Music's Like a Snuggie for Your Soul

MUSIC'S LIKE A SNUGGIE FOR YOUR SOUL

Saturday, January 2, 2021

More of the Same. But Different

Hi, 

How's things? 

My life has taken a few loops and unexpected turns I can't articulate here much further, for now, but i'm grateful. 

I'm a poor historian, but I'd say since I last updated, the seizure scene has been mostly copacetic. I'd guess I've maintained an average of 3-4 months between. I had one cluster, i remember, but even then I was able to avoid the woo-woo bus and the hospital. 

I still have the same part time gig (building maintenance at an event center). My boss has been pretty exceptional regarding the seizure factor. She even called my sister when I had one there once, and helped me get home without summoning the whole brigade. 

My sweet dog, Olive, died. My sister moved out of town. All my grandparents are gone. My leg is pretty well healed. You'd hardly know there's a big titanium rod in there most of the time. I'm back playing hockey, biking and kayaking. And that's life, i guess. 

I learned a lot in counseling. Mostly on my own, granted, in attempt to better understand and trust the process. In any case, I liked the lady, she seemed smart and I trusted her. Then she breached confidentiality. Twice. Absent threat to life or limb or any reasonable justification. I tried to let go. It wasn't anything major, admittedly, but I couldn't get over it, so I quit.

So here i am with another randosaurus report from the nutcase junkshow bunker. 

I can't think of any notable lifestyle changes or stressors. I had low key anxiety about going to the hospital in general, post Rona, i suppose. It was high on my running list of objectives- stay out of Gritman (our local E.R.). And I had great success- check! Until I didn't. 

I was on my bike running an errand. It was dark. I was afforded the luxury enjoyment of a brief debate. The prospect of an extemporaneous bicycle race home against my sometimes fractious, irascible neurons through two busy intersections was tempting,,, i have the brain and body of a prize fighter but i'm not as young or fast or resilient as I once was. I was on a stretch of sidewalk where I knew someone would find me eventually. 

Then I dunno. Not sure exactly why i was transported. My hunch is i was still unconscious when medics got there, and the opportunity to administer drugs and abscond with a sedated, seizure-zonked patient was understandably preferable to waiting around for the whole seizure puppet song and dance to transpire. I don't usually get the whole story, fortunately/unfortunately.

I think my brain tends to spiral in hospital settings after so many fights and desperate-feeling times there. I dunno. I've had seizures cluster outside the urgent care scene, though too, so who knows. 

So whether I needed to be there or not, there i was. It's my understanding none of the seizures were particularly severe or prolonged. I don't remember any part of being in the ER. I don't think I remember anything on the hospital floor until the second day. 

Praise Jesus for a phenomenal hospitalist; i was able to leave that night.

My friend was able to stay most of the duration, thankfully, it sounds like, and has since helped me piece together some details. Not lots but some.

I remember taking out my I.V. toward the end. I don't remember feeling brash about it, just done, and resolute in my decision to vacate the premises. I don't remember what precipitated the verdict.

The hospitalist came in and talked to me extensively. Like a really, really long time, from what I recall. Ack. She must have been adequately placated, though, with whatever promises I made to follow through with the freshly drafted pharmaceutical game plan. (Sure. Maybe. We'll see. I'm trying.) Barf. In any case, she let me free.

I remember eating beef stir fry that tasted good. (It was the only thing I'd eaten, apparently.) I remember looking for bed alarms to disable and realizing it was an I.V. drip machine squawking.

I don't know why anyone is so nice. I feel like a colossal waste of resources. 

I just come crashing onto the stage like a wind up monkey bashing cymbals together, and disappear again. I don't deserve the care and concern I've garnered here or anywhere. 

People rallied around me. People I hadn't seen or heard from in a while helped coordinate care for me my dog and my bicycle.

I was gross. I'm always so gross. Doomed, infernal white bed sheets. I wasn't shackled or restrained to the unit in any way though, hallelujah. I kind of remember talking to my dad on the phone. I thought I saw my sister, but it was only Tami they said. Ah, well. 

So, however it all went, it wasn't overly traumatizing. I feel a little bit gas-lit regarding my lived experience on versus off antiepileptic drugs ('Anti- epileptic' drugs.  Isn't language, funny?) But oh well. I don't deny science. I understand action potentials and most of the proposed mechanisms of action; I'm just afraid they're overly simplified heuristics is all. Even they admit the exact mechanism is unknown for most of the anti-seizure medications.

I'd quit pharmaceuticals entirely for the better part of a year without any notable repercussions. Yeah, yeah i hear you, I'm just trying to eliminate my reliance on as many criminal, enterprises as possible these days, okay? 

