Listen to Your Body

For as long as I can remember, people have told me to listen to my body. It was practically the soundtrack of my childhood. I heard it from nurses, from my mother, and most recently from my cardiologist, who said it with the same energy as someone offering ancient, mystical wisdom. Going to a high elevation? “Listen to your body.”

It sounds gentle and intuitive. It sounds like something you’d hear during yoga while someone rings a tiny bell. But for me, that phrase has never meant serenity. Listening to my body has always meant one thing: prepare for impact.

My body has never been a calm inner compass. It has been a 24-hour breaking news alert system. “This just in, you might be dying…” Numbers. Readings. Symptoms. Side effects. Every twinge a possible emergency. Every flutter a potential disaster film in the making. .

“Is this a headache or a stroke?”
“Chest pain or arthritis?”
“Am I tired or am I fatigued?”

And my personal favorite: “Do I have a blood clot?” A diagnosis I have never had in my entire life, but a theory my brain presents with the enthusiasm of a kid showing you their newest treasure.

After years of this, listening stopped meaning awareness. It became surveillance. It was less “inner peace” and more “airport security.” And thanks to the alphabet soup of C-PTSD, OCD, ADHD, and other neurological party tricks, that vigilance was cranked up to maximum volume.

To be fair, I was born with a complex heart condition, so paying attention mattered. Small shifts really did mean something. But somewhere along the way, I began to believe my literal survival depended on catching every flicker of sensation before it turned into catastrophe. My body became a project, and I became a project manager who never got a day off.

Eventually, something rewired itself. I stopped recognizing my body as a place where emotions lived. Sensations were never just sensations. They meant illness or medication changes or tests or occasionally “Hey, for real though, you might be dying.” A racing heart was not fear. Tightness in my chest was not sadness. My body wasn’t allowed to feel; it was only allowed to signal.

Even professionals played into this without meaning to. A dull ache? More tests. A weird flutter? More medication. A moment of discomfort? Let’s throw in a scan for fun. No one, including me, considered that my body might also be speaking in the language of emotion.

By the time panic attacks appeared, I’d spent years responding to every sensation as if it belonged to my heart. So when the symptoms started, the doctors and I followed the same script we always had; tests, scans, monitoring. It wasn’t until we ran out of physical explanations that we finally realized: my body wasn’t warning me about my heart. It was trying to tell me I had feelings I’d never dealt with, and my mind was tired of waiting it’s turn.

Now, when I try to feel my feelings, I often get static. What I hear is the echo of a system that kept me alive but no longer matches the life I’m trying to live. Any detachment I experience is not apathy. It is survival being a little overzealous and not knowing it can clock out now.

Even the most basic emotions can hit the old alarms. I rarely assume I am having a feeling. I assume I am having an event. The smallest beep from a microwave or phone still makes my brain behave like it is back in the hospital, ready for a plot twist. It is very Lost in Space. My mind goes full B9 yelling, “Danger, Will Robinson,” and my system responds as trained: shut it down, stay calm, stay alive.

These days, I am trying to listen differently. I am learning to notice the quieter signals: the warmth of a blanket, the gentle rhythm of breathing, the moment of contentment when a room feels safe. I am teaching my body that not every sensation is a threat and not every feeling requires medical intervention. Some things can simply exist without becoming a diagnostic mystery.

People love to tell those of us with lifelong medical conditions to be strong. But strength does not always look like vigilance. Sometimes strength looks like unclenching your jaw, and relaxing your shoulders. Sometimes it looks like rest. Sometimes it is trusting that your body can communicate without sending up a flare. A whisper can be just as wise as a wail.

I am not trying to unlearn survival. Survival has been my longest relationship. I am simply trying to expand it, to let it include moments of ease and belonging and maybe the occasional emotion without the immediate assumption that the end is near.

So when something rises in my chest now, I pause. I breathe. Take a quick look at my vitals, just to satisfy the tiny intern who lives in my brain. (I am still me guys.) But when everything comes back normal, I remind myself that a feeling can simply be a feeling. A heartbeat can simply be a heartbeat. And sometimes the noises I once treated as danger are nothing more than the ordinary soundtrack of being alive.

Maybe this is the real meaning of listening to my body. Not scanning for illness, but noticing the quiet whisper of an emotion before I mistake it for something medical. Not bracing for danger, but letting myself recognize sadness, or joy, or fear, or grief as themselves. I spent most of my life believing feelings were symptoms. Now I am learning how to tell the difference, and even more than that, how to let emotional feelings exist without rushing to diagnose them. It turns out my body has been trying to speak in many languages, and I am finally learning to understand more than one.

