Monday, November 27, 2017

Neurofeedback and stuff


**UPDATE**
I was very grateful to try the neurofeedback machine! In some ways the timing of receiving the machine was great. The holidays are especially crazy for me, but in November I had a MS relapse. I was a bit of a mess and turned holiday hermit. So, since I couldn't do many holiday things anyway, I figured it was great timing to sit back and focus on stress management. It did help calm me and develop better stress management. But, my geniculate neuralgia (feeling like an ice pick is being shoved down my ear) was greatly agitated. For anyone else it would be no problem. If you can wear a hat that covers your ears, brush your hair near your ear, put earbuds or a Q-tip in your ear, wear ear muffs, or even handle touching your ear at any time of the day, then this would no problem. For me, though, it caused too much pain and then the next few days my stabbing pains, ripping out jaw, electrocuted pains intensified. I thought I would be okay because I have reached the point where I can somewhat handle my hair touching my ear and the pain from brushing my hair only sends mild to moderate pain through my head, ear, and face. But, alas, the simple clip was too much for me. Again, it would NOT be painful to 99.99998% of the population (GN is extremely rare and there aren't many stats at all as to how many people have it, but it's extremely, extremely rare). I did, however, get through my MS relapse and my cognition, balance, and strength are better again. I feel like even though it was painful and I didn't get to use it as much as I wanted to, it helped me through my relapse.  Cognition was one of my biggest frustrations with my latest relapse and I'm particularly glad that it has basically returned. (January 7, 2018)


11/27/17
The best things for my TN/ON/GN/AD are hands down my anti-seizure medications. However, the multiple meds are taking parts of my brain too (well, that and my MS brain lesions). My memory is flitting away in pieces (especially with reversals, as if I have dyslexia at times, or I struggle coming up with the simplest words or names. There are other more severe episodes, but it's not as frequent). I graduated with a 4.0 GPA in my Master's program and now there are times when I can't remember words I taught my 4th graders. It's frustrating but not taking all of me.

They say we only use 10% of our brain.** So, sure, I may be operating on 9% of my brain...well, let's say 9.4% of my brain...and still functioning pretty well. I mean, if I were an 80 year old, you'd say, "WOW! That Kali is really rockin' that busted up body." So, yeah, MS can take 0.6% of my brain, but I'll make it up in different ways. Take that MS. =)

**Okay, so..."they" say/said back in the day that we only use 10% of our brain. I don't think it's entirely true, but let's just pretend that in an eternal/resurrected body sense we are only using a portion of our potential. 

...focus. Did I mention I have a hard time focusing sometimes too?

I've noticed a few new things that seem to indicate that I am either in active demyelination or I'm just having a bit of a flare of old lesions. I've actually had minor issues for a few months, but when you have so many diseases, you often brush warning signs off. Or dodge the red flags like you would a charging bull. It's been long enough, though, that I finally contacted my neurologist. I have a MRI scheduled, but I haven't had one since my little surgery. I've had many over the years and they don't bother me too much. However, I know how it is and the tiniest triggers for my anesthesia dolorosa/trigeminal/occipital/geniculate neuralgias could make the appointment difficult. First, you lie down while someone stands OVER you. It's usually cold and there are florescent lights overhead. They put this cage over your head and adjust sponge type things next to your head/face so you don't move. You are pushed back through a tube where you can not move except for small movements, which you shouldn't do anyway. Then there are loud pounding sounds. Over and over. Next, they pull you out and someone again stands OVER you while they INJECT the contrasting dye. Then you do it all over again. PTSD triggers all over like a swarm of bees with jack hammers for stingers aimed at my head (accompanied with acid, knives, electricity, burning rods, and scorpions I know will be there too). Issues. There will be a tiny little mirror and a hand held button to push to notify the radiology technician that I can't go on. May I stay in that claustrophobic tube for the whole hour (+) without vomiting.

So, I'm focusing on stress relief and better pain management. I'm cutting out Facebook (gulp), going to bed at 10:30 every night, cleaning up my diet, and trying NEUROFEEDBACK. (Check out neurofeedbacktraining.com).

I may extend my Facebook hiatus past the date of my MRI, but we will see. I stayed on longer than I anticipated because I was doing two challenges via fb. One was a weight loss challenge and I WON!!! I lost 4.9% of my weight in 4 weeks. It was exactly the motivation I needed and the positivity I could focus on. There are so many wonderful, positive influences in my life and I primarily communicate with them online. But, I am going to have to hide away in my little hermit hole for a minute or two. Hopefully a few people will still communicate with me via text, email, snail mail, or even messenger. If not, I'll see ya when I "see" ya.

Happy Holidays and I hope everyone feels less stress somehow for the remainder of 2017.

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Add another disease to the list-even more rare than ALL of my other diseases!

For the last 19 years, the cold seasons have been my better seasons. Fall is my ultimate, because it's cool and people don't have on their heaters yet. Here in Kansas, Autumn lasted about a week or two. Then we moved right into winter. We got snow for Halloween. And my "ice pick shoved down my ear" pains have amplified right along with those colder temps. As have my trigeminal neuralgia attacks on my LEFT side of my face. I'm afraid MS is currently eating away more of my trigeminal nerve on that side now. Hands down, though, the cold weather greatly aggravates my right ear the most. In fact, issues with my hearing, dizziness, and louder ringing in my right ear have been an issue since my surgery, but especially now that it's significantly colder. Wind has been an enemy all year, but now even just bitter cold is enough to cause the ice pick to attack with more ferocity. Funny fact-I am now only comfortable between 66 and 69 degrees. Creepy coincidence? And when I say comfortable, I mean those are the only temperatures where I can see, hear, walk, and feel adequately. Outside of that range, I struggle, even if you can't see it. It's a shame I can't wear hats, ear muffs, scarves, sunglasses, or anything that touches my face or head. Sometimes it's worth the pain, but most of the times it's a tricky balance of which kind of torture I can endure.

When I met with my neurosurgeon I shared a tiny bit of information about my grandmother. She had tumors that pushed on at least 2 of her nerves. One was on her trigeminal nerve (she had deep pains and also couldn't eat or talk without causing the pains. She used paper and pen to communicate just like me!!) and another was on the nerve by her ear. The neurosurgeon who worked on my grandmother a few times in the 1960s cut several nerves. After one of the surgeries she had balance issues, which I've also had, but brushed off as simply due to my MS and anti-seizure meds. It got me thinking to ask specifically about the pain in my ear that happened soon after my minor brain surgery. I asked if it was due to me jerking my head away when I woke up and the needle was still inside my skull. He said it wasn't because the movement shifted the needle over to that nerve, but that it's related to my MS. In fact, the only people he has known with anesthesia dolorosa are MS patients. The numbness and lack of signal from the nerve to the brain is confusing. Our brains misinterpret the lack of signal as a problem-which must mean PAIN. So, we have the numbness and the pain. This was just another attack my body was making on that nerve. NERVUS INTERMEDUS NEURALGIA or GENICULATE NEURALGIA. He explained that this is EVEN MORE RARE than Trigeminal Neuralgia, TN in all 3 branches, TN on both sides of my face, AND Anesthesia Dolorosa. So, so, so incredibly rare. In fact, he didn't even have stats for this GN! I asked if I had it and he said, "Yes."

ANOTHER disease that was there, but not diagnosed until now...story of my life! 

It's getting a bit ridiculous to add up all my diseases and issues diagnosed over the last 1/2 of my life (some are obviously related to each other):
  1. Multiple Sclerosis
  2. Hashimoto's Thyroiditis
  3. Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) + insulin resistance
  4. Dysmetabolic Syndrome
  5. Depression & Anxiety
  6. Asthma 
  7. IBS
  8. Gall bladder (removed)
  9. Fibromyalgia
  10. Occipital neuralgia
  11. Trigeminal neuralgia
  12. Geniculate neuralgia
  13. Anesthesia dolorosa
  14. Melasma
  15. PTSD (waking up in surgery)
The first 5 I've had for AT LEAST 19 years and the rest I've developed as my body just continues to fight itself. The last 6 I've developed in the last 4 years. BUT, it isn't normal for most MS patients to have this many issues. Then again, most MS patients I know haven't had it as long as I have! I had issues all the way back in my junior year of high school with MS (minor) & thyroid. I've also struggled with depression & anxiety for as long as I can remember living. Honestly inflammation and hormones seem to have been the biggest factors in my deterioration of health. In looking back I can see the small flares, red flags, and contributing factors, but I had no clue. Obviously even with the HUGE exacerbations and red flags doctors had no clue for a while either. 

