Wednesday, April 22, 2009

一歩一歩、前に進むこと。 -- One foot in front of the other.



(Sorry about the long post... it's two months' worth, hahaha.
長くてごめんナサイ。2ヶ月分なんだもん、って言い訳になってないけど。)

はっ、と気付いたら、2ヶ月更新していなかった。

すみません m(__)m

書くことがなかった訳では、ナイ。

線維筋痛症(FMS)、慢性疲労症候群(CFS)、セリアック病などと診断されてから2年経ったのだが、懸命に治療をして、思ったほど成果が出ていない気がしたので、それを認めるのが口惜しくって落ち込んでいたのだ。

クリニックに来ている人の中には10年、20年、30年と FMS・CFS とお付き合いしている人もいるので、私はまだラッキー(?)なほうなのだけれど。

そんな私の悩みなどちっぽけに思える事件が最近、起こった。

ほんの10日ほどの間に知り合いが2人、自らの手で命を断ってしまったのである。

ショックだった。

2人とも親しい友人と呼べるほど知っていたわけではないのだが、そのうちの1人は親しくなりかけだったけれどなかなか会えなかった、という状況だったので、果てしない罪悪感におそわれた。 ちょっと落ち着いてきた頃にもう1人の方が亡くなったので、まさにダブルパンチ、両側から頭をでっかいハンマーですこーんと殴られて、ぽかーんと穴があいてしまったような気分が続いている。

一番やるせないのは、多分それがうつによるもので、個人的な経験から、うつ病は治るものだと分かっているからだ。 そして良くなりかけ、ちょっと元気になった頃があぶない、ということも分かっている。 治るとはいえ、本人が「治りたい」と願い、総合的な、そして継続的な治療を続けないと、再発しやすい病気でもある。 (薬だけでは治らないし、時たまの心理療法(カウンセリング)だけでもなかなか治らない。) 

その「ほんとうに治りたい」というところまでたどり着くまでに、大抵かなり時間がかかる。 自身や、家族がふだん強かったり、プライドが高ければ特にそうだ。 だんだんまわりの世界が色をなくし、灰色になっていくのに、「私/うちは大丈夫、自分の力でなんとかなる」と考えてしまう。

すると今まであった感覚はだんだん麻痺していって、毎日が同じ灰色の日になる。 体は重く、自分の体がどこで終わって外の世界がどこで始まるのかぼんやりしてくる。 起きてるのも寝てるのも、生きてるのも死んでるのもあまり変わらなく思えてくる。 自分の体に傷をつけても痛くなくなる。 心の痛みよりずっと楽だからだ。 そして多くの場合眠れなくなる。 何日も眠れないと、ホルモンバランスは崩れ、気持ちはもっとあやふやになってきて、判断力がなくなってしまう。

私の場合、若いときそれで死にそうになった。 セリアック病患者は栄養不足もあってうつ病になることが多いそうだが、他にも高校生の時点で、[言葉ができなかった]+[顔面複雑骨折して顔半分マヒでブス]+[落ち込んで過食したら15キロほど太った]+[寮の個室で孤立]+[暴行にあう]=という殆ど完璧なレシピも手伝い、人と接しているときはなんとかかんとか喋れる、でも一人になるとくらーくなる日々が続いた。 

(それに日本の英語の教科書って、"How are you?" "I'm fine, thank you!" か "So so" と、まあまあ元気なときの挨拶しか教えてくれなかったので、「落ち込んでいる~」とか、「ストレス~」とか言えるまでに何年もかかった。 今も条件反射で、機嫌の悪いときでも、殆ど "I'm good!" とか "Fine!" になってしまう。 笑)

20代はじめのあるとき、1週間ほどよく眠れなかったあと、3~4日一睡もできなかったことがあった。 頭はがんがんクラクラ、頭痛薬ももう効かず、判断力がそこでもうなくなっていて、眠れさえしたら、その時間は人生ばら色になるような気がした。 意外と真面目な性格なので、なんでこんなことになっちゃったんだろう、私なんてめんどくさい奴、この世界にいないほうがいいかもね、と時々頭をよぎったことは否めないが、決して自殺しようとしたわけでは、ない。 とにかく眠りたかった。 あとはよく覚えていない。