Rehab Day 1

They tried to make me go to rehab and I said, “Hell yes! Finally.” Not exactly as catchy as Amy Winehouse but sometimes the truth isn’t catchy. Today, I completed intake for 36 sessions, 14 weeks, of cardiac rehab and I could not be more thrilled. Over the last few months I have tried working out on my own only to run up against the same issue, time and time again. I just get scared. I know to you heart-healthy people that is an odd issue to have, but there comes a point where I don’t know if I am pushing myself or pushing my luck. When that happens I find myself giving up, too scared to keep going. That is why when I saw my doctor last month I asked if I could do more cardiac rehab, and he approved. I knew I would be rolling the dice with insurance whether they would approve it for me or not, and was prepared to only have 6 sessions if they did. Getting 36? A full course? I am so excited. It feels like I finally won a battle after a long, long losing streak. 

There are so many benefits of cardiac rehab for me that go beyond just the customized workout. For one thing, the scheduled appointments assure I will actually attend. It is far too easy for my brain to talk me out of going to the gym, there is no accountability, and I can justify just about any reason to skip. Conversely, I don’t miss appointments, I am the person who is early to everything. The structure of these sessions will be great for my ADHD brain. They will also give me a safe place to feel for my edges, to learn better what my body feels like when I am entering the danger zone, and when I am just pushing. Learning this will hopefully help me when working out on my own, to have the confidence to continue. 

Things I love about cardiac rehab: 

  1. Old men exercising in jeans. I would say 90% of the people in cardiac rehab are men over the age of 60 (heart attacks likely), and of those men 90% wear jeans to work out. It cracks me up. 
  1. I am a unicorn to them. These nurses are used to working with the aforementioned old men in jeans with acquired heart disease and a tendency to push back about all the lifestyle changes they are being asked to make. Not me, this has been my life for 41 years. They aren’t asking anything of me that hasn’t been asked before. Plus, both this time and last the nurses remarked about enjoying learning about my heart, and seemed very amused by me in general. I love being amusing, and I am happy to provide a little break from the old dudes. 
  1. Sonic ice! I love it. Who doesn’t love Sonic ice, that they can access for free? 
  1. Constant feedback on my heart while working out. Blood pressures, BPM, pulse ox, they check it all, and tailor my work out to what my body tells them. 
  1. Help from an honest to goodness nutritionist on tailoring my diet to better serve me. I do a good job with this but guidance and feedback are so nice. 
  1. This is a medication free way of regaining some of my lost heart function and I am all for anything that doesn’t require another pill. 

I start my first real workout tomorrow and am so excited to begin. If you see me, please ask me how it is going, or shoot me a message. I need all the encouragement I can get, exercise has long been something I feared and gave up easily on. The more positive reinforcement I can get the better!  In fact, one of my questions on my intake paperwork today was about my support system. It wanted to know if I had anyone I could call if I needed support. I didn’t have to think about that question at all, and marked that I had MANY people who I could call if I needed. I truly believe that has always been my magic feather so to speak, and lets me keep flying. Thank you for that. 

Still stable, still strong. Not yet.

If there is anything I have learned through this whole process it is that I shouldn’t bury the lede, so here it is, after being presented for a second time, my case for heart transplant remains on hold and I have not been listed. I am happy with this decision. I find I am only unhappy in the absence of a decision,  floating out in purgatory not knowing what comes next. This is actually good news in its way, this means that I am stable and strong, and I can keep going without a transplant. Once again my weight plays a large factor in this decision, and I am again not angry about that, though I am a bit annoyed I didn’t have a shot at my new medication for a while before my case was presented. 

About a month ago I was put into a program sponsored by the hospital and the heart failure clinic to get Wegovy at no cost to me because my insurance will not pay for any of the weight loss medications. There are good indications that this medication can help significantly with chronic heart failure but as of yet this would be an “off label” use for the drug, thus the program through the heart failure clinic that is very interested in its potential to help its patients, prolong lives of those waiting for transplants, and possibly eliminated the need all together. (Let’s not dream too big just yet.) All of this is great, however if you have read anything about these medications, especially this one, they are in short supply and I HAVE to get this medication, and it HAS to be through their pharmacy. They have not had any of the lower doses since September. I have been chilling at number 87 on a waiting list for when they get the medication in, however along with today’s news they also were able to bump me up to first priority on the list. 

Hopefully, I will be able to start this new medication soon and it can help jumpstart the weight loss I have been unable to achieve on my own with my limited capacity to exercise. Best case scenario is I lose weight and feel so much better that I can go back to work full time, and I feel better than I do now, well enough to perhaps push the transplant talk back another year, 18 months or two. I am hopeful but not naive, I will control the things I can, my diet and exercise and try to let go of what I can’t, when/if I get the Wegovy. 

