A little while ago I was haphazardly complaining that I couldnβt believe how old, number-wise, I was. I didnβt really feel older. I still feel like an idiot kid figuring it out litrally (said with accent) every day. My cousin Brenda piped in with something that should have been obvious. βWeβre all getting older Mary. Youβre not suddenly older than us!β
What a self-evident, seemingly obvious take on things. I had it somehow in my mind that only I was getting older, while everyone else stayed the same age. She was right, we were all looking the same, while somehow kids were growing and seasons continued to change and evidence of time past surrounded us wherever we looked. I guess thatβs all to say, Itβs been a while. Iβve missed you. Howβs things?
I had no idea how to re-enter this little world I created so long ago and then took a sudden hiatus from for what, two years? Was I doing other important things? You could say that. (I wasnβt.) I was just living, plain and simple. The way people in picture frames and advertisements live. In some sacred momentβ without a history of the last 10 years. No memory of being consumed by illness. Nothing lost. All I could ever need, I have. Iβm just a smiling girl in a picture, no pastβinhabiting βthe eternal presentβ as Tolle calls it. I erase it all.
The taking. Of friendships, relationships, autonomy and money and time. The leaking. Into every corner of my foolish little life. The waiting. In line at the pharmacy. In the first room at the doctor. The exam room at the doctor. On hold with the pharmacy. On hold with the insurance. On hold with the doctors office. And the loss, naturally. The loss of self to something I thought stronger than me. Of livelihood. Of growing into something impressive. Of opportunity. Of ways to make a mother proud.
There had to be a reconciliation with all of all that. And in truth, I might say that every day is exactly that. An eternal letting go, surrendering to what was and is real, all the while continuing to move forward. Embracing what is real and true by the ever changing second. Not to grieve the same things twice. In order for Life to overcome loss. To give what used to be taken. To have gratitude while I wait, because hey, at least Iβm able to be here in the supermarket and wait on two feet. Not for long before it hurts, but I am somewhere. I am not a living couch.
This all points to my life now and how things have changed. When I look back at the move to Colorado, I see just how much of an insane shit show it was. We left with high hopes that Rocky Mountain air and crisp clear Colorado water could do nothing but help me. Iβd have to feel better here, right? Wrong. Itβs all too hilarious that I moved back into my childhood home, but moved into the basement. (Itβs a finished walk-out OK!?) Every 36-year-olds dream. I did my best.
Looking back now from a stage of much higher functionality and a new, certain βavailabilityβ of health, I see how bad it was. My memory fills with images of me crawling up the stairs to the kitchen, on four legs like a monkey, because I was too weak to walk on two feet. Dizzily stumbling to the bathroom every morning, squinting in pain. Clothes all over the floor and Montyβs chew toys, because there was no energy in me available to do unnecessary things. Multiple Zooms with multiple doctorsβzero real answers or treatments. A constant shortness of breath. A darkness under the eyes.
I rarely, ever left the house. People thought it was because of Covid. For me it was just life. For so many with chronic illness, quarantine was simply life as they already knew it. Covid was nothing but an interesting reminder that other people were also at home on a Tuesday afternoon. (Plus a whole lot more. Weβll get there.)
The truth is, I am very, very lucky. I write that with a strong knowing that itβs not even fair, what Iβve been given, because itβs what everyone should be given: a knowing, caring doctor. An MECFS specialist who treats exactly and only that. Proper healthcare. I can hardly convey how stark the contrastβvisiting 6 different doctors in New Orleans to address eight different issues and dispense twenty medications, compared to one, bright, excessively knowledgable doctor, in charge of all my medicine, who knows so much more than me about this diseaseβwhich, it should be said, is how it should be. The patient shouldnβt have to wonder if the doctor has ever heard of her disease, let alone whether she says its name out loud. That is, if she even mentions it out loud at all. Itβs always a gamble. Tell them or donβt tell them? Donβt. Unless they say it first.
Imagine. This will be a time in history, one day, when we look back and say βIt was a gamble to even say out loud the name of your disease in the presence of a doctor. It meant they likely wouldnβt believe you. Which meant they couldnβt or wouldnβt help you. Which meant, well, hereβs the number to a therapist, in the end. One day in the future, we will look back at this reality in awe. Shock. Shame.
With a lot of luck, but mostly hard work and some gambling on the part of my sister, she was able to arrange an appointment with Dr. Yellman, of the Bateman Horne Center in Salt Lake City. Itβs only four hours from here, so even when I have to go, itβs a beautiful drive. I think most ME patients would be eager, health-willing, to drive for days to see this kind of doctor. Like I said, Iβm lucky as hell that I got in, and I am far from the most deserving. Iβm constantly grateful to have him on board and also a bit woefully heartbroken that so many sick people donβt have this access. To those I say, please hang in there. We will get there. Thereβs work to do. Thereβs so much work to do. But we can do it.
