Something To Hold Onto

I guess I want to tell you it’s getting better in some way. Maybe there are more superficial ways that will become more manifest in time. The physical therapist who had a plausible explanation for why I have failed over a year of pelvic floor physical therapy and thinks she can help. The fleeting, sputtering moment of clarity where I told my parents that I was relying on the executive functions of a mentally and physically ill 24-year-old with long-standing ADD tendencies to manage the care of a complex patient – the aforementioned 24-year-old – and we regrouped and got some help with care coordination. The unknowable time at which the anhedonia lessened and I could truly enjoy a few things again, for who knows how much more time. The support of parents who allow me to breathe a bit and stop being a full-time advocate who cannot advocate.

But I feel I do myself and others a disservice by romanticizing. For months I’ve been wandering a weird mix of trauma, hypersensitivity, depression, aggression, and brain fog, such that I often cannot even remember enough to describe how my day went but know in some vague sense that it was bad. I weather weird assumptions about my quality of life based on physical symptoms or labels, wanting to scream that I would cut off all my limbs if it meant I get my brain back. I have learned what it means to spend hours of a morning wracking ones brain for how to do a morning routine, then 10 minutes of that morning trying to attend to a 101-level lecture online, then the rest starting to go to the gym but being so agitated I have to get out. I have learned that maybe it’s ok that this is the first time I’ve felt able – as in, focus-wise, genuinely capable – to write a blog post since the last one. I have learned that even the fogginess isn’t so bad when your mind and body remember how to be calm. It seems not so long ago that mine truly did.

I have wielded diagnoses as a Something To Hold Onto, validation from a mystical board. Of course I don’t feel well, I inform you. I have celiac disease, Crohn’s disease, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, lichen sclerosus, secondary adrenal insufficiency, and mast cell activation disorder. All of these are real; laboratory tested. Yet it’s an armor against how none of this explains what is going on; why I sometimes find even good and pleasurable thoughts torturous, like fingers raking into lava veins of nerves; why I feel worse and worse mentally despite no major demands on me, some improvements in physical conditions, and few other life stressors; why I scream threats at loved ones and then minutes later am relaxed and joking; why I haven’t truly slept through the night since December; why even gentle medications or supplements often lead to agitation and dysphoria. I haven’t had a single break from reality through all of this, always excruciating awareness that I sometimes wish I had some escape from. I don’t want to see myself behaving as I do. I don’t want to see others wanting to reach out and to not have the heart to tell them that lately, company often makes things substantially, critically worse. Harder. On. Me. Not. On. Your. Ego. Insistence on what I know I need, attunement to a soma trying perversely to protect me, becomes paramount.

I both hope I remember and forget this time at some point. At times I’ve looked back at my early days of illness through Facebook memories and feel generally what I should; compassion for the person involved but great relief and wonder that I am not her anymore. How odd that now I would gladly trade my current situation for hers.