起きたときは、真っ白な病院の中にいて、胃を炭で洗浄されて黒い液体を吐いている真っ最中だった。 「へ?何が起こってるの?」というのが最初の反応。 (悪いイカスミでも食べたかと思った。) どうも、あまりに眠りたくていつもより多く薬を口に入れて、これでもっと眠れるかなと台所にあったカンパリかなにかを飲んで(一口だったと思った)、わけがわからない状態になり、さらに薬とアルコールをガーッと飲んだらしい。 酔っ払っただけなら良かった(?)のだが、抗うつ剤が大量に混じったことで錯乱状態になって、その後ぐったり起きなくなったらしい。 発見したハウスメイト(命の恩人)には非常にお気の毒なことであった。

病院では当然自殺を図ったと思い込まれて、やさしい看護師さんが「生きていればいいこともあるよ」とか毎日こんこんと語り聞かせてくれた。 しばらく狐につままれたような気分だったが、退院時体重が80パウンド(36キロくらい?)に落ちてたことも考えると、あまりいい状態ではなかったのであろう。 (その後太るまで栄養ドリンクを飲みなさいと言われて律儀に毎日飲んだのだが、そのときはグルテンだの乳製品だのにアレルギーだと知らなかったので、ほとんどアレルギー成分でできてるような飲み物を体が思いっきり受けつけなかった。。。 ハハハ。 おかゆで生き返ったけど)

知らなかったのは、「自殺」とか「自殺未遂」、「自分でやったケガ」と判断されると、保険が全く適用されないこと。 オチ -> 救急車代から救命士の人件費、心臓の専門医の問診から入院費から検査から、全て実費の請求書が、何ヶ月か後に次々と届き始めましたとさ。 うん百万単位の借金を分割払いにしてもらって払うのに5~6年かかったので、いくら眠れなくても落ち込んでいても、こういう行動は絶対にお薦めできません! 自分も(生きてたら)まわりも(どっちにしろ)ひじょーに大変です。 生命保険あるし~、とか思っても、自殺で保険金=お葬式代は出ません。 そうなる前に誰かに相談しましょう!!

これで懲りたので、こんなしょーもない私を愛してくれる家族や優しい看護師さん、命の恩人たちのためにも、その後私は「治ろう!」と、お医者さんの言うことをよく聞く患者になりました。 (って言うか、お金の無駄だと分かったからかも。。。 予防のほうが何かあってからの治療よりよほど安い、と身をもって知ったのです。)

・・・とお金のことはさておき、そんなことがあったので余計に、なんでもっと苦しんでた人達のこと気付いてあげられなかったんだろう、と胸が痛くなったわけです。 でも離れていて電話やメールだけだと、外から見えないことって沢山ある、というのが今度の教訓。 「大丈夫、元気よ~」って言われても、「ほんとかな~」としばらく疑り深くなっちゃいそう。

うつ病の発症は、30代が一番多いそうです。 (女性の場合はホルモンバランスが崩れてくる時期だからかしら~。) 世界で一番規模の大きい精神疾患の研究所である NIMH(National Institute of Mental Health - 国立精神疾患研究機関)によると、アメリカでは人口の 9.5% 、実に10人に1人がうつ病にかかっているそうです。 診療をうけていない人口を含めると、もっと多いことになる。 アメリカではもうすぐ保険法の改正で、精神疾患と身体疾患に対する保険適用限度の差がなくなります。 (ワシントン州の法律ではすでにそうなっています。) これで、精神疾患治療に対するイメージは少し変わるでしょうか。

うつ病は日本では「心の風邪」とか呼ぶそうですが、風邪もそのままにして悪くなると肺炎になって死んでしまうかも知れないし、うつ病もしかり。 アメリカでは保険がなくて十分な治療が受けられない人もたくさんいる。 うつになった人がみんな、ひどい風邪やインフルエンザになったときのように、気軽に(?)診療を受けられるのが私の夢です。 セリアック病や睡眠障害のように、他の疾患が関係してる場合もあるし。

人生の中では、前に進むのがすごーく難しく感じられる日もある。 時にはどう歩くものなのか忘れてしまうかも。 ダニエルは、そんな日は、「I just put one foot in front of the other」、つまり、頑張って右足を左足の前に、そして次は左足を右足の前においてみて、それをたんたんと繰り返すのだ、と言います。 そうしているうちに素敵な場所も見つかって、また歩き方も思い出す。 時にはスピードが遅くても、そうして一歩一歩前に進んでいればいいのだと。

