First and Last

There are evenings like tonight that I am sure I will remember in thirty years. There’s nothing remarkable about tonight, just a quiet evening at home, only it entails being forced to watch the school’s football field undergo a Cinderella transformation into my way-too-soon college graduation. And as such, I am overcome with a simultaneous sense of relief and panic – causing me to nearly freak out at the sight of the stage being built with a near “WAIT I AM NOT READY TO LEAVE”. But alas, no one would hear me, so I will spare my neighbors the screaming.

Graduating college is funny – you spend so long thinking about what school to choose, and then what classes to choose, what dorms to live in, and which textbooks to buy or rent. I remember matriculation four years ago, sitting in the crowd of my new classmates, a pit in my stomach trying to quell my intestines from causing a scene. To think about how sick I have been these past few years – the sheer number of doctors’ appointments, pills swallowed, IV attempts, hospitalizations, scars now icing my abdomen, and an ostomy bag carefully tucked into my dress, it seems unbelievable. But I want to be clear and direct – college was an amazing experience, and while I perhaps had far from the typical four-year journey, I have so loved my time at school and done some wonderful things.

When I was graduating high school, people who didn’t know me well cautioned me with wrinkled noses that I should stay home, I was – after all – sick, and why would I want to go to school in another country? My parents, undaunted by my persistence in school choice, willingly sent me on my way (okay, not so willingly when it came to saying goodbye, but that I’m guessing is a normative going-off-to-college right of passage). I found friends who saw beyond my disease, who have laughed with me, brought me extra clothes in the hospital, met my doctors, and made cupcakes in my kitchen. I have done community service and had a job serving under-resourced preschools all four years. I have been doing research since freshman year, did a senior thesis and got a grant, and am being awarded a Psychology Research award at graduation. I’m graduating with honors. I have perfected my Patrick Dempsey addiction, finally understood how to use Tumblr, hiked Machu Picchu, ran a half-marathon, and never pulled an all-nighter. And just before graduating and really entering the ‘real’ world (whatever that actually means), I even went on a first date – make that second, compliments of vegan ice cream.

The point to the rambling – I went to college. I went to college with Crohn’s. I went to college and was sick. I went to college and had surgeries. But, I went to college. I went to college and did it in four years and am graduating. I did it. I did not do it alone, but I did it. And so can you or your child or your best friend or that new patient you had in clinic today who was frightened and sick.

As an English minor, I took a class this semester that centered around literary non-fiction. The final class project was to write an essay of our own – mine was a braided essay about the history of Crohn’s (look it up, the story is fascinating!) and my own personal experiences. I even interviewed my GI for the piece. After being undecided about the title for literally weeks on end, my roommates finally prompted me to accept the working title of ‘Not Where I Thought I Would Be’ – and they, as usual, were right. At one part in the piece, I wrote that my GI understands that even though I may be broken, I am not breakable. I sent him the essay, which he so kindly read, and sent me an email response. “I would dispute one thing,” he wrote. “You are not broken. You are whole.” And while the thought was enough to leave a permanent grin on my face and make me feel incredibly lucky and honored to have such a compassionate doctor, it made me think – he’s right. I am whole.

In pediatric chronic illness, the focus is often on what’s broken. Your ESR is too high, you don’t like taking injections, you miss school to see the doctor, band-aids dot your arms to remind you where blood was taken. There are pictures of your gut, all twisted and inflamed, the pharmacist knows you by name, your medical chart has several volumes. But we forget to remind ourselves of something really important – we’re still kids, we’re still growing, we’re still dreaming. Our bodies may be in need of support, but our souls and spirits and whole. Be it going to college or anything else, having a chronic illness is only part of the equation.

If the last few weeks have proved anything to me, it’s that life is always happening – even if it means my college graduation will be here sooner than I want. There are still so many firsts in store for me, so many exciting things ahead, and yes, enough challenges (both health-related and other) to keep me busy. Perhaps it’s not where I thought I would be, but to be honest, I’m pretty darn happy I ended up right where I belonged.

Jennie

Kicking Up Confidence

My lucky parents were blessed with a child who not only won the IBD lottery, but long before that diagnosis, had a severe reaction from eating a nut at age two. Growing up with a life-threatening nut allergy, I became accustomed to standing out from my friends long before my IBD diagnosis – but that is a story for another time. The point here is, I mastered the game of careful avoidance from a young age. Although I was not sensitive to the smell of nuts, I would take care not to even hang out in the same room as any. I was taught well that they were the enemy, and the farther away I stayed, the safer I felt.

So, you can imagine my surprise (read: horror) when, on my very first college campus tour, our guide announced that one of the distinguishing features of the campus was a large courtyard brimming with pecan shells. I stuck to the sidewalk when the group walked through the (admittedly beautiful) pit of possible death, trying hard not to let this unexpected development spoil a day that had been wonderful up until that moment.