It has always been hard to explain this place I am in. My heart functions at about half the capabilities of a sedentary adult, and about a third the capability of a fit adult. On paper it is REALLY bad. In my day to day it isn’t great but it has been such a slow decline over the last 41 years that it isn’t shocking, super scary and sometimes it isn’t even THAT different that what I have known my whole life. It isn’t like I woke up one day and was suddenly unable to go up and down the stairs without feeling faint, that has almost always been the case, it is just more frequent and with fewer stairs now. When people suggest things to do, I used to be able to decide I wanted to do it and power through even though it would mean I would be tired and weak the few days after, now I just have to say no because they are not feasible for me to push through. Most days, I am very tired but I am okay. I live a low key life and sometimes do things I know will cost me, just to prove to myself I still can.

Today in therapy, I was telling my therapist that I think my current point of growth is going to have to be accepting where I am, but like, actually doing it. I know I am at a limited capacity, but I don’t like being the one who has to change a plan or cancel, etc. I have never liked calling myself disabled but more and more that is how my doctors refer to my condition and how I experience life. It is time to start taking the help that is available to me and perhaps ease some of the challenges I face day to day. Apparently I don’t have to just be stubborn and figure out how to do everything myself? Seems fake but I guess I’ll try it. It may be time I start renting mobility aids when the situation calls for it (Omaha Zoo I’m looking at you)  so I can enjoy myself AND still function the next day. Perhaps, I let go of my compulsive need to do my own grocery shopping and let it be delivered 2020 style again. Maybe, just maybe I don’t say “I’m good.” every time a friend asks if I need help with anything, when in reality I just thought of five things I am trying to figure out how to do on my own but know I will struggle with. Anyway, this is all a long winded way of saying I am stable and I am strong, and I will keep doing my part to stay that way, and if that changes, the plan will change too, and I promise, I will tell you.

Participating In My Care

“You have to participate in your own care.” 

For years I have heard this phrase, it comes up from time to time in patient groups I am in, around  the importance of self advocacy. It comes up in articles about living with chronic health conditions and seeking care. Doctors and nurses will use it when you are in the big house (hospital), or about to be sprung from it to remind you of your responsibility in the healing process. It is a catchphrase, and like so many catchphrases, once you’ve heard it a million times it starts to lose its meaning. 

If you are reading this you likely know that I recently underwent an evaluation for heart transplant. If you didn’t know that, perhaps you should go back and read a few prior entries to give this one some context. After the billion and two tests, it was decided I was not quite ready for a transplant, and that perhaps with a bit more participation in my own care on my part we could keep it that way. I was skeptical but willing to try. 

Here’s the thing, I have always kind of thought of participating in my own care as things like; taking my medications as directed, or going to my appointments when I am supposed to,or maybe even keeping up with my preventative care, vaccinations, things like that. I did those things. I have been a model patient for years now, (we won’t talk about the years before that they don’t count, I was young dumb and mentally unwell) I truly felt like there was nothing more I could be doing. The suggestion that there WAS more that I could be doing would often lead to a full on meltdown. The guilt would quickly transform into a shame spiral that I could not easily come out of, it was best to assume I was doing the best I could and leaving it at that. No one wanted to set me off, and I was darn good at keeping it that way. And look it wasn’t like I didn’t believe I was trying my best, it was just that I am a MASTER at justifying just about anything to myself and others. Take-out three nights a week? I’m too tired to cook, sad face. No exercise? It scares me, and I don’t want to be alone if something bad happens. You name it, I could channel my inner CJ Craig and spin it. (Let me take a moment here to say if you don’t know who CJ Craig is, you owe it to yourself and your country to watch The West Wing.) 

I may have been taking my meds, and making appointments but was I really participating in my care? Yes and no. There have been very real mental hurdles in my way, roadblocks that I didn’t even see until I had these recent test results in my hands and realized that while I did sometimes (often) not feel well, I could really catastrophize that and build it up to the point where I convinced myself that my safety and really my life was on the line if I did too much. Now rewind to three months ago and I have these test results in my hands and yeah, some of them are not good, and none of them are normal but they are stable. None of these results were super dangerous and the conclusion was that while no, I am not a picture of health because of elements beyond my control, I could be healthier if I took control of the things that were within my power. Gut. Punch. 

I had really been hanging my hat on one sentence said to me perhaps mistakenly or a bit too flippantly over a year ago. My EP and CHD doctor said “You can’t diet and exercise your way out of this (chronic heart failure).” I took that as, not only can you not, but you shouldn’t try, and hey why don’t you eat whatever the hell you want whenever you want it, because you’re screwed anyway. 