なんだか歩いてもどうどうまわりしていたように思えた春の始まりでしたが、何でも話せる家族、そしていい友人に囲まれて本当にわたしは幸運だ~、またトロくても歩いていこう、と思った一週間でした。

私のお友達、家族へ: ひとりで落ち込んでいることがあったら、泣いててなにも話せなくてもいいから、死ぬ前に連絡ください!!! きっと同じようなことで悩んだことがあるのはあなただけじゃない。 一歩一歩、少しずつでも歩くうちに、いいことが必ずあります。

- 英

I recently realized I hadn’t posted in a couple of months.

Oops.

It’s not as though I didn’t have things to write about. No, that wasn’t it.

It was because the time was coming up on my two-year anniversary of various diagnoses – fibromyalgia (FMS), chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), and celiac disease. I’ve put in various efforts for these two years, but I felt as though I wasn’t making as much of a progress as I’d hoped, and I was depressed about that. I really didn’t want to talk about it.

When I put it in a perspective, though, I meet others who’ve lived with these conditions for multiple decades, so I should maybe feel lucky. Should, would, could. Keywords of guilt!

But just then…

A couple of incidents happened recently, and they made my little dilemma seem miniscule.

Within days of each other, two people I know took their own lives.

They were both “tough” women, and I was shocked, like electric shocks ran through me.

I wasn’t that close to either of them. With one of them, though, I was developing a friendship. I couldn’t see her as often as I’d hoped, so I was tormented by strong sense of guilt for a while. I was almost settling down after her memorial service, and the news came in about the other person. I felt as if my head had been hit with a huge hammer from both sides in succession, leaving huge holes. I’ve felt like my brain (and heart) had been put through a blender. It really hurts.

I think what’s eating me up the most is the fact that they were both probably going through severe depression, and the fact that I personally know depression is treatable. (I also know that it's most dangerous when the person is starting to feel a bit better and have a little energy.) But – and this is a big but – the person, not family or friends, has to feel she/he wants to continue treatment and get better. And the treatment plan must be holistic, consistent, and comprehensive. Pills by themselves usually don’t quite do the job, and psychotherapies on their own have limited reach.

Usually, the hardest part is reaching that point, where the afflicted person feels he/she wants to fully get better. It takes some time. If that person and their family are known as “strong,” or if they are too proud, it becomes that much harder. Despite the fact the world becomes more and more gray and lose more and more color each day, they think to themselves, “I'm fine. I/We’ve always been strong. I/We will deal with it.”

Then the numbness sets in. Everyday becomes a gray day. The body becomes heavy, and it becomes difficult to decipher where your body ends and the world begins. Being awake or asleep, dead or alive, doesn’t seem to make much of a difference. It doesn’t hurt anymore to hurt your own body, because the pain in the heart is so much more. And you often lose sleep. As you haven’t slept for days, your hormones go out of whack, you can’t tell what you’re feeling anymore, and your judgment goes out the window.

I almost died feeling like that when I was young. They say celiac disease patients, before they’re diagnosed, often become depressed (makes sense if your whole body including the brain isn’t getting nutrients). In my case, I had an almost perfect recipe for depression in addition to that: [Can’t speak the language and can’t communicate] + [Bashed my face and with half of it paralyzed, felt completely ugly] + [Overate feeling depressed and gained about 30 pounds] + [Isolated in a single-person dorm room reminiscent of a jail cell] + [Assaulted]. I was a walking zombie, a “functional depressed.” I could form complete sentences when I was with people, but my heart was in a complete darkness once alone.

After a while, the depressed state becomes the norm. Once upon a time in my early 20s, I'd had a particularly rough week, unable to sleep. After being awake for 3 or 4 straight days and nights, my head was dizzy and ringing. Headache medicines did no good. I’d lost any sense of good judgment – it seemed, to my dizzy head, if I could only sleep, that time would be completely delightful. A utopia. I’ll admit, in the past with my (surprisingly) serious personality, the thought had crossed my mind a few times: “What have I become? I’m such a mess, the world would be probably better off without me.” But I swear, at that time, all I wanted was sleep. I wasn’t trying to kill myself. I don’t remember much else about what happened.