The funny thing is that what is best for SOME of these diseases is WORSE for others. For example, vitamin D deficiencies are an issue with some of my diseases, but sun is HORRIBLE for my MELASMA and if it's too hot, it's bad for my MS. Studies show no meat is better for MS, but meat and no grains are better for the THYROID. Cold is better for my MS, but worse for my TN/AD/GN. Stepping outside in 20 degree weather when heaters were too much was refreshing or standing in front of a strong a/c unit brought relief. Now I can't handle the slightest breeze or even Fall temps! I used to be a prisoner stuck in my home a few months out of the year in southern Utah. (Granted my health and newer diseases weren't as bad or present back then). Then I came to Kansas and it reversed-there were only a few months out of the year that I could venture outside without too many issues. Now there is NO month that I can simply go outside without big issues. 

It is funny how your dreams have to change. First I wanted to be a wife and mother to many children. Instead I was a case manager and then teacher to many, many children. I traveled the world. My next humanitarian project was going to be in India to work in one of Mother Theresa's orphanages for the summer while I taught the rest of the year. Maybe I'd add one more country and round up to 15 visited countries. But, I didn't feel like that was one that would happen. Instead, I got married and even though many, many doctors told me I'd have a hard time getting pregnant, I got prego 2 weeks after marriage. Then my biggest goal was to get sleep and hoped my daughter would sleep more than 20 min at a time. I wanted to be the best mom. After maternity leave, I wanted to be a great teacher AND a mom. After surgery and retirement, I just wanted to be able to physically lift up my daughter. Then I traveled a lot through many moves across a few states. Now my daughter lifts me. Dreams just morph, change, die, grow, and take twists and turns. I got used to creating plans A, B, C & D. Letting one dream go, so another could take its place, while involving God along the way. 

Now I dream of the simplest things with EASE! It's no wonder it's called DIS-EASE! 
  • Eat a taco...which eventually just morphed into EAT 
  • Go outside for 50, 15, 5 minutes...and eventually morphed into GO OUTSIDE
  • Laugh 
  • Smile
  • Sleep
  • Walk
  • Travel
  • Read
  • Write
  • Hear
  • See
  • Touch/Feel
  • Taste
  • Smell
  • Sit in the sun
  • Sit
  • Exercise
  • Kiss
  • Play
  • Sing
Thankfully I can do all of these at least sometimes. I can't do any of them with ease, but I can do them. I don't let the pain, worry, struggle, or lack of senses chain me down to full surrender. I may find myself at times DIS-couraged, DIS-abled, DIS-ordered, DIS-tracted, and want to DIS-appear, but I find the positive aspects of each state more often. In fact I'm getting better at doing them despite the pain! Day to day it doesn't seem like much improvement. But looking back, I have definitely improved. Less is holding me back!!! A lot of people struggle with taking things for granted, missing out on the small moments, simplifying, feeling gratitude, or a myriad of aspects of life that flitter by. All of my diseases may rob my body of many functions, but it definitely lets my spirit take the wheel in other ways. When I CAN go outside, smile, laugh, walk, travel, hear, see, feel, sit, kiss, play, eat, or sleep, I appreciate it so much more. It's the smallest things that have become my new BIG things. Sometimes I hate it. But most of the time I love it. 

EASE may have stopped in my teen years as DISease was replaced, but my determination, optimism, and faith keep climbing. Most of the time you don't want to plateau, but these days that is kind of my lofty goal. 

Often I feel as though I've maxed out my blessings. Travel- maxed at 13 countries. Careers-maxed out at 2. Children- maxed out at 1. For a while in the back of my head I still thought I could get control of my health and have ONE more child (foster care, adoption, biological-I didn't care). Maybe we could visit a country or two with careful planning? But those dang diseases keep climbing. Instead of getting 15 stamps on my passport, I got 15 diseases. Balance in everything, right?

I'm declaring with like 66.6% certainty that 15 diseases/issues/syndromes/tortures are my max. Done and done. I can relate really well to those 'OVER THE HILL,' so I feel like it's on to greener pastures, smooth sailing, and retirement, please. I'll hold off on the REST in PEACE, but I would also like extra portions of rest AND peace. Thank goodness medications, family, friends, and the priesthood do offer these to a great extent. 

P.S. I'm super, duper, UBER aware of the fact that my body isn't completely broken. Disease may be rampant, but I'm not only a diseased/disabled person. I still have some working parts and abilities. =) 

P.P.S. I've decided to donate my body to science after I pass. I was already an organ donor, but chances are when that happens no one will want them. haha



Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Timeline of Day 1 minor brain surgery to Month 12

Timeline of Physiological & Psychological Issues after my failed minor brain surgery (Radiofrequency Lesioning of Right Trigeminal Nerve). **It is very rare to have ANESTHESIA DOLOROSA and EXTREMELY rare to have it after a Radio Frequency Lesioning surgery.**



Day 1: SURGERY

  1. Went in happy and hopeful.
  2. Woke up screaming and begging them to stop. Jerked head away, felt the needle and burning in skull and face. Monitors beeping a lot. Then closed eyes, but still could hear and talk. Nurse asked if she should help move me and I spoke up that I could move myself and started to move my body from the surgical table to the gurney. (Leg touched metal on table). Everything was silent and no body said anything for a second. Then I couldn't talk anymore and body started spasming so hard that it felt like it wanted to fold into itself. Still conscious and trying to tell them to stop this (thought they were killing me again). Took breaks off gurney, wheeled down the hallway while trying to gain ability to speak and see. Around the corner, getting better, parked gurney, opened eyes, still struggling to speak. 6 around me (3 nurses-2 of mine and 1 from before), neurosurgeon, recovery floor doc and ? (probably anesthesiologist). 10:00 a.m. Able to speak right after parked. "It hurt! It hurt!" Neurosurgeon stepped forward concerned, "What hurts?" I clarified, "No the surgery! The surgery hurt so much. You hurt me too much." Touched forehead-could feel. Surgery didn't work. Watched him walk away and others dispersed. Horrific trigeminal neuralgia attack. Crying, rocking back and forth, worried nurses, but I reassured them I was fine. It was just an attack and I wanted to go home. Gave me a pain med and nurse said, "Most people this knocks them out (puts them to sleep). But it looks like nothing works on you." Asked if I could leave and floor doc said, "No! You JUST got out of surgery." Asked again and he decided they could monitor me for 20 minutes minimum. 
  3. 10:20 started paperwork for discharge. Got husband, wheeled down to bottom floor. Left about 10:40, less than an hour out of surgery. 
  4. Ice pick being shoved down ear, less ability to hear and fullness. Bad attacks of stabbing pains all around and in eyes, cheek, mouth. New stabbing and constant burning pains in lips and injection site. Numbness all over and pain as well. Depressed. 
  5. Cough




















Week 1: Sickness + WHAT is happening to me? 

  1. Burning lips, slurred speech, can't taste much, emailed doctor and told to take aspirin. (No advil until 6 weeks post operation).
  2. Numbness-can't handle wind, touch, talking, eating on that side, or really anything. 
  3. Emailed neurosurgeon again about increasing, constant burning and pain. Told to take EXTRA strength aspirin. Severe depression. Surprised by horrific pain in same area of numbness. Confused as to whether this is just my body adjusting or the new me.
  4. Constant pain spread as well as sensation of: 
    1. Burning lips, part of tongue, below injection site, and in ear.
    2. Stinging on tip of tongue and almost no sense of taste.
    3. Front 4 teeth constantly being kicked in.
    4. Lower jaw all being ripped out continuously.
    5. Ice pick shoved down ear, pain down neck, up head, & by ear.
    6. Worsening Trigeminal Neuralgia attacks. 
    7. Still can't hear very well out of ear as well as imbalance and fullness.
    8. Constant stabbing and aching pain that is unbearable.
    9. Swelling and tightness. Feel like head is in a vice.
    10. Feels like mouth is wired shut and when I yawn, cough, smile, or move even the slightest, I'm ripping some part of my mouth and face open.
    11. Cough getting worse.
  5. Went to Urgent Care
    1. Told I have a Eustachian tube dysfunction and should get better after sickness. 
    2. Steroids for cough and swelling (no ear infection, but swelling)
    3. Told to call after 1 week if steroids aren't enough (because I explained my weak/over-achieving immune system).

