I Didn’t Want This Really Nice Bike

I Didn’t Want This Really Nice Bike

My Sweet Townie

 

 

My husband got me a new bike.

He didn’t ask – – not this time. Just said, “I’m getting it.”

He asked the first time, a couple of years ago; took me to a bike shop along our favorite trail, a trail he’d ridden not long ago by himself. I remember that day – – the day of his solo ride – – It was the first time I realized I was angry about being sick.

He came home drenched in sweaty exhilaration, no effort to hide his delight. I wanted to knock the endorphins right out of him but instead, pounded my pillow. I yelled, cried about wanting my old life back; about how could he do it? How could he ride “our” trail without me, knowing my joining him wasn’t even an option?

He tried to hold me, wrapped his arms around from behind – – probably afraid I’d hurt myself. I told him to leave me alone, and he did. He went outside and took up some project I’d begged him to finish, or to weed the flower bed that I couldn’t – – something to make up for abandoning me, for having fun while I was stuck at home, mostly in bed, in a body of pain – or maybe he was just trying to get away from all the emotion.

I felt horrible; couldn’t believe I was treating him this way. I could tell he was panicked, confused by my reaction. But I couldn’t seem to help myself. I wanted out of my body, to be free of the ache that had settled into my skin, muscles, and bones. I wanted to crawl out, to liberate myself from a soul-holder that was crushing my soul. I wanted to ride my bike, to go fast.

But I couldn’t so I settled for getting out of my house.

This was no small feat. It was probably a more horrible idea than riding a bike, but, like a thief bathed suddenly in flashing red light, I snatched my car keys and headed for the door.  I still had trouble remembering which side of the road to drive on, how to get home, what a stop sign meant. I still had vertigo. The bottoms of my feet were still too tender to press the pedals without pain, but for the first time in months, I got behind the wheel.

My husband’s panic did not subside.

He’d brought our daughter out to help weed. I still remember her watching, without a word, her mother’s head explode. But I didn’t linger on her face. I was sick of feeling guilty on top of feeling sick. I was sick of being chauffeured; sick of being watched, helped, protected.

So, I drove. Not far but to a place more painful than even our old bike path, another place I could not go anymore to be who I once was. I didn’t have complete sensation in my legs most of the time, and I was weak. I hobbled and trembled toward the closest picnic table where I collapsed, staring at the trailhead. I wanted to hike, but I couldn’t. I wanted to ride, but I couldn’t. I wanted to be a partner to my spouse and a mother to my children, instead of an invalid. But I couldn’t.

I sensed myself trying to harden against the longing, trying to feel nothing, but this was my place and, without a sound, I wept. I’d shared this space with my dog before she died and occasionally with my kids, but mostly, I’d come alone. My exile from here had produced a craving – – not like when you really want candy or a cheeseburger, more like the ache you feel over the absence of the one you love most. It had been so easy to pray here, so simple to set my mind straight. It was a place where I’d put one foot in front of the other, worked my way up hills, learned to feel small at the bottom of ravines, and remembered the big picture from their peaks.

Biking was different.

I’d never considered myself a “cyclist,” had no interest in squeezing into tight uniforms or locking my feet into pedals; was never intent on beating a clock. I just loved to ride my bike.

It was like getting into a swing or slipping down a slide. On my bike, I found my child’s heart. It’s a quiet experience, the hum of skinny tires, birdsong, a breeze streaming past your ears. It was fun to be speedy, to try and run over crunchy leaves, to reach overhead and let my fingers touch the ones on the trees, to stand tall on the pedals, or ride with no hands.

My husband could still do all those things, and I understand now why, many months after my tantrum and my driving rebellion, when I was a little more mobile, he tried to get me to try a “more comfortable” bike.

I wasn’t angry the day he took me to the bike shop, just sad – – as if sad is better or less. He fed me first at a nice local restaurant. We sat outside where I could see all the people on their bikes. I recall that not helping, but I didn’t say anything. After dinner, he spoke a gentle command, something like, “Let’s go. Just try one.” And we went. He was taking me to look at the cruisers — the Townie Electras – the comfortable bikes.

When I was well, I actually wanted a Townie. They’re a charming vehicle; hipster, with cool baskets and shiny fenders. But that was different – – that was a choice for days when I might want to wear a skirt and sunhat to ride my super cute bike to the street market or something. It wasn’t because leaning forward onto my time trial bar or sitting on my skinny racing seat just hurt more than I could tolerate. It wasn’t because I was disabled.