It seemed like the mission was accomplished, because everything became dark. When I woke up, it was under blaring fluorescent lights, in a very white hospital room. My mouth was spewing out black liquids as they washed my stomach with charcoal. (I thought, for a moment, maybe I ate bad squid ink pasta or something.) My first reaction was, “Why am I here and what’s happening???” From what I gathered later, it seems, I first took some “extra” antidepressant pills, thinking they might help me sleep. Then I chased those with some liquor, thinking that might further aid my sleeping. That mix apparently made me lose control, I went nuts, and followed up with more pills and alcohol. Apparently when my poor housemate (to whom I owe my life) got home, I was screaming things he couldn't understand, and later became limp. To this day I feel very badly about what he had to go through.

At the hospital, understandably, they determined I was suicidal. I was bewildered by this and couldn’t understand why people were so nice to me. A very gentle nurse would come by every day and tell me, “If you stay alive, things will get better, surely.” I wasn’t fully aware, but considering I’d dropped to about 80 pounds by the time I was discharged, I must have been in a pretty bad shape. (Then they told me to drink those protein drinks like Ensure until I gained weight – not knowing back then I was allergic to things like dairy ingredients and gluten, my body seemed not to accept them. Lol. I eventually recovered on rice porridge.)

What I didn’t know was that when such an incident is considered to be suicide, suicide attempt, or self-inflicted injury, insurance doesn’t cover any treatment. So the lesson was learned: After I recovered, numerous bills started arriving. Ambulance transportation, EMT’s pay, a cardiologist’s 5-minute visit, hospital stay, tests and supplies – I was to pay tens of thousands of dollars. I was on a payment plan for several years.

So the gist of this story is: I really don’t recommend staying depressed and losing sleep and becoming crazy. For you (if you stay alive) and those around you (either way), things will be haaaard! Even if you think “Oh, my life insurance will pay out and pay for the funeral,” insurance companies don’t pay when you commit suicide! Before you do such things, talk to someone!!!

After my own lesson, for those who love me/the nice nurse/those who saved my life, I decided I’d really be serious about my treatment. I became a really good patient who listened to her doctors, and got over my depression for the most part. (Well, I mostly learned that prevention is much cheaper than treatment of a catastrophic event.)

The economics of depression aside, since I’d gone through such periods in my life, I’ve felt especially badly that I couldn’t spot someone else’s depression. But when we live far away from one another and communicate by just phone or email, there are a lot of things we can’t see. For a while, I might become suspicious when someone says they’re "fine" or “OK,” because that’s what my two friends said.

On average, the initial onset of depression is said to be most common in people's 30s. According to National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), at any given time, 9.5% of the American population is depressed. That’s about 1 in 10 people. If you include those who are not reporting their depression, it would probably be more. The good news is that legally, it would soon be illegal at the Federal level to limit insurance coverage for mental health treatments compared to treatment for other conditions. In other words, mental health treatment will gain the same status as other "physical" illnesses. (In Washington state this is already a reality.) I hope this will remove the certain stigma associated with mental illnesses.

In Japan they say depression is “a cold of the heart.” A bad cold or flu can develop into pneumonia and kill people, and so can depression. In the U.S., there are a ton of people who are uninsured or underinsured, who can’t get appropriate treatment. My dream is that all depressed people can someday have easy and prompt access to treatment, like when people go to clinics for bad colds or flu. Who knows, like me, they might also be affected by celiac disease or sleep disorders (I keep saying this, but more on this later)!

In life, it may seem reeeeally hard to go forward on some days. Some days we might even forget how to walk forward. Daniel says, on days like that, “I just put one foot in front of the other.” Then keep going. As we keep going, we find nice places again, and remember how to walk again. Sometimes we might be slow, but what matters is that we keep going.

At the beginning of this spring, I was feeling as though I was walking in circles. But during this past week, I realized, once again, how fortunate I am. I have a family with whom I can talk about most everything, and I’m surrounded by great friends. Even if I’m slow, I will keep walking forward.

To my friends and family: If you are feeling depressed alone, even if you feel like you can’t say anything because you’re just crying, PLEASE call me before you die!!! You are not alone in feeling that way. As we walk forward, one foot in front of the other, we will find a better place.

