Saturday, June 11, 2016

Hospital PTSD


Before Micah was born I had already had a lot of experiences with hospitals. My mom struggles with her health, and was in hospitals or flying back to the Mayo Clinic a lot of the time. It's been normal for me, just another part of life. However, when Micah was admitted into the NICU after birth I had the weird combination of heart-crumbling-numbness. 

When your child is in the hospital it's all business. You need to be able to put emotions aside to a degree and make the best decisions possible. His life depended on it, and I was pretty good at it. Things were always moving so fast, and I was always so busy being his calm and comfort, that I never really had a chance to process things and really FEEL that fear and mourn what was happening. I dealt with the feelings that were absolutely necessary and then pushed them away to deal with later. 

Now that things are slower and things aren't quite as intense these feelings have been creeping up. I'll be watching a show and be ambushed my an unexpected hospital scene, and just like that my world will crumble all over again. I feel the fear and the sadness as I hear familiar medical terms and I'll be a puddle of tears. Have you ever noticed how many hospital scenes there are in shows? Too many. 

Suddenly I understand why my mom didn't want anybody in the house watching HOUSE and E.R. when we were growing up. I understand wanting a safe place away from medical problems, how after experiencing it these 'medical mysteries' aren't entertaining. The times where Micah was first diagnosed, so many infections, and when they thought he may have cancer... these scenes haunt me now. The knowledge that losing my child has ever even been a possibility is sometimes too much to think about. 

I don't know how or when this gets better, but I do know that I've made a commitment to process these things and work through them. And, for right now, I will look at my son's smile and realize that it's okay right now, and will hopefully continue being okay.



Thursday, March 10, 2016

Reminder....

A little reminder for myself and anybody else who can relate....

On those days that you feel too bad, sluggish, or unmotivated to workout? Those are the days you should work out the hardest! Tonight I felt like curling up on the couch and having a lazy night, I literally had to force myself to get up and do leg day. As I started working out I began to feel better little by little.

The days you don't feel like it or don't think you can are the days you can't afford to skip. It's these days that working out will benefit you the most! It's like saying you're too sick to take your medicine. No. You're too sick to NOT take your medicine!

Bad Days

Yesterday I had a REALLY bad day as far as health and fitness goes. I still tried to eat fairly healthy, but I just didn't have the motivation. I felt really bad about myself, hated my body, and basically just wanted to crawl into a hole and ignore life. Luckily, as a mom I don't have that choice. Even if I feel terrible and want to stay in bed all day I just really can't. I'm forced to get up and face the world whether I feel like it or not!

I'm having to realize that success isn't a straight line. I'm going to have days where I feel amazing, days where I really push myself and get a lot done. On the other side I'm also going to have days like these. Days where the hatred I feel for myself and my body can't even compare to anything else. I'm going to feel like I don't want to wake up another day feeling like this, but the difference now I'm doing something to challenge that feeling.  I'm lucky that I've been able to figure out a few things that work for me when I feel this way, and I'll share them with you.

Mindfulness

You've probably heard of this one as it was 'trendy' for a while. The thing is, this really is a useful tool. Psychology Today describes mindfulness as "a state of active, open attention to the present. When you're mindful you observe your thoughts and feelings from a distance, without judging them as good or bad. Instead of letting your life pass you by, mindfulness means living in the moment and awakening to experience." I love that description! When I'm feeling down on myself I can take step back and ask why I'm feeling that way, question what is really going on. This especially helps with getting myself out of panic attacks and anxiety.

Things that help me with this and snapping back into the moment is using my senses. When eating really chew and focus on the textures and tastes. What can you see around you, what sounds are there? What is going on in this exact moment - not the future or past. Smells can be especially helpful. The small of citrus, vanilla and grass are calming to me and can help level out my moods and focus my mind.