We looked that night but didn’t commit. I ended up in the car with my head on my husband’s shoulder sobbing, not ready for what I referred to as “a sick person’s bike.” It felt like giving in to something that I just wanted to go away.

Back to now.

He bought it, and I keep it in the back of the van so it’s handy whenever I want to stop for a ride. I still don’t ride “our” trail without him. It’s just too lonely, but I’ve found other paths for myself, and we go to ours together, knowing that he’ll go farther and faster, that I’ll need to turn around sooner; take my time, take more breaks.

I don’t zip past people anymore and rarely call out, “On your left!” I have days when I struggle to pass people walking, when the sight of them up ahead makes me cringe at the effort getting by them will demand. My seat is wide and cushy. My back is straight. I have seven gears and use two. I wear a sunhat and am in the market for a basket – – but it has be to wicker, and it has to be darling.

I didn’t want this really nice bike. I didn’t want a chronic, debilitating disease. I now have both. Sometimes, that’s just the way it goes.

On a recent solo ride, I was headed up a hill, amazed that I was doing it. Riding my bike; riding it up. I had on my sunhat, baggy pants, and sandals. (Sandals to ride a bike?) I was working those pedals for all I was worth, stunned that my muscles were still with me, and then I heard it.

“On your left!”

A guy, feet locked in the pedals, body squeezed into a second, endorsement-covered skin, helmet fastened down, flew past me up the hill and beyond, racing to beat the clock fastened to his handlebars and the one ticking away inside his head.

I laughed. No weight-of-the-world sigh, no sorrow or despair. I laughed at the picture of me eking up that small hill on my “sick person bike” while he whizzed onward. The laughing nearly cost me the thrill of reaching the summit – nearly, but I made it. When I got to the top, I could see him far away already. I took a break to look at the river, now below; to watch Herons wade and Kingfishers dive.

My old bike is silver, a smooth, swift ride — quiet and faster than my husband’s touring bike. (Maybe that’s why he wanted to get me another?) I pushed left of a lot of people on that bike. It was great, the speed, the feeling of strength, of dominance.

Odd, how much stronger I felt struggling up that little hill. I felt stronger than that fast guy. It was easy to whiz past when I was healthy; easy to get healthier, when I was healthy.  But, the way I see it, I’ve been persistent, diligent, steady in trying to get up a hill for the last four years, or more like a lot of hills, and every tiny summit has been a happy surprise.

I’ve a new moniker for my Townie. Not a “sick person bike,” but a “restorative bike”; a bike that gives me grace to slow down and take in all the sights along the trails I couldn’t visit for so very long; a bike that brings me back to familiar and longed-for places, that restores my child’s heart. She’s a bike that says, “It’s Okay to not be completely healthy, to feel weak, to go slower than I used to. It’s Okay.”

On second thought, look at her, the sweet little hipster. She’s a bike that says, “It’s cool.”

“It’s Cool”

“What If I Get Better?”

 

We started on solid ground, our footing sure, each step of life’s terrain mapped out in our heads. There would be rough patches, we knew. Our expectation, though, was that we would traverse them all and reach the peak.

But things shifted in ways we didn’t anticipate. A crack formed; a fissure so narrow, at first, we just kept going, stepped over the little aches in our knees. Hopped, while we still could, around that fuzzy feeling in our heads. We ducked under the cover of over-the-counter pain killers and trudged along, our ears ringing so loudly we never heard the avalanche of hurt tumbling our way, intent on knocking our feet from under us.

Then we were dizzy, shaky. We could feel the tremors when we held a pen or slipped a spoon between our lips. Our world became unstable, and we found ourselves grabbing hold of walls, furniture, the person beside us. Our steps became arduous from hoisting our limbs over the obstacles that kept showing up in our path. Things that, a few months prior had been only pebbles, were now boulders, immovable, expansive; blocking the whole trail.

 

How had we misread the signs of our inevitable cave-in?

At first, it was just loose stones, bits of gravel. They only trickled and sometimes didn’t move at all. If it had been a constant rumble, we’d have recognized the danger, but we had no idea those little bits of tumbling rock were a part of something bigger. No clue they were pieces of our very foundation.

We turned to science, to the detectors and fixers of bodily earthquakes. They attached sensors to our brains, hearts, nerves. They looked diligently for any disruptions inside or out. When they couldn’t find one, they made guesses that they called, “educated”; pulled blood from our veins and ran test after test, all-the-while warning us that a positive result didn’t prove we were sick, and a negative didn’t prove we were well. They promised to look at the whole picture; make a determination, let us know how long before we would fall apart.

