Thursday, February 21, 2008

humilty

I have another journal that I write in, which is public, that has more trivial stuff, like my involvement against a well known religious group i am none too fond of (it has a few high profile celebrities in it, there's your obvious hint), the beginnings of my jewelry making, politics, random social stuff that I choose to share in a public forum.

I've slowly been trying to redirect health stuff here, as opposed to there, because I don't want to be known as the sick friend. This is an absolute impossibility, as I nearly went into shock at a friend's party (everything but the throat swelling. turned out she'd had her carpets cleaned, so chances are there was something in the cleanser that didn't agree with me) which caused a bit of a scene, and had a similar experience at some stupid ren faire that I went to, where again, hives, sweating, tachycardia, faintness, flushing...I had my epi pens out and ready (i was also in the company of either my partner or my best friend, both of whom carry my medical id card on them as well as my emergency protocol as dictated by my doctor and who are both trained in epi pen administration and cpr certified). The point being, while my friends love me (i believe), they also know I can't really do typical things like go out for drinks or go out to eat without it being a big production of planning ahead, reading menus, figuring out where the closest hospital is and what the fastest route is. It's difficult and annoying and scary for me, but almost moreso for them because suddenly "hanging out with bridget time" becomes "potential liability time"

I am sometimes brave and sometimes overly cautious. A few weeks ago I took part in a protest against something I'm not going to mention here (for safety reasons, it's a cultish organization known to seek out and harass people who speak against it) and stood out in the snow for 4 hours, brave and proud. It is an organization that once tried to convince a diabetic friend of mine that if they joined, and spent a lot of money, their diabetes would go away. They are an organization that preys on people like me. Scared, sick, possibly misinformed, possibly lonely...and for that reason and many others, I dislike them strongly.

As for my story...

Last year, last march probably, I went into work and told my manager I'd be leaving in May. We had big plans, you know. We were going to go to Costa Rica, come back for a few days, decompress, pack up our belongings, and go to England for a few months like we did back in 2004. My partner was going to work with the group over there and while perfecting the role of a faux-british housewife, I was going to study for the GRE.

Things went completely awry. Later in the month I got diagnosed with diverticulitis, and all my doctors were shocked a 29 year old with an incredibly healthy diet would have it so badly. I reacted pretty harshly to my antibiotics and painkillers, but just assumed they were strong drugs and that my reaction wasn't that out of sorts (flushing, itching, tachycardia). During the CT-Scan that showed the diverticulitis, the doctors noticed a hemangianoma in my back and my primarily care physician decided to have it re-checked with an MRI. So in April I had an MRI (without contrast) on my back and for what ever reason, I had my first big mast cell degranulation episode, something that happened repeatedly for a few weeks until i started experiencing some weird stomach mottling that made me make an appointment to see a dermatologist. The whole experience was terrible...doctors were convinced I'd developed an anxiety disorder, I thought I was losing my mind, everything was just wrong. Then suddenly through a set of random coincidences, I had an answer, or a potential one. I was referred to one of the top mast cell doctors in the country, and the diagnosis was confirmed: Indolent Systemic Mastocytosis with Urticaria Pigmentosa. Strangely enough, when I had my bone density scan done on my spine, the hemanianoma was gone, which led my doctor to surmise it may have been a cluster of mast cells.

Regardless of minutia, suddenly my world got turned upside down. Lots of doctor appointments, lots of trial and error with medications, lots of annoying stuff. It was really amazing how one day I felt really good (well good for me since even before this I rarely felt awesome as my spotty attendance record at work and social events can attest to) and the next I "sick". At first I kinda ignored it, I didn't tell anyone what was going on until I left my job, for some reason I liked leaving everyone under the impression (at work at least) that I was going off to do great things* instead of going off to try to be patched up.

It's been quite a few months later, almost a year, an anniversary I am dreading, and things are better, but they aren't great. Earlier on I was measuring days by doses of medication, now I'm measuring them by accomplishments that once seemed pathetically small, but now seem huge. I have days where I feel good and I have days where I feel like I want to just stop being because it feels like such a trial. (that sounds so fucking whingey and dramatic, urgh) but the pain and the fatigue and the fear of shocking are so strong, and the possibility this will be my entire life, that this may get worse, is just so daunting, and so dark sometimes.

The past few days, for whatever reason, hammered something home, which is that for the time being, I'm not better, my medication takes a ton out of me, and there's no humanly possible way I can work. And I loathe that. I'd love to have a job more than anything, but my good and bad days are so sporadic and dramatic it would be impossible. I have days where I wake up at 7am all sunshine and WHEEEE and days where I can't get out of bed. I had Ethan take a picture of my back the other day so I could see what it looked like when irritated. I know what my arms and fingers look like, but not my back.

Looking at it, talking to the doctors at length about my story, realizing how high my histamine and tryptase levels still are, how low my energy is, how far I still seem to have to go, how I pretty much have a doctor appointment every day for the next few months, working is really not an option.