Week 2: Sickness + Anesthesia Dolorosa = Slowly dying by torture
  1. Cough spreading with daughter, husband and I.  
  2. Unbearable, unrelenting pain.
  3. Severe depression. 
  4. The slightest touch, breeze, or movement is a deeper level of torture. 
  5. Feels like I'm slowly being tortured to death.
  6. Insomnia, nightmares, flashbacks. Have to pray through wake and sleep to get through.
  7. When I cry it feels like acid running down my face. But hurts too much to wipe my tears.
  8. Plan out 30 min - 1 hr for things like brushing my teeth because I cannot communicate with anyone after. 
  9. Learning sign language and using my phone or pad of paper to communicate. 
  10. Feel like I've been hit in the face with a truck and have Train-Wreck-Fatigue. Every decision I make is a balance of how much I do versus how much torture I will endure now and in the near future. 
  11. Learning to adjust in different ways: Don't go outside. Block any slight breeze or someone's breath near me. Pillows so I don't accidentally turn over in sleep. Only eat soft foods (friend brought NutriBullet). Spread out talking to 10 min three times a day unless I went out (church). 
  12. All dreams about death (and Satan laughing at me unable to talk). 
  13. Side effects of medications are bad, but pains are worse.
Week 3: Maybe something is wrong and I'm actually dying???
  1. Done with steroids and coughing worse (hasn't been a full week and still can't get in with family doctor).
  2. Simply living is severely painful. Hurts to breathe, swallow, kiss, smile, yawn, sneeze, shower, sleep, or do any things at all. 
  3. Ticks & twitches when pains are bad. Sometimes shuts my eyes and can't control it.
  4. Things I used to do to cool my body down (lessen MS symptoms) now are too much. (i.e. ice packs on chest is too much because the coolness radiating off the packs make the pains more severe). 
  5. Fever (didn't check temperature, but I passed out a few times. Husband caught me and covered me in ice packs so I could sleep. He thought it was my regular MS stuff plus my added sickness. He had a feeling we should go to the hospital but I told him I was fine and we would wait for when I had my 2 week follow up with the neurosurgeon. I also had a thought that I should go to the hospital and felt like I was almost dying. But I didn't care.)
  6. 2.5 weeks post operation met with neurosurgeon. Feeling better than I had the 2 days before. (Not too hot, could walk, could talk a little (tons of pain), and not passing out). 


    • Neurosurgeon kept repeating, "Your nerve was so bad! Your trigeminal nerve was so, so, so damaged. It was just so bad." 
    • Showed paper of pains and he confirmed, "You have ANESTHESIA DOLOROSA and there are no more surgeries we can do to help you. Nothing more I can do for you." {This was supposed to be the first of THREE surgeries}.
    • My fever was almost 103, checked my ear and thought an infection could be happening behind the ear. Sent to ER downstairs (wheelchair and attendant came to get me). 
    • In ER for 12 hours. Found pneumonia, UTI, sinus infection, and possible meningitis. Cocky doctor in training wouldn't listen to me. Pushed and pulled several times for lumbar puncture. Unsuccessful (but kept saying how well I was handling it. 6th spinal tap = not that big of a deal). Had already been on IV antibiotics and by the time they could now do Xray lumbar puncture, I would have had them in my system so long it may not show up. Also treatment is the same for meningitis as it is for my other infections. 
    • Admitted for 4 days. Told my mom I was fine (ER), but she came from Idaho to help. Good thing too, because Mike had walking pneumonia and intensive school he couldn't miss.

Week 4: Thank you Hospital and Mom and Friends and Family!


  1.  Still fighting pneumonia. Visited with 2 neurologists and put on new anti seizure medication. 2nd neurologist said, "You know, we can't take away all of your pains." {DUH! I just want to be able to eat without a million knives, battery acid, sledge hammers, ice picks, fire pokers, grills, electrocution, and root canals on half my face being constantly administered. I'd take 1,000 knives, hammers, picks, pokers, grills and electrocuting shocks even. The first neurologist really does understand trigeminal neuralgia. My last 3 neurologists had no clue what it was, nor did they get the severity of pain. I have pushed through an incredible amount of pain in the past 19 years. Half of my life. None of it compares to this, especially anesthesia dolorosa.}
  2. Mom helped and messages of hope and love buoyed me up. I still wanted to die, but there were breaks where I didn't. 
  3. Slept sitting up for almost a month after leaving the hospital. Reduction in sinus infection (couldn't even feel, thought it was all AD) and coughing helped. Still a great deal of pain.
Month 2: I think I can, I think I can...
  1. Hard to imagine living this way, but maybe it is possible to survive.
  2. End of the month the pains are getting a bit better until visit to Utah.

 Month 3/End of Month 2: Mawwwige. It's what bwings us togever

  1. Visited Utah for brother's wedding. More pain, stabbing, twitching, aching, increased ear pain. Ears popped for a few minutes on plane. Hurt more on the way back. Went back to pressure, pain, and not able to hear as well. More feelings of bugs under my skin or hair on certain parts that won't go away. Night time is worst. Regressing.
  2. Trying different times of day to spread out many different medications.
Month 4: Baby steps!
  1. Lips on fire has decreased (still always burn, but less severe)
  2. Crying no longer feels like acid running down my face. 
  3. Tips of back two teeth I can feel some (one top, one bottom)
  4. Less burning on part by mouth (between chin and injection site), but now feels like bugs crawling under my skin or a hair is stuck. ? healing ?
  5. I cry out or moan a lot less (night time is still somewhat unbearable). Better able to hide my pains. Twitch and wince less. Careful about talking/laughing/smiling. 
  6. Started with chiropractor and massage therapist.
  7. PTSD coming up (Xray for chiro)
  8. Some depression lessening.
Month 5: Is that SUN I see?
  1. MINIMAL pains in morning. Sleep is vital and somewhat better. 
  2. Part by ear gets cold now when I drink something cool. (more cold there than in my mouth)
  3. After 5 or 6 pm the unbearable levels return. (Root canals on 10 teeth, wretched ice pick in ear and down neck, always need to "pop" my ear, trouble hearing, bugs under skin, unquenchable fire with knives and electric bolts.)
  4. Thyroid the most inflamed it's EVER been and has attached to surrounding tissues. Increased selenium. Nodules stabilized. Monitored regularly, but no regular biopsy needed for now. (Swallowing still an issue, but not as bad)
  5. I can talk a little more!!!
  6. Feeling more okay about living. 
Month 6: I can DEFINITELY do this. Halle-FREAKIN-lujah! 
  1. Part by my ear still gets a bit cool when I drink, but not AS cold!!! 
  2. Ear finally popped. I can hear, but I cannot hear as well as I could before the surgery. New me?
  3. Sleeping better (still pain).
  4. Continuing with massage therapist and chiropractor. 
  5. Mornings are actually decent!!! Able to drive to my appointments sometimes!!!

Month 7: Pain, Pain GO AWAY, never come back another day!
  1. Pains returning too much. Much like month 3 or month 2 minus the acute illnesses. (Had the beginning of a sinus infection, but was thankfully wiped out quickly). 
  2. Shaking a lot more
  3. Increased anti-seizure med with side effects (off balance, bad vertigo/dizziness, worse fatigue, incredible nausea at night, and more depression), but NOT the relief from pain. 
  4. As nerves heal, MORE pain is returning. Feels like 1/2 my nose is broken and when I brush my back teeth it feels like scraping exposed nerves.
  5. More trouble swallowing. Clearing throat all the time (narrowed breathing). Feel like I'm eating and swallowing rocks.
  6. Body pillow to train body to sleep on back. (Formed issues because I can't change to right side like I used to (right hip, left shoulder).
  7. Short sinus infection.
Month 8: Bless you and curse you anti-seizure meds! Intolerance
  1. We had to increase one anti-seizure medication and I'm feeling all the negative side effects without the benefit of reduced pain levels. Struggling more and more. 
  2. Constant feeling that my mouth is wired shut, my head is in a vice, ice pick in ear, swallowing rocks (and some that won't leave), elephant sitting on half my face, 1/2 broken nose is more annoying, swelling on both sides of face under my eye, when I yawn it feels like half my face is splitting open. Stronger sensation of jaw yanked out, root canals on half my teeth, kicked in front teeth. Can't easily drink cold anymore. Returning to eating softer foods most of the day. 
  3. Severe nausea and dizziness has greatly increased. Vision darker. Anxiety and depression worse (situational most likely, although I do wonder about the increase in Carbamazepine). Worsening memory (names, word choice) and off balance.
  4. Can't feel feet for 7 days or hands for 2 after walking to get daughter from bus stop. Also stressed with husband's surgery. Pains worse.