-A

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

I ate GF delivery pizza! (& didn't get sick!)

This is my 100th post on this blog! Hooray!

For those of you who were wondering if I was alive, I am... I'm trying to get used to sleeping with a machine that puffs air up my nostrils. (Which has been taking away my sleep, which in turn makes me hurt more and be tired.) The hope is such that it will, eventually, improve my health. I shall explain more in another post.

Right now, I'm excited about having had pizza on Valentine's Day!


Having delivery pizza may not seem like the most romantic Valentine's date, but for us, it was the ultimate luxury... A few companies like Bob's Red Mill and Ener-G make gluten-free pizza crust mix/pre-made shells, but GF delivery pizzas are still few and far in between. I once went to pick up a GF + egg-free pizza at a restaurant near Kirkland, but the crust tasted like cardboard, and I felt crushed. :( (It also didn't help that I was bringing it to attend a gourmet pizza-baking party.)

Then recently, Daniel spotted this sign in our neighborhood: "Garlic Jim's Famous Gourmet Pizza: Gluten-Free Pizza now available!"

Still, I was cautiously optimistic, because things that say "gluten-free" could still have dairy or eggs in them. Usually eggs are the culprit.

So I wrote in to their website to inquire. To my delight, the GF crust they make is dairy- and egg-free! This was music to my ears.

They don't offer any vegan (i.e. dairy-free) cheese alternative, but the company rep told me the pizzas would still be good without cheese (with just the sauce).

So we took the plunge. We were so glad we did -- it was the best tasting gluten-free, egg-free crust we've tasted to date! AND we can get the pizzas delivered!

I used to be a bit of a pizza snob and didn't exactly jump to order delivery pizzas in the past, but two years of deprivation can do wonders...

Happy belated Valentine's Day!

-A

Thursday, January 1, 2009

A happy, healthy, delicious new year! - 明けましておめでとうございます!



A *happy* new year!

I may be able to compete in the "least frequently updated blog" contest, but I haven't forgotten I have a blog! These couple of months have been slightly rough... partially due to the cold weather. (You hear a lot of fibromyalgia sufferers talking about wanting to move to Hawaii around this time of year in Seattle.)

Nonetheless, I'm filled with hopes for the new year. I learned a lot more about myself in the past year, and I can't help but be grateful for all the great things I have in my life.

My ever-so-supportive husband and I still get along famously after two years of marriage, as we both type away on our laptops at the table by our bay window. Both my family and his family have been so loving and supportive, I couldn't have asked for more. We have wonderful friends whom we'd love to see more of any day. Our cats are so loving and sweet it makes me want to cry (OK, maybe I'm a bit woozy from pain medication, but it's true). I'm getting great medical care and am finding out all sorts of new things. And we're becoming an uncle and aunt both in Japan and the U.S.! How cool is that?

Well, enough with my blabbering. What I wanted to say most of all:

I'm wishing YOU, who's reading this blog, a happy, healthy, delicious new year! (The word "delicious" came about because I had one of the most amazing meals last night -- more on this later.)

I love you all.

-A

We can all use a little boost in our life --
y'all have given me a boost! Thank you.

旧年中はみなさんに助けていただきました。
ありがとうございます!

新年あけましておめでとうございます。 m(__)m

「更新される頻度が低いブログ」コンテストがあったら、
けっこういい線いくかも知れませんね。。。
ブログがあることを忘れた訳ではありません!

ここ2ヶ月ほどは、ちょっと参り気味でした。
寒くて湿気の多い季節と線維筋痛症はあまり相性が良くありません。
(この季節になると、「ああハワイに引っ越したいわ〜」という声を
よくクリニックで聞きます。)

それでも新年に向けて、希望でいっぱいです。
去年一年で、それまで知らなかったことを沢山学べたし、
色々な面で恵まれていることに感謝しています。

結婚して早くも2年になりますが、大きな支えとなってくれる
だんな様とはまだ気が合うみたいだし(ふたりして出窓の内側の
テーブルで、ノートパソコンを並べてカタカタやってます)、
自分の家族も彼の家族も、この上なく良くしてくれる。

いつでももっと会いたい、素敵な友人に囲まれている。

愛情深い猫達には、涙ぐまされることも多いです。
(う〜ん、痛み止めを飲んでちょっともろくなってる?
でもほんとです。痛くて寝ていると必ず猫が来て、
隣で心配そうな目でゴロゴロゴロゴロ言うんだもん)

様々な専門の、いいお医者さんに診てもらえて、
新しい発見がいつもある。

そして・・・太平洋の両側で、おじ・おばになれる。
これは楽しみです。

私のことはさておき、一番言いたかったことは・・・

これを読んでいるあなたにとって、新年が幸せで
健康に満ちたものになるよう、心からお祈り申し上げます!

