Skip to main content

Rediscovering Fortitude


August 3rd, 2016.

After months of drawing and saving up, I permanently affixed a symbol that meant so much to me on my back.

A lotus flower: as a lotus flower is born in the water, grows in the water and rises out of the water to stand above it unsoiled, so I born in the world, raised in the world, having overcome the world, live unsoiled by the world 

Fortitude: courage in pain or adversity. 

I struggled through high school and felt extremely accomplished in graduating and taking the next steps forward. To me this summed up what I had gone through and would serve as a reminder that I could get through anything.

What I didn't know was the true understanding of fortitude. Sure it felt like it. But I didn't.

The problem was, I wasn't really doing the whole "courageous" thing the right way.

I understood the definition of "strength in the face of pain of grief" but the first part of "the ability to do something that frightens one" was ignored for too long.

After senior year, I was forced to quit my job when I couldn't get my shift covered for the second week in a row, because wait for, I wound up in the hospital on the same day, two weeks in a row.

I shrugged it off to it being the restaurant industry.

In the middle of Summer '16, I nauseatingly rode alongside my mom up to Clemson for orientation. My fingers and lips tingled.

I met all sorts of new people that all shared this same hope of what their next 4 years would look like. They all were bright eyed and ready to be friends with everyone they met.

On the second day of orientation,  I couldn't even eat I was so sick. That night there was a big "bash" in the bowling alley. I left early and went to bed.

I found out I was allergic to the new Topamax I'd been prescribed. So I shrugged it off and started a new medication. 

A week later, I was back up by Clemson for a camping. The trip was fun until I felt nauseated after we grilled burgers. I ended up calling it a night early and crawled into the tent. I was shaking so much you could have sworn I was having a seizure. Luckily I was with an army medic who had me drink some water and eventually helped me get to the ER.

I thought I had been bitten by something in a swimming hole and was having a reaction to that. I was treated for my migraine and given a CT scan without my consent.

The incident was brushed off and I started yet another new medication. 

The summer was over and off to Clemson I was for good. No car. No money. No real treatment. But here I was expected to have the time of my life.

Let's ignore the fact that the architecture program doesn't start off slow. I had 8 hours worth of work after the first class. That alone made it harder to go out with the people I'd made friends with at orientation.

When you start a new medicine you don't also get rip roaring drunk. So I spent a lot of time helping my roommate get ready for her night out. I stayed in.

I went out twice with this new group. But after declining to go much more than I said yes, I simply didn't get invited anymore.

I was boring.

It became real clear that everyone I met was still stuck in "high school" and still loved drama. No one cared about their education and no one had a job.

I did amazing in all my classes, but my migraines almost caused me to fail calculus... I mean who purposely takes an exam upside down while blind?

I brushed it all off. The people I met. Calculus. I assumed my personality just didn't fit with theirs. I got an accommodation letter allowing me to reschedule exams on short notice. 

By second semester, I hated everything about that place. I hated orange. I hated my roommate. I hated the program I was in. I hated my professors. I really only liked my job.

So I picked a school and I transferred.

I chalked up my migraines to be something caused by the stress of driving home every weekend along with the amount of hours I had to put into projects for architecture.

I joked that I couldn't see. My teachers were more understanding if I couldn't make it to classes. I rescheduled exams.

Classes ended and I stayed for the summer to keep working. The heat was ungodly that summer. I spent my time off locked up in my room sleeping when I wasn't tossing and turning because of pain.

I decided that moving to a cooler place would be the solution. 

Before I'd even gotten up to Wisconsin, I'd accepted a job with Ethan Allen. So, my new classes started the same day my new job did. I jumped in head first and buried myself in a million tasks.

I was doing better.

But then mid-September, this migraine started.

Maybe it was the seasons changing. Maybe it was because I still didn't have a doctor up here. Maybe it was because I never had a day off.

But it was getting worse. I struggled through my exams and was thrilled for winter break to be in session. I had recognized that I could no longer "make plans" because chances are I wouldn't feel good enough to follow through. I canceled on family for Christmas Eve because I knew the noise would be too much.

It became clear that any sort of gathering would be painful for me.

I went up to visit my sister and spent the majority of the time in her guest room in pain.

I started massage therapy hoping that would help ease the neck tension.

School started back up and I got extra accommodations that would prevent me from being penalized for missing class.

I missed a lot of class.

I blamed it on my new neurologist taking me off my medication. That was part of it, but going back on the medication didn't make the migraines just stop. 

I started taking pain medication every day.

I started missing work. In six months I hadn't missed a single day.