During my evaluation appointments I met with a nutritionist who helped me see that I was doing a lot of the right things, but there were a few things I could be doing better. Tiny little tweaks that would make a big difference. She also showed me that my perception of what my goal should be was WAY off. I had been thinking I needed to lose like 50-60 pounds and fast. She showed me that really 15 would be ideal and if I did that in a year she would be impressed. Then I had a cardiothoracic surgeon tell me much the same, that it isn’t about speed at all, it is about consistency and that they just want to see effort and forward movement. They wanted me to participate in my care. 🤯

When I came home from that appointment as well as my follow up a few weeks later I had a lot to think about. I had really painted myself into a corner of belief that I was fundamentally, irrevocably, unhealthy. I sold myself the idea that the only way that I was going to feel any better, ever again was if I had a new heart, and here I was not getting one, and being told that there was a chance that if I reconditioned myself, ate better, did some cardio, I might start to feel better. No one was making any promises that this was the thing that was going to “fix” me, in fact I was told that I would likely still feel crummy from time to time. I just needed to try not to stay in that crummy place. Needless to say I had a lot to digest and sort out on my therapist’s couch. I had been psyching myself out, now I needed to psych myself up. 

As of May 29th I joined the YMCA and have gone all but one day since (I listened to my body and screaming muscles about day three). Sometimes I even take a walk OUTSIDE which if you know me, you know is one of my least favorite places to be. I have worked up to a solid 20-30 minutes of cardio and do resistance training at home. I am eating better than I have in a long time, and logging all my meals, and tracking my calories. You guys, I am eating salads regularly. I am doing my best to participate in my care. I wake up every day and the first thing I do is my cardio. And guys…I am starting to feel better. Little things, here and there. Less winded coming up the stairs, a little lighter on the scale, more energy in general. I had given up on myself there for a while and I didn’t even realize it. I see it now and I am here to participate.

It’s A No From Me Dawg

It’s over. Four days of testing looking at everything, head to toe, and literally my big toes, is finished. I won’t bury the lede, I heard back this morning, I won’t be listed for a new heart at this time. I am not shocked or saddened by this news. After all I have gone through over the last two weeks, this is the right call for me right now. As I watched the test come back one-by-one I could see the story that was being told in their results. It is a story of someone whose heart is sick, but whose body and mind are strong. I know what you are thinking, “But Mo isn’t the heart kind of important?” it is, and mine is sick but there are others out there in the world that are more sick. And while the sickness of other people’s hearts doesn’t make mine better, I would never want to be listed when it isn’t absolutely my turn, and my time. Everyone deserves their shot at life and right now I am strong enough, and stable enough to live my life without a transplant. They checked, and that is a win. 

In fact, from my first troubling tests, I have lost some weight and improved my test results somewhat. I’m still not going to be running a marathon next week and no one is saying I am going to diet and exercise my way out of heart failure, or heart disease. These things are a fact of my life, but being as heart healthy as possible is as good for me as it is for anyone. Some things are just medical truths, the less body (mass) the heart has to pump to, the less stress on the heart. The more active a person is, the stronger heart muscle stays. It is no one’s favorite thing to hear, but it is the truth of our biology. 

So what is the plan now? Is transplant off the table? Are they just going to let you get more sick? 

The plan now is to do my best to maintain. The plan now is to work carefully but consistently on keeping this heart healthy and making my whole body as healthy as I can. I have lost about ten pounds over the last three months and I have my sights on at least 20 more. I am hoping to slowly add in some cardio and resistance training to challenge myself and my heart. Again, I am not going to change the cards I was dealt, but I am going to do my best to play them a little smarter than I have been. 

As far as transplant goes, it will never be off the table. The odds are high that this road of mine ends up in transplant. Now, both myself and my team know more about that road than we did two weeks ago. I think we are all relieved that I have the option of waiting a little longer before it is my reality. My end goal, has and always will be, more time. Right now, transplant isn’t the answer for that. In fact, transplant could realistically mean less time. Not because it wouldn’t be successful or give me 10-15 years of a better, more “normal” life but because I want more than 10-15 years. And of course there are those out there who get transplanted more than once, or whose transplant lasts 25 years or more. But no one wants to transplant someone before it is time and potentially cut into the years of their life. Not my medical team, not my support team, and certainly not myself. 

Am I going to get sicker? Only time knows the answers to this. There are some tests that were done that show I have become “sicker”, and others that improved. There are new tests that look like they were taken from a perfectly healthy person, and there are others that show the strain on my body. No one is going to actively encourage me to get sicker. Right now, the plan is to get in better shape, try a new med, perhaps adjust some others, and do the next best thing. I might get sicker, I might not. It might be over the next year, it might be over the next five years. Either way, my doctors are going to be following me so closely I will think I see them in my bushes. I will check with them every three months. I will do heart caths every six months, and I will do my best to be aware of the things in my life that change even slightly for the better or the worse. They are all part of the puzzle and they are all part of how we will know when it is time. Heart transplant has not gone away, it has just gone down the road, and that is okay with me. 