Challenge Your Thinking

Challenge your anxious thoughts with reality. If I'm feeling fat and worthless, is that actually true? In reality I am overweight, but I am working to change that. It does not take away my worth as a person. I have many amazing qualities, and even though I have a hard time seeing them other people see and value them. I have friends and a family who love to be around me. I have worth in that my son wakes up every morning and asks for ME. If I leave the room for even a few minutes my son runs to greet me with a hug. If I was gone my son would notice and suffer because of it. To him, I am one of the most worthwhile people in the world. Don't always trust your feelings as truth, challenge them.

Having A Support System

I don't know what I would do without my husband. He is amazing, and I can always count on him to keep me on track. When I feel down on myself my husband is there for me. He might not be able to make me see himself through his eyes and love my body, but he can be there for me. Be in the same room holding me, and keeping me accountable. It isn't his job, but he voluntarily helps me with this diet. Since a few weeks ago when I told him I wanted to get healthy he hasn't given me junk food. When I ask or beg him for ice cream or chips he tells me no, that I'm trying to get healthy. He refuses to share unhealthy food that he is eating because he knows how important this is to me. And, what touched me most, is yesterday he brought home healthier food for HIMSELF so that he can eat healthy too. Find people who will be there for you and keep you accountable. People who will hold you up when you want to fold, or simply watch a show with you when you feel bad.


Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Why Is It Cool To Be Bad?

This is a topic I've been thinking about lately. I've always been annoyed by people who brag about being bad or dangerous. People who think the villains are people that they should emulate. I've noticed this in a diverse group of people, but seem to hear this a lot more from guys. Saying people should be careful, that they're dangerous or that you don't want to see their temper. Even things as seemingly benign as saying that they would be sorted into slytherin in Harry Potter has been something that gets on my nerves lately.

I've known real life bad people, the ones who really would be a 'Slytherin'. It goes beyond thinking you're a rebel, as being such is not necessarily a bad thing. Rebels have shaped our world to be the way it is now, often for the better. Rebels are not what I am talking about. I've known people in real life who have an actual capacity for evil, those who don't think twice for ruining somebody's life. It isn't cool, and it isn't something to strive for. These people will manipulate you, crush your world and then leave. Truely 'bad' people aren't usually going around telling people that they are bad, in fact they don't usually think they are bad or doing anything wrong. They think that the things they take are things they deserve, no matter who they have to hurt to get it.

Let's delve into this whole Slytherin thing, mostly because it's one I've noticed most often and one I simply can't understand. In the Harry Potter books the sorting hat tells Harry that Slytherin students "Use any means to achieve their ends", putting their own wants ahead of other's needs. They will push you down and step on you to reach higher. We know that they value being a pure-blood. In the world we live in this would likely translate, in simple terms, to being a bigot. People like them are ones with no tolerance, hating anybody who isn't like them. Your hate crimes? Committed by people like this. Dictators, rapists, terrorists, and racists.

Those sorted into Slytherin aren't rebels, they simply go with whatever suits their own needs. They don't try to better the world because they can't see beyond their own desires. Slytherins are the kinds of people to ignore great injustices because it's easier and doesn't involve them. Is this really who people should be looking up to?

As stated, I've known truely bad people. I have felt torn down to my very core until I felt empty inside. From a very young age I learned to hate myself and entered into a series of self-destruction. Ruining somebody so completely that way doesn't show how great you are - it shows what a narcissistic, selfish fuck up you are. It shows how weak you really are on the inside, being bad isn't hard. And, in time, it showed me that the world wouldn't be better without me - it would be better without YOU. You, the person who did this.

I hate when people brag about being bad. It enables the truely bad people and allows them to hide and get away with things no person should.

Not only that, but when you say you're bad or scary it makes you sound like an idiot.

Monday, March 7, 2016

The Struggle To Eat Healthy

Motivation is what gets you started, habit is what keeps you going. 


Something I have always struggled with is eating healthy. Fatty junk foods just taste so good to me! It isn't even really the candy and sweets that get to me, my weakness really is in the satly chips and takeout. It's delicious, AND I don't have to cook it!