But science was stumped, or just ignoring the data. Either way, too late came too soon, the crack became a gaping hole. It sucked us under and our productive, happy lives crumbled. 

At first, we braced ourselves. Surely, there would be some room for escape. A simple treatment; the right pill.

When there wasn’t, and the wreckage was so much we couldn’t comprehend, we remained determined to dig our way out; move every stone out of the way. We would not eat gluten. We would not consume dairy. We would not partake of sugar. We’d get enough sleep, do yoga, drink water, meditate. We would eat Keto, Paleo, Autoimmune. We would not, I repeat, not, get stressed.

But it was so confusing. We’d just gotten rid of the pain in our feet, hadn’t we? Just yesterday it was better, but once more, they felt as if they’d been punched all night. And two days prior, wasn’t our thinking clearer? We weren’t sure. We thought it had been, but we can’t remember, not with any clarity. We excavated symptoms only to watch our clear, clean space fill again as they rolled back in or new ones took their places.

We asked our scientists over and over, “When will I get better? When?”

At first, it was scary; dark, lonely, silent. But after a while, our eyes adjusted to the gloom; our mind to the quiet. Finally, we accepted our place in this crumbling heap; stretched out our arms and began to gather the fragments, pulling them close; wrapping them around ourselves like a cold, hard blanket.

What else could we do? We had to hold on to something, and since this disease seemed unshakable, we grabbed on to it and embraced our new “normal.”

“It’s better this way”, we reasoned. Buried under the natural disaster of sickness, no longer would we have to do the things that had become so difficult, like talking, thinking fast, getting jokes, feeling sympathy, sorrow, or joy. Instead of trying to discard the stones, we began stacking them with precision. We built a fortress, and tucked away, relieved no one could see us.

We couldn’t drive. Our road was filled with potholes and rubble. It was too hard to remember what a red light or a stop sign meant; too hard to recall the way home or where we were. So, we got cozy in the passenger seat; leaned back and watched things pass by in a blur.

We tried crawling out each day to go to work, but the weight of our symptoms – – too many to count – – was too much, the load too heavy to add the responsibility of bread-winning. Our brains were filled with dust, no room for thoughts, problem solving, or words. So, we quit or were let go. At least that left time for hobbies – – as long as they weren’t too strenuous or didn’t demand clear thought.

We discovered a small, but bright light inside our burrow. A screen held relief from complete isolation. We weren’t exactly alone. Even in the deepest, darkest place, we could find a signal; a connection. There were people like us hunkered in the ruins. We couldn’t see them face to face, but we found friends, a tribe, a community of like-diseased sufferers. From our corner, we could call out and find validation, encouragement, ideas, and ways to feel a little better sometimes. We could say, “Hey, it’s a full moon and I feel like crap.” Or, name weird symptoms like when our ankles feel wet for no reason, or our lips have an imaginary bug crawling on them that won’t go away no matter how hard we rub. We could proclaim these without fear, knowing their voices would echo our own.

All those things were long ago.

Now, this fracture feels permanent; like part of us, or more often like who we are – – a brittle shard, once whole. We still turn to the scientists, but more and more we feel they’ve lost the patience to uncover our past. Maybe they’ve done all the digging, brushing, and cleaning they can. So, we’ve stopped asking ‘when.’

Instead, here in our dark, hushed places, we whisper, afraid to say it out loud, “What if I get better? What if?”

It happens. Sometimes, someone finds a way out. They stand, stretch, and smile, looking at their limbs like they’ve just shown up. Wide-eyed from a suddenly clear mind, they buy work clothes, running shoes, school supplies; get new hairstyles, make plans, make friends.

We peer between the slabs of our bunkers; watch their strong arms reach up until their shadow-self is washed away by light. We watch until they’re gone. They’ll be back now and again to tell us what it’s like out there, give us pointers, share what worked for them, helped them rebuild. On hopeful days we’ll soak in their wisdom, on days of despair, we’ll only hear Charlie Brown’s teacher.

So, what if we get better?

What if one day, we are strong enough to ascend? What if the pain, fatigue, mental fog, numbness, tingling, anxiety, depression all stay underground and we, somehow, rise to the surface? What if we can make it out clean and fresh, no trace of grit clinging to our flesh; no sludge clogging our minds? No second thoughts about going out with friends? No hesitation about volunteering?

It’s hard to imagine. Some of us don’t have the strength to stand, let alone climb out of a tomb. And better isn’t well.

