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To Be, or Not To Be? - Choices

Apr 01, 2008 - 5 comments
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adhesions

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Pain

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Pain management

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Chronic Pain



I first came to Med Help when my intestines turned on me along with doctors of medicine.  When the doctors fail us, we turn to the internet.  Over the years I've been asked many times how I deal with incurable chronic illness and pain.  There's no secret.  You either deal with it or you die.  It's that simple.  Here's the abbreviated version of my story for anyone with patience enough to read it.  :-)

Like so many people with GI troubles, I presented to "Dr. A-" with extreme bloating and pain after eating.  It got worse and worse until those symptoms were present all the time, even without goading my guts with a meal.  After that sadistic misogynist of a gastro doc performed a colonoscopy with next to zero anesthesia and no further testing, I was told I had diverticulosis, given a pat on head, and told that fiber would cure all my ills.  I gave it the old college try, and only got worse.  Back to the gastro doc.  He told me it was all in my head and there was nothing further he could do.  Have I mentioned he's a sadistic misogynist?  

My good personal friend and horse trainer, "Ms. Doolittle", happens to work at a local hospital as a histologist.  She's the person who gets all the nasty tissues extracted from our bodies during surgery that need to be looked at under a microscope.  Ever wonder where all those gallbladders, appendixes and tumors go?  Ms. Doolittle slices and dices those samples and prepares the slides for review by the pathologist.  Pretty interesting job she's got.  After my botched butt scope, poor Ms. Doolittle got a self-pitying, frustrated, whining earful from me about doctors and the medical community in general and she gave me the name of a gastro doc in her hospital.  Apparently the entire staff just loves "Dr. T-", so I gave his office a call.  That one call began a relationship that began in 1997 and continues to this day.  I really do wonder if he doesn't walk on water in his spare time.

After a week of in-hospital testing to try to figure out why I had so much bloating, pain and now barfing, Dr. T- told me he couldn't find anything wrong and had to discharge me.  Much as I love the man, I got a bit pissy with him.  I sank down in the bed, pulled the covers up to my chin, stuck out my lower lip and said, "I am NOT leaving this hospital until someone cuts me open and looks around."  He didn't have much hope of convincing a surgeon to perform a diagnostic laparascopy, but Dr. T- appeased me and called in "Dr. K-",  General Surgeon.  These two docs have been quite the dynamic duo in west Houston medicine for decades.  God help me and their other patients when they retire.

I managed to convince Dr. K- to take a look at my internal workings, so the next morning found me in the OR.  Surprise!  He was greeted with quite a mess: my gallbladder was about to rupture (no stones) and adhesions (scar tissue) had obstructed my intestines in too many places to count.  None of that mess showed up on the extensive tests then, or every time it's come back since.

The years rolled by with me averaging one or more surgeries a year, and Drs. T- and K- on more intimate terms with my insides than my outsides.  I am now missing my gallbladder, appendix, uterus and 2 feet of colon.  The only thing that won't go away is the scar tissue.  That's been the gift that keeps on giving.  The pain, nausea and vomiting finally got bad enough that I couldn't continue working, and I began seeing a pain management doctor.  That's when depression knocked at my door.  Actually, it knocked the door down.

Meet my pain shrink, "Dr. B-".  The pain doc asked me to give therapy a try and I reluctantly agreed.  I was no different from most other pain patients.  I'm not crazy!  I'm in pain!  Best thing that could have happened to me.  Those of us who deal with chronic illness eventually end up dealing with depression on top of everything else.  Our lives are over.  Finished.  Kaput.  We fall into a trap of defining our lives by our illness.  "I can't do X because of my pain.  I can't do Y because of my pain."  And finally, "I can't do A through Z because of my pain so why am I here?"  Dr. B- got me to see what I could still accomplish in spite of the pain.  I can still have a life - with pain.  I can still have a marriage - with pain.  I can still have friends - with pain.  What I refuse to do for one more minute is let my pain steal my joy.  

Like a bad boss or co-worker, pain is something that can be dealt with without cutting off our noses.  Pain is only a small part of who I am.  It does not stand for all of who I am.  I had to train my family and friends to see it that way too.  How many "get well soon" cards did it take before they finally realized I was going to be this way the rest of my life?  Some folks still can't believe that 21st century medicine can't cure what ails me.  If I can accept it, why can't they?  

Then came the comments about the narcotics I am prescribed for the pain.  The misinformation about opiate therapy among not only the population at large, but within my own family and circle of friends was not to be believed.  I can't tell you how many times I've had to explain the difference between addiction and dependence.  Some people just won't be educated, and the ones who kept trying to "save" me are no longer part of my life.  It's too short to keep butting my head against a brick wall of willful ignorance.  

The people who are still a big part of my life understand that I will not focus on pain and illness.  They celebrate the good days with me and ignore the bad days.  After all, another good day will come around sooner or later.  Sure I miss out on certain events, but not all of them.  Sure my life is totally different from where it was headed before adhesions turned it all upside down, but is that necessarily a bad thing?  I don't think so.  The mental work I've had to do has had very unexpected benefits in other areas of life.  I no longer ask, "Why me?"  Why NOT me?  I'm not so special that bad things can't happen to me just like anyone else on the planet.  I've found more strength than I ever knew I had in dealing with chronic pain.  That's a good thing.  I've learned to enjoy life more than when I was healthy.  That's a good thing.  I've found compassion in my soul for other people that I never knew had.  That's a good thing.  I will not go quietly in the night.  I am still here, I choose To Be.