If you wonder how they came to this conclusion, allow me to assure you they looked at everything. Here is a quick glimpse at my weeks at Club Med-icine. 

  • Heart Cath
  • 24 Hour Urine Collection Test
  • Chest CT
  • Pulmonary Function Test
  • Echocardiogram
    • 2 pokes for IV
  • Cardio Pulmonary Stress Test
  • Labs
    • 2 pokes
    • 22 vials of blood
    • 44 blood tests
  • Panorex X-Ray
  • Dexa Scan (bone density)
  • Mammogram (no biggy at all)
  • Carotid Ultrasound
  • Ankle Brachial Index
  • More labs (I know right?!)
    • 1 poke
    • Two vials
  • Bonus Ultrasound Exam at clinic across town to check up on a mammogram finding, all is well!
  • 6 minute walk
  • Nurse Visit
  • PA Visit
  • Cardiothoracic Surgeon Consult
  • Pharmacist Consult
  • Nutritionist Consult
  • Social Work Consult 
  • Psych Consult
  • Two antibiotics for surprise double lung pneumonia

They looked at everything, they even put teeny tiny blood pressure cuffs on my big toes. This is the right call for right now. Thank you for your love and support through all of this. If I learned nothing else, I have learned that my community is large and I have surrounded myself with the best kind of people, and a couple weirdos to keep it interesting. I am thankful for all of you.

Spring Break?

Three years ago, I spent my spring break out running a pandemic and flying to Boston for a fateful second opinion on my health situation. At the time I was frustrated with the care I was receiving at the clinic I had been with for 10 years. The doctor I had been assigned after my prior doctor passed away and I did not click. I was not the kind of patient she preferred to work with and she didn’t seem to have a deep knowledge of the things I needed addressed most. I don’t blame her, her passion was more in cardio obstetrics and I had no desire to reproduce, we were a bad fit, the clinic had a hole to fill and they tried to put a square peg in a round hole. The issue being it wasn’t a picnic to be the peg or the hole in that scenario and in the end I felt my care and my health were suffering. 

Arriving in Boston I don’t know that I had anything in particular that I was hoping to hear other than, my symptoms were real, and my current care plan (or lack thereof), was not benefiting me. Aim low, and you will rarely be disappointed folks! My appointment with Dr. Fred Wu, was amazing, and yes I am using his full name while I left my previous doctor out of this because I believe praises should be sung loudly and often and complaints are best for mumbling to yourself or boring your close friends and family with. (Especially if you’re pretty sure it wasn’t so much an ability thing as much as it was a personality thing, sometimes doctors and patients don’t click and that’s ok.) He spent over an hour with my sister and I discussing my chart and reviewing recent testing I had done. His overall opinion – I was correct in feeling that my treatment plan wasn’t ideal and I was declining in health. Enter his college friend and local recommendation, my current ACHA doctor Dr. Shane Tsai. Also named, also because I like him. 

This spring break, three years later, I am once again spending my time doing medical appointments. In fact, I am doing four nearly full days of medical appointments and testing. After doing what he could with where I was Dr. Tsai referred me to the heart failure and transplant team, and at our last appointment as you may know it was decided that it is time to have the complete work up to see if it is time to really, for real, list me for a heart transplant. When they told me it would be four days of testing I thought surely they were exaggerating, I thought they must be preparing me for the worst case scenario of scheduling. That is not in fact the case, they said it would be four days of testing and appointments because that is exactly what it is going to be. So many appointments and they are going to look at everything from head to toe. I have 52 different blood tests you guys! 52! I didn’t even know there were 52 things in my blood. To paraphrase the adorable Andy Dewyer from Parks and Rec, I am going to get my ankles microwaved and all my blood taken for science. 

The upside, my whole family will be hanging out with me while I shuttle from ankle mirowaving to blood letting. They will take turns, or double up, etc. through the week, cook for me while I rest in the evenings, and in general keep me entertained while we navigate this giant gauntlet of the unknown. My mom is bringing us gramma cookies, and promises to make me chicken and noodles. It ALMOST makes the fact that I have to collect all my urine for 24 hours worth it. Almost. That is going to be a real treat. 

Last week, I had a heart cath. It was actually one of the easiest and dare I say darn near enjoyable heart caths I have ever had. I really loved the doctor and I was able to have light sedation, be accessed through my neck, have a sandwich and cookies as soon as I was back in the room. All that and I got to go home within two hours! The findings weren’t surprising and weren’t altogether great. My heart failure is progressing. No one thought it would hit the pause button so it wasn’t shocking. I am unsure if the rate is surprising or not, that is something we will talk about next week. As I have said a million times in the last few weeks, you don’t get this far along in this process because you’re doing fine. Sometimes it is weird to think I am as sick as I am. I absolutely do not see myself as a sick person. I wake up every day and do my best to push myself out of bed, and through my day. I want to be as “normal” as I can be. My doctor has remarked more than a few times that most people who are this far in the process aren’t still attempting to work. So take that expectations. Spite is a powerful motivator. 

