I’m fucking angry. I’m overcome with grief, then guilt,
then, utter sadness. It’s part of the process everyone tells me. You’ve been
through so much they all say. I guess. I guess I have been through a lot.
Everyone looks at me like a fucking patient. I had a surgery that didn’t go so
well, then 48 hours later I had a second surgery to clean up the first. I spent
nearly 11 days in the hospital; I have a $140,000 bill to show for it.
I fantasize a lot. I’m sweaty, panting; my heart is a
racing, pupils dilated. I’m so ready for this moment. My breath escapes me
through slightly parted lips; I suck in the thick air summer air. I feel
primal, I feel alive. I’m my most happiest me. I’m competitive again. If
perhaps you thought this was the intro to some tawdry sex novel this is much
more salacious. This is a story about a girl and yes, a little mention of
what’s between her legs. So if that’s enough to keep you reading, I’m fine with
that. Perhaps in the end you’ll walk away feeling something else. At least that’s
my hope.
This is the first in a series of articles cataloguing my
recent diagnosis with Endometriosis and subsequent journey from the belly of
despair to something more salient. A lot of what I’ve documented is raw. I
wrote down my feelings as they surfaced. There is a clear timeline of events
even if the emotions I experienced jumped from grief to anger to questioning
and back again to grief. I’ve yet to reach the acceptance phase.
This year was supposed to be “the” year. Just like thousands upon thousands of
triathletes before me I had notions of qualifying for Kona at Ironman
Louisville this year. I was close enough to taste it last year at Chattanooga
and missed a slot by 12 minutes. I was on fire last year. I won overall female
at two XTERRA triathlons and one sprint triathlon. Good things were happening.
I’m coached by 2x XTERRA World Champion Lesley Paterson. Together with the help
of her sports psychologist husband Simon Marshall, I was gonna get me one of
those slots. So it sounds more or less that I’ve written that off. Not quite.
For now I’m focusing on the next couple of weeks. Each day I do a little bit
more. Eight weeks ago I was pushing my IV pole 40’ to my neighbor’s room and
back again. Now I split my time each day
between my road bike and trainer, the treadmill and a step-mill. For someone
who has logged 20 marathons, a handful of ultras and three Ironman triathlons,
admitting that the most I’ve been able to run so far is 1.2 miles at a snails
pace is pretty demoralizing.
At the finish of IMCHOO 2014. PR'd it finishing in 10:34, close to Kona but close doesn't cut it! |
I want this to be no big deal (even though it’s a really big
deal I know). My husband, in his attempt
to make me feel not so bad about not seriously racing Ironman, said this year
could just be about fun, no pressure. You know what I kept thinking about? That
damn hoodie I bought my dad for his birthday last year. It was a custom IM
jobber that said Kristen’s Pops on the back and the IMLOU date on the front,
10.11.15. I thought, “I have to race, my dad has that hoodie. If I don’t its
all a lie.”
In the beginning . . .
I’m documenting “my road to recovery,” it just sounds
cheesy. I suppose in a month I’ll be better than I am today and I’ll revisit my
words, I’ll be reflective, introspective, ponder the meaning behind all of this
stinking pile of shit that has befallen me. Whoa, why so negative? It’s where I
am today. I’ve been out of the hospital now for almost two weeks. I’m 13lbs
lighter (wish it was more), I’m one ovary down, and I have 1’ less small
intestine out of 14’, no appendix, and get this, Endometriosis. In addition to
all that was removed, the surgeons took a 10cm cyst that had swallowed said
ovary. Do you know what 10cm is comparable to? A fucking apple! Jesus H.
Christ. Do you know how big the average female ovary is? Its 3 cm . . . chew on
that.
The quiet moments before my nightmare began Jan. 17, 2015. Operation #1. I'm all pre-oped and stuff! |
As if all of
this wasn’t tragic enough, infertility occurs in up to half of people diagnosed.
Obviously I’m referring to women,
but in rare cases Endometriosis has actually been found in dudes. Then, there’s
the social and psychological effects. I can attest to the psychological effects. But
I wasn’t prepared for was the Tsunami of emotions that are associated with
having an ovary removed. I’m a hot mess right now. I actually bawl, howl like a
Basset hound . . . over minor things. I’m “that girl” the one that’s on the
emotional rollercoaster and my poor husband has front row seats. Less common
symptoms include urinary or bowel symptoms. About 25% of women have no
symptoms. Up until the giant cyst was discovered on my ovary I was part of this
group, no symptoms, I WAS one of the lucky ones. Those days have passed. I’ve
read some horror stories about women who couldn’t bare the pain they endured
every month and felt there was no way out but to end it through suicide. This
is where I get crazy mad. Why isn’t there more research on this disease? Why
aren’t there more support groups? For an illness that accounts for the 11th
largest country in the world if all those afflicted were thrown in a giant bowl
together, the resources associated with finding a cure and educating women is
shoddy.
This is my Warrior Husband Al. He's the best mothah f*#ckin husband in the whole world! |
A couple of
nuggets here I’d like to point out, infertility, which I’ll come back to. Also,
areas of endometriosis bleed each month. Think about this for a moment. The
endometrium travels backwards and escapes the confines of the uterus and
fallopian tubes and floats out into the great unknown attaching its spider web-like cells to your intestines, diaphragm, bladder, stomach, liver, kidneys,
spleen, and in rare cases your brain. Then once a month when “Aunt Flo” comes a
knockin’ those pesky Endo cells bleed right along with your mighty Vag. Fucked
up isn’t it? This is where the horrible cramping associated with Endo comes
from. So all the ibuprofen, heating pads, and ice packs in the world don’t do
shit for alleviating the deep aching pain that many women experience. Yes, I
mentioned I was part of the 25% of women who don't experience Endo symptoms. Whelp, that ship has sailed. My first period post surgery was brutal. I’m not gonna
lie, I was grateful to have had a narcotic pain killer on hand (left over from
surgery). I used it . . . often.
This was my little friend. It's actually a drain. Its tubing was fastened inside of my belly for the better part of a week. |
FrankenBelly. Not lucky enough to get Laproscopy. The vertical incision is from surgery #2 aka ABSCESS |
More feelings . . .
“In the blink of an eye.” Whoever came up with that phrase
must have had the rug pulled out from under them. That’s pretty much what
happened to me. Sidelined, out of the game, benched for who knows how long. I’m
not sure what decisions to make? Scared that if I make decisions based on how my
body feels right now in this moment they’ll be the wrong ones. I can’t trust my
body to give me the answers I’m seeking. I’m now nine weeks post op and I’m on
the fence about pain I have down there. It’s hard to tell, did I push one of my
workouts too hard and pull something or is this pain a cyst on my remaining
ovary or worse yet, is this pain the Endo? It hasn’t always been this way, like
I said in the blink of an eye it’s all taken away from you.
My first run back. It wasn't fast or very long, but you have to start somewhere, even if its the bottom. |
Happiness isn't always clean. |
I have to apologize to the reader this isn’t me, this
brooding teenage-like outlook. I’m mostly a positive and happy person. Blame it
on the one ovary, blame it on the surgery, blame it on the shit weather we’ve
been having so far this year. Blame it on whatever the fuck you want but it’s
not me. I’m trying here. I’m trying to see the silver lining in this entire shit
sandwich; I’m failing, failing to see the plan.
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