My eating habits swing between the two extremes of binge eating and not eating at all. The problem essentially lies in emotions being put with foods. When I binge eat I feel happy and better when I'm full. I don't take time to enjoy it while eating, I just eat a lot of it. It is humiliating and something I don't talk about often, but it is a part of me. The other struggle is the control and perfection of not eating. No matter what emotions I may be having, or what real life struggles I may be facing, I can always count on the control restricting gives me. Between these two food and eating is chaos.

One of my goals in this is to take to emotions out of eating. Food is fuel, and after everything I have done in y life I deserve to treat myself and my body right. It's a trap to feel like junk food and binge eating is a reward. The real reward is taking the time to work out and feed myself (and my family) foods that are good for us. Food that will give us energy and help us feel good.

The first couple of weeks of this have been hard. I've had an insane amount of cravings, and I haven't won all of the battles. The longer I'm doing this, however, the easier it's getting. I've begun getting excited while finding recipes for healthy food, and I feel like I've hit the jackpot when I shop and find alternatives to junk food. This week I decided to get myself some salmon for lunch as a reward to myself. I absolutely love salmon, but it is a food my husband can't stomach so I don't usually get it. I got the salmon and some asparagus, and today I cooked it. It was healthy, and I enjoyed it a lot more than I would ever enjoy a greasy pizza or a burger. 

This is how I know that even while I'm struggling through this I am improving, and that's what it's all about! If anybody has any healthy recipes or snack ideas I would love to hear about them in the comments!

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Lap Them



It's been a couple of days since I started acting on my commitment to get fit and healthy again. For the most part I've just been going through the motions. Eating the healthy food and trying not to overdue the unhealthy foods. I've been doing the workouts, yet my heart hasn't really been in it. Pretty much doing the steps but not really PUSHING myself.... until today.

Something amazing happens when you begin working out after so long of living an unhealthy lifestyle. It feels like slowly coming out of a fog. I've been getting excited about actually DOING things and moving! It's invigorating, and I know that this is only the beginning. The more I put into my workouts, the more energy I use taking care of my body, the better I'm going to feel!

I can't wait to feel excited about life again. It's been too long, and I deserve it.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Rare Disease Day



This year February 29th marked not only my husband's birthday, but the 9th annual Rare Disease Day. Every year on the last day of February people rally together to bring awareness for rare diseases and raise money for research. These diseases are often overlooked and forgotten, most people never have a need to learn about any of them. This is a wonderful opportunity to learn more about often life threatening diseases that people struggle with every day. 

In March, 2013 my little family added Micah as it's newest addition. The days that followed were both the best and worst of my life. Something that made it a little easier was that I have an amazing mom who battles a very similar disease as the one Micah does. Knowledge was an incredible ally to have. The following is our journey with Micah's own rare disease.



March 23, 2013

On March 23, 2013 our first child was born perfectly into this world after 8 hours of labor. He weighed just over 7 pounds and was the most peaceful newborn baby I had ever met. He slept great and hardly ever cried! He nursed great for the 24 hours, and was such a cuddly baby. It was a relief because I had suffered major anxiety during pregnancy worrying about his health. He had tried to come early several times, when I reached 21 weeks I remember celebrating because now he was seen as viable and if he came early the doctors would try to save him. I worried about all sorts of diseases even though the ultrasound technicians always assured me he looked perfect. I finally felt at peace holding him in my arms and watching him breathe. 

The next day Micah started to show the first signs of struggling. He turned a yellow color from jaundice, and he stopped eating. The nurses said he was okay and showed me how to feed him with a spoon. The problem was when we could get him to eat he would throw it up! I would call the nurses in after and they repeatedly assured me that he was spitting up, not throwing up. I fought them on this telling them I had extreme morning sickness all throughout my pregnancy. I KNEW what throwup smelt like. This was green and smelled of bile, I was starting to think I was crazy from the way they treated me. That same day they told me that if he didn't have a bowel movement he would have to stay, yet they stilled denied that he was throwing up. 