If we find our footing and move forward will we be looking over our shoulders, wiser now, to the threat of falling rock? Our steps will be wary because we won’t want to wake the giant. We know what it’s like to be swallowed whole and will do anything to keep ourselves free; anything to stay out from under.

Our eyes no longer care for the light, our ears, the noise. We’re not sure we can endure the world above ground. Our brains have failed us so many times we don’t trust them; don’t believe they’re up to the challenge of living in the world of wellness. We fantasize about jobs, parties, picnics, or maybe a club. But what if our panic comes with us? What if it never really leaves? It might be impossible to speak the words we need or to listen and understand the words of others.

And what of our friends still living in the throes of a long, long illness? They’ve meant so much to us, how can we leave them behind? No longer share with them the strange communion of affliction?

 

Remission is a permanent home on a fault line. Always at risk, the cost to keep it standing is high. The hatches are never completely battened down so we reinforce in hopes we’ll never again have to rebuild from the ground up, but this is where we live, and no matter how badly we want to, we can’t choose a disease-free zone.

Standing in a place that’s not disintegrating, where everything is exposed, we will look unstable and unsteady sometimes, but we know how far we’ve come. We remember the initial collapse, the dementia, the hallucinations, the pain. The days of endless sleep and nights of relentless wakefulness are fresh in our minds. Sometimes, those things are still with us in flashes, moments. Some days they spew up from where we’d buried them. To a degree, some of them are always here.

But, we fear those who watch, will only see us as less than we were, unaware of how much more we’ve had to be, in order to keep trying.

Lyme feels like this.

 

Romans 8:23b “. . . for we long for our bodies to be released from sin and suffering. We, too, wait with eager hope for the day when God will give us our full rights as his adopted children, including the new bodies he has promised us.” (NLT) 

Try And Try And Try Again – – Or Not

Gardens in early spring are broken, dry, and brown, but if you look underneath the leaf litter and last year’s mulch, you’ll find green.

It’s the same every year. I snap off the old dead stems and seed heads and toss them into the compost where they rot themselves into nourishment for the new florae. I try to clear the way and clean the slate. I add new plants, divide the ones too big for their own good, and remove those taken by the cold.

Every year, I start over.

But front to back, and side to side, my plot is filled with stubborn invaders.

Gooseneck loosestrife is lovely, but I didn’t research it, just stuck it in the ground delighted by its drooping cluster of dainty, white blooms. I soon learned it’s not meant for containment but needs its own space and will choke the life out of everything else to get it. An apt name, it is on the loose and causing me immense strife.   

There’s also common speedwell – – not native to North America, it’s certainly made itself at home.  Every spring, I think I’ll just give in and call it my ground cover. But, every spring, I tug and tug and tug it out, knowing my efforts are futile. It’s long runners will produce new shoots faster than I can say, “shoot.” I apply mulch like a pillow to a face and hope against hope it won’t resurface.

So, my gardening season begins in a sort of panic. Pre-Lyme, I was a butterfly – – fluttering from task to task; soaking it all up, productive and happy. But, I’ve become a caterpillar. I inch along, stay low to the ground, always seated. I pull the garden cart – – two steps then rest, two steps, then rest.

I am defeated before I start. It’s a simple fact.

I know gardens are never finished, even for the healthy. That used to make me happy, but now I’m more acutely aware that my growing season is limited and feel pressure to get it done; make it perfect. I want to make the most of what I have, but spring and summer outpace me. I can’t keep up anymore.

Gardens are places of constant change and perpetuation. They’re filled with decay, death, and disease, but they heal, even resurrect.  A garden can be suffocated by alien life; its residents killed by ignorant gardeners who don’t bother to learn what their plants need.

But, they endure. They not only withstand fire and freezing but rise new and vibrant from the ash and snow.

Gardens keep trying.

I am also in a perpetual state of succumbing to disease and decay, then standing again in healing and new growth; succumbing, healing – – always starting over. There are days, when dry, brown, and brittle are all I know and days of flourishing, of feeling bright, full of color and hope.

But, this year’s different. After four years of treatment, and at the risk of being overrun, I decided to stop. I told my doctor I was taking some time off, that I didn’t want to spend the warm days as a patient, keeping appointments, and swallowing pills, or worse, those brown, acrimonious tinctures so popular among Lyme-killers. I have had the same symptoms for a long time, without change, so I need to think.

Can I live with some dry twigs? Develop a rapport with these invaders? Can we function as one?