I will update next week as I can and feel up to it. It is really going to be an undertaking. I think I am ready for it mentally, but physically it will be more demanding than I usually put myself through which often impacts my state of mind. Stay tuned on my socials (ugh did I just say that) if you want to know what is up. I doubt I will be writing any blog posts, but who knows maybe I will be inspired. Thanks for all your well wishes and kind thoughts. Until next time.

Only Monday

I woke up at 3:45 this morning and couldn’t go back to sleep. I haven’t been sleeping well the last few days. I also haven’t been feeling my best, it is almost like you don’t get this far in the heart transplant process because you are a healthy person with no reason to feel crummy. In addition to the crumminess I just have been kind of sad. In the period of two weeks, people I have known since they were kids passed away in one way or another from complications of their heart defect. That just never gets easier, especially when they are younger than me. The universe doesn’t do a whole lot of trade in fairness I have learned, but it doesn’t mean I don’t always hold out a little hope that one day that will change. 

So here it was almost 4am and I couldn’t go back to sleep. What is a girl to do besides grab her phone and lull herself back to sleep or at least sweet dissociation by the gentle glow of her smartphone and the promise of an infinite scroll? I round the usual bases, Instagram, and Facebook, and on my way to Tik Tok, I make the mistake of checking my email, it is hard for me to resist the siren song of the red circle indicating new messages. They have to be dealt with (see also; deleted) as soon as possible, the red circle is my mortal enemy and it must be vanquished. This dear reader was a mistake, for the email that awaited me at just after 4am was from my medication subscription service, and they were letting me know about the medications that would not be included in my next order without action. If I wasn’t awake before, I was now.

The first of the year is a real pain in the ass for the chronically ill, especially the chronically ill who take a large number of meds, and even more so if those meds are thousands of dollars without copay cards that have to be obtained, and resubmitted each year. I take 5 medications that cost over a thousand dollars without copay “coupons” that knock the price back to $10 which is great but the series of hoops to get these cards, and register them with the correct places is a pain in the butt. I have been dealing with prescription issues since December, and I would guess I will be until April. 

I immediately begin to dread the phone call I will have to make in the morning but I also know I will have to make it. I absolutely cannot go without my meds, not for one day, let alone a month. I calm myself down (I just get so tired of the hoops) turn on the sounds of gentle rain, and get another hour and a half of sleep before I have to really be awake. 

The moment I have a free second at work I take the chance to make a call to the pharmacy. I plead my case to the woman on the other end of the line. I have a very strict “be nice to the person who answers the phone it isn’t their fault everything is jacked up” policy. Her name was Nona and she was lovely. It took about 10 full minutes of checking this and that and we got things sorted (I think, I will check again in a week to be sure). She also let me know that my request to add the four medications that have been prescribed in the last year but are not in my pill packs could not be added. I would have to contact each provider and ask them to send in a new prescription. Again, it isn’t the person who answers fault. I thanked her and went back to class. 

Thankfully today we watched an episode of Cosmos in science and I had time to message four different doctor’s offices to make my requests. I even heard back from three! Not bad. All of this and it wasn’t even noon yet. 

While sending messages in MyChart I noticed that the appointments for my transplant evaluation were being put in. They were not kidding when they say it is three full days of appointments. It was at this point that I started to feel the anxiety building. Things have been getting real for a while now, but this made it even more so. I reached out to my family text and told them the kind of things I was worried about that they could help with, getting an Airbnb set up, making their travel plans, and generally anything that wasn’t actually doing the testing. They as always came through almost instantly. By the time my third viewing of the Cosmos episode was over I was feeling a bit better.  Thankfully I had a pretty full plate the next hour and was able to concentrate fully on the kids. 

I have to make a slight aside right here. My students have been so good about my absences and understanding my limitations. They are little rascals, don’t get me wrong, but they do have kind hearts. 

At the very end of class just as we had finished our work my phone started to ring. Normally when I have students I don’t answer but I saw that it was the Children’s Hospital in Omaha calling, I had a feeling they were trying to get something scheduled. I asked the kids to give me a moment and took the call. It was indeed a scheduler wanting to see if I could schedule my next heart cath…for tomorrow! Apparently, my team decided they wanted a heart cath before all of my other appointments and in order to give me my usual doctor the only day they could do it was tomorrow. That was not going to happen. I know the whole transplant process is hurry up and wait. I just didn’t know they would do all the hurry-up part while I did all the waiting. I asked for a different day with a different doctor and got it scheduled for two weeks from now. The stress level was hitting critical levels. It was time to call my mom. I sent my students to lunch and did just that, have I mentioned that all of this has happened and it was barely past noon? Mom talked me down and I was able to function the rest of the day without incident. 