The charge nurse came to visit us and speak about our options since he hadn't pooped yet. When she came in I desperately showed her a blanket that Micah had thrown up on. Her face became serious and she quickly left the room to bag the blanket and put a note on it. Our son was throwing up bile, and finally a nurse acknowledged that. Micah was moved to the hospital's special care unit right after that. We were told I was okay to leave, but that I could stay in the hospital on 'Hotel Stay' if I wanted. 

March 26, 2013

On March 26, 2013 we were told that Micah needed to be taken to Primary Children's Hospital for some tests, but that he would come back to the hospital he was in afterwards. I insisted on riding along in the ambulance with Micah as I couldn't imagine my baby being without me during the ride. I was worried, and being able to ride with him was one thing I could control. They agreed and off we went! When we arrived Micah was taken to imaging to get a barium enema. According to the Mayo Clinic a barium enema is "an X-ray exam that can detect changes or abnormalities in the large intestine (colon). The procedure is also called a colon X-ray. An enema is the injection of a liquid into your rectum through a small tube." We were lucky to be working with people during this that were professional, yet had a great sense of humor. They explained everything and even involved us in the procedure, and knew exactly when would be appropriate while explaining the process to make a small joke. They were very relaxed and seemed like they had done this millions of times, it really helped. 

After they had finished they told us that it looked like this was something Micah would grow out of and that in their opinion he could be sent home. We were ecstatic! I rode back to the hospital with my husband to be able to talk to him, we couldn't wait to bring our son home! When we pulled into the hospital we got a call, and my heart sank. It was the paramedic calling to tell us that a head surgeon had looked over the test Micah just had and told them to turn around and bring him back. He could no longer be treated at the hospital we were at, he needed to be in the NICU at the children's hospital. 

I'll never forget my phone call to my dad on our way back. I call and told him Micah was transferred to be in the NICU, that we didn't know what was wrong but that it was something serious. I told him Micah couldn't come home and that I was scared and didn't know what was going on. He said he would be at the hospital as soon as he could, and then we hung up. I was numb when we walked into Primary Children's. We got our badges to enter the NICU and went to the elevators. None of it seemed real, not even when we scrubbed up to our elbows preparing to see our son. It finally became real when a surgeon walked into the scrubbing room. She told us her name was Dr. Meyers and that our son was very sick, but that she think she knew what was wrong. She explained that on the image from the enema half of his colon looked small and restricted, then the top half looked normal. She said she would need to biopsy his colon and then we would know more. I was then handed intake papers, and on the diagnosis line I read the word's "Hirschsprung's Disease". 

I wasn't prepared for what I saw when I walked into the room to see Micah. When I had last seen him less than an hour ago he looked normal. He had only had an IV in and other than throwing up he was acting like any other newborn. The baby I was directed to was in a crib under a light to help his jaundice. He had an IV, an anderson tube going into his mouth, oxygen, heart monitors, a pulse ox, and a covering over his eyes. I went over and stroked my little angel, holding back tears from seeing him so sick. 

The nurse we had that night will forever be my favorite nurse we've ever had. She explained to NICU to us and brought me a reclining chair so I could put my feet up. She told us not to go home and google what Hirschsprung's was as it wouldn't help, it would only worry us needlessly. She told us it's a rare disease, but that they usually have one baby at a time in the NICU with it. At this point I hadn't done much in the way of relaxing and allowing my body to recover from giving birth, and it showed. I had hemorraged during labor, and I was weak and now swollen from being up all day. She told us we couldn't do anything here tonight and that I needed to allow myself to heal for when I could take care of Micah. She told us to go home, so we hesitantly left. 

Going home was harder than I thought it would be. Seeing his bassinet next to the bed was too much for me and I went to lay in the bath and cry. This wasn't the way it was supposed to be, I was supposed to be wheeled out of the hospital with my baby. I was supposed to bring him home in his special coming home outfit and give him his first bath before feeding him and putting him to bed. I wasn't supposed to be home without my baby in my arms, but that's the way it was. 

