all. I'm not southern, but I feel like I can still get away with that. 

Behold! Things that happened this week, with pictures!

Super expensive butt aspirin! 
This doesn't really need an explanation, does it? 


Costco, where the elite meet to eat (free samples)
You know what makes a super crowded Sunday afternoon Costco experience that much more enjoyable? STOMACH CRAMPS. 

I wish....
A list of things that gave me heartburn:

Juice
Toast
Eggs
Boneless, skinless chicken
Smoothies
Cheerios. Plain ass Cheerios. 


(hooray!)

This bathroom is swanky, no?
Depressing: when you spend so much time in the bathroom that you go through all of your reading materials (we're talking two periodicals and a stack of catalogs, people) and can't get up to get more. And no, I do not take my smart phone into the bathroom because EW. You put that thing up to your face. A thousand times no. 

UGH UGH UGH UGH UGH

Hearing my LEAST FAVORITE phrase from my doctor. Again. Sigh. 

Making it rain, etc. At the pharmacy. WHOOOOOOOOOOO. 
Also depressing: spending obscene amounts of money at the pharmacy; even the pharmacy tech was like, whoa. 


So, after such a glamorous week, where am I off to next? London? New York? Cannes? Oh right. 

Except without the mohair (??) tea cozy. Sexy.


                                                                                       Try not to be jealous.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Post #102: Great Expectations

Well, seeing as how you're already all gloved up.....
Hey, guess what I just had? My second colonoscopy of the year! Whooo. I seriously should enroll in some sort of "frequent flier" scoping program. Perhaps there is a punch card of some sort? A 10% off coupon for valued customers? A BOGO promotion? 

Everything went smoothly. I didn't talk to my doctor afterwards, but I did talk to the nurse who was in the room the whole time, and she said my AAC looked "ok." I read on the paperwork that he took some biopsies as well, which I knew because I had that delightful "kicked in the gut by a tiny, angry shetland pony" feeling in my gut. 

The day of the procedure was my Crohn's med injection day, and I read online that giving yourself the shot standing up was easier/less painful then doing it sittting down. Ha ha, THANKS A LOT INTERNET. I had a golf ball sized lump that is now a golf ball sized bruise, a constellation of green and yellow and purple dots staining my abdomen. My eye is drawn to it every time I step out of the shower. It looks about as violent as giving myself the shot sometimes feels. 

Sorry if this post feels scattered, but so does my thinking around this. I haven't blogged for a while, and it feels a little awkward. It's not like anything changed, in terms of my AAC; increasingly, I'm just getting sick of talking about it. About the food I can't eat, the weird procedures, the night sweats, and the joint pain (that's a new one)-how I feel like an 80 year old women when I come down the stairs in the morning, gripping the handrail and saying "ow. ow. ow." under my breath as my swollen ankles pop and creak in protest. 

Depending on the results of the colonoscopy, can I say that this medicine is working? Is it worth the side effects? And the most important question of all: 

Is this as good as it gets? 

I'm trying to wrap my head around it. I've spent so much time invested in the idea that I was going to return to a place of normalcy, where I felt healthy again. Where I felt good, and able, and strong. I'm not at that place; sure, I may be a few steps past where I was at my worst, but I didn't think this was the big "tah dah!" stage of this whole process. I'm not a shiny, perfect example of a successful "after;" maybe after a year and some change, I thought I would be. That probably wasn't a reasonable expectation in the first place, but it's what got me through. 

I guess I just don't know what I'm waiting for anymore. This might be as good as it gets. And if it is, how do I stop waiting around and start moving again? How do I progress when I feel like I'm still waiting to be healed? How do I shake the feeling that I should wait around until things are better? That is my inclination, but it maybe be time to reassess. 

All of this is floating in my mind, a perplexing stew of thoughts and hopes and feelings and fear. There's a little determination in the mix, a little hint of impatience. But mostly a dull confusion that makes everything hazy and difficult to discern. 

The recurring theme in this blog, and in my life, is a desire for clarity. I don't think colonoscopy #2, as delightful as it was, will give that to me. 

I just don't know how to wean myself off of expectation. I project my hopes onto every blood test and invasive procedure, looking for medical markers to guide me on my way, to help me make good choices, the right choices. Clear signs that say, definitively, YES! Stay on this medication or NO! Try a new one. 

I end up with a lot of maybes, and at this point, as you can probably tell, I'm just so freaking unsure of which way to turn. 

Friday, April 12, 2013

Post #101: It's not me, it's you

It it's on candy, it must be true. CANDY DOESN'T LIE.


Dear tiny, tiny doctor: 

Last week, we had a frustrating meeting. You're frustrated, I'm frustrated, my AAC is frustrated. 

Frustration all around. 

I understand that you are human, and as such are entitled to an off day. I know you can't snap your fingers and fix all that is wrong with me; my only requirement is that you keep trying. 

I've encountered this behavior before, from previous doctors. I can recognize the signs: the impatience, the shortness, the annoyance that the treatments aren't working. The bland admonishment to "hang in there and give things a time to work out." 

Ordering test after test after invasive, pointless test. 

Trying to parse and farm out my ailments; telling me you can only treat my gastrointestinal symptoms. 

Telling me you "get it" and that "you're frustrated too."

I'm not so sure that you do get it anymore, and I can guarantee I'm ten times as frustrated by my lack of progress as you'll ever be. At the end of the day, you get to go home, take off your lab coat, and resume your life, free of the digestive complaints you spend your day hearing about. I don't get to clock out at the end of the day. 

I'm tried of "hanging in there."

Deep in my heart, I feel like this treatment is not working. We are running out of viable options. The more pills that don't work, the more tests that are inconclusive, the more side effects and strange symptoms I seem to accumulate, the more you seen to step away. This is not my first time at the rodeo: I know a doctor who is distancing himself when I see one. 

As much as I posture and pretend, I know I don't know it all. I am, however, the expert on my disease. 

When the Prednisone YOU prescribed gives me high blood pressure, don't tell me it could be caused by a preexisting condition. Listen to me when I tell you I've never had a problem with high blood pressure before. Feel free to scroll through my entire medical history to check. I'll give you a minute. 

When I complain about being tired, so fucking tired, don't you DARE tell me it's not related to my Crohn's. How can you possibly know with certainty that "there is no way" the disease is causing this amount of exhaustion?  

Don't tell me that changing my diet won't help. I'm not a moron: I know flax seeds and green smoothies won't cure my disease, but maybe dietary changes could help alleviate some of my symptoms (the dietitian YOU sent me to agrees, by the way). 

You don't know what's going on. I get it. But it's not my fault that my colon isn't being cooperative, and I won't let anyone EVER make me feel to blame me for a disease process that is so obviously out of my control. 

Don't get frustrated with me: take it up with my AAC. 

If all else fails, be honest. Tell me you're not sure what's happening. Tell me you're looking for answers, or consulting with colleagues. I don't require perfection, only compassion. 

You ordered another colonoscopy, my second THIS YEAR, as a last ditch effort to find some answers. As much as I don't want the procedure, I do want clarity. So look for clues in my colon; take some pretty pictures while you're there. 

I hope it can give us some direction. 

In the end, though, I need a doctor who will keep trying. I need a doctor who will stay positive. I need a doctor who will give me hope when I am feeling hopeless. 

If you can't do that anymore, I will find someone who can. 

I'm not giving up on you just yet: don't give up on me either. 

Sincerely,
AAC