Do I have to keep snapping off the brittle remains of my old self, making room for new shoots only to find them dead again? Must I continue plucking and pulling at invisible bacteria, viruses, parasites only to find them alive because their roots are many and strong? No amount of pruning or pesticide has destroyed my vermin. Can I just call them my cover? Pretend they belong?

Is it possible to simply look away?

I mean, they aren’t unobtrusive.

The fatigue crushes. Pushing a spade into the earth is not always possible.  Somedays, I’m too weak and  worn-out.

I bend to plant, then raise up gasping for air, heart pounding, hand to chest wondering if it’s a heart attack or just a Lyme-fake. Can I ignore this?

The depression is dark, an immovable mass; the anxiety like pieces of paper in a blender, swirling, coming close, but never hitting the blades. Some days in the garden, I spend in numb defeat, ruled by blight, sitting in slumped surrender. Other days, I cry, knowing it’s too much, and like me, will never be what it was. How do I keep planting hope when I’m buried? How do I take root and find peace, when I’m scattered?

The roaming, restless pain can’t find a place to land. It rears its head without warning, subsides without a hint. It aches, stabs, stings, burns, spasms, pounds, pierces, throbs. Sometimes, my insides are a bug zapper, overrun by bugs, constantly sending useless zings through my neurons; firing without apparent purpose and with miserable aim.

My brain is another world, where the barometric pressure is prone to dramatic shifts. It swells with damp clouds; blooms with a disorienting mist that steals words, thoughts, the ability to spell, converse, or feel things. Can I be fruitful in a stupor?

As I yank speedwell, and ponder what to do, a tiny green butterfly stops for a sip from one of the relentless weeds. I smile. My nemesis, is this little pollinator’s vast spread of sugary nectar. I’ve heard it before and have said it myself – – weeds have purpose. Struggle and suffering feed our character, nourish our souls, and point us to God. I could end this post on this inspirational note; could list the benefits of trials and the hidden blessings of chronic disease. In my writer’s brain, the butterfly is metaphor for mind and heart; for the way they discover sweetness in weeds. 

But, that rosy conclusion wouldn’t be an honest picture of how I feel, not right now. From my little stool, in my big garden, in front of me, I see a small circle, cleared of weeds, filled with multi-hued snapdragons. But if I look left, right, in front of, or behind those flowers, I see speedwell. I see gooseneck loosestrife. I see my perennials looking for air, for light, and finding little of either. I see small gain and huge loss. Clearing this circle was costly and painful, and it won’t last. The dragon slayers are waiting to move in.

This ring of frilly, radiant dragons represents a few good days and some small victories, but mostly, treating Lyme has been like pulling weeds with long, stubborn roots that worm through my body, finding and taking everything. Sometimes, it seems treatment only clears the way for a new batch as soon as the medicine stops.

A successful garden, free of weeds and pests, starts with healthy soil; invites good soldiers – – ladybugs, toads, spiders – – to stand at the ready and make quick work of those bugs that would do harm. It has just enough hours of sunlight to warm the ground without thieving all moisture. It catches the rain and draws it toward the roots; doesn’t hold it on the surface in pools and puddles that corrode.

My “soil,” my internal bed, isn’t healthy. I’ve been looking for green, digging in, doing the right things – – diet, exercise, sleep, meditation, prayer. Ideally, these actions should feed my defenders – – those good bacteria and antibodies. They should open a path for nutrients, supplements, and tinctures to reach the places where they can do their promised work.

But these things work until they don’t. Sometimes, they just don’t. And that’s the problem.

This disease keeps finding its springtime. It keeps starting over, forcing me to do the same. I just don’t know if I can keep it up, keep pulling internal weeds, when to the left and right and all around I see illness – – a snaking, complex, foreign system – – that has made itself at home and thrives at my expense.

This disease will never be finished. I know this, and I know that means my efforts to vanquish it will never be either. It’s one of the first things I learned about Lyme – – that remission and maintenance are the goals, not cure. But, I feel so weary thinking of a life spent clawing out small circles of open space, a life of choosing, over and over again, to try and get done what I cannot. That choice, repeated many times, is wearing me down.

Of course, I won’t give up my garden – – not yet. I’ll do the best I can and try to be content when my efforts to eliminate speedwell or all that strife fail. I’ll try not to look at them, but instead focus on the plants I choose – – the ones I’ll nurture. I’ll look at butterflies when they show up, if only for a moment.