I should perhaps clarify that no, I am nowhere near perfect health. What changed is that my specialist is treating all kinds of things that a regular PC doc wouldnβt. Medicine like Cromolyn for Mast Cell Activation Syndrome, Pyrodistigmine for POTS, electrolytes and compression leggings for all parts dysautonomia. (That last bit is the easiest change you can make right now. Iβll post the leggings I use. That and at least one liquid IV a day.)
I still crash. Push and crash as though I havenβt learned this lesson a thousand times. But my crashes are less extreme, and a lot less long. This last month reminded me I am very very far from invincible, and it still doesnβt take so much for me to overdo it. I still need to be cautious with myself, but itβs difficult when I feel energy not to want to run outside and jump on the roof of my Toyota Camry and, I donβt know, sing Taylor Swift at the top of my lungs. Why? Because I can is all. Thatβs it really.
There is plenty more to say, about everything. Weβve got two years to account for! But mostly, Iβm still me.
I hate to say it, donβt know how to say it, except to say it. I finally lost Monty, which I came close to thinking would never really happen. It was exactly a year ago next weekend. Iβve so much still to write about it, and him, and the whole thing. But the most I can say for now is that yes, it was very hard. But I realized that my fear of losing him was actually worse than the loss itself. When the time comes, you know. When youβre close with another soul like that, you know. Monty chose when and where, and I was simply there to pet his velvet ears and take in his smell one last time. OK, so Iβm crying now. That happens sometimes and itβs OK. I think how wasteful all that fear of losing him was, when he was panting directly in my face!
Dogs are incredible teachers. Monty was next-level, and what he gave to me, in nearly every category of life, was precious. I really cannot believe how lucky I was to have such a dog as my own. It was a gift and a privilege to have him. I will never forget it.
Itβs been a crazy two years. But Iβm still here. Still Surviving. And Monty? Well, heβll live forever ;)

Health, Happiness, Hellos & Goodbyes

Win back Ex-lover, Fix broken relationship/marriage β¦
I recommend this service.
It worked for me..
visit, R.buc k ler11 [[ g ma i l ]]β¦ c o m…
LikeLike
I’m glad to hear from you. Sorry for your loss
LikeLike
You have no idea how relieved I was to see you in my Inbox! I had scoured the web looking for any more up-to-date news of you and feared the worst. I am so sorry about Monty, as there’s never been a Black Lab that I didn’t adore. I hope by now you are looking for another one. While I don’t suffer from your health issues, you were originally referred to me way back when to help me understand the struggles of Ataxia which afflicts several of my relatives. Not the same disease, but still relevant to see chronic illness from your side. Glad you are hanging in there in a better place. Keep posting!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Aw dude, thank you! And Thank you for your words about Montyβ¦ Iβm always looking for another one hah, but I have to get the timing right. Iβm so glad you found any benefit from the blog, I will keep posting! See you on the flippity flop :)
LikeLike
Always wonderful to get an update about your life. Happy to hear about your one doctor. Miss and love you. Long live Monty <3 RIP
LikeLiked by 1 person
Mia, my love! Itβs so good to hear from you. Thanks for all your encouragement and positive energy over the years. Itβs meant a lot. Miss and love you much!
LikeLike
It was so good to see this update! Think of you often, and am so sorry for your loss of Monty. But glad you have found such a wonderful ally in your new doc!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much for reading (and writing) and for your thoughts. Hopefully Monty is happy running after sticks in dog heaven. Just wish theyβ¦ βlasted longer.β Hah :) all the bestβ¦
LikeLike
MARYβ£οΈβ£οΈβ£οΈ It made me so happy to receive this email. It made me laugh and cry( sounds like Iβm doing press for a romantic comedy).
<
div>Iβm so sorry about Monty. Wh
LikeLiked by 1 person
Duder!!! Itβs so good to βhear your voiceβ haha. I think about you (and your mom) all the time! How are yall? Thank you for reading and always being so encouraging. It really helps me out to hear anyone is out there reading my silly words, but it makes me even more happy to know people like YOU are enjoying it! All my love to you both :)
LikeLike
Mary! π€πβ£οΈπ€π
Sent from my iPhone
<
div dir=”ltr”>
<
blockquote type=”cite”>
LikeLike
So excited to see this post. Thank you for sharing. I’m so happy there has been even the slightest bit of reprieve. I’m so sorry that Monty passed. What an angel. Sending you everything good and wonderful. Spoons!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Katie!! Thanks for your kind words. Monty really was an angelβ¦ or I guess.. heβs an angelβ¦ now? Haha, life is funny. All the spoons back to you boo! Take it easy :)
LikeLike
β€π
There was an error when I tried to go to the webpage to like this. So, here is your heart & thumbs up, because I wanted you to know it was read and appreciated.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Awww thanks dude! Appreciate the info. Yeah the blog has been having hosting and domain issues but thank you for you letting me! Hopefully most of them are cleared up by now. Thank you for reading and encouragement! Means a lot.
LikeLike