I came home disappointed but determined. I returned for a second campus visit prepared. After two rounds of allergen testing (including literally walking into my allergist’s office with a bag of pecans and asking that we rub them all over my feet), we confirmed that although I had not outgrown my oral allergy to pecans, I did not have a skin allergy. So, one year later, I returned to that pecan court – and despite the March cold – donned flip flops and stomped all around that thing. My heart was racing, but I had to prove to myself that I could do it.

Pecan Court as described by Sami I was literally walking, kicking, and dancing through a Pit of Things that Could Kill Me.

But I did it. And nothing happened.

Three years later, I walk through that pecan court at least once a day. And sometimes, I feel a little surge of victory. I can do what I once thought I couldn’t do. Other times, though, I feel a pecan shell slip beneath the sole of my shoe and rub up against my foot – and despite the overwhelming evidence that I won’t react – I still look for a hive to pop up. I am safe – but I can never erase that twinge of fear and doubt.

IBD is similar in some ways.

I have been in remission for over two years. But in that moment I see a red-tinge on the toilet paper, my mind inevitably begins to race off in directions I know it shouldn’t go. I’ll think, ‘This is it. This is the first drop, and tomorrow there will be two drops, and then in a week there will be red all over the bowl, and then I will be on Prednisone, and I should go freak out now.’ I always manage to regain my common sense by the time I finally flush that terrible industrial grade skin-irritating toilet paper away, but the panic never fails to set in for just a moment there. Even now.

I know remission is not a cure, and thus I am always ready to lose it. When I feel an abdominal cramp come on, I know I should go straight to the conclusion that it’s just my menstrual cycle. That’s the most likely conclusion, and for three years, that has been what it always turns out to be – but my mind never goes there first, even now. Perhaps it’s a coping mechanism for when the day does come that I slip out of my remission – as if I think I’ll find comfort in saying, ‘Well, at least I knew this was coming.’

Living with a chronic illness, I am always walking through a pit of danger. Right now, I’m protected, my treatment is doing its job, but I know my armor is unlikely to last me forever. My 6mp probably won’t hold off my immune system until I’m old and gray, but in the absence of a cure, my disease isn’t going anywhere. Even my medications could hurt me one day.

But, just like with my nut allergy, there are things I can do to protect myself. I can take my meds on schedule. I can check in with my doctor every three months. I can be alert to my body and bowel movements so that I catch bumps in the road before they progress to flares. I can avoid behaviors and foods that might trigger problems, and do my best to keep my body healthy and rested.

It’s important to know what I can’t do, but it’s equally important to know what I can do. I can walk through that pecan court. And, with a touch of luck and a lot of cooperation as an engaged patient, I can be an IBDer who hangs on to that remission for what I hope will be a good long time. It’s important to know where I stand, but even more important to walk with confidence through wherever I am – whether it’s the sidewalk or a courtyard of pecans, remission or a flare.

IBD was certainly unexpected and (if I let myself become preoccupied with all the what-if’s of my disease) can be unnerving, but I am walking, kicking, and dancing through it.

All or Nothing

This semester alone, I have heard the phase “all or nothing” easily a gazillion times. Okay, I might be exaggerating here, but what I’m trying to say is that my psychology classes have discussed – repeatedly, at length each time – the ‘danger’ in “all or nothing” thinking. And it’s very true, because things are never black or white, things are not all or nothing. It’s not as easy as saying that someone is sick or healthy, there are grey areas in the middle, that slick slide you find yourself on traveling from one side to the other.

I hear my professors say this – I have proof of this scrawled in my doctor-worthy handwriting – and yet, I watch them crash through the glass walls they just built. Today in a class, a guest lecturer was talking about chronic pain. I know the guest lecturer meant well and he was in truth ultimately very determined to make a difference for those living with chronic pain.

But – some rules of thumb for doctors/parents/anyone reading this: not everyone who will deal with chronic pain/illness is anxious or depressed. Everyone (illness or otherwise) will deal with anxious and depressed moments, absolutely, but that does not mean they present with clinical psychopathology or that it is the heart of the problem.

One of the points this lecturer made was to help encourage positive thinking, active lifestyles, and a sense of control. So here’s an important note – if you want patients to have positive thinking, the doctor has to be positive with them, if you want patients to have a sense of control (and better yet, not just a sense but actual control), then a doctor has to be willing to share. It’s not all or nothing, it’s not you versus me, it’s us, here together – the ‘chronic’ should be a hint that there’s a plethora of time together. So use it wisely.

With each passing lecture, the urge to stand on my chair and shout (no, not ‘Captain my captain’, though that would be pretty awesome) “Hey you, listen, I’m a patient and I disagree. You can’t judge me or make blanket statements about me and all patients because you don’t know me.” This might cause massive disruption to the class and/or result in a stern conversation about being adults and not interrupting others when they’re speaking. But, like every kid knows, if you don’t have anything nice to say, you shouldn’t say it at all.

