IBS = Is Believable Sickness

About 11 years ago, I started to get sick – randomly. Sometimes, it was in the middle of the night, and I would get violently ill to the point where I was pretty useless and exhausted the next day. It happened infrequently enough that I just assumed I’d eaten something that disagreed with me or that I’d had perhaps a beer or three too many earlier in the evening. It wasn’t until I started to get sick more and more often that I took action.

After a while, it got to the point where I was getting sick monthly…then weekly, then sometimes several times a week. It was nearly debilitating; it’s incredibly hard to function when you can’t keep your stomach from practically failing on you and you have no way to predict when or where the digestive fireworks will occur.

I went to the doctor, who referred me to a gastroenterologist – who immediately ordered a “small bowel series”. I can assure you that it is EXACTLY as much fun as the name suggests. You get to chug some incredibly large volume of a radioactive milkshake, and then you’re put under a camera for the doctor to evaluate and see where things may be going wrong with your body. At the time that I went in for my series, the fear was that I had Crohn’s Disease – a treatable but not curable condition.

DH went with me to the appointment and duly waited for me as I choked down all of the icky barium milkshake that I was handed. This was no small feat on either of our parts, given that the appointment required him to wait for HOURS and it subjected me to a veal stall of a waiting room that bordered on one occupied by someone who was busy yakking up her milkshake (ew). Once I’d sucked down all of this nastiness, it turned out that I didn’t have enough “coating” in my system (awesome), so dh and I took a walk around the block and waited some more for all of the milkshake to settle out through my system. When things were finally in the places that the docs and radiologists wanted, I lay on a table and a doctor did something to my belly that felt like he was trying to rearrange all of my internal organs from the outside. Given that I was full of something like 1-2 liters of barium milkshake, calling this “uncomfortable” is somewhat of an understatement.

Anyway, the results of the test finally came back and I sat on my gastro’s exam table while he explained to me that I had Irritable Bowel Syndrome – IBSIt’s not Crohn’s? I asked. Nope, he said – not Crohn’s. So, what’s IBS and how do I treat it? was my natural response. His answer was exactly what I didn’t want to hear: It’s the catch-all for any stomach issue they can’t strictly classify as a known, named disorder/disease, and they don’t know how to cure it. UGH.

He explained that the key was to find my triggers, so he suggested I start eliminating things from my diet. His first target was gum (creates bubbles in the stomach), so I quit gum. Next, he said that my lactose intolerance meant I should eliminate all dairy, but I resisted that and held up my Lactaid pills like a shield. His third suggestion was intriguing: eliminate caffeine. Being a fan of Dr. Pepper and coffee, this seemed like he was putting a stake through my caffeinated heart. But, being willing to try anything…I gave up caffeine. Cold turkey.

I expected all of the headaches, shakes and other terrible symptoms friends had gone through when they tried to go decaf, and I was completely shocked when NONE of those issues materialized for me. Even better, my constant pattern of sickness dissipated in short order. It’s like everything went in reverse; I started to get sick only rarely…first a couple of times a month, then a couple of times a quarter, then only a couple of times per year.

Caffeine isn’t my only trigger, as it turns out, but it is the strongest. Dehydration is the other, which is yet another reason why my social drinking dropped to almost nothing; if I have a couple of drinks in a month it’s a lot.  As long as I stick to decaffeinated food & drinks, I appear to be able to manage my IBS much better. Much like a person with a gluten allergy or some other obscure food allergy, you’d be amazed what you get attuned to (like avoiding coffee-flavored ice cream or tiramisu, since the coffee components are almost always caffeinated).

The thing that’s actually the hardest about IBS, now that I’ve had it fairly under control for the last decade, is that people don’t believe it’s actually a thing. When I wave off alcohol in favor of water, I get the skeptical glance or comment that says “What, are you a teetotaler?!” As I lovingly cradle my decaf coffee every morning, people think I’m nuts for still drinking anything. Apparently, to some, drinking decaf is the equivalent of downing near-beer…and some of my more caffeinated co-workers just shake their head. I shrug it all off; I like the taste of coffee (and tea), and decaf is far better than nothing at all.

When I first realized I actually had something WRONG with me, a friend of mine with a variety of allergies/food-related issues lent me a book about coping with stomach problems. The thing I took away from it was that people are far more apt to sympathize with someone who has a broken leg than with someone who has a stomach disorder, because they can SEE the cast and think back to a time when they may have worn a cast themselves. I remind myself of this every time I have a friend or co-worker who tells me of an allergy/ailment of their own; not every sickness is visible, but every sickness leaves its mark. Mine limits me somewhat, but I’ve learned how to live WELL within those limitations. And frankly, I’m lucky. It could be so much worse.

So, if you ever see me cradling a decaf or nursing an ice water, don’t tease me for my lack of caffeine or alcohol. Just remember, I’m trying to have a good time…and for me, avoiding being sick is A BLAST.

{divergence} Inner Dialogue

I really need to write about {this thing} because it’s truly bothering me and I just don’t even know how to handle it.

Well, why not just write about it? After all, the writing of it alone is cathartic – sometimes just putting electric ink to electric paper, and all that…

But…I can’t. Not with this.

