Wednesday, October 22, 2014

17th GTBAD Letter


October 22, 2014
 
 
Here’s the synopsis of a story of a girl: A girl lived as joyously and as fully as she could in an imperfect world.
A simple fifteen word sentence with nothing deeply profound within. I admit until recently, I was vain enough to expect my life to consist of a vast amount of profound world altering achievements. I don’t really know how I was going to change the world; it’s not like I thought I personally would find the cure to cancer, solve world hunger, or even create world peace. However, I felt like a failure because I wasn’t changing the world. I felt like a failure because not only was I not changing the world, I was utterly failing at being anywhere near to a normal independent and successful twenty-eight year old adult. To me, my life held nothing profound. While my parents, and I’m sure many of you will argue, that the profundity of my life is not nothing, what matters is that to me my life was not what I believed my life should be.
My life’s summary had to change, and I had to change it because only I can determine how I see my life. I now have no expectations of being a person whose name will end up in the annals of history, my story will not be heralded around the world, and my life will not and should not serve as an example to others. Like every human on this planet, I only want to be able to function day in and day out, to contribute positively to the world, to love my family and friends, and to accomplish those few dreams I can. I simply want quality of life.
Usually, how you would rank your quality of life is not something you think about unless you feel your quality of life is lacking in some way. As I stated in last year’s letter, my health and breathing have been gradually declining over the past year and a half, and three weeks ago we learned why. I have a new disease call Bronchiolitis Obliterans (BO). You can’t imagine the fun I am having with telling people I have BO. Those people then think all I need is a good shower to cure my new disease. Unfortunately, BO can’t be cured with a shower, and BO is not a good thing. As the name states, it literally obliterates or destroys the bronchioles, the smallest part of the lung. If you’re a technical person, as I assume many of you are, I suggest you Google it to get a better description.
What does this mean in the long term? Well, we don’t really know. As per usual, my body has decided to do something abnormal and rare, and after seventeen years of abnormal and rare, I think it’s better if we really don’t try to give this new diagnosis parameters. I will admit though that I am thinking of petitioning the Guinness Book of World Records for the title of “Person Living with the Most Rare Diseases.” The long and short of this newest health crisis is that I have a lung disease that has destroyed a significant part of my already small amount of functioning lung. My quality of life declined over the past year to a point where I could no longer function and complete the daily and basic needs of a person. I didn’t realize how bad my health had become until I started taking one of the medications that treats BO, steroids. Literally, I went from being a couch potato to being a cyclone of energy that cooks, cleans, bakes, walks, works, and accomplishes a very long to-do list. I sleep a mere seven hours and feel refreshed rather than unrefreshing twelve hours. It’s been amazing. Like I said before though, BO isn’t a good thing because BO is not curable.
 

Unfortunately, it can present a serious threat to life, but there are medications out there that can help stop and/or slow down its progression. Only time will tell. I am currently in week three of a four to six week course of IV steroids. I personally feel like I am more stable, able to breathe, and to actually live again.

Which brings me back to that synopsis. That is what I want my life to be. My world, our world, is imperfect. We can’t change that. We can’t make life a fairy tale where nothing bad happens and where everyone always lives happily ever after.  I can’t change the fact that my health quite frankly sucks. It does, and at twenty-eight, I think I have the right to call it like it is. However, I don’t want to live my life as the biggest downer on Earth. What a waste. What a waste to live your life filled with negativity and a “Woe is me” attitude. Now that really would suck. I want to live joyously, humbled, and filled with love. I want my friends and family not to pity me because I now have more health challenges. That just happens to be my lot in life, and by now, you should understand I am a survivor.

Many people have been wondering how I am dealing with this newest health crisis, and I have to be honest with how I am dealing with it. I am truly at peace with this newest challenge because I have Faith. I believe in God. I believe in Heaven, and that my struggles in this world will be erased in whatever comes next. I have Hope. I hold strong to beliefs that were there seventeen years ago and remain even today.

I also have the greatest crack team of doctors, nurses, and staff taking care of me. They look out for my wants and needs, my version of a quality of life. I have an amazing support network that includes you. People who day in and day out give me the greatest friendship and love. People who make me laugh and are willing to joke even about the seriousness of life.

Being diagnosed with BO doesn’t change much in my life. I’ve lived with its effects for a year now. Now, I merely know what has been going on inside my lungs for a while, and now, I have the opportunity to gain back some of the quality of life I lost in the past year. I am grateful for whatever health I can regain. Today, I can accomplish things that I love doing like laundry, going to work for my cousin at his new electrical business, singing off-key in the car, playing with my nephews, baking, pumpkin hunting, and driving in the mountains. It makes me realize I have dreams I really want to accomplish especially traveling.