It is now 7pm and I am exhausted. I have a feeling I will finish writing and posting this and be tucked away in bed before 9pm. This was just a Monday after a Friday when I was so tired I could not get out of my bed. Tomorrow is a Tuesday, and I will message my former doctors for records that my new doctors will need as I move forward, and maybe I’ll even get that dentist appointment scheduled too. Did you know you can’t get a heart if you have crappy teeth? Gotta get those pearly whites checked out. Thursday I get to go to the CPAP store because my old supplier couldn’t understand that I got a new machine and messed up my orders all the time. I did the right thing when I fired them but then I found out that in order to get my supplies from a new provider, I have to have an appointment to be taught to use a device I have been using for five years. It isn’t the person who answered the phone’s fault. The red tape is everywhere, and it makes me tired. I am very tired and it is only Monday.

Enough

I have struggled much of my life with the feeling of enough. Being a sick kid I was always worried that my contribution to my family wasn’t enough to outweigh the cost of time, money, and mental bandwidth my illness required. Once upon a time, and more than once my father remarked off the cuff that I was “more trouble than I was worth” to him the comment was a joke, it was innocent, it was a throwaway remark meant to tease me about my clumsiness, and my tendency to end up in the ER. To me it was an admission, he confirmed what I was sure I knew, I was not enough. 

Therapy has helped. I have learned that my worth is not derived from others. The concept of enough however seems like it is ever-present. Lurking. Cruel. Being enough. Not having enough. Having ENOUGH

This transplant journey has brought up its own enough. Is how I am living enough? Have I truly had enough? Am I sick enough? Am I worthy enough? 

One of the hardest things about being an adult with a congenital heart defect that is being considered for a heart transplant is that a lot of the usual ways of determining candidacy don’t align with the issues that we have as our health declines. To look at me, most people wouldn’t believe I am in end-stage heart failure, but here I am, crushing it. The thing with people with CHD is the decline in our health is often so slow, over a lifetime, that in ways we almost don’t notice our quality of life slowly slipping away. Tests meant for acquired heart disease don’t always accurately measure how sick we are, or how sick our hearts are, because the very structure of our hearts isn’t typical, and neither are the ways in which it can fail us. For a long time, doctors told me that a big indicator of whether or not it was time for me to have a transplant would be my ejection fraction (the amount of blood your heart can squeeze out each time it constricts), when last “measured” my EF was 25. In a typical heart, an ejection fraction in this neighborhood would put you on track for a transplant. For me? I got a defibrillator and resynchronization therapy. That has worked fairly well for me for the last 10ish years, during which time the medical community has decided that ejection fraction is actually not a useful or accurate measure for people with a systemic right ventricle (the one that does the bulk of the pumping) like me. More recently I failed with flying colors a different test that would indicate heart failure and transplant, but my heart cath looked “good” for someone with my defect. The question now is, am I sick enough for a transplant? A question and answer that is way out of my hands. 

The caveat of “for someone with TGA…” has been thrown around a lot in my life, it is often used to curb enthusiasm and lower expectations. It often feels like  “Don’t ask for more than you have because, for someone with TGA, you should be thankful just to be alive. That should be enough.” Do not mistake me, I am incredibly thankful for the series of events, and miracles even (and there have been many) that have led to me being alive at 40 but, I am no longer sure that not being dead is enough. I miss living. I miss the freedom of a more healthy body. There are things that I don’t even know that I miss because they are things that I have never known. It isn’t that I am not happy, we all know that I am a generally happy person. It isn’t that I couldn’t possibly continue to coast. It is that it isn’t enough anymore. As Albert Einstein (or maybe John Shedd) said “A ship is always safe at the shore, but that is not what it is built for.” it is true that I might be safe, but this isn’t what I am meant for. 

On the other hand, there is the magnitude, the cost of the gift I am asking for, the desire I am putting into the universe, and the price of taking my ship out of the harbor again. Could anyone easily say they are worthy of such a gift? I have been uniquely close to both sides of organ donation. So many of my friends have received the gift of life and in my second-hand experience receiving an organ is a solemn celebration. I have also known the pain that comes with losing someone I love dearly tragically, and the heartbreak of letting them go. It is true that knowing when I lost my friend others were given a chance at life through the gift of organ donation was comforting and the choice made by those that loved him was absolutely the one he would have made himself. Knowing that isn’t enough though, it isn’t the same as being able to laugh with my best friend, hug him tight, and listen to all the ways what I am writing right now is valid but in the end, doesn’t matter because I deserve to be happy and healthy both at the same time. Dammit. This is not where I thought this entry would end, but I feel like I reached a conclusion, with the help of my friend. I deserve to be happy and healthy at the same time, anything less than that isn’t enough.