Month 9: Surgery, surgery, I hate surgery
  1. Fatigue, anxiety, stress heightened as Mike tries to recoup from his surgery. He is not recovering as expected. 
  2. Started to get more energy. I was careful in how I used my time and energy. Weather starting to cool off, making it a tad easier to move. 
  3. Side effects of memory worse, but other side effects seem to be lessening slightly. 
  4. Partial feeling returning to severe burning section by mouth/chin/inscision site, as well as two back teeth. 
Month 10: Sugar anyone? Surgery #2, please!
  1. Eating sugar to the extreme. But, fun parties for my daughter and all the planning and exertion were worth it. My body was angry, but emotionally it was nice to have a tiny, tiny portion of my old self back (planning parties is def one of my "things"). 
  2. Feeling back in two teeth. Feels like I'm constantly eating rocks (that limbo stage when you've visited the doctor and are only getting back a tiny bit of feeling, and everything feels exaggerated and harder/bigger than normal...but this is worse than that. ha)
  3. Fall or Autumn lasted about a week. It was glorious as long as the wind wasn't blowing. The cold, however, aggravates my ear pains (ice pick shoved down ear). Winter is basically here and while it used to be great for my MS, it is making AD/GN/TN/ON worse.
  4. My left side pains are breaking through my anti-seizure meds and it worries me that my MS is eating away more of that trigeminal nerve. =( Often left side is worse than right side with TN specifically.
  5. I wake up every morning (and in the night) with really bad pains in my left ear-especially behind just like my right ear after the surgery. Ask neurosurgeon- GENICULATE NEURALGIA OR NERVUS INTERMEDIUS NEURALGIA. This is even more rare that TN or AD. Not even figures for how RARE this is! Yes, I have it. 
  6. Met with endocrinologist. Each time I met with endocrinologists last year my thyroid kept growing. Cut my thyroid meds in half when I was eating WFPB because I went HYPERthyroid instead of HYPOthyroid for about 2 decades. Visit in March 2017, said thyroid was the biggest it had been and was now attaching to surrounding tissues. All they could do was high doses of selenium. Now even bigger issues (compound issues- trouble breathing and swallowing, sometimes hoarse voice, always feel like rock is in my throat won't go away- issue for a year, but much worse the last 3 months. I thought it was due to my surgery. No, two separate issues). Talked for 5 min with endo because she HIGHLYYYYY recommended I have surgery to remove my thyroid. Doesn't recommend very often, but my compression issues are too bad. Cut out gluten and dairy (inflammatory, as is refined sugar). 
  7. I'm getting awesome at not flinching and breathing through the pain. For the most part the AD pains are bearable. It's the TN that comes out of the blue or the GN that are tougher. Still WAY better than the first few months after the surgery. 

Month 11: 
  1. FIRST day of month 11 and a part of my tongue isn't numb. I was able to taste something spicy on the right side of my mouth! I even chewed a tiny bit on that side. Still exposed nerve feeling on teeth that have feeling back. I even caught the taste of the nasty anti-seizure med that got lodged down in the gums on that side. I could feel it sort of! So a part of my gum is coming back too. Still can't taste very well, but I never really have been able to...so, not that big of a deal. 
  2. MS relapse (Cognitive issues the worst)
Month 12: 
  1. Small part of my cheek is not numb. The severe feeling of exposed nerves on back two teeth is better.
  2. More used to feeling of bugs crawling under my skin by my ear and mouth/incision site. 
  3. Smells for the first time in life?!?
  4. Sleeping schedule all over the place
  5. 3 times part of my shower I didn't even think about it. Didn't have to concentrate so hard on getting through it.
  6. Cold/Flu, asthma worse but not nearly as bad as daughter and husband's sicknesses. (I didn't get their versions and was the LAST to get the sicknesses instead of the FIRST).
  7. Geniculate neuralgia isn't just because of the cold. I learned it is the drastic change in air pressure and temperature change that really increases the severity and frequency of pain.

SaveSave

Sunday, September 17, 2017

"Trust the Doctor"

LOOOONG story:

My husband went in for a Laparoscopic Nissen Fundoplication surgery. It was expected it would be 2-2.5 hours. I had my friend and her husband with me at the hospital because of my PTSD issues. Mike's parents also came and were a great support. At about 2 hours and 20 minutes after entering surgery, I got nervous. I knew it was just because I wanted him to be done and I had been too warm for too long. Nausea, dizziness, fatigue, vision, hearing, and feeling my extremities were all issues. I just wanted to see Mike and hear him.

After 3 hours they had finally finished. It went longer than expected. The surgeon met with us very quickly. "It was successful. Mike won't be able to drink or eat anything because they will do a scope the following morning to make sure everything looked okay." He showed a square of 4 in x 4 in saying it was a large hiatal hernia. I asked if all he used were stitches and he said Yes and then left in a hurry. When he left my friend said, "Well okay then!" and "He is young." The surgeon didn't spend much time, but he said the words I wanted to hear-it was successful.

We went up to the observation room he'd stay in for 24 hours and Mike was starting to come to. Everyone left and I figured all would be fine. However, shortly thereafter he threw up some blood. Then he screamed out in more pain than I've ever seen him in. More pain than he has ever felt. The nurse asked what he was feeling. He said, "Tearing. My lung feels like it's being torn open." He had incredible pain in his right lung. His blood pressure and heart rate were high (which is obviously to be expected. I knew that simply because of my own experiences), but the lung and chest pains weren't something I expected. The nurses were wonderful and I said it worried me. One nurse said, "Me too. I've never heard pain after surgery described like that." She told the doctor and he ordered an EKG and stat X-ray. They did an EKG and I watched it just like the others in the ER the few months before. Abnormal.

The surgeon came up and asked, "Michael, how do you feel?" He told him honestly, "I feel like my lung is being torn open." The surgeon said, "What did you expect? You just got out of surgery." The cardiologist came up. He saw the EKG and said, "Hmm.." He looked at the monitors. Hmmm. The cardiologist then compared the previous EKGs from the ER visit a few months earlier to the current one and said, "Oh, okay." He told the surgeon that he would have been much more concerned-in fact that he WAS concerned-because of the EKG and his stats. But since his other EKGs were the same (abnormal) and this one was the same (abnormal, but in the same way), that it should be okay. They would monitor him, though, because of his chest pain. I asked the doctors, "But, they said that his abnormal EKG was only because of his hiatal hernia. They thought it would get better after he had the surgery. Does that mean it is something else? His heart?" Our surgeon gave his second, "He JUST got out of surgery. What did you expect?"He walked out and I looked to the nurses. I explained that I was sorry that they had to do another test, but that I had been concerned. We didn't know what to expect. Both nurses said they were too. "You were okay to ask and don't worry about him. He is....he is that way. Always. The hardest to read" (other nurses on later shifts said the same thing and about his communication 'style').

Mike had his X-ray and the surgeon came back to say everything was normal. No problems. AGAIN he told us that he just got out of surgery. The pain is just the trapped gas bubbles. Part of surgery. (Granted, we weren't told what to expect at all)!

We figured it was no big deal and my concern was unfounded. I shook it off and took my place of silence. I acknowledged that my extra concern was probably just my heightened stress of PTSD. I was being ridiculous. Settle down.

But Mike didn't get better. We thought we'd be able to leave within 24 hours as predicted for this type of surgery. He was still struggling breathing on his own. His heart hurt pretty bad- even worse than his stomach and incision sites. Whenever he was alert enough, he made sure to walk often. His heart rate, blood pressure, temperature, and other stats would fluctuate between high and normal, but not extremely high. On their own it raised no flags, but together he was not good enough to go home. I asked a few questions, but was put in my place.