It became my goal each week to at least attend half my classes. Half.

I considered medical withdrawal.

I missed 3 exams. I pushed a final presentation back 3 times and thought my teacher might just fail me.

I quit my job because of some shitty circumstances.

Then I had to find a new job during finals week.

I finally got in to see a headache specialist. He diagnosed me with medicine overuse headache on top of chronic migraine and prescribed a week of DHE injections... which I failed to go through with.

I convinced my new boss that I was able to work despite disclosing my migraines. I then had to push back my start date to be hospitalized for the DHE. But I said I'd be fine after the procedure. 

The new job was great.

But I was working well over 40 hours a week as a part time employee. After we hired more people, I transitioned to closer to 30 hours a week.

But the days in between couldn't have been considered days at all. I spent more time wrapped up in blankets unable to pull myself up to even use the bathroom. On days where I had groceries, I didn't have the energy to cook, so most of my food would spoil.

I realized how bad of shape I was in and halfway accepted that I'd have to quit because I was missing work too much.

My boss allowed me to work on a reduced schedule.

But then it finally hit me.

You know how you see those "Road Closed" signs that say "local traffic only"? Well I'd been driving past those signs and successfully making it through to my destination. Some times I'd have to reroute a little, other times I'd be navigating through a maze of cones, but I'd eventually get through. This week I finally turned down the wrong road and the road itself isn't there anymore. They ripped it out.

Now I understand fortitude. I understand courage. It isn't smiling and pushing through the pain. Its accepting the pain and working with the pain. Not physically going to work with the pain, but adjusting who I am 100% because of the pain. 

Its deciding that I need my degree more than I need the job I love. Because the job I love is killing me and the thought of managing work and school without ending up in the hospital each week isn't realistic. 

Its accepting that it takes more courage to stand up for my own health and to stop pushing myself so hard than it does to push through and pretend that I'm doing okay. 

My "strength" in the face of pain, is no longer pushing myself beyond my limits. My strength comes from acceptance. My strength comes in letting myself cry in the center of my kitchen floor while I wait for my chai to heat up knowing those tears will cause more pain.

In the words of Hilary Mantel: "fortitude... it means fixity of purpose. It means endurance. It means having the strength to live with what constrains you."

A.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Tips and Tricks: Migraines Without Meds

We've all got that one thing that we know will make us be more comfortable, more ourselves. That little something we feel gives us an edge in whatever we're doing. It's that red pair of shoes that'll make us stand out from the crowd because there really isn't a wrong time to wear them, but they certainly aren't expected. It's that lucky pair of socks. It's the green scarf. It's our lucky pen. We want to be comfortable. But, when we've got outside forces controlling a pulsing sensation in our heads, comfort is about as far away as the sun we're desperately trying to avoid. And if you're in my position, reaching for the bottle of pain killers isn't always the right choice. To be completely honest, my pain meds scare me. Every time I get into some trance while I'm on them. Every time I feel myself coming down. Every time the pain sneaks back in. Some days I convince myself that the medication simply wore off and the br

It Hurts

To say I feel less than human, is probably a bit of an understatement. But I do. I've been home for a week. I've managed to pretty much lay in bed in agonizing pain the whole time. I had a half-assed attempt to see a friend that resulted in me rushing home as the nausea and aphasia set in. I successfully made it to massage therapy today. Which meant even after sleeping for roughly 2 hours, I got up at 7:30 and sat in traffic for hours to get to a less than expected appointment. Mind you, my previous massage therapist was so wonderful I'm most likely spoiled to other techniques. This lady was late, she sat in the same god awful traffic I did. We spent more time going over the woes of her morning, than we did discussing why I was there and what I hoped to achieve through various massage techniques. The massage room wasn't dimly lit, and even as the massage started, lights were still on. I found this odd, but decided to just keep my eyes closed. Then she started

Here's My Advice, Take it or Leave It

On one of my last days of work, as I cradled my head and struggled to get through the short shift I had that evening, on the way out, my coworker looked at me and said: "You know, for as bad as you feel, you certainly don't show it" It was the first time I stepped back from a comment like that and realized that she wasn't trying to diminish me. She was coming from a common place. She knew exactly the pain I was in, and was truly almost impressed that I could go on with my day and appear to be a high functioning adult. And that is where this post came from. There's so many of us, who day in and day out are fighting. Fighting for the pain to stop. Fighting for those around us to just let us be or try and understand us. Fighting to hide what's going on. We're all simply fighting to be normal, but we never will be, and that's okay. I took the time to reach out to people with conditions ranging from migraines (like mine), to anxiety and depressio