Thursday, August 29, 2013

triggers

It’s no secret that my 20’s were… Well, we’ll call them adventurous. Drug addiction, homelessness, abusive relationships… Not to mention surviving multiple rapes and attempts at suicide.

And then I looked around and realized if I didn’t turn my life around, no one else would. I got sober on my own, started therapy, and chose a career helping the women of my community. I met my husband at the lowest time in my life and he has been my rock through all of it. I finally went back to college. I volunteered at an alcohol and drug rehabilitation center for women with children. My life was wonderful.

When I got sick last year, I was shaken but not broken. I could get through this. I had A Plan: find a neurosurgeon, have the decompression surgery I need to get my life back, spend six months to a year in recovery. My life after surgery would go on as before.

Then, doctor after doctor began rejecting me. Treating me like I was an imbecile, less than a person. Rejecting me because of my weight, because my herniation wasn’t big enough, because they didn’t believe the Chiari was my problem (but wouldn’t tell me what they believed these crippling symptoms were).
It’s been over a year since my diagnosis and my hope is gone. The Great Plan has failed. The depression I battled all my life and thought I’d overcome has come back with a vengeance. I constantly feel as though there’s a vice around my chest getting tighter and tighter until I can’t breathe, I can’t think, I can’t make the smallest decision.

This September on my birthday marks the eleventh year of my sobriety. Getting sober was hard but after a couple of years, things got easier until getting high was the last thing on my mind. After everything I’ve been though this last year…

….I don’t want to be sober anymore.

I don’t see the point. I don’t want to constantly think about the horror of being me, being sick, being in pain. I don’t want to remember all the things I’ve lost, things I may never get back. I don’t want to look into the future and see misery, loneliness, and pain pain pain. At least with drugs I can forget, dull that pain. The craving to let go and self-medicate is overwhelming. It’s all I can think about sometimes.

And if it shortens my life span, well, I’ve got nothing good going at the moment. Maybe I’ll never do anything good ever again. I can’t even take care of myself, how will I ever get through the stress of being my own advocate. I can’t handle researching my options, finding a doctor, being rejected, and starting over again. And again. And again…

It’s enough to drive a girl back to insobriety.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

I suppose I should say something...

Seattle rejected me because my herniation was too small. This, coming from the surgeon who believes in a "Chiari 0" - symptomatic with zero herniation. Needless to say I felt my world unravel.

I've spent the last few months fighting severe depression and anxiety. Seattle was The Plan. I couldn't process the thought that I would have to start all over again.

Through some therapy, pouring myself into art projects, and a medication adjustment I'm... well, I guess I'm better. If by "better" you mean "not on the verge of a major meltdown most days." I'm still in pain. I've resigned myself to using a wheelchair when needed, although I fought that decision tooth and nail. I have at least one doctor on my side and he's promised to help me find the care I deserve. We're sending my information to Dr. Oro in Colorado next. I spoke to the receptionist there and she said, "Even if he determines you're not eligible for surgery, we will still put you on a care plan. We won't leave you drifting out in limbo." That's what I need. Someone who knows this disease helping to get me on a path to healing.

In three weeks it will have been one year since my diagnosis. I look back and wonder at how naive I was. Truly, I believed I would find a neurosurgeon immediately, have the decompression surgery I need to get back on my feet, spend a few months recovering and then get back in the game. As the weeks and then months rolled by, my hope and positive attitude were whittled away. I miss my old life. I miss being active in my community. I miss having friends. I miss driving my car.

There's still some hope left in me, I guess. It's hard to see some days. All I can do is put my head down and hope this misery ends sooner rather than later.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

And then the good news...

Finally! The company handling my long term disability finally made the decision to pay out benefits for the past couple of months! They're also paying my salary at 60% - much better than the 40% I thought I would be getting. This means we will be able to keep our home and have food on the table. We may not be able to pay all of our bills but we're safer than we were a week ago.

That said, we're still waiting to hear back from the neurosurgeon in Seattle. Speaking with some patients of his on the Chiari boards, I found out he is extremely busy and may or may  not accept me as a patient right now. If we don't get in touch with him, our next option would be to submit my medical records to a specialist in Colorado. I can't fathom going that far away from home to have a scary surgery and then travel all the way back to Washington... Keeping my fingers crossed for Seattle.

I've been thinking pretty hard about this surgery. Yes, there is a risk of complications. It's brain surgery. Do I risk it? Or do I continue to live this way: in pain, depressed, watching my life pass me by? There's no good answer and no promises that I'll be 100% healed either way.

I'm still scared but at least the weight of finances has been taken off my shoulders.