I shared an extra part of our struggles with others via email or fb and several voiced their thoughts that we should just "trust the doctor" and that none of it was a big deal. I know it was to calm me, but instead it rattled me. Granted, I was running on a lot of pain and very little sleep. I started having flashbacks of a couple really, really hard times in my past where I did trust doctors and shoved that inner voice down. By the 2nd or 3rd day, I became more and more concerned. Why was he still unable to breathe on his own? Why is he still so lethargic? Why was he still so pale? How is he getting just a little worse and worse? I didn't VOICE these, but I did wonder and asked a few questions leading to answer these. I am familiar with recovery from surgery and most of these are common. But there was this gnawing feeling that there is more and the surgeon's dismissive attitude and lack of communicating ANYTHING at all was not something I should just sit back and watch.

I know most people have great experiences with doctors and surgeons. I am SO glad that is the case. But when my stress level was too high, sleep was low, pain was high, patience ran low, and PTSD was high, I started listening more to my gut than the doctor.

Let me tell you where TRUSTING DOCTORS got me:


  • REMEMBER THAT TIME I STARTED TO DIE? --->A doctor put me on a prescription that interacted with another I'd been on for years. My pharmacist twice said he didn't want to give it to me and to ask the doctor about possible interactions. The doctor waved off my question and said everything was fine. Instead, month after month, he actually increased the dosage. I got to the point where I twitched on the floor, collapsed at work, became home-bound, and couldn't stand more than 2 minutes without passing out or vomiting. My intestines completely shut down. Bleeding over my kidney with bruises that looked like someone took a bat to my back. My doctor thought someone was abusing me. He didn't listen. I ended up in the hospital after 3 days of slurred speech, and then my eyes rolling back in my head and unable to stand. In time I came to and they brushed it off. The pharmacist's words that I'd forgotten about many months before kept running through my head. The day after the ER, I was crawling down the hall to take my meds and that warning I'd received came to me. I decided to NOT listen to my doctor. It took a few months, but I improved. LATER, when I got a new doctor and she saw how HIGH the dosage was on this new medication, she was appalled. Horrified, actually. Come to find out, I was experiencing SEROTONIN SYNDROME and was closer to death or coma than I'd realized. Granted, I felt like I was dying and had prayed for 3 days, "Heal me or Kill me," over and over to God. But, I hadn't realized WHY. My intestines have never been the same.
  • REMEMBER THAT TIME I WAS IN LABOR FOR ALMOST 6 DAYS? --->The first time I went to my OBGYN appointment, I met with the nurse practitioner. I didn't have a good feeling and felt like I should get a different doctor. I was talked out of it, though, because I hadn't actually met the doctor. He was recommended by so many. Fast forward 8ish months, around my original due date (later they changed my due date, by a month, when they measured my baby in my ultrasound. But according to timing the due date was right on)......... My OBGYN thought I had a kidney stone, not that I was in labor. I mentioned that my mom only felt back labor and my sister only progressed with pitocin. What if I was the same? Why were they monitoring me on the front if my pain was in the back? The nurse came back to say, 'He says it's fine.' I went back to teach and still felt pretty bad. But, I can push through quite a bit. I called to say the kidney stone hadn't passed and pain increased. Doctor said, "Drink more fluids." Called the second day that the kidney stone still hadn't passed. "Drink more liquids." This had gone on since Wednesday night/ Thursday morning. It was now Saturday. I lost control of my bladder and was leaking. Kidney stones really do hurt and they seem to last for a long time. Sunday I had reached my limit. I hadn't slept since Thursday early morning. I called the OBGYN and still was told, it's just a kidney stone. I prayed for relief and felt that I should actually get a second opinion. I got in with an Urologist on Monday. He was shocked---Your OBGYN didn't do an ultrasound to see the kidney stone? No. You thought you lost control of your bladder? Yes. The urologist scheduled an ultra sound. There was NO inflammation. NO kidney stone. I hadn't lost control of my bladder, but had been leaking out amniotic fluid this whole time. I didn't need more liquids and Depends diapers. I needed the hospital. I had been in labor that whole time. We went to the hospital and I called the OBGYN AGAIN. Even though I'd called earlier that day, he was "in a meeting." His message via his nurse was, "I wasn't in labor, but if I wanted to, I was free to go to the hospital for them to tell me it was just a kidney stone." I got to the hospital and amniotic fluid was found. The doctor didn't believe them. "It could have been on the nurse's gloves from before." The nurses were flabbergasted. He demanded 3 tests. The OBGYN on call did the tests. I had almost NO amniotic fluid left except for 2 tiny pockets on one side. I was at risk. I was put on pitocin for THIRTY hours. Since my uterus was exhausted from working for so many days, I only progressed to a 5. I finally had a C-section and had my daughter Tuesday night. I was in labor for almost 6 days. All the nurses came in to see "that couple," and joked that I had the cutest 7 pound kidney stone they'd ever seen. I finished teaching that school year, and a day or two later, had a surgery to fix my issues from that horrible labor. 
  • REMEMBER THAT TIME I HAD A MINOR BRAIN SURGERY AND WOKE UP THINKING THEY WERE KILLING ME? THEN EVERYTHING BECAME 100000000xs WORSE?---> I was so hopeful about my Radio Frequency Lesioning for my Trigeminal Neuralgia. As I was discussing it with my neurologist, I had a quick feeling of "Oh no. Don't do it." But, I brushed it aside. NOTHING could be worse than TN. If medication had failed and this was the last ditch effort, let's do it. I CRIED because I was so happy that there was actually hope of relief. I had the surgery and everything got SO much worse. The issues I have now from waking up screaming and crying, begging them to stop, and the anesthesiologist unsuccessfully being able to put me under from that moment on remind me the issues I have from NOT being heard. 
  • REMEMBER HOW I HAD ANESTHESIA DOLOROSA AND INFECTIONS THROUGHOUT MY BODY LANDING ME IN THE HOSPITAL FOR 4 DAYS? --> Immediately after my surgery I got a cough and burning in my lips. Then stinging in my tongue. I emailed the neurosurgeon (my chart) and said my lips burned. I was told it should go away and to take Tylenol. The next day I emailed again that the Tylenol wasn't enough and what to do about the stabbing pain in my ear. I was told to take EXTRA strength Tylenol. And see my family practitioner about the ear. I called my fam doctor and couldn't see her for 2 weeks. Saw the Quick care doc and was put on a small round of steroids. Asked about what I do when I need another round, since I ALWAYS need extra rounds. Told to wait a week and then call. The next week I passed out twice, had a fever so bad I had to be covered in ice packs to stay conscious, and decided I would be happy to die. My husband and I both thought that I should go to the ER, but I reassured him I was fine. Two days later my fever was better and I went for my followup with the neurosurgeon. Almost 103 temp, sent down to the ER, and had pneumonia, UTI, sinus infection and possibly meningitis (but the cocky doc in training wouldn't listen to me and failed at getting the spinal tap all the way). I had anesthesia dolorosa, they could no longer help me with surgeries (I had 2 more set up), and was in the hospital for 4 days. 
Needless to say, I've gotten to the point that if I have a question, concern, or thought, I've learned to speak up. I SHOULD speak up. But I questioned my thoughts because I'm a bit on the fragile side since my surgery. I knew that some of my own past experiences cast a shadow on my current experience. But, shouldn't I speak up and ask if we are being told NOTHING? Especially if I feel that the doctor/surgeon/nurse is being dismissive. I kept dismissing my gnawing feeling that they were missing something with my husband's recovery because of my own weird hospital issues. Eventually, though, I decided that I'd had enough silence. 

Anyway, I started asking that they monitor him more. They were monitoring every 2 hours. But it was just a snapshot and I could tell when he started getting a little off. He didn't say anything or really look that different, but in that moment I wanted him monitored. This time I insisted that they check him and keep him monitored. That was when they realized that his blood pressure was all over and that cardiology actually shouldn't have given the all clear. They called the surgeon back and did another EKG. It was abnormal, just like all of his others. They checked everything and did another EKG longer, while keeping his bp, heart rate, and oxygen levels monitored. They realized what the issues were and finally were willing to discuss treating it. He was put on blood pressure medication and they finally recognized that his issues were bp + hiatal hernia. I had been VERY frustrated because right after his first EKG (waking up with surgery) they put him on bp medication. That was when his chest pain finally dissipated. But in time, the chest pain returned and then he got worse and worse. They didn't put him on the medication again and wouldn't discuss the idea that any heart issues were needed to monitor.