But, my body . . . I don’t know. I am losing the drive to clear the way and clean the slate and am, perhaps, at a place of surrender to the reality of more weeds than snapdragons, more shade than sun, more gasping than breathing. I am understanding that I may have to dig a little deeper to find the green and that I may not be strong enough to do it.

Lyme Disease keeps trying.

 

Lyme feels like this.

 

Psalm 119:49-50 Remember your word to your servant, in which you have made me hope. This is my comfort in my affliction, that your promise gives me life.

 

When Lyme Turns Blue

Sometimes we stop writing blog posts. We stop answering calls or text messages. We don’t go outside. We avoid social media. Sometimes, we avoid social. So many things we wish you knew about our disease; the faltering of our mental health is not low on that long list.
Sometimes, Lyme makes us sad. It pulls, and paws, and drags us under until we are so disoriented by the darkness, we just stop moving and welcome the rest.
Depression is not a powerful force; not a fierce warrior. It is not strategic and doesn’t attack. It is, instead, a slow sluggish thing. A blob that slithers and slips and lumbers onto our backs when we aren’t looking. It’s only super power? Sheer weight.
The heaviness presses until tears fall and angry, fearful, frustrated words squeeze out. We want to, but cannot contain them. The burden is too much. We cry, talk to ourselves, our God, friends who know. We are prickly, easily irritated in ways we don’t understand. Thoughts, that should maybe remain private, tumble out like pebbles before an avalanche. But the crumbling of the load, the torrent we were expecting, that may have let in some light and air, doesn’t happen. The last of the tears and the words skid to a feckless stop at rock bottom, but the weight remains and pins us to the precipice, trapping everything inside. This sad parasite has cut off our emotion. No more crying. No more words. The relentless pressure smothers all sensation.
That’s when we go away; when we welcome the dark cloak our unwanted passenger has thrown over us. We’re too tired to look for anymore light.
Lyme disease causes depression. Like so much about Lyme, the mechanism is not clear.
Is it the bugs themselves? The little corkscrews twisting into our brains, throwing us off balance, making us see things that aren’t there, and forget things that are? Is it because they are making warm little nests in our heads that shove aside rational thought, knowledge of recent events, the way home from work? They pervert our perspective. Along with their infectious co-infectors, they take over, invading the limbic system wreaking havoc with our feelings and ability to remember. They hijack the pre-frontal cortex until we cannot make decisions, plans, or follow a recipe; until our personality is unrecognizable. They both dull and heighten our senses and do whichever, whenever they please. Captivity can lead to depression and hopelessness. And we are prisoners, no exit left unguarded by those that have conquered our domain.
Maybe the depression comes from loss. We have lost jobs, mobility, cognition, money, goals, and marriages. We keep looking but cannot find our old selves, and we miss them. In the beginning, we were buoyed by our stubbornness – – back when we had no idea what we were really in for. We thought it a matter of determination, that we could will ourselves better, climb into the ring and go as many rounds as needed to beat this disease to a bloody, lifeless pulp. We frustrated loved ones who wanted to help because we continued to insist we could do it ourselves. But now that slovenly despicable weight of gloom wears us down and we give in, and sometimes, on and off, we give up. Some of us once dreamed of hiking the Appalachian Trail, or traveling the world. Some of us just wanted to go to work everyday and take care of our kids, garden, pets. But most of us have had to come to terms with new limitations. We’ve had to lower the bar. Once the worst of the pain subsides, and some of the fog clears from our brains, we can mostly, despite all that’s missing, find contentment but not always. Losing can cause depression and hopelessness, and we have lost much.
Maybe the depression comes from so many unbelievers. They are the majority – – some are physicians, some researchers, nurses, family, friends. They speak to us with condescension, even if they don’t mean to. Imagine losing the ability to walk, being struck with a sudden dementia, having seizures, falling, hallucinating. Imagine a sudden debility or a debility that creeps up slowly so that you don’t know how much you’re about to lose until it’s too late. Imagine having lab tests that prove your body full of infectious disease. Imagine being treated for four years, or ten, or twenty and still your tests return positive. Then someone laughs at you, maybe even your doctor, and tells you Lyme disease is not a chronic infection or that it can’t be contracted in Ohio, or California, or Flordia – – or wherever you live that’s not the Northeastern United States. They dismiss the evidence before them because, they say, ten days, or thirty of antibiotics – – if you’re lucky enough to get that much – – will “cure” you. Think about that. Years of treatment doesn’t erase the disease and you can prove it – – can prove it’s thriving inside, but the person in front of you says not to worry because you don’t have it anymore as if their magical unbelief is all it takes to eradicate your affliction. Denial of personal, undeniable truth can make you feel crazy. It can lead to depression and hopelessness. We have been denied.
Maybe it’s all the pretending. The pretending is so draining. Maybe that’s what makes us depressed. It’s been a few years that we’ve been sick now, and it seems there’s a time limit for lifelong illness that is, surprisingly, not the end of life. We’ve been making excuses well past the time allotted us by the healthy people. It might be different if we were in wheelchairs, or our hair had all fallen out, or our skin were covered in boils and we were clawing ourselves raw with shards of pottery trying to find relief, but most of us look okay. Inside we tremble with fatigue, our hearts are skipping beats, our brains are working overtime to think of the simplest words. When we feel like there’s not enough air, don’t worry, we’ll turn around so you can’t see us gasp. When our joints throb and our skin hurts and our bones ache and our muscles spasm – – it’s alright – – we’ll make sure you don’t know. We’ll keep our anxiety and depression to ourselves and if we can’t, we’ll find a reason to stay away until we can put our “good” face back on. Pretending is exhausting and can lead to depression and hopelessness. We are pretenders, afraid to be “that person” – – the one who’s always sick, who doesn’t feel well, who can’t go, who can’t stay.
We don’t want to be sad. We don’t like being depressed but sometimes, Lyme feels like this.