So recently I started the wheels in motion to apply for disability. It's a huge tedious process and one I wanted to avoid as long as possible. I have to get all my medical records together (I have a lot of them since I generally have to bring specialist A's report to specialist B who wants specialist R to see it too), but my god. I had to write out every diagnosis I have that could influence my ability as a valuable employee, every doctor I see regularly (over 15), what medications I take, how many ER visits I've had, how tall i am, how much i weigh, what every job I've had over the past 15 years has paid, what my work has entailed, how educated I am, if i ever worked in coal mines or for the rail road, what sort of skill set I have, am I computer literate, what my pension is, all this probing random personal information. Obviously they need to know it. It almost seems like they are asking "Did you really make an effort when you did have a job/Do you have an aversion to working hard". Again, understandable but insulting. I hate not working, I hate eating away at my savings, I hate hoping every day that my property will sell so I wont have to be a leech, I hate selling stuff on ebay so I have my own money...it's all so frustrating. I knew someone once who really seemed attached to the idea of being a "disabled housewife" and would tell people right off the bat that was who she was (even though, to be a catty fuck for a moment, technically she isn't as she hasn't been granted disability. i think that's a glaring technicality, but maybe i'm being an jerk), so it was almost like a title or an essence...and man, I cannot understand it at all. I don't want to be disabled or differently abled or sickly and i don't want to be a housewife (unless we suddenly had a litter of kids or something, then i'd probably want to stay home)

I'm also going to need to get a bone marrow biopsy, probably sooner than we'd anticipated, or sooner than we'd have liked to get it done, since apparently the folks at social security are bastards if you don't have one done. This is really up for debate, and I'm going to see how/why/if my initial claim is rejected, and on what grounds before I make a concrete decision on that. I fit the criteria for systemic mastocytosis disease (do not even get me started on the fucking ridiculous fight I had with someone on a major masto list about that this week. some woman all but invalidated everything i'd been through, including my doctor's diagnosis, because as far as she was concerned I didn't live up to her misinterpretation of the WHO criteria for diagnosis. so fucking insulting) I have a friend who has a lawyer for a parent, and has offered said parent's advice or counsel to me if needed. i hope it doesn't go that far.

It's funny, you know, there is this voice in my head screaming I AM NOT SICK, DON'T BE SICK, STOP BEING SICK, DON'T TREAT ME LIKE I AM whenever I deal with every overly compassionate doctor or lab tech, but now I have to start saying the opposite outloud to the government, and that is really tough. it's a label I don't want.


*I will still do great things, or at least good things, my timeline just got shifted around a bit. But there will still be England and GREs and all that. I swear.

5 comments:

Kim said...

i really do understand everything you are saying....i really do..... just be careful with the flying....that is something i can't do/am afraid to do....at least longer flights, for me 4 or 5 hour flights. last flight became deathly ill...afraid to go to the hospital that they would do the wrong thing. to get home my gp told me to double my medicine and that worked.

Bridget said...

when we go to england we're actually going to take a boat. Then I may try a few smaller flights while over there to see how I do. If I were flying across the continent, at least we could do an emergency landing....transatlantic flight..not so much. unless we landed in iceland, and i like iceland.

Kim said...

hmmm i don't know anything about iceland, however i have also had trouble on cruise ships...hopefully that won't be an issue for you.

Anonymous said...

Bridget love the little quotes... yeh it gets pretty trying at times. Emergency visits and those Doc's who supposedly know something every so often love to try their hands at killing us. I find drugs work well for long trips... food I find is my biggest problem and not eatting has it's own problems. I've battled this for too many years and found the best thing we can do is put our bitching in writing. It's a great release. Some write books, some email, some blog... Hang in there find Doc's who listen and fire the ones who don't. Remember you know you best and stand by that. All the experts don't know shit to fix this they can only give you what they call a bulletproof vest that keeps the attacks from killing you. JOY. enough of my bitching... keep up the humor in an unhumorable(is that a word) disease.

BETTY ROUNDHEAD said...

HELLO AS A PERSON LIVING WITH A RARER FORM OF SYSTEMIC MASTOCYTOSIS I CAN RELATE TO ALL OF THIS, BEFORE I WAS DIAGNOSED IN 1995 THE DOCTERS HAD LABELED ME A HYPOCHONDRIAC, NOW THEY JUST DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WTIH ME, AND SOMETIMES THE DOCS DO ME MORE HARM THAN GOOD, BUT MY MARRIAGES HAVE WENT SOUTH,MANY FRIENDS LEFT ME BEHIND AND I NOW I FIND THE ONLY WAY TO KEEP MY ATTACKS AT A MINUMUM IS TO BE A RECLUSE..BUT SINCE THERE IS NO CURE I ALSO HAVE LEARNED TO LIVE WITH THE DISEASE IT IS TO BAD THAT THOSE THAT SHOULD CARE ABOUT ME THE MOST WANT TRY TO UNDERSTAND THAT THIS DISEASE DOES NOT ONLY AFFECT MY BODY BUT MY MIND AND EMOTIONS...SO I AM GLAD THERE ARE OTHERS LIKE ME SPEAKING OUT..THANK U BETTY ROUNDHEAD..IF ANY WANT TO BE MY FRIEND MY HANDLE ON MYSPACE IS WOLFSEEKERSPIRIT..