Horticulture

Let’s talk about
establishing healthy values
in yourself and others.

As for yourself
always be a work in progress
know your limits and strengths

There is a seed
inside all of us that will grow
if cared for and watered

There are weeds too
that will choke those seeds to nothing
if not ripped from the soil.

Growth is violent change
raging against the garden
within to find greatness

As for others
gardening is hard, dirty work
find the seed – inspire fruit.

Drowning In Confusion

Drowning in confusion. That was the state of my existence for approximately two months, maybe longer.

I was not given information about what Crohn’s was, or how it would impact me, aside from it being “an inflammatory bowel disease characterized by inflammation throughout your digestive tract”. In an attempt to inform myself, I tread upon thin ice, fell through, and found myself drowning.

I read about everything that could go wrong.

I took existing statistics and mashed them together to create new, more terrifying, super-statistics.

I was afraid of doing things that the month prior I was doing with great joy. I had anxiety before this year, but because of the self administered drip-feed of medical propaganda, I was on the verge of agoraphobia. I was away from work for almost two months and had tremors at the thought of returning. 

My husband struggled, I’m sure- actually, hear it from him yourself.

Brendon, how was that experience for you?

There are a lot of layers to that struggle. First and foremost, I love my wife very much and was heartbroken to find out that something like this could affect her so severely, forever. I understood that there were ways to manage it so it wasn’t debilitating but even ‘managing’ it is more than what I would want for her. But there is more than that. We are not just individuals anymore, we are a couple, a family. I was upset for Austin the person, for all the reasons above. 

But I was upset for Austin the wife too for entirely different reasons. Austin, my wife, was scared to do the things we enjoyed doing together. Biking, exercising, running, etc. But I myself, (Brendon the husband man) still wanted to do those things. These opposing situations created friction that was difficult for us to deal with. In doing them I felt guilty because I knew the impact it had on my wife. In not doing them it made Austin feel guilty that her medical issues were limiting my enjoyment in life. Both of us developed an underlying resentment on top of the other stressors inherent in the issue. That resentment also developed a sense of guilt, and it was all cyclical and felt rather hopeless.

On top of that there was Austin, the family person, who’s same fear impacted the relationship she had with our children and the things she was willing to do with them. The emotional toll all of this was having translated to bad moods, poor communication and isolation behavior which is never well received by kids. Watching that as the other half of the monarchy that rules over our family was difficult and disheartening as well.

Financial impacts were hard on both of us too, but how can you value income over one’s health? You can’t without feeling like a monster. Yet at the same time very real threats to our livelihood rose out of the ashes of the old Austin the diagnosis had tried to lay to waste. As a caring husband you can’t really say anything, but you can’t hide the calls you have to make on a weekly basis to your mother for help, or trying to apply for other jobs to either supplement the income or replace the income you already have with something better. That too developed into some very guilt heavy resentment over those months.

Eventually you just have to tackle that fear though. You have to identify the value of what you’re doing to protect yourself from any and all risk against the value of living your life in a way you love. That’s how we broke the cycle without breaking each other. Because we realized that we were worth taking some risks, and we always had each other to see us through to the otherside. 

Thank you Brendon, I appreciate you sharing what that experience was like for you. I am incredibly grateful that I have you in my life and that you were there for me when I needed help resurfacing.

It wasn’t easy. We fought a lot. At the time, I believed that I had every right to live in fear, and I felt like he was telling me that I didn’t. I applied every grim statistic to myself because I had every right to, but the point that I kept missing was that I didn’t have any reason to. He was always trying to help me understand that distinction, and eventually I did.

Stress is a very large contributor to “flare-ups” , a sudden showing of more severe symptoms, in Crohn’s patients. In “educating” myself, I was causing myself so much unneeded stress that was actually perpetuating my symptoms and increasing the possibilities of certain frightening circumstances, such as cancer, becoming a reality in the future. I was making myself sick! In choosing to be afraid, I was choosing to abandon my family, and live a very sad, and most likely short, life. 

So I started thinking more positively, letting go of the things that I had no control over, and prioritizing the things that I love. I can’t control whether I get cancer in the future, but I can control how often I get to feel the satisfaction of kicking my husband’s ass at a bike race.

I’m still working on myself, and staying positive and productive is a constant battle, but I believe that it is worth it.

If you find that you have a diagnosis, are confused, and you are wanting to know more about it, I would recommend that you find resources that can help guide you and support you rather than attempting to go at it alone. At the very least, have a support system of friends and family on standby to help give you a more positive perspective on things.

Living With a Chronic Illness

Living with a chronic illness is something that I am new to. I was diagnosed at the start of this year. Here’s how that happened. Forewarning, I discuss bodily functions in this post. Don’t read it, if that kind of thing makes you squeamish.

About two weeks prior to my diagnosis I was bloated, gassy, and constipated which I had taken milk of magnesia to try and relieve. Constipation was not new to me.

One day at work I felt abdominal cramping and when I went to the bathroom I found a substantial amount of bright red blood in my stool. 

I was freaking out because my Dad has colon cancer. Because of that my mind immediately defaulted to “It must be cancer!”

I broke down crying while on the toilet at work. I called my husband to let him know what happened and he calmed me down, and helped me remember that we wouldn’t know what’s wrong until I saw a doctor; he then recommended that I speak to my manager. I had a full-blown panic attack in my manager’s office and then went home.

I went to a clinic where, for the first time in my adult life, someone looked at my butthole. The doctor checked to see if I had a hemorrhoid that may have ruptured, but I didn’t, so she referred me to a gastroenterologist. I went to a gastroenterologist the next day and was scheduled for a colonoscopy the day after. 

The bowel preparation for the colonoscopy was one of the worst things that I have ever experienced. 

After the colonoscopy I was informed that I more than likely had Crohn’s Colitis but they would have to wait for the results of the biopsy that they took to come back to know for sure. The biopsies came back within the next 48 hours and I was officially diagnosed with Crohn’s Colitis and prescribed an anti-inflammatory medication that I would potentially have to be on for the rest of my life, this is when I got to experience medicated enemas for the first time, 30 days worth.

As a woman in her twenties, already struggling to be confident in her own skin; having diarrhea, mucus, and blood coming out of my ass multiple times a day, wasn’t exactly a confidence-booster. 

My self-esteem took a huge blow. 

My relationship suffered. 

My outlook on life was bleak.

I was drowning.

Dialogue

We talk to ourselves with fists
a pugilist of reason
faced against years of abuse
the ebb and flow of emotional seasons

Only reason knows when to quit
but abuse will never stop
unloading blow after blow
to make sure no one else lives on top

Anything for that title
we have absently supplied
trading any confidence
for whatever drama we’ve cooked up inside.

With your value undefined
transactional praise given
where else could you we ever turn?
Unconceited, to the fights we are driven.

We can but hope that we win,
our critical self will fall
our ego rise the victor
but victory grants an albatross for us all

Our ego must be tempered
our abuse must die in shame,
either way our value breaks,
time and again it works exactly the same.

Without honesty we lose
the audience inside us
is only there for the show
ring the bell, choose yourself – the rest are treasonous.