I love you!

- 英

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Doh! - またしでかしてしまった。。。


I wanna cry, too, bunny.
私も泣きたいよ~。

I'm just not good at sitting still and healing myself...

After months of dealing with spotty tonsils and flared-up mono, I was finally feeling up to taking up a role in our Toastmasters meeting -- i.e. I was dying to go out and do something. (Never mind it took an IV/massage/acupuncture/qi-gong blitz on Wed/Thurs/Friday.)

Well, the ending result is a bleeding throat. Doh! So much for dreaming maybe I'd be able to catch a chat with a friend over tea some time soon. (I guess I still could -- I just have to be a really good listener and not so much a chatter. Or I need a chalkboard.)

I talked to my doc last week, and we'll do another 3-month round of chelation therapy to rid of more mercury/heavy metal in my body (I was taking a little break to rest my kidney), and we'd try double-dosing immunoglobulin shots this time along with the anti-viral IVs in an attempt to boost my immune system.

So the saga continues... I guess the fact I can be up and typing is an improvement from a month ago, though. :-)

-A

P.S. A thought: Maybe I should enroll in some miming classes, so I can learn to communicate without talking.

じっと安静にしている、ということがとことん苦手なようです。

2ヶ月ほど水玉もようの喉と、悪化した単核球症と
共存して、出かけて何かしたい症候群になっていた私。
水・木・金と点滴、マッサージ、鍼、気功と、
手を尽くしてトーストマスターズのミーティングに
久しぶりに参加することができました。

結果は、、、焼けるような喉と熱。
あーんとしてみたら、白かったところが今度は赤い。
(紅白だから縁起は良い?!)
うがいしてみたらやはり・・・血が出てます。

あーあ。 もうちょっとで、お友達とお茶でも飲んで
お喋りでもできるかしら~と思ってたのに。
(話を聞く側にとことんまわればいいのかな。
それか、小さい黒板を持参して筆談?)

先週、線維筋痛症・慢性疲労症候群クリニックの
お医者様と話して、また3ヶ月、DMSAを飲んで
体内の重金属をもう少し排出する治療をすること
(飲み続けると腎臓に負担がかかるので
ちょっと休んでました)、あとはまた抗グロブリン注射、
ただし今回は一回の量を倍にして、毎週点滴も続け、
しつこい慢性感染・免疫不全に対処することになりました。

そしてまた冒険は続く。。。 でも、こうして起きて
更新できるだけ、一ヶ月前よりは良くなってるという
ことですね。 (^_^)

-英

P.S. しばらく喋らなくてすむように、
パントマイムでも習うべきかしら・・・。

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Hope wins! Thank you.


HOPE > FEAR.

What a night. (Pinching myself to make sure it's true.) The next president will undoubtedly have one tough job ahead of him, but we picked the right guy for the job!

Excited crowd at Grant Park in Chicago.

Way to go, America. Thank you, to all those who voted, and worked so hard to get out those votes (like our friend Eve)!

-A

P.S. It's nice to see Colorado turn blue! Thanks to Maine, too, for giving all its 4 electoral votes to Pres. Obama :-)

Friday, October 31, 2008

The Economist Endorses Barack Obama!


"It's time"

Happy Halloween everyone :-)

I just got the new issue of The Economist in the mail, and I couldn't be happier. The Economist, which is one of the most sensible magazines, endorses Barack Obama.

This is significant, because The Economist (while unabashedly pro-free trade) is a naturally skeptical (thus thoughtful) magazine, so it argues both sides of the equation. It freely expresses its doubts for both candidates and points out a better choice. It's also significant because it means the decision makes sense from the econimical, political, and security standpoint, not just from the ideological standpoint.

"America should take a chance and make Barack Obama the next leader of the free world... He has earned it."

Amen.