Sometimes I think people forget that patients are not lab rats. We’re not a separate population, smushed somewhere between children and adults. It’s like wearing one of those really itchy and constricting outfits for a family function and all you want to do is rip it off, but that would be impolite and people might stare so you smile tightly and keep your mouth closed. It is so polarizing to say people can only be a patient or a doctor, no in-between space, or shared community or feelings or beliefs. One or the other. All or nothing.

So I will stand up metaphorically on my chair (though, in reality, this involves me typing passionately at my computer) and declare that I am not just a patient, it is not black or white, not every person with a medical issue experiences anxiety or depression or is incapacitated crying ‘why me’ in a corner with a sappy violin playing in the background. Most of us are strong and capable and fighting – we’re advocates and whole, real, amazing people. We are every color imaginable, because black and white is boring, we are everything because to be all or nothing is belittling and untrue. We are loud, and we will never be quiet.

Jennie

Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner (or a Space-Saving Bag)

Today in class, a guest lecturer talked about patients with chronic illness “having to get used to” their new roles as patients. Those words were not the main point of the sentence; they were the words you say trying to pad the time, but nevertheless they were there, sandwiched in between other ideas. It made me think of space-saving storage bags. My grandparents bought them years ago, in an effort to control the umpteen crocheted afghans that had begun to overtake their Florida condo.

There’s a sense of disbelief – or at least at 13 I possessed such a notion – that overtakes you when watching someone demonstrate a space-saving bag. They show you the pile of items to be stored and the nonsensically small bag that the items will supposedly all fit into. No, your reasonable brain informs you, this is impossible; it is foolish, for it seems like trying to fit the entire American population into the state of Rhode Island. But the miracle is performed; disregarding your doubt, the vacuum is hooked up to a special port in the bag, sucking air out and shrinking down the large pile until it is neatly, possibly even comfortably, squished in the teeny space-saving bag. And this is what I thought of, as the speaker lectured, about fitting into bags that can’t possibly contain the whole of you – until you shrink.

There is something about being a patient that is belittling, and for the chronically ill, something that is voluntarily so. We comply and save our feelings for favorite books, comfort food, the song that always makes us smile, the memory of our first car, our first kiss, our first failure, plans to travel the world, and whatever else makes us up.  Instead we don the Johnny shirt, shrinking into our own space-saving bag. We become reduced down to our disease; a list of symptoms, a medicine cabinet of pills, a medical record number.

If there is a manual on how to deal with a chronic illness, I missed it. As far as I’m concerned there are no rules, all you can do is live (and trip) gracefully. Yes, it is important for people with chronic illnesses to learn about their illness and to adjust to what it means (read: adjust emotionally not adjust your expectations about your life’s possibilities).  But it is also important to be true to yourself.  When I wake up in the morning and get ready for class, or sing along to some favorite lyrics, or tell my parents about my day, or make cupcakes for my roommates; I am not my disease. I am Jennie. I am a girl graduating from college who wishes Patrick Dempsey would marry her – and so many other things. I politely, but fervently, refuse to be put in a space-saving bag, because it’s impossible to shrink me down and after years of being reduced to a diagnosis, I will no longer allow it.

The noun ‘doctor’ comes from the Latin ‘docere’, which means ‘teach’. ‘Patient’, on the other hand, is also Latin but means ‘suffering’. Even if you can manage to overlook the double meaning of patients having to be patient, the roots of the words speak for themselves. But the best doctors are the ones who suffer alongside you, who see the pain you’re too proud to admit to, who are normal and everyday and accessible and in that way wholly incredible and wonderful. And the best patients are the ones who never pass up the opportunity to teach a doctor, a nurse, or a medical student. The relationship between a patient and a doctor is dynamic and constantly evolving, and only when we can understand and respect it as a process will we ever be able to meaningfully work together – to quote a Taylor Swift song (but of course), “two is better than one”.

So be a little rebellious (if you’re like me, you never really went through the traditional teenage rebellion phase [Mom, Dad, feel free to disagree], you’ve earned it). You don’t fit in a space-saving bag, so don’t bother trying. Be patient with yourself, but no need to be only a patient – you are a teacher, you are incredible, you are a thousand other things, and (in the words of a fellow Crohnie) you deserve a beautiful life. That, my friends, is impossible to fit in a space-saving bag.

Jennie

Incorporating Patient-generated Information to Manage Health

e-Patient Nikolai (Kolya) Kirienko’s White House testimony is a must read if you feel it’s essential to have a voice and visibility into your own healthcare.

Testimony of Nikolai Kirienko
Project Director, Crohnology.MD
University of California, Berkeley
www.crohnology.md

Incorporating Patient-generated Information to Manage Health
HIT Policy Committee Hearing
June 8, 2012