March 27, 2013

On March 27, 2013 they did a rectal biopsy which ended up confirmed the diagnosis of Hirschsprung's Disease. At this point I couldn't resist and looked up what this disease was on google. According to the Mayo Clinic Hirschsprung's Disease is a disease that affects the large intestine. It is caused by not having nerves in parts of, the intestinal tract making it impossible to move stool through. I would later learn that while it most commonly affects the large intestine it can also go up into the small intestine. Around 70% of cases are a short section where they can do a pull through surgery immediately. 20% have what is considered a long segment and can extend all the way up to the small intestine, 9% have it going slightly into the small intestine and in 1% it can go all the way up to the stomach. In many babies with Hirschsprung's the first sign is not being able to pass stool after birth, and then becoming distended and unable to eat or keep food down. Hirschsprung's appears in around 1 our of 5,000 live births, most commonly in males and often found in people with downs syndrome. Hirschsprung's is not a disease that can be cured, and most often will continue to affect patients for their entire lives. Early treatment includes having an ostomy for long segment, and then later on after healing opting for a pull through surgery to remove any of the affected intestine. 

We were told to expect Micah to have Long Segment Hirschsprung's Disease because of what they saw on his images. In the same conversation we were told that Micah's biopsy had come back confirming Hirschsprung's we were told that his surgery was scheduled for that friday morning and that he would likely be getting a colostomy bag and not the pull through because of him being Long Segment. At this point we went down to eat lunch and process what we had been told. I broke down crying trying to come to terms with our son having this disease and needing a colostomy bag. My mom has 2 ostomy bags and I've seen how much it effects her. I've watched her tie sweaters around the bags hiding them and asking me if she smelled. Of course she never did smell, but she was always sure she did and self concious because of it. I've watched her miss out on important events in mine and my sibling's lives because she was afraid she would have an ostomy leak and because she didn't want people to see her. I grew up watching my mom cry in pain and nearly die several times. It scared me half to death that my son would have to go through any of this. It isn't the life I wanted for him. I had had visions of him running and playing with friends, being a rambunctious little boy. It took me a long time to realize that the situation is what you make it. Having an ostomy doesn't mean you have to hide away and not be a normal little kid. Having an ostomy is just something that is sometimes necessary medically, and you can still do anything anybody else can. It means you're a fighter! 

That was the last time I cried about Micah's diagnosis. I've felt sad sometimes, and scared a lot of times. Yet, it was after that time that I realized I needed to keep it together to be the best mother and advocate for Micah. He needed me to be the strong one, so that's what I became. Something happens when you have a child diagnosed with a serious disease - you realize you can do things you never thought you could. I've put NG tubes in my son, I've held him down while they put tubes in while he screamed and asked me why, I've handed my son over to surgeons and I've held him while he pukes on me. I've tried to do this all in a calm, neutral and confident way. Never crying, my son even as a newborn was watching me to see if things were okay. If I was crying hysterically I wouldn't be able to be there for him and he would be scared seeing me. He already had enough to deal with without me losing it. 

March 29, 2013

March 29, 2013 I handed my tiny son over to surgeons for the first time. We walked down as far as we were allowed and then gave him hugs and kisses. In surgery they would biopsy his intestines slowly up until they found nerves. If it was only a short segment of intestine without nerves they would take out that small section and pull the rest down reconnecting it. If, however, it was a long segment they would create a stoma for a colostomy. A stoma is where they make an incision and bring part of the intestine to the surface. They make an opening in the intestine so that stool can exit through there. After a few hours in the waiting room without receiving a call to inform us they had found nerves we knew it wasn't going to be short segment. Sure enough we got the call, half of Micah's colon was without nerves and he would need a colostomy. 

Micah recovered quickly from the surgery, and now that he wasn't as sickly his personality started to come forward. He cried hard and was no longer a quiet peaceful little baby. He loved music and made it known when he wasn't happy. There were literally times when we were walking down the hall to the NICU and I would hear a baby crying and know it was him. He became a fierce little guy. As much as I hadn't wanted that colostomy it had given me my baby back. He finally had energy to cry!