With his first response to the bp meds and the abnormal EKGs after surgery, I thought we figured out the last piece of the puzzle. They didn't think so and how dare I think that I could ask questions.

Couple that with my inability to walk easily, feel my feet for 6 days, hands for 2, vision and hearing messed up, so sick that I'm in the bathroom for half an hour, stabbing pains from Hades, sleep for only 1-2 hours for 2 days, nausea, dizziness, fatigue, and pain throughout my body....I reached my limit. I broke down feeling a weight of anxiety past my limit as too many reminders of my own experiences in the hospital crept up, the inability for my hubby to communicate with me much, and feeling so dang disabled. Thankfully there were so many intervening angels who saved the day. Many wrote messages of love and support on fb or text. My dear friends drove me back and forth so I could shower and get clothes. (Because every day they thought he'd improve and we could go home. But each day he wouldn't improve, they had no answers, and that was that.) Several stopped by to simply check in, give me food, give Mike a blessing, and help me through small bouts of PTSD.

Thursday night they wanted to move us to another floor. We were only supposed to be in observation for 24 hours. Instead we had been there for more than 3 days. Nurses who returned were shocked to still see us there. That evening there were no available beds. But in the morning they would move us because we were expected to be there until at least Saturday. Again, no one told us this until the nurses were changing shifts. Every piece of information we got about how Mike was doing or the treatment plan was through a nurse shift change and their report to each other.

It was that afternoon/evening that they put Mike on regular bp medication. Our dear friend also came to give an anointed blessing. About an hour later his stats had gotten just a bit worse (fever, oxygen) and I had some hesitations. But, once they had decided that he needed bp medication that nagging feeling inside that something was off had disappeared. I also knew he'd received a priesthood blessing that was positive. I no longer felt like I had to speak up about something. So, I went home to sleep. By the time I returned at 6:45 a.m. Mike was smiling. He was finally looking like himself. He was no longer pale, lethargic, or having chest pains. Everyone who saw him from then on commented on how much better he looked. Finally. 4 days.

Instead of moving us up to another floor, they decided he had improved so well that we could go home instead.

We asked a few questions of the surgeon.
He can return to work? 2 weeks
Wait, he can lift 50 pounds at work, always on his feet... TWO weeks. 


Okay, okay, no more questions.

The nurses were more helpful and sent us home with paperwork that answered a few questions we had (which would have been great to have from day 1, since our surgeon didn't tell us anything). It recommended two weeks of liquid diet and his body seems to respond much better to this than solids. I still worry a lot about him going back to work in 2 weeks and lifting so much. But, apparently doctor knows best. =)

Mike is allergic to one pain medication and when I went to pick it up, the pharmacist voiced concern (flashback to my doctor who almost killed me and my pharmacist was cautious-eventually being the one who saved me). This pharmacist said the one pain prescription the surgeon had prescribed was in the same 'family' as this medication. Mike tried it for a day and after the weird things he experienced, he decided they weren't worth it. It is funny that the pain in the areas where the surgery were done aren't that painful. The pain is still in his heart. He feels like something is grinding in his heart. ALWAYS.

I'm grateful for the help, love, support, prayers, and blessings so many people gave. I know everyone truly wanted the best for us and were hoping to relieve the stress Mike and I were feeling. I KNEW it wasn't a life or death situation by ANY means. I knew in the end everything would be okay. But, I also knew that we needed extra help. He didn't recover like a normal patient and I am very grateful for all the doctors, nurses, and medical knowledge available. I'm just really glad we got out Friday afternoon instead of dragging it out longer and longer. My heart goes out to the many, many people who are suffering so much more in and out of hospitals in more dire circumstances. =( And I truly am grateful for wonderful medical professionals. I am NOT saying that this surgeon was horrible by any means. But, the lack of communication was frustrating. I also just wanted to answer all the questions we'd received in one loooooong blog post. It's simply easier that way since I'm limited in talking.

Thanks for the prayers, texts, fasting, blessings, meals, drives back and forth and back and forth and ... THANK YOU!

*********** UPDATE:

Mike lost 20 pounds in 2 weeks. (11+% of his body weight). He needed rest from the bed to the couch. His fatigue was like mine- Train Wreck Fatigue. Pure exhaustion, ESPECIALLY after he ate. If he ate more than 1/2 cup of food with 2 sips of water, he would vomit. By 4 weeks he had lost almost 15% of his body weight. It has been 8.5 weeks since his surgery and he still can't eat more than 1 cup of food per meal. He can't even eat 1/2 cup of thicker foods like mashed potatoes. He hates eating. But his weight has finally stabilized. His heart also stopped grinding and he doesn't need the beta blockers. =) He has had a cough for more than 4 weeks, though. =(

Surgery Short Version

Short story:

Hubby went in for surgery on a very significant hiatal hernia, as recommended by 3 surgeons. Took 3 hours. Woke up vomiting blood and feeling like his right lung was being ripped open. Surgeon's favorite response after any question (even the one HE asked) or concern was raised: "What did you expect? You just had surgery." EKG done and was abnormal (cardiologist called up and said he was concerned until he saw his previous EKGs). Put on one dose of blood pressure medication (temporary). Were not told EKG was abnormal, but that it was normal. Had an X-ray that showed partially collapsed lung. Were not told it was abnormal in anyway. I suspected both were abnormal, but I was put in my place for even asking about the test results. ZERO communication about what was happening, what the test results were, what to expect, or any answers to any questions. The following day I asked very pointedly what the test results really showed and why did he still have trouble breathing? Or why were other stats still high and he wasn't improving? Finally told, "Well, yes, there was a partially collapsed lung but it's normal after this surgery." By the second day, the surgeon stopped being so mean with his "It's just recovery. What did you expect" response, but still didn't communicate. The cardiologist had decided it had nothing to do with their specialty and handed it back to the surgeon. However, the surgeon couldn't say why things weren't improving. I didn't ask much and figured it was just an extra day of healing. However, something in me said they were missing the last piece of his puzzle. At this point I didn't think Mike was DYING. There were many more severe cases throughout the hospital. HOWEVER, it mattered to us. OBVIOUSLY everything wasn't fine/normal as the surgeon flippantly declared several times OR we would have left as expected days earlier.

Mike continued to struggle breathing, had a higher heart rate, blood pressure, temperature, and chest pain, but not severe enough on their own to raise red flags. Each day we were told we should go home the next day. But he wasn't improving and instead continued getting a little worse and worse. After 2 days we were told we would have to move rooms and HOPEFULLY would leave in 2 more days-Saturday instead of Wednesday. By day 3, I was frustrated with the surgeon's lack of communication, my husband's lack of improvement, and my anxiety started climbing as memories of my own experiences with dismissive doctors creeped in. I had shared updates with others and prayers increased. I shared a bit more information with others via email, although I was running on little sleep, poor health, and interrupted communication with our phones. I know everyone I communicated with cared and wanted the best for us. Mike and I had concern and anxiety, so I reached out for support and extra love. (My love language, and help with peace, is through words of affirmation. Mike was so out of it that I had to turn to many others at that time. I felt like I wasn't being heard in the hospital-which was VERY much my issue with waking up in my own surgery earlier this year).  There were several who recommended just trusting the doctor and stepping back. I believe I could have relaxed if the doctor had communicated from the beginning. On the night of the 3rd day, Mike got an anointed blessing and I stopped trusting the doctor blindly. Instead, I asked MORE questions and asked for MORE monitoring. I shared my own thoughts instead of staying quiet. They learned that his blood pressure was up and down too much and finally put him on bp medication consistently. It was then that cardiologists were asked BACK on his case. He finally had no chest pain regularly, could breathe on his own, and stats went back to normal. He was no longer pale, lethargic, or out of it. There were many who were incredibly supportive! They brought meals, answered questions the surgeon wouldn't take time to do, drove me back and forth so I could take a shower, called or texted love and support, and encouraged me to share my thoughts with the doctors and nurses. (Bless nurses and medical professional friends we can trust!) Mike and I both have had excellent doctors, more specifically surgeons, and nurses. BUT, sometimes you have to speak up and not just silence the voice inside screaming for you to speak up. It is funny how time seems to slow down in hospitals. I knew in the end Mike would be fine. But it is hard to feel like your voice is negated and things aren't being taken seriously. To many others it wasn't a big deal. But, to us it was a big deal. I appreciated those who listened to us, and let me cry some, lean on them, and gave of themselves what we needed and couldn't do on our own.