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by Micky143, Apr 01, 2008
I applaud you God bless you 23 yrs ago my life almost ended before it began I was 18yrs old and I was told after spending my whole childhood going from Dr to Dr that I had severe Hydrocephalis and a 1/4 inch of brain space left before my head would have been completely filled with fluid and that it was a "miracle I was still alive" I was told I wouldnt live if I left the hosp. Like you I met some great Drs and lets just say NOT so great ones.  I am blessed to be alive and for all those Drs who stated I would never be able to have children well they were WRONG I now have two beautiful children I am in a sense reliving the past b/c my daughter who is my first child was born clefted and has some kind of mental issue although no one seems to be able to figure it out yet but I believe God makes the impossible possible he has for me countless times.  I too live with unbelievable amounts of scare tissue due to the Not so great Dr's mess up.  So I can totally sympathize with you on that but what I would like to say to you is that you are on the right path.  Life is beautiful and just try and focus on all you can do you can smell the flowers or see a beautiful sun-rise/set If you are blessed to have a good life partner that in itself is a wonderous thing.  I want to tell you that I applaude you for the journey you are on and YOU matter. I dont know you but you seem to write with a great sense of humor and the mere fact that you refuse to lay down and die or feel sorry for yourself shows the great strength you have and the fact you are sharing your story shows you are being an inspiration to someone somewhere hang in there YOU matter!!! Also please do not allow other people to dictate to you what you should or should not be doing everyone has an oppinion but some should definately keep it to themselves.  I hope you know that only you can truly know what you are feeling and you are right to weed out those who will bring you down.  I wish you all the happiness live can bring

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by suzi-q, Apr 01, 2008
Wow!!!!  What a powerful story!  What doesn't kill you definitely makes you stronger and you are living proof of that.  You are an inspiration to anyone who suffers from any ailment, whether it be emotional or physical.  I love reading your posts because I always get so much out of it.  Thank you for sharing your story.

Suzi

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by Jaybay, Apr 04, 2008
Micky143 and suziq:  Thank you both so much for reading my journal.  :-)  I write because I must: it's a form of therapy I suppose.  Reading comments from other people gives me another ray of joy in my life, so thank you!

Micky, I already did the "lay down and die" and feel sorry for myself routine.  It didn't work.  LOL!   As you must know yourself, that's the choice: get busy living or get busy dying.  This is the one life we've got, and if I have to live it with pain and nausea and barfing, then so be it - but I'm going to LIVE!  Yes, live IS beautiful.  I smell the flowers and watch the sunsets and smell the rain and know I'm nothing but a blip on the radar.  But I'm part of something much larger and that gives me my sanity and peace in my heart.  :-)

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by blessed1ga, Apr 09, 2008
Hi,
God placed me on this website for the very first time tonight.  I've only been on this site for about 30 minutes and found your post.  I was diagnosed with primary biliary cirrhosis last Wednesday by my MD who told me NOTHING about it and just looked at my lab work (which had been sitting in my chart for over 3 months and I HAD BEEN TOLD THEY WERE NORMAL) and said "oH you have primary biliary cirrhosis."  I asked what that meant and he informed me that "oh you have 10 good years"!!  WHAT!!!  He said I needed a liver biopsy and he'll see me soon.  NO OTHER INFORMATION GIVEN.  I went out in my car and cried for an hour in his parking lot.  Reading your journal scared the **** out of me but the positive note you have with it was felt as well.  I am the proud mother of 3 small children (youngest 7 months) and life has been snatched from me.  Please pray for me and give me some guidance!!!  

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by Sue357, Aug 16, 2008
Hi.  After leaving you a note, I stumbled upon your story here.  I had never read before.  I applaud you for all that you have been through and the positive attitude you possess.  I have "seen" how helpful you are to newbies, like me, who have experienced our first surgery and freak out!!!  Also, found your journal interesting about the opiates.  I still take a very small amount, after work, as I still have residual pain.  My hubby is on chronic pain management, due to non surgicallly fixable spinal stenosis, so I "nip" a third of his Oxycodone.  He gets shots in his back, periodically, and so I just help myself. LOL.  He knows, by the way.  Everyone kept telling me that after 6 months I should not need anything for pain.  As a matter of fact, I am switching GI's as he told me it was BS ( actually said that ) that after 4 months I was still taking Vicodin.  And mind you, only 1 at night.  I use to hold docs on pedestals before this but my bf is a nurse and has really explained a lot about how the "system" works.  Anyway, I just had a CT scan, yesterday, just to make sure that everything is okay.  If so, and no surgery for adhesions, he is referring me to a new GI, whom I met in the hospital.  My Idiot GI didn't have any priveleges there, which I found out AFTER I was admitted.   Now, I know why.  LOL.  That is a long story and has to do with the almight dollar, but I am sure his attitude has something to do with it, too.  There were many other comments that he made to me ( too many to go into here) that caused me to want to switch.  I could tell I becoming a "nuisance" to him.  He actually told a med student, in with him, that I was his "worst nightmare".. I thought he was joking, at first.  Anyway, didn't mean to ramble on and on.  Take care and again, thanks.

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