It took us a while to be able to take him home because he wouldn't eat. He COULD eat, but he wouldn't. Micah ended up being in there for exactly a month. 


After Coming Home

Micah came home with his colostomy, and while it was a struggle to care for a colostomy we learned how to handle it. In August of 2013 Micah was able to receive his pull through surgery, removing half of his colon. He was in the hospital for another month, and we learned during that stay that Micah also had a heart defect called Wolf-Parkinson-White syndrome. This means he had an extra pathway in his heart causing it to be too fast. When it was diagnosed his heart rate was 311. He was put on medicine and we learned how to handle it just like we had his Hirschsprung's. 



Micah has continually gotten infections in his bowels. This is called enterocolitis, and it is very serious. Aboutkidsgi.org says "Enterocolitis is a clinical diagnosis. The symptoms of early enterocolitis may be indistinguishable from a simple viral gastroenteritis: diarrhea, bellyache, a little fever, maybe some vomiting. Because enterocolitis can progress rapidly and even result in death, most pediatric surgeons like to err on the side of caution and treat it with irrigations, antibiotics, and iv fluids even if they’re not sure of the diagnosis."  Enterocolitis is the leading cause of death in Hirschsprung's patients, and is something we worry about every day. 

One day Micah was his normal funny, playful self all morning and I put him down for a nap. I sent my husband to wake him up three hours later as he still hadn't woken up. My husband ran up saying that Micah felt hot and wanted the thermometer. It turns out that in that short amount of time Micah had gone septic with enterocolitis and had a fever of 105. The knowledge that my baby boy can be fine one minute and deathly ill another minute scares me. It is something we've had to live with and haven't gotten any answers from doctors. We continue to try and find ways to prevent this from happening. 


Micah is now almost 3 years old, and he continues to amaze me. Even when he is sick or in the hospital this kid keeps laughing and playing! Nurses have commented that it's amazing how he hardly ever slows down. Hirschsprung's is part of his life, but we fight for it to be a small part. He is smart and funny. He loves to joke around and get others to laugh! He wants to be everywhere at once, and soaks up knowledge. He is now his target weight and continues to grow. Micah is the type of kid who walks into a room full of people and says 'Hello Friends!' He loves cuddling on my lap, and if I leave the room to get something he always runs to me and gives me a hug. 

Having a child with a rare disease has taught me:

How strong the human spirit is, I am amazed at how Micah keeps fighting and never gets discouraged. 

That sometimes I need to stand up to nurses and doctors because I know my child best. It's hard to do, I tend to not like to make waves, but it is necessary. I've had to be a strong willed advocate in getting my son proper treatment that has been the difference between him getting to the point of being deathly ill and treating him before it gets to that point. 

Not everybody understand, and that's okay. Most people are lucky to never have to deal with caring for a sick child. Sometimes even extended family doesn't full understand why we can't attend family funtions, but that's okay. We know we're doing what is best for our son, and everything else is so much lower on the priority list that we don't even notice it. I know there have been hurt feelings and misunderstandings, and that's okay too. I hope people learn more and know that our only intention is to protect our son. 

Even though something difficult is going on that doesn't mean life is bad. We're incredibly lucky that Micah's disease is treatable, and even more lucky that we even have him with us. We have a sick child, but there is so much to be thankful for! His illness, and everything that comes with it, are just a part of life. Feeling bad about it, or fighting it, doesn't help. 

We can handle literally anything. Seriously, the biggest thing that this has taught me is we can accomplish so much! I now try to have the attitude that no matter what happens we'll get through it. I have an awesome husband who makes me laugh and we have a kid who we love to death. Even when things get hard, we can get through it. Currently a worry is my husband finding a job for when he graduates in May. I've come to the conclusion that even if it takes a while to find a job, we'll be okay. We may not be able to spend money on fun things for a while, or move as quickly as we would like.... but it's okay. I try to ask myself "What's the worst than can happen, and so what if it does?" and seriously.... short of somebody dying I've learned it's just something we'll get through.