Now his pain is really just in his heart. He feels like something is grinding in there. You would think it would be the incision sites or where most of the surgery happened. But, it's not. Surgeon and Cardiologist say it's fine. I'm hopeful that he will improve and we have an appointment this week with the family doctor.

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Saturday Song*Spiration *STITCHES*

While I haven't been able to really sing for a year, I still love music. I listen to it almost daily and especially have grown to love music videos. I am particularly drawn to certain ones that better emulate the emotions or experiences of my new life.

I LOVE Shawn Mendes' STITCHES video!! Love, love, love. I try to explain how I feel with Trigeminal Neuralgia, my surgery, and Anesthesia Dolorosa, but I know it all gets jumbled. I'm a visual learner so I like how his video shows the invisible aspect of the torturous assaults to my body.

TRIGEMINAL NEURALGIA (and OCCIPITAL) with the invisible punches. 
ANESTHESIA DOLOROSA with the slamming of his face into a car window. (Except imagine it's happening over and over and over, along with a blow torch, battery acid, knives, sledge hammer, bugs, and an evil dentist with his torture devices. haha)

The part where he is dragged back to the car to have his face smashed in reminds me SO much of being wheeled down the hallway after waking up in surgery. I could hear everything and was completely aware, but I had to work hard to open my eyes and mouth. It was after these movements and moments that the anesthesia dolorosa hit me. Over and over. "Needle and the thread, gotta get you out of my head" makes me think of waking up on the surgical table feeling the needle and burning in my face and skull. I jerked my head and screamed for them to stop. I felt the needle come out and yet felt the sensation as if it was still in. But the lasting effects that stayed with me are the true torture. Gotta get it out of my head in more than just a literal sense of the statement. My husband goes in for surgery in about a week and my PTSD is rearing its ugly head. Thankfully I'm working through it and feel better prepared. (ish)

The message itself may not be specifically relatable to my situation, but the visual is poignant. I also love some of the lines. OH how applicable! {I substituted Trigeminal Neuralgia (TN), Anesthesia Dolorosa (AD), my surgery, hope of relief, and other aspects of my struggles into parts of his lyrics that fit me better}.

"I thought that I've been hurt before {TN, ON, MS, Fibromyalgia, labor for 6 days, gall bladder, cysts on ovaries bursting, arm broken at 10 yrs old with 2 nurses who broke it back into place and then breaking again later that year, concussion, serotonin syndrome, car accident, and emotional pain all pale in comparison to AD}
But {nothing's} ever left me quite this sore
Your {surgery} cut deeper than a knife
Now I need someone to breathe me back to life
Got a feeling that I'm going under {after I woke up they tried to put me under, but I could still talk. After I spoke up and started moving myself from the surgical table to the gurney, they put me under more. I fought to open my eyes and mouth and was able to do so in a short amount of time. They tried another medication but I didn't go under at all}
But I know that I'll make it out alive
If I quit calling you my {hope}
Move on
You watch me {cry} until I can't breathe
I'm shaking falling onto my knees
And now that I'm without your {relief}
I'll be needing stitches {figurative}
I'm tripping over myself
I'm aching begging you to come help
And now that I'm without your {relief}
I'll be needing stitches
Just like a moth drawn to a flame {all my attempts to deal with Trigeminal Neuralgia}
Oh you lured me in I couldn't sense the pain
Your bitter heart cold to the touch {suicidal, working SO hard to stay alive and find happiness}
Now I'm gonna reap what I sew
I'm left seeing red on my own
Got a feeling that I'm going under
But I know that I'll make it out alive
If I quit calling you my {hope}
Move on
Needle and the thread
Gotta get you out of my head
Needle and the thread...
Gonna wind up dead...
Gonna wind up dead
Needle and the thread
Gotta get you out of my head
Get you out of my head
You watch me {cry} until I can't breathe
I'm shaking falling onto my knees 
And now that I'm without your {relief}
I'll be needing stitches {figurative
I'm tripping over myself
I'm aching begging you to come help 

And now that I'm without your {
hope}
I'll be needing stitches {figurative}

At the end, I LOVE how he washes off his scars, blood, and pain and looks up with a healed face. Scars gone. I feel like that will be me at the resurrection. Healed. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbfpW0pbvaU

I may be struggling more these days as my body has built up a tolerance to my medications. But I've decided to document the things I'm feeling and what I've experienced to look back on. I am still doing much better than I was the first 2 months after my surgery.

I view my "stitches" as the gifts, cards, messages, texts, comments here, and love that you all have given me. I have not found hope in the medical world lately. My last several doctors' visits left me with little hope. They don't have much more they can do and simple comments of, "We HOPE it goes away or lessens," and "Sorry I can't do much of anything to help," left me a tad empty. But, thankfully it's not all I've put my hope into. <3 <3 <3




Tuesday, August 29, 2017

I've never smelled a rose

The idiom, "Stop and smell the roses," has always been lost on me.

I was born without a real sense of smell. I used to joke that my Mom had an amazing sniffer and a horrible memory while my Dad had a horrible sense of smell and an amazing memory. I got jipped because I got the bad nose and the bad memory.

I didn't realize how many things smelled until I lived with a roommate who commented on smells she loved. Most people don't talk about their love for so many smells.
Rain smells?
Dirt and grass? Are they good or bad smells?
Skunks and Tuna Fish doNOT smell the same to everyone? (They do to my dad and me. I only know it is a skunk if I'm on the road and tuna fish is in the kitchen. If there was ever a skunk in a kitchen, it would entirely throw me off).

Flowers, however, I knew smelled. I've just never smelled one. Sometimes I ask people to describe smells, but usually it just falls flat. I'm okay with it because I've never known anything different.

Some say it's a blessing and others call it a curse. Some may add it to my list of disabilities. I just call it a lack of whiff-ability. However, apparently there is a legitimate medical term for being born without a real sense of smell. A sickness led me to a fantastic ENT (and office staff) who led me to the real term:

Congenital Anosmia

{Side note: Now that my face has changed, it's harder for me to feel how much my sinus infections have progressed. Recently I could feel a sinus infection coming on and unsuccessfully tried getting in with my family doctor. I didn't want it to progress quickly and follow the same path of Urgent Care doctor--> minimal prescription--> "wait a week"--> admitted to the hospital with a failed lumbar puncture and 4 days of IV steroids/antibiotics, like last time. The increase in pressure is also much harder on me with anesthesia dolorosa. Thankfully, I got in with a wonderful ENT (and amazing nurses/assistants) and got it cleared up quickly. My first visit was a bit of a blur. I had flashbacks from waking up in my surgery because I did a CT scan before I met with the doctor. I cried silently and swiftly wiped away my tears. But I couldn't stop shaking. It was hard to focus on the doctor. He showed me I have a deviated septum and even though he didn't mention surgery at all, my mind immediately went there. Nooooo. I also mentioned that I didn't hear as well out of my right ear after my surgery. I didn't delve into the details, because honestly I just wanted to leave the office (PTSD).

Immediately after my minor brain surgery I felt like an ice pick was being shoved down my ear. I couldn't hear as well and always felt like I needed to pop my ear. When I'd visited the Urgent Care for my cough, the week after surgery, she mentioned that I had a Eustachian tube dysfunction and it should return to normal after my sickness passed. (The next week I had developed pneumonia, UTI, and a sinus infection, which led me to a relaxing, extended stay at the KU hospital. At the time I only knew I had a cough and couldn't tell the other infections spread. I get sinus infections several times every year, but all I knew after the surgery was that I coughed and passed out a few times. Oh, and I was slowly being tortured to death. But the regular ol' sinus infection wasn't anywhere near my radar).

