Just an average pre-dawn trip to the ER |
However, I believe that my story is worth telling. I have developed a way of living with my
disease (and that’s with my disease,
not in spite of my disease) that
allows me to have a completely satisfying, present-moment oriented life without
regret, remorse, or wishing things were different.
I was surprised diagnosed with PH January 8th
2014. After about six months of
increasing difficulty breathing, I finally went in to see a pulmonologist when
I could no longer walk the six blocks to my regular bus stop without having to
stop multiple times to steady my breathing.
Because my symptoms were so severe at my first appointment, I was
quickly scheduled for a series of escalating tests culminating in a lung
biopsy. The lung biopsy confirmed the
PH, as well as a secondary lung disease thought to be completely independent
from my PH. I woke up from the surgery
on oxygen and have been on oxygen 24/7 ever since then. My first right heart cath confirmed what my
echo had estimated, that my pressures were in the 100’s and that my heart was significantly
enlarged from all of the extra effort it has to exert. I was promptly started on Sildenafil and
daily diuretics, and when that didn’t work they increased my diuretics and
added Letaris, and when that didn’t work they increased my diuretics and added
inhaled Tyvaso, and when that didn’t work they increased my diuretics and
switched me from Tyvaso to Sub Q Remodulin, and when that landed me in a three
week ICU stay in which I was given a 0% chance of surviving, they increased my
diuretics and switched me from Sub Q Remodulin to IV Veletri
(epoprostinil). Since being switched to
IV Veletri this past January, I have survived one serious line infection, a
blood clot, multiple septic emboli in my lungs, and a six hour hemorrhaging
episode after my new line was placed. I
have spent a total of 35 days in the ICU, my walking radius has decreased to
within the confines of my studio apartment, and I am currently on 10-15 liters
per minute of supplemental oxygen.
I am also having the highest quality of life that I have ever experienced.
Many years before my
diagnosis I began learning about and practicing Buddhist mindfulness. Since I had been raised Jewish this was not
much of a stretch. There are countless
numbers of us “Jew-Bu’s” walking around!
In a journal entry from 2009 I wrote to myself “When I look in the
mirror I can either believe ‘my hair is brown,’ or I can believe ‘I’m having a
thought that my hair is brown’.” Both
thoughts are true, but how will thinking one versus the other impact me in my
daily life? Let’s say that my mind
automatically goes to the thought “my hair is brown.” What if I don’t want to
have brown hair? What if I prefer
red? In fact, my grandmother had red
hair. Why should I have been born with
brown hair? It’s not fair! I should be able to change my hair color,
maybe I should get some dye. Of course,
my hair being so dark I would have to bleach it first. Again, not fair! Other people don’t have to do that so why
should I?
As you can see, suddenly from the thought “I have brown
hair,” I have created a story about the value of having brown hair, and then I
began emotionally reacting to my story .
The negative feelings I experienced were not actually caused by having
brown hair, but because of the meaning I had invented and then assigned to
it. Suddenly, I am lost in
suffering. However, when instead I have
the thought “I’m having a thought that I have brown hair,” I can instead notice
the natural human instinct to want to categorize and label, and I can lovingly
allow those thoughts to disperse naturally, like leaves being carried away in a
river current. In fact, because I am not
caught in a self-perpetuated story that things should be different, I am free to enjoy what actually is. For example, the naturally occurring
red highlights that do appear in my hair when the sunlight hits it just right.
My wife and I at our wedding reception |
I have long subscribed to the alterna-healing world, and I
have continued to use many complimentary forms of healing alongside my traditional
allopathic PH care. Among my regular
tool kit I have used the anti-inflammation diet, a brief foray into juicing
medical grade marijuana (legal in my state), hand making medicinal bone broths
and eating traditional organ meats, learning to both give and receive Reiki,
five element acupuncture, chiropractic care, yoga nidra, prayer, meditation,
guided imagery, and specialized breathing exercises. I believe in the alterna-care world very
much, but here is another place where I have to be very careful not to create
story (and therefore suffering). I
receive acupuncture, for example, because I like the relationship with my body
that it helps to foster and I have also noticed that many times it can alter my
experience of my symptoms. However, if I
start to become attached to the thought that acupuncture should cure me, I block myself off from the healing that is available to me, and is happening on a daily basis.
I mentioned earlier that I am currently having the highest
quality of life I have ever experienced.
And I mean it, literally. This
last January, as I lay in my ICU bed in heart failure and unable to move, talk
coherently, or care for any of my basic needs independently, the people that I
had known and loved throughout my life dropped everything to take up residency
in my hospital room. Friends and family,
and sometimes even near strangers, literally put their lives on hold to make
sure that I was never alone. My best-friend-since-the-sixth-grade even
private chartered a plane with her husband to come out to visit me. For three weeks, people sang me songs,
massaged my aching body, slept in the hospital bed with me, and told me over
and over again what it had meant to them to have me in their lives. We said our goodbye’s, but with so little
time left and the perception of nothing to lose, we metaphorically stripped
down bare and truly got to show our souls to each other. The joy of life was palpable to all during
this time, and pure unencumbered love was the only language that anyone
spoke. Suddenly, it became clear to
everyone present what it truly means to be alive (hint: it has nothing to do
with if you can work, how much money you have, or what your body looks
like). My sisters decorated the ICU
walls with colorful and beautiful artwork for me to look at. We kept a mini fridge in my room filled with
delectable taste sensations for when I could eat. A good friend rented a button making machine
and hand-made buttons for visitors and medical staff alike celebrating my
life. I hosted and judged a dance
competition between my sisters, a close friend, and medical staff. Although I was dying I was also, for the
first time in my life, fully alive. Far
from feeling burdened, the close friends and family who walked this path with
me were also woken up to the beauty and splendor of life. Many of them feel permanently altered for the
better from that experience.
Wedding day! |
Two books have helped me considerably on my journey towards
peace and freedom with my illness, and I would recommend them without
reservation to anyone who is either sick or knows someone who is sick. The first is called How To Be Sick: A
Buddhist-inspired guide for the chronically ill and their caregivers, written
by Toni Bernhard. And the second book is
simply titled Fear, written by Zen Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh. Both books have helped me shift my thoughts
so that I when things are hard, as they often are, I experience the necessary and
expected pain of being a human being who is mortal, but not the suffering
caused by own self created story.
I hope that my orientation towards my disease can be helpful
to all of us in the PH family, whether you have six months or twenty years to
live. Whether the new drugs “work” for
you, or they do not. Whether you are
working a full time job, or just working on being able to get out of bed in the
morning. Regardless of your
circumstance, there is an equal amount of peace and freedom to be found for
each of us.
Lovely blog xx
ReplyDeleteI am glad you enjoyed reading about Carmel as much as I have :)
DeleteThanks for the book recommendations, I've just ordered them both. Good luck with the fundraising x
ReplyDeleteHi Sarah- I haven't had a chance to read the recommendations made by Carmel. Please feel free to let me know how you enjoyed them. xx
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ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful. Thank you so much.
ReplyDeleteJust beautiful in so many ways. Im inspired to look at the stories I tell myself. What a powerful reminder to appreciate what gifts we do have. My co-worker, Zimryah shared your story with us as at work today. Thank you for your writing and for sharing your gifts and story.
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