Not Really That Well. Thankyou For Asking..
This is the face of not-a-happy-blogger. You know how we all tell ourselves little stories about the person that we are? Well, my story includes me as a healthy person. I am the person who never gets sick, has no diseases or allergies, and can tick all the NO boxes on health forms without even reading them. I eat well. I, erm, occasionally go for a walk. All my family seem to live until they are ninety. So when I got sick eight weeks ago, and didn't get better I was perplexed, annoyed, and then finally outraged.
I have a lovely doctor. I go to visit her every couple of years for girlie checkups, we chat about art, and renovating and then she tells me that I am still perfectly healthy, and I smile smugly.
I have visited her more times in the last eight weeks than in the last decade. Continuous flu type symptoms, nana naps, and with a side order of raging candida albicans, thankyou very much. I am not someone who has ever embraced the taking antibiotics or any other prescribed drugs for me or the children without a prolonged discussion with my doctor about what other avenues we could pursue first. But over the last eight weeks I've been saying, ooh, yes please, to everything offered, and asking if there is anything stronger?
Nothing made a difference, drugs or diet, and in the end my Very Nice Doctor sent me off to have blood tests for an enormous long list of every disease or condition she could think of. And rang me that same afternoon to tell me I was severely anaemic and needed to book in for a iron infusion immediately because I had almost no iron stored or in my blood, and gosh, how is it that you are you still standing up? So yesterday I spent three hours sitting on a recliner chair at the hospital, having an intravenous infusion of a year's worth of iron. The Man was hoping that magnets would then stick to me, but sadly, no.
So that should stop me feeling like I am dying every time I climb the stairs or a slight incline, stop the nana naps, and kick my immune system into gear so I don't feel like a dying swan anymore. But now the tests begin, to find out why I have no iron. It's not diet - The Man has perfect iron levels, and we eat the same things. So either I am losing blood internally somewhere (oh my goodness, the scary list of diseases and conditions that can cause that), or not absorbing iron due to intestinal damage (also a horror list). The blood tests showed it wasn't coeliacs, which is often diagnosed from low iron levels, because the damage it causes to your intestines stops iron absorption. So that result is good and bad, because Let Them Eat Cake is one of the Ten Commandments, right? And I have just worked out how to make perfect bread, so that would have been a bummer. But on the other hand, I could just have taken a gluten-free baking course, and never had to go back to a doctor again. Which would have been brilliant. Because it turns out that the next round of tests involves words that end with 'oscopy' and 'scope'. Bleuggh.
So here I am, former healthy person, doing rounds of tests that only sick people need. Bugger. Worse, I get to imagine all the terrible things that could be wrong with me until my tests at the end of the month. I am thinking that it will be stress induced stomach ulcers in addition to whatever the underlying cause is.
And one more thing. As I sat in the Transfusion Unit in the hospital yesterday, surrounded by other people who were very ill indeed, having drugs pumped into them to keep them alive, I made a resolution. Whatever is wrong with me, it is unlikely to kill me (despite those 3am wakeful worry sessions), and I want to get healthy again and stay healthy, and I will be working much harder in the future to be fit, to be well nourished, to keep my family healthy, so none of us have to end up in one of those blue chairs.
Comments
As a very healthy hypochondriac, can I say Dr Google is very useful for finding all manner of illness.
I too suffered very low iron levels. Not as low as you. I was only threatened with infusions, if I didn't take iron tablets orally. I had tests, including for losing blood intestinally. (Oh no, bowel cancer.) Nope, just a very heavy bloody mess once a month. Too much info I know, but I am of peasant stock and might be half cow.
Good luck.
(Oh, and your photos is beautiful. Correction, you are beautiful.)
My mother shares all manner of ills. Won't share my response just yet, trying to be a sympathetic person and all.
See? I am nodding sympathetically and with empathetic concern. (Well, trying to, me being Captain Compassion.)
And, no, not TMI, all possibilities gratefully considered, but that was the doctor's second question after diet. I am very thankful to say that every reproductive function has always performed to text book clock-work regularity and restraint. Clearly, reading the family medical book as a child had an effect. Even my labours all went for the regulation eight hours. The power of the written word!
And that is partly why I rage of course - the first sign that I am not young and invulnerable any more - a mystery illness. I really hate surprises.
Definitely will join you on that journey to the gorgeous life. I keep meaning to do those exercises you posted....