My sickness passed, but the need to pop my ear lasted for about 6 months. (It popped for a minute or two on the airplane in March, but didn't last). In that amount of time my hearing has come back, but not fully. I worry with MS exacerbations that new issues become permanent disabilities. I always have buzzing/ringing in my ears (19 years) and when my MS gets worse, my hearing can come and go or the ringing increases significantly in either ear. However, since my surgery it is primarily in my right ear.

Thankfully my incredible ENT scheduled a hearing test and a follow up. Even though I struggled a bit, it was nothing compared to the first visit. I met some awesome workers and found that my left ear is EXCEPTIONAL and my right ear is VERY GOOD. Both are in great range, but my right is slightly less perceptive. My right ear used to be my better ear, but because of my MS and worse neuralgia on that side, it is the one that reacts worse. My pains have simply increased and it's just a small part of it all. Nevertheless, I found out my deviated septum is not significant, it isn't related to my lack of smell, and there's a name for my sad lil sniffer.}

Are side notes allowed to be that LOOOONG?


Lately I've been a bit obsessed with BUTTERFLIES. I've joked that I'm in my cocoon phase. I started as more of a caterpillar. Too many rolls and at first glance it looks like I have a few too many legs (with my walker). And then my failed little surgery put me in a dark place with a whole lot of transformation. I haven't escaped yet or risen in the least. But, I like the idea that I can morph into something beautiful. Eventually.

I can't smell the roses and I've been forced to STOP more times than I'd like to count. But at least I can look for the roses and find the incredible creatures God had created as a reminder that darkness lifts, beauty prevails, and we will eventually rise.



Happiness is a butterfly, which when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.      
Nathaniel Hawthorne

Adding wings to caterpillars does not create butterflies, it creates awkward and dysfunctional caterpillars. Butterflies are created through transformation. 

The butterfly counts not months but moments, and has time enough.
What the caterpillar calls the end of the world the master calls a butterfly.

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Sometimes the WRONG one is the RIGHT one to lead you to the BEST one

I was an "older" single in Utah and remember one fireside in particular. My friends and I came earlier so we could have good seats. Later, an older lady sat next to me and right before it started, an usher came to say, "Can you move? There isn't enough room for this woman's husband." I was just a single, so moving me was easier than an older lady WITH someone. She needed the softer seat, so I moved, but I did it begrudgingly. I sat by myself and felt alone.

John Bytheway and his wife were speaking at the fireside (meeting). He had been single well past his peers and some people were critical. He was doing the best he could to progress, with one aspect of progression being building a family. But, he hadn't found his eternal companion yet. He had prayed along the way and sometimes dated girls where it didn't work out. He was so confused because he had felt good about the different relationships at the time.

Then he said, "Sometimes the WRONG one is the RIGHT one to lead you to the BEST one."

{This is NOT to say that disobeying a commandment or doing wrong will lead us to good. "Wickedness never was happiness." Some people will date someone who isn't good for them or we simply make wrong choices that go against God's counsel. Later we are surprised to realize the depth of consequences from our negative choices. We've all done it, learn from it, and move forward if we look above for assistance, input, and if necessary, repentance & forgiveness.}

This statement by John Bytheway has run through my head too much the past year. We did NOT even make $20,000 last year. Before starting school, jobs were not working out (except for a few that would mean not doing school or one that required Mike being gone from 7:30 a.m. to midnight every day/night. He had to quit because of my health issues, though). We felt strongly that Mike should do the intensive school program. There were a few times we questioned our inspirations and the ability for us to survive for a whole year. Since it was a technical college, they had limited funds and other establishments wouldn't loan anything additional. It left us with only $770/mo from August to May. I'm really good with money, but no magician. In time we felt strongly that somehow it would work out.  It took another huge leap of faith, especially because the previous two years resulted in frighteningly bad finances and struggles. In 2015, there were several months were we didn't make any money and even one job where Mike got less than $4/hr. On top of the lack of funds, we had 4 robberies, 2 ER visits, a "Peeping Tom," frightening & confusing health problems for both of us, often two house payments, and no help from several people/places that usually help others in need. There were months where we brought in nothing: $0/mo income, no food stamps, no unemployment, no bishop's storehouse, no health insurance, or anything else despite our applications and requests as there were many delays. {Thankfully there were some friends and family who were inspired and we were blessed step by step.} So, obviously this move forward into school without a job scared us that it would be another 2 steps shoved backwards just like the years before had turned out to be.

At this point in my life I should be confident in the inspirations I've received and know that doubt often follows powerful promptings. I knew I'd been inspired down to small details throughout my life and even knew when things would be hard. However, they were always much, much harder than I ever expected. For example, when we were looking at homes to buy, with our excellent credit score, savings, and job, we qualified for a home twice the amount of the one we chose. I felt that we should choose a much cheaper, older, smaller home than the ones we'd been exploring. I was inspired to know that the home would be okay for us, but that I'd hate it the second year of ownership. I imagined a few thousand dollars being sunk by bad plumbing or electrical issues. If ONLY it were a few thousand dollars! It was so much worse than I imagined. But, in the end, it was okay. Another time, I remember crying and crying when the railroad called back four months after furlough. I explained my fears and feelings that by the time we returned to Kansas, we would have given up a good job and would be furloughed again before working one single day. The night we pulled into our driveway, back at our rental, we learned that he had in fact been furloughed right before his shift. The first furlough with the railroad put hundreds out of a job. This time they furloughed thousands across the nation. Sadly, the job we left in Idaho was no longer available, either.

Joining the railroad felt so right, and yet it was the worst financial decision we had ever made. WHY did we feel so good about it when it went so horribly wrong?

It took me a while before I found the positive blessings hidden behind wretched fears and struggles.

We learned a great deal of compassion and understanding for others struggling. There are so many in the world who were in a much more tragic and dire situation than us. We were not starving, living on the streets, or in a war-torn country, absolutely alone, or entirely hopeless. There were others we knew needed more help than our little family in the middle of the USA.

Each time I thought we'd maxed out our blessings and credit cards, I was surprised to find we had just enough intervention to carry on.

We learned what matters most and if we lost every physical thing, we would be a-okay.

I had help weekly with my worsening health and my husband's intense schedule.

We learned God is aware of us and others are incredibly inspired. I learned I was loved and not forgotten.

We learned to acknowledge our weaknesses, ask for help, and to fully accept service. {SO much easier to give than receive, honestly}.

My husband and I are quite nonjudgemental, but I learned that we still had some judgements and assumptions that were narrow minded with regard to employment, resources, and a few extra limitations.

The most dramatic twist of fate in our path of survival was our journey of jobs. In 2014, my husband's company's health coverage was significantly worse than previous years. As my health worsened, so did our finances. My husband always wanted to have rentals and drive trains. He got both dreams and so much more...or less. =) A 'bad' job (poor coverage and not enough pay or opportunities to move up) led to the WORST job (Union Pacific) that was the RIGHT job to lead us to the BEST job and path of education. The struggles led to re-evaluation of our occupational path and taught my hubby that he can be successful in intensive training and testing. Before the railroad, we'd talked about education and possible opportunities. Dead-end jobs pushed us to so many more opportunities and open doors.

Before my husband completed his 48 credit hours (in TWO semesters with all A's and one B), he had multiple job offers. He decided on one job of the three offered. THIRTY minutes after he decided which job to take, the Union Pacific called to take him off furlough! Years after furlough, the timing was impeccable. We moved forward with the job that had good pay and the easiest opportunity to continue education. In one year we had gone through the darkest tunnel of our lives and came out the other side to the light. We saw the beautifully orchestrated outcome of hard work, sacrifice, inspiration, and especially intervention.

Stumbling through the dark tunnel as you chase the elusive light at the end is usually when change happens. Sporadic glimmers of light give a dull glow that keeps you moving forward, but sometimes feeling your way through the rough path makes you think that you are alone. It isn't until the end, that you see you weren't alone. None of us are alone. The darkness can be suffocating and even painful in every way possible. But thank HEAVENS for the LIGHT of the WORLD!

I am so grateful for those who lent their lights to me, those who lifted me when I'd fallen, and helped make the past year of education and now the BEST job we've ever had become a reality. When you're in the middle of trials it seems as though it will never end. But, thankfully as long as we continually turn to God, He can make the seemingly impossible, POSSIBLE.

Bless you all for being my BEST supporters. <3 <3 <3