It’s not tomorrow.

“It’s not tomorrow.” 

That is the phrase I have been telling myself and my mother at the end of each conversation we have had since Ashley, the nurse coordinator and my self-proclaimed “newest cheerleader” handed us “The Packet”. Perhaps not THE packet but definitely a packet, a packet that indicates we have taken another step in this transplant process – a packet outlining a whole lot of scary scenarios and less than favorable outcomes. “The Packet” includes a whole lot of places to sign acknowledging understanding of all kinds of things, I would tell you what but if I am honest, I have only skimmed “The Packet” I am not quite ready to read it in full. I am going to take it to work, scan it in, send it out to my team and hopefully soon we can talk about it together. I don’t want it to live in my head with just myself to absorb it, I want to look at it with MY team ready to help me interpret, dissect, and digest its contents. 

Until now I have only been monitored by the Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant clinic, with the knowledge that transplant is in my future. During my appointment this week, on the suggestion of my doctor we have taken one more small step and I will be doing the actual evaluations for heart transplant. Please understand, this is still the very base of the mountain. There are many hoops here as well, many approvals to get, and then many tests to schedule. 

THIS DOES NOT MEAN I AM OR WILL BE LISTED ANY TIME SOON. 

Read that again. I am not listed. I may not get listed at this point. If I am listed after this, I likely have a very long wait ahead. This is all just the evaluation process. I am super stoked to have found out during this appointment and testing that there are no concerns about my liver currently, which can often be the case in people with congenital heart issues. We can all celebrate that. As Bruce Bryan would say “Put that in the W column.”

There is still a lot of time in this process. There are still a lot of unknowns in this process. There are a lot of big feelings in this process. The only thing I know for sure right now is, it’s not tomorrow. My family and I have time to absorb and digest this information, and as always I promise to update when the situation changes. I appreciate all the love and support from my people. You all have made your presence known in ways I did not expect and am not entirely certain I deserve, but I am grateful. 

Until next time.

Scars

When I was in elementary school, we had an indoor swimming pool. A few times a week our classes would get to put on our bathing suits in the middle of the school day and take swimming lessons from our PE teachers. I was never a particularly modest child, in fact it was all my mother could do to keep clothes on me as a little thing. I was forever standing in front of the television in my training pants making muscles for my family to see. I was comfortable with my body, and I really didn’t have any thoughts about the still pink scars that graced my chest. They were as much a part of me as my fingers or my toes. So when one day sitting on the edge of the school swimming pool a little boy in my class asked me what happened, gesturing to the scar on my chest, I froze, and after a million thoughts ran through my six year old head I told him, “I fell on an ax.” I could live another 100 years and still have no idea why those were the words that escaped my six year old lips, but they were. 

My relationship with my scars has always been complicated. I spent many post-bath moments observing my scars as a child, they were to me, the only thing I had as proof of the time I was told I spent as a baby fighting for my life. While everyone around me remembered that time, all I had were the scars. I spent a lot of time in my teens doing all I could to hide my scars, believing they were ugly and not wanting to show anyone what I thought of as a weakness. As the years have gone by I have come to feel pride in my scars. I still spend time observing them in the mirror, (clothes still aren’t my thing if I can help it) and thinking about where they came from and where they have gotten me. Many nights to this day I trace each bump and curve in the scar that sits center of my chest, until I fall asleep. 

It shouldn’t have surprised me then, how today I was suddenly overcome with sadness at the thought of the eventual reconfiguring of my scars. When the time comes for transplant the incision will be on top of my current scar. It will be larger, and likely much gnarlier than the scar that started on a one year old baby and grew with me over time. I have never minded new scars joining the others, but this one will change the topography completely. And while I have thought frequently about how many emotions are tied up in my actual heart and saying goodbye to it one day, I don’t look in the mirror and see my heart. My heart isn’t the outward reminder of why I am who I am and what I have been through. While it is true that I have never let my heart condition define me, it has certainly shaped me into who I am. So today I felt my feelings, first in my car, out of nowhere, then on my therapist’s couch, and later as I shed a few tears in front of the bedroom mirror. I have carried these scars since before I could remember. They have been the things that remind me that if I could do it as a tiny baby, I could do it as a teen, or an adult. I imagine there are more of these kinds of things that will come up as I sit here in the unknown. Minds wander as they wait and I have never been good at waiting. 

I am glad this all came up today, it gives me a chance to think about what I can do to come to terms with this change as much as I can now, so it won’t be as hard later. Until then I will continue to observe in awe of the landmarks of my life that adorn my chest. Each glossy white river of mended flesh a testament to the strength and perseverance of the me who came before today.