When You're Stuck With a Fake Disease

When my test results came they were covered with multiple +’s. My doctor assured me that, yes, I was truly sick; that the myriad of symptoms harassing me were not the imagined folly of an attention seeker, or an attempt to get out of work. They were, he said, signs of a real and, while not curable, treatable disease. I hobbled from his office that day on legs stiff with pain, climbed into my vehicle, put my head on the steering wheel, and wept.
Relief.
I was not glad to know I was sick or to be sick, and had no idea the long road ahead of me. I was simply happy to know I was not insane. In my body, I carried a pathogen – – a wiggly, sneaky spirochete that could be identified under a microscope. So now, when people asked what was wrong, I could say definitively, “I have Lyme Disease.”
Little did I know . . . truly little . . . this disease, at least the chronic version, came wrapped so tightly in politics, it had been strangled into a mere syndrome. Just a collection of symptoms and the claim of unknown etiology.
Once again, almost three years later, I am in my car with another laboratory report. This time, a Lupus panel. I requested it because I suffer so many of the symptoms. This page is full of “negatives” and “within ranges,” and I am weeping. Not out of joy as one might assume but frustration, plain and simple. I was hoping for the words, “positive,” “elevated,” or “out of range.”
You may be thinking, I am insane after all. This has to seem crazy and probably offensive to those who have Lupus. I may, indeed, at this point, be a little mental, and I really do not mean to offend. I will try to explain my desire to be diagnosed with a progressive, awful disease.
As a nurse, I knew going in, there was no test to confirm Lupus. A positive on any one of the many tests commonly run does not mean one has the disease, while a negative does not mean one doesn’t. Confirmation involves, as with most autoimmune illnesses, a battery of tests that could all mean something else, and the clinical diagnosis of a physician based on symptoms.
This has to be exasperating for Lupus patients, always leaving them with a hint of doubt, a bit of worry; the possibility they may have something else instead, afraid they may be on the wrong track. They probably feel some days they would give anything for pathogenic proof.
But, as I have learned, a clear etiology doesn’t always hold up in the court of medical or governmental opinion. A wiggly, active, clever spirochete in your blood, muscles, joints, and organs does not, for some reason, necessarily make a convincing argument.
So I wanted a Lupus diagnosis. I wanted it because it is legitimate in the eyes of the world. And if I am going to have the symptoms of a real disease, I would like people to believe I have one. Lupus, MS, ALS, all count. They are not referred to as “post disease syndromes.” They garner, as they should, sympathy, empathy, walk-a-thons, telethons, marathons, ice bucket challenges. Celebrities raise awareness and money for these ailments. And all the governmental agencies that hold the power and the purse strings take them seriously and search for cures.
These afflictions should get attention. They are serious and devastating and treatment needs to continue to advance. But the horror of one disease does not negate the horror of another.
So I am in my car, weary of explaining; of the questioning looks, implications, and innuendos. Did you see a tick? Did you have a rash? Lyme disease makes your knees hurt, right? It’s caused by a bacteria? I didn’t know that. Well, at least it can’t kill you. Just a few weeks of antibiotics and you should be good, right?
I am in my car thinking that I am done; done feeling defensive and trying to prove this is genuine. Just because I am sick, doesn’t mean I have to become an activist, does it? I can just close up and know within myself that I am really ill. Someone else doesn’t have to believe me.
I am in my car thinking maybe I am crazy; maybe this is all in my head, and I do not really have crippling pain, suffocating fatigue, memory loss. What if my sometimes stumbling, drunken-like gait is put-on, but I’m so nuts that I don’t realize I’m doing it. What if some psychosomatic invention is causing the muscle spasms, the shortness of breath, the heart palpitations? It’s been awhile since I have had doubt about the truth of my condition, but somehow this piece of paper takes me back.
I am in my car crying, experiencing all the symptoms of multiple real diseases that people believe in and care about; suffering as much as some with MS or Lupus, but stuck with a “fake” disease, just this left over syndrome that is supposedly “cured” by 21 days of antibiotics but has cost me thousands over the last three years.
I fold up the results and tuck them in my purse. I don’t even tell my family they were negative. I think they might be disappointed too that I am not sick with something they won’t have to defend or explain. This paper in my purse, doesn’t mean I don’t have Lupus, but it means I can’t say that I do. Maybe I’ll talk to my doctor about testing for something else, or maybe I’ll pretend I’m well. Maybe, as hard as that is, that would be the easiest.
Lyme feels like this.