My Glad to Be Alive Day isn’t meant to be an example of how to live one’s life. It’s not meant to be a form of the “Pain Olympics” whereby I say my pain is worse than yours. I’m merely hoping to share my deepest thoughts with you, dear friend. That you may understand my life better. That I can tell you, on this my 17th Glad to Be Alive Day, I am still most assuredly still alive and kicking. Above all, I want you to not feel sad for me because, in my case, I am so lucky that I already had the greatest bonus of an extra seventeen years and counting added to my life.

We don’t know what is coming next. I’m not sure I want to know. But, I do know that I will strive to make my life as close to that simple fifteen word summary. I will live joyously and fully because above all that is what I believe in. A life filled with love, laughter, hope, faith, friends, and family. Those are things that embody my Glad to Be Alive Day, and they are profound and life changing if we take the time to appreciate them.

So on this very happy 17th Glad to Be Alive Day, celebrate all the love, laughter, hope, faith, friends, family, and simple joys in your own life. Wishing you, as always, a most unquestionably Happy Glad to Be Alive Day!

Sunday, September 14, 2014

16th GTBAD Letter


October 22, 2013
 
 
Fall has arrived once more in Colorado. Winter will soon be here.  By far, fall is my favorite season. Given the track record October and I share, it would be easy to assume that for me fall is most decidedly not a wonderful time of the year. Somehow, though, it is. Beyond the tragic anniversaries, seasonal illnesses, fear of the flu, and weather induced migraines, fall is downright magical even hopeful. It’s the time of year, the one season that perfectly reflects me and my life.
 
The biggest reason fall represents me is that due to my health, I’m already in the fall of life. I’ve been born, grown up, had some really awesome bright days, and moved on into the fall of my life that tends to have a unique mixture of days. Here in Colorado, fall is a time where the weather changes from summer to winter to fall, often within one day. Some days are beautiful, bright, bringing a joy that rivals the light of summer. Other days rival the seemingly never ending darkness and bleakness of a winter day. But in all honesty, most days today are fall like, neither super bright nor bleak. Instead, the days are the perfect mixture of averageness, of fallness.
 
Many things have happened this past year, but most are neither here nor there. The biggest event of 2013 is that it marks the 16th Glad to Be Alive Day, and I’m very happy to say my second Sweet Sixteen. Like my first Sweet Sixteen, I have a sweet new ride in the form of my very own tandem bicycle thanks to my cousin Carole and her husband Joe! I’m fairly certain that the people at the bike shop think I am demented based on the happy dances, spontaneous clapping, and a serious case of the giggles I displayed when we picked the bike up.  I’ll never truly drive it, but after the first few rides, my dad knows I like to think I can. As I fondly told him during one ride, “I’m enjoying this ride. I’m enjoying it by watching where we’re going!” I can proudly say that I’m


working on not being a backseat driver. I’m also happy to announce that as of writing of this letter I have no new health issues to tell you about despite my lungs not functioning as well as they have and could. We’re working on making my lungs function better through exercise, and this endeavor is one of the reasons we seriously pursued getting a tandem bicycle after two years of not cycling. It also helps that my Porphyria is now under control, and I am once more enjoying the beautiful Colorado sunshine. The other major news of the past year is that we have moved. We now live in Monument, CO. Our current address is below, so if you would, please change your records.

 

Sixteen years ago, we were fairly certain how my life would turn out, and today life is filled with a wonderful uncertainty of what I’ll do or be or how life will end up. At 27, I’m still trying to figure out what being an “adult” will mean to me, yet this year I find myself happy with the mixture of days even the average ones. It’s the average days that keep me whole. In between those days, I’ll make sure to make my own summer. I’ll hunt for the Giant Pumpkin (this year’s weighed in around 80-100 lbs.), drink hot coffee without feeling ridiculous, eat tons of candy, and spend time in front of a warm fire watching the leaves change.  As the leaves finally fall to the ground, I’ll count my blessings, 16 sweet years worth, and I’ll find comfort in my belief that everything in life, even the falling leaves, has purpose.

 

It is my fervent hope that this letter finds you and yours also enjoying the seasons, and that you know how much love and gratitude I have for all you in making my life possible. Thank you for being a Godsend.

 

Happy 16th Glad to Be Alive Day!!