I'm grateful that you have had such a healthy life and it means that your body is in good shape to cope with this blip. These things are sent to test us, and you will see how much your family love you and pull together for you. Try to forget all the things that you think you should be doing and give yourself some space to relax and recover. I hate being ill and find it really hard to give in to it, so I really sympathise with you. Hope you get some good results soon.
Judy
And Judy, such a kind offer! I know I have good, kind friends here on this blog who would be round with chicken soup in a flash if you could, and I'd be there for all of you too - but the thought really does count, doesn't it? I take a lot heart knowing that.
And I'll tell you a secret - I haven't cooked for days because I have a kind husband and clever children who can all find their way around a kitchen and cook a decent dinner...
Best wishes
Jen in NSW
Sarah, thanks for the spinach, can feel it doing me good already, and Jen, I have the same hair colour now that I did when I was three. Isn't that a MIRACLE!
Thanks, as always ladies, for loving thoughts and concern. I feel well virtually cared for :)
Good on you having the same hair colour. I am getting grey hairs and I swing between embracing them and pulling out the ones on my temples that are too "in my face". Aah, vanity!
Some claim it is science. I subscribe to the miracle explanation. It must be because I have less sun and less salt water exposure than when I was a teenager, but I am blonder. (Also a hundred dollars lighter every 5 weeks or so' but shhh!)
And I only just learnt the difference between blond and blonde. Apropos of nothing. Isn't it amazing you can still learn new grammar and spelling rules and new words all through life?
onto more serious things ... mystery illnesses suck. i hope you gett o the cause of this (i was going to say "bottom of this" but we don't want to think of things endign with "oscopy"...). i think you are brave to share this with us here, but then it is wonderful to find the support and wisdom of far-flung people.
i hope you find good health without too much trauma and topsy-turvy changes to your lovely lifestyle.
No googling symptoms, young lady! I have made myself crazy doing just that. My SIL, the former vegetarian, became severely anemic, which is why now she sometimes eats meat. No major diseases, no life-threatening illnesses, she just need more iron. Please don't torture yourself!
I will send out white light and heat into the universe for you (i.e. pray). I hope this gets cleared up shortly. In the meantime, take care of yourself, nap, and try not to worry too much if at all possible.
xofrances
Thanks for kind thoughts, e, and Frances, I promise to stay off Dr Google... for now. I love your definition of praying, it's just wonderful. And, thankyou :)
I really didn't notice it until about 60, and I'm just glad I don't have young children to run after these days. May God strengthen and heal you real quick!
We have an adequate public health system in Oz, but slightly older friends advised us to take out private health cover before we turned 35, which according to them is when everything starts falling apart. They were so right!
I too, am very glad not to have to run around after tiny children - but hoping to have a bit of spark left in me to run around after grand children one day..
My seond thought was Nettle infusions. Check out my friend over at theecomum.com who swears by nettle. It's one of those mega vitamin dose herbs that despite being a nasty little plant with a nasty big sting, packs about 100 times more goodness than it does nastiness. You can buy it in bulk from places like herbcottage.com.au and there's another bulk dried herb seller. Then you just soak the stuff in boiling water to make a tea or an infusion (length of soaking time changes). It won't cure your ills but I can nearly guarantee it will help you feel better. It contains iron amongst many other goodies. I add chamomile for calmness, oat straw for more general health improvment qualities and red clover which helps me with my depression. It also still has necter in it I discovered and sweetens the tea considerably.
Good luck with your doctors and tests and I hope they find something that can be fixed with a simple change or a single pill.
Thinking of you.
I must say that since the iron infusion last week I am beginning to feel marvellous... iron is a wonderful thing!
Good luck with a diagnosis. I'm sure you've heard it all before but just in case, golden rule for any anemia - no tea around meals. The tannin blocks iron from being absorbed. Conversely Oranges/vitamin C help absorption. Whoop to orange juice. I'm guessing your GP has ruled out Vitamin B12 deficiency or pernicious anemia? That blocks absorption from the diet
So sorry if you've heard that all before you've obviously had heaps of advice with no success. Fingers crossed for your 'oscopy's etc.
Thinking of you
I did know that about tea, but I often ignore it. Will be more vigilant in the future. Thanks for the reminder! GP thinks it's probably something systemic, as difficult to get iron levels this low with a reasonable diet like I have. Even with tea. But every little bit helps, so I will try to be good. Sigh. Love tea with breakfast. What if I don't eat iron for breakfast?
Can't believe your poor sister can't get treated for iron deficiency. I feel SO much better for it, it seems unbelievable that I was still standing beforehand...