Sunday Driver

To the long line of drivers behind me, I am sorry. Please know that I am likely not even aware I am driving 40 mph in a 55 mph zone. At some point it will dawn on me, and I promise to hit the gas and make my way to at least 45.
If I could only contact each of you and explain; convince you that my snail’s pace is the best thing for all of us. I just need a little extra time. It’s been awhile since I’ve driven.
Maybe if you’d known me before I got sick. Maybe then you wouldn’t sigh, or roll your eyes and ride my bumper. You might even cheer me on if you knew all I’d been through to get back in the driver’s seat.
Maybe if you’d known me when I was a home health nurse, logging more hours in a car than I can count, you would show some grace. Twenty years, I drove from house to house providing treatments and medicine to those unable to transport themselves. I drove on roads that looked like driveways in weather that forced most to stay inside. Maybe you would see me in a more heroic light; be grateful and consider I may have once cared for someone you love. You might even stop shouting things like, “good grief,” or “c’mon lady,” or worse.
Maybe if you’d seen me on my last day of work; watched me turn in my nursing bag, computer, and name tag; saw me hug, and cry, and say good-bye to my friends and co-workers, maybe then you would find some patience. If you had witnessed my devastation, how helpless I was to save my livelihood in the wake of this microscopic army; if you had seen me when I was a whole person and watched that last piece of my old life crumble, leaving me barely standing – – an isolated ruin. Maybe then your testy fingers would cease tapping the wheel.
If you had watched me grow frustrated when my light switch would not start my dryer, or witnessed my panic when I could not remember the way home, or glimpsed my daughter’s face when she realized I was seeing things that were not really there. Maybe you could find it in your heart, to stop slamming your palms on the wheel, and instead smile and feel happy that some of the cobwebs have been cleared from my mind and, even with an occasional wrong turn, I always find my way home now.
I want to go faster. I do! I long to feel the confidence of a drive at the legal limit of speed. I hate making you wait, being that person who slows everyone down. I want to feel the wind blow my hair and turn up my radio. I want what you want right now while stuck behind me and what you will have as soon as I am out of your way.
I have been forced into the passenger seat for two years, sitting passively saying, “Turn left, now right. Take me to the grocery, then the pharmacy, please. Can we stop at the library?” Or, worse, I ask to be taken, to attend to an errand, and I hear, “Oh, I can drop that off for you!” or “What do you need? I can pick it up and bring it home.”
Being a passenger after having been so capable is like being a very hungry baby, whose mother is distracted and doesn’t bring spoon to mouth quickly enough. And just like that baby wants to grab the spoon and do it herself, so I ache to grab the wheel and deliver myself wherever I need and want to go.
So maybe I will speed up, but then again, maybe I will just pull over and let you pass me by, asking yourself, “What’s wrong with her? Why doesn’t she get off the road?” I won’t get to tell you that there is, in fact, a lot wrong with me but not as much as there used to be. I understand you cannot wait, but the road ahead has been here a long time, and she and I have some reacquainting to do. I am going to look out the window, feel the breeze, listen to NPR, listen to pop music. I am going to choose where to go next. And I am not, nor can I be, in a hurry.
Sorry.
Lyme feels like this.