Why on earth not? TOO personal? It’s not like you’re thinking of writing about the first time you had sex or anything. So, really, what’s the big deal?

Ugh. I just can’t. And no, it’s nothing like that. It’s other drama, drama that’s not even my own, but because it’s part of my life, because it’s with someone IN my life, it’s something I’m not sure I should talk about.

Okay, calm down. WHAT exactly is the reason why you’re afraid to write about {this thing}?

(sigh)

The reason I’m not sure I should write about {this thing} is because if I do, if I unleash all of my thoughts here because I need SOMEWHERE to bring them and I can’t bring them to {the person} who’s the source of all of the drama, it’ll just hurt {the person} anyway. I don’t want to hurt {the person}, but I’m really, truly so {REDACTED} angry at {the person} that if I really tell them, or anyone, exactly how {REDACTED} {the person} really is, or how {REDACTED} angry I am with {the person} for letting things get to this point, it’ll probably drive an unremovable wedge between me and {this person}…and potentially others.

If the drama was something that only impacted me, then maybe that would be one thing, but there’s no way to talk about this openly, honestly, without there being collateral damage. I just can’t risk it.

So, instead, you’ll just bottle it up, or sparingly talk about it offline, and just assume that you’ll be fine? You’ll “self-medicate” with Ben & Jerry’s, and that’ll fix everything?

No, that won’t fix everything. And I’m trying not to self-medicate like that. I’m trying, really, not to self-medicate at all. But I’m stressed and I’m just tired after decades of…oh {REDACTED}, I should just stop altogether and not even go down this road at all.

Are you sure? Maybe you should talk to someone else? Is this the start of another depression spiral or something?

Oh dear lord, no – not at all. I know what that feels like. I know that “depression lies” and all that, but this isn’t that at all. This is something deeper, where the very fabric that you’re made of, the foundation on which you were built is just…well, finally falling apart to the point where the reality of a situation is just unavoidable, and yet you know that {the person} is still unlikely to avoid facing the reality in short order, because it’s too horrible to deal with. And THAT is what makes me so {REDACTED} angry. THAT is what is so upsetting, that after years, it’s still highly likely that no matter how much reality {the person} is finally willing to face, {the person} has too long a history of making the wrong choice and the drama will have its inevitable conclusion.

And that sucks.

And that’s why I’m angry.

And that’s why I can’t write about {this thing}. 

DO YOU GET IT NOW? DO YOU GET IT?

Yep. So, don’t write. Just move on and don’t write about {this thing}. Write like {this thing} never even happened. Write as though {the person} doesn’t even exist, or won’t make the wrong choice yet again.

In other words, write like I’m ignoring reality, too?

Yep.

OK.

{REDACTED}

Going batty (part 5) – the finale

The prior posts – part 1, part 2part 3, and part 4 – all explain how I got to this point.

It’s over. For now.

We got our final shots last Friday, so now we’re just dealing with the aftermath of it all. The biggest physical issue we ran into was the entire family being taken down (in various ways) by DEATHCOLD that set in while our immune systems were compromised by the immune globulin we got with our first rabies vaccine shots. After battling fevers, runny noses, and hacking coughs that had us all ready to bathe in hand sanitizer, we seem to have come out the other side none the worse for wear. Honestly, the hardest part of the shots for the kids wasn’t so much getting the shots as it was the trauma of removing the band-aids that covered where the shots were administered. (I’m not kidding, y’all.)

The issues with the house aren’t 100% resolved, but we’re getting there. I have to take down the duct tape that’s all around the fireplace facade/door, but I’m not planning to leave things as they are. With my reasoned brain in motion, I’m assuming that the one-way door installed by the wildlife company has given the bats only a way OUT, not a way IN to the chimney. Furthermore, seeing as how bats are mammals and likely require feeding on a regular basis, any bats still remaining in the chimney should have died by now (but no smell has been present, and it’s unlikely they’d die without a smell being obvious). Finally, the duct tape around the fireplace door would’ve prevented their movement into the house; either they would’ve been stopped cold by it or they would’ve been stuck to it like flies on flypaper. In any case, I would assume that bats would’ve then left or died (and again, no smell).

So, we’ll take off the duct tape and I’ve already contacted a stonework company to come over and give us an estimate for sealing up the gaps around the fireplace door. I’m hoping they can provide us with a better solution than the duct tape, and they seemed to indicate that this is right up their alley. It was a complete bit of luck that I happened to see a van of theirs in the parking lot for ds’ day care the other day, on my way out of Dunkin’ Donuts, and I took a mental note of the name and URL so I could look them up. They responded right away, so I’m being hopeful that this will work out and not cost us an arm and a leg. I’ve already gotten shots in both arms and both legs and I’d like to keep them.

I’m sincerely hoping this is the end of this saga. It’s been weeks since I didn’t have even a trace of fear being by myself in our den at night. A tweep of my BIL told me how cool he thought bats were and how he grew up with them nearby. I guess the city girl in me just doesn’t want them anywhere nearby. It’s like Carrie Bradshaw and that damn squirrel at Aidan’s cabin; nature’s fine as long as I can see it from my preferred distance.