-A

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Aging while being sick (and during an election cycle)


Hello Kitty Pumpkin! Truly awesome.

Happy Halloween Eve! (For those of you I haven't emailed: You must check out The 7 Types of Pet Costumes.)

I’m barely making my once-a-month post… My friend Mick left me a comment on my last post (which had to do with the fall festival): “Please post a new page before a 'snow festival' starts.”

Ha ha, very funny. Hey, at least it’s not time for the cherry blossom festival yet! So would you forgive me?

A couple of days ago, I found my second piece of gray hair. For the first one, which I think I found a few months back, I had this visceral reaction to pluck it, although they say you shouldn’t do that. I realize a lot of folks get gray at a younger age, so I shouldn’t gripe about it, but it was so shiny and silver among my brown/black hair it shocked me a little bit. Yes, I plucked it again. I blame this one on the election season.

(You know you’re being too obsessive when you’re incessantly checking Google News & cnn.com & politico.com & FiveThirtyEight.com on top of your regular NPR programming, and you’ve read one too many article on slate.com and The New Yorker magazine. I usually don't mind my limited exposure to The New Yorker to be at my Bostonian therapist’s office -- although their endorsement for Obama presidency was one of the most eloquent prior to Gen. Colin Powell's, which also referenced a beautiful, haunting picture in the magazine. The “election season” has gone on for waaaay too long, and the suspense is killing me. I'm bad at sitting still... as I'm too sick to volunteer, I’d like to go into a cryogenic freeze chamber and come out Wednesday morning.)

I always hoped to age gracefully. We live in a culture that’s obsessed with youth, but I always believed with age came wisdom, and along that reasoning, that aging must be a good thing.

Except I don’t feel particularly wiser, than, say, when I started becoming sick about two years ago. For that matter, I don’t feel particularly older, either. Having been sick and spending much of my time in bed and various clinics has felt a little bit like having been in a glass box -- like the one depicted by mimes. I’m in there, and my life is paused, while I watch everyone else outside, living their lives and moving. Friends have had babies, loved ones passed on, and here I am, kind of in the same place, in the same old glass box.

Behold: squirrel mime.

Of course I’m probably feeling like this because I’m writing this with my left hand while getting my nth (who can keep the count?) anti-viral IV, which I’ve been getting weekly. Since this summer my lovely & chronic Epstein-Barr viral infection (a.k.a. mono) seems to have flared up, with accompanying tonsillitis to boot. I don’t know if my Vancouver jaunt was premature, or if it was the combination of that with other summer activities, but according to the key witness (a.k.a. husband), “It was a steady downward spiral for a while there,” a bit like Sarah Palin’s approval rating.

Fortunately, not my throat...
The Wiki picture of tonsillitis. Yikes!
My white spots are much smaller now, thank you.

My white blood cell count is now in the low end of acceptable range, but not high enough to fight off my infections, and my natural killer cell count is… well, let’s just say they apparently barely exist.

I also got my most recent mercury test result back, and the news is mixed. It’s gone down a little bit from before (yay), yet it’s still twice as high as the upper limit of normal range (boo). And I have high levels of lead and tin (why?!). Having been a good student most of my life, getting back bad test results feels like failure, like I’m not a good patient or something.

I know I shouldn’t feel that way. Although I still get low fever every time I move around a little bit, I’m definitely doing a little better than I was in September. I can drive myself to my appointments instead of taking a cab. So who knows, maybe soon, my glass box can turn into a mosquito net, from which I can step out.

In the meantime, I need to gain back some weight. (I used to have a roommate in high school who weighed something like 95 pounds at 5'7", and she was always complaining she couldn’t find clothes that fit. I was a little chubby back then and I thought she was a bitch for complaining about such things -- 20 years later, I feel her pain. Hey, maybe I am becoming wiser. This illness is teaching me empathy!) If you’re in the area and want to go grab some prime rib shabu shabu or BBQ ribs (sorry, my vegetarian friends! Sometimes a girl needs pure fat before winter), give me a holler. If you’re not in the area but want to help boost my natural killer cell count, go vote for Barack Obama (just kidding… well, not really).


Obama '08 - Vote For Hope from MC Yogi on Vimeo.

-A

(まだこれを日本語にする元気はナイ・・・
すみません m(__)m )