In the PH community, I often hear people being asked what
their life was like before diagnosis. I've been asked this myself many
times over the years. The thing is, my life before I was diagnosed with
PH was the same as my life is now. I don't know what it's like to breath
normally. I don't have a clue what going from an active lifestyle to a
PH lifestyle is all about. That is because PH has been my entire life.
It's all I've known. I actually thought, as a kid, that it was normal to
take hours to recover from running around with your siblings and
friends. I thought everyone took naps when they were exhausted! And
although everyone around me, family included, always told me I looked
purple, to me that was just my thing!
I was
diagnosed when I was 9 months old, but technically, I should have been
diagnosed months earlier. My mom brought me to a free clinic to get my
first set of immunization shots, and a doctor there thought something
was up with my heart. My mom took me to the pediatrician, who didn't
think anything was wrong. So at the same free clinic for my 2nd set of
shots, the same doctor who saw me the first time told my mom that
something was seriously wrong with me, because I looked blue. My parents
ended up taking me to a children's hospital, and after many tests, they
discovered I had a pretty bad congenital heart defect and pulmonary
arterial hypertention. At that time (1975), the doctors couldn't do
anything. It was too late for surgery to correct the holes in my heart,
and there wasn't anything to treat PAH. My parents were told I might not
make it to my first birthday, or I may possibly live til I'm 50. They
weren't given much hope! But here I am, 39 years later, and I'm still
living to share my story!
First Airplane Trip |
A few years later after my PAH
symptoms continued to get worse, I ended up going to the Cleveland
Clinic in Ohio. I was referred by my doctor to go for a transplant
evaluation. At the time, the shortness of breath started happening more
frequently (just getting dressed in the morning was becoming a 30 minute
event), and an elephant had permanently moved in on top of my chest.
That was one symptom I didn't have growing up, and it was not a symptom I
particularly enjoyed! Being sent to Cleveland was very scary.
Transplant was even scarier!! But my first visit, I was sent back home
after so many tests with instructions to start taking Coumadin, a blood
thinner, and to wear oxygen all the time. After several more visits to
Cleveland in the following months, I was put on Tracleer. I had no idea
what it was, or exactly what it would do. All I knew was that I surely
hoped it would help my elephant to move on, and that I would start
feeling better!!
My first shipment of Tracleer
brought me not only the first medicine I'd ever try for PAH, but it also
brought me into the world of the pulmonary hypertension community. I
grew up knowing I had PH, but it was something that was never focused
on. My heart condition was the central star all those years. Once I
found the Pulmonary Hypertension Association website, my knowledge of PH
started to expand. But what really hit me?? THERE WERE OTHERS LIKE
ME!!!! I seriously spent a week reading the message boards and crying,
because there were people I could relate to and totally understand!! It
was like finding a miracle!
Tracleer got that
stupid elephant to move out several months after being on it, and I also
didn't feel as short of breath doing certain things like I was always
used to feeling. It was a pretty awesome feeling for a few years, until I
felt like I needed to add another medication to the mix. Revatio was
added, and the combination of the two is what I am still on today.
Pulmonary rehabilitation was something I found out about from phriends
(friends who have PH), and after inquiring about it, I started going
twice a week at one of my local hospitals. It's been a little over six
years since I've started pulmonary rehab, and I truly believe it's a
part of what's been keeping my PAH stable in the last several years.
Kinda hard to believe I went from no gym or sports as a kid/teen to
working out a couple times a week at least! No, I am not running
marathons or doing heavy weightlifting, but that is ok! Exercising at
any capacity is beneficial, even if I can only do it a little at a time!
So
after my PAH seemed to be stable for awhile, the next part of the
equation was....what am I going to do with my life?? I couldn't teach. I
knew I'd never go back to that. But I didn't know what else to do. Some
days I had more energy than others. I'd have one day where I wish I
could be at a job, to several days when I was thanking my lucky stars
that I didn't have one. Then one day I got a call that started the ball
rolling for me towards a direction I never thought about. I was asked if
I'd consider starting a support group for PH patients in my area. At
first, I was pretty terrified. I could handle being around kids, but to
lead a group for adults??? I guess you could say that my shy background
made the whole prospect a bit daunting for me! I really had to think
about it. So, that's what I did. I spent a couple weeks thinking and
praying and talking to my loved ones about the idea. I finally decided
to go ahead! Yes, I was incredibly nervous about it, but I felt it was
something I just HAD to do. How many years did I live with this disease
by myself?? I just knew I had to at least give others the chance to not
feel so alone after their diagnosis!
In the 10
years since starting a support group in the Niagara Falls/Buffalo, NY
area, I have really become involved with helping PH patients. I've had
so many meetings, a large variety of topics and speakers, and phriends I
care about very much. I have also become a big part of the online
community for PHers, by being a PHA mentor, a chat leader, a blogger,
and just a presence on Facebook. I had always wanted to teach in a
classroom, but it took me awhile to realize that a "classroom" didn't
have to be a place with 4 walls. It could be anywhere! I have even
educated complete strangers during shopping trips about PH! And, in the
10 years since starting my support group, I have also learned to not be
so shy with people. Sure, I can keep quiet sometimes, but more often
than not, I put myself out there and let others know about this awful
illness. Awareness is the key to so many answers, and I never know when
one day I will talk to someone and they tell me they have PH, too!
My
life with PAH is something I cannot change, and honestly, I think it
has helped shape me to be the person I am today. Do I have days when I
am angry about having it? Of course! I allow myself to have those angry
days, or days of self-pity, but not for long. What good does that do me?
I have learned to deal with this disease, and to cope the best I know
how, and I have learned to help others going through the same thing. I
have also not let PAH BE my entire life. I enjoy things like reading,
painting glass, making jewelry, spending time with family and friends.
In the last few years I have allowed myself to take on challenges I
never thought I could do, because I always had that "cannnot" attitude
with me. So I've gone on hikes, I've been on a jet ski, I took my first
ever trip on an airplane! There are so many more things I've let myself
try, even if I may not be able to do them again. I try my best not to
let PAH take over my life, because if I did, I can't honestly say that
I'd be living to the best of my ability!
No comments:
Post a Comment