I wasn't in a bad place mentally. I'd made some great friends working a regenerative style farm. I'd identified some of my flawed thinking and schemas and recognized healthy and unhealthy attachment patterns in therapy, so my relationships seemed to be bearing the fruit of that. 

I don't remember feeling particularly stressed until getting out of the hospital. Hopping back in the saddle on the western medical pony is giving me anxiety. I'm sure the new primary care docs in town are perfectly lovely, and the local neurology options are much improved. I just can't get myself excited about them. Sorry. I want to feel something other than 'over it' already, I do; I'm just failing at the moment. Wish I were better at just going along to get along.

I asked Dr. Brown if she'd chart i was faking or that I told her i was, at the very least, so maybe they'd hold the phone on the benzos. Hold the phone on everything.

I'm grateful, don't get me wrong- overwhelmed how people just deal with me all my associated biohazards and antics before I'm even cognizant and thereafter. I'm wildly impressed and humbled by that. I dont care much for the system but the people are wonderful.

Do I need help? Sure. Do I think the Rockefeller deathcare mafia system is, this time, for once, prepared to render that to me in my shiny, new, combination therapy, big pharma prescription deal? Eh. 

Do I believe marinating in a hospital setting after seizures is the best recovery policy for me? No, afraid not.

Do i think my people are amazing, that people, in general are amazing? Totally

What do you think, dear reader? Of my half-crocked strategy to tell them, many thanks, but i'm a faker. Please unsubscribe me from your service. ? Honestly I remember so little, I could be faking. At least I can't rule out concomitant dissociative seizures, certainly. I won't make mountains out of, nor deny real trauma I've been through. So there.

Just seems no way an otherwise normal, healthy person like me could or should have so much trouble with this. I totally get how the demon possession mythos became intertwined and persisted with epilepsy. Sorry. I feel gremlin infested. I'd buy that.

Just tell me the new, properly metered incantations 'ox-car-baz'ah-pine', 'la-mo-tri-gine' will channel the benevolent  pharmakia spirits equipped to rescue me from the jowls and bonds and bowels of physical and spiritual possession. 

I've tolerated both of the drugs independently, at one time, so hopefully that bodes well. Ugh. I'm sure in a week the side effects will vanish and we'll be blissfully on the road to seizure freedom. That's how this all goes, right?

I don't want to be obstinate or lazy and have everything erupt like a spectacular, purulent infection, making an even bigger, smellier mess of things. I don't. But I really, really don't want to get back on the roller coaster of new medications, new doctors, and the bloody rest of it, either. I don't want to be such a royal waste of resources. I just want to be left alone. Pretty sure. Yikes.

Besos. Abrazos. Best to you, adorable reader. Thanks for being here.

Alli







4 comments:

  1. Girl, I swear to all the animal gods- I was just thinking about you a few seconds before I saw you on my feed.
    DAYAM.
    I have no words of advice whatsoever. I sure wish I did. But what I do have is major respect for you and for your life-experience and for your intelligence and your attitude and your goodness.
    Unfortunately, none of that helps much.
    But I sure am glad you're still among us, doing not so badly overall. I wish you were doing even better. I wish you WERE done with all of this.
    I wish, I wish, I wish.
    I'm sorry about your beloved Olive. That's hard.
    Please know that you are thought about and wished very, very well by an oldish woman in Lloyd, Florida. There's a little pocket in my heart that is yours and yours alone.
    Mary

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  2. I wish I could take all that heavy illness stuff away from you in one big swoop. But, woman, you certainly find ways to write it down and at least from my experience, that helps, a lot some times.

    Drugs, the pharma shits, I have struggled and experimented with dosage against all advice too many times. Still do, what is it that makes me hate taking a shot of immune suppressant once a week? Plus all the other stuff against the side effects and the stuff against the stuff against the side effects. Plus the hospital visits and the tests and blood letting and waiting rooms and the whole load of never ending forever shit connected to it. Should I not be happy and delighted to live in a place where I have all that? Truth is, no, not - until I meet someone worse off than me. And that is always like a heavy punch in the guts and I feel small and humble and lost and one day I'll resign but not yet.
    What I mean to say is, I hear you.

    Also, I am so so happy to hear/read from you again after such a long time.

    Just as Mary wrote, know that you are in the thoughts and wishes of an oldish woman in the Rhine valley in the middle of Europe.

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  3. So bizarre. Hot damn. I have been thinking of you all week for some reason, and I guess I've summoned you or you've summoned me and all is good. I am so happy to read your words and the goings-on of your life and brain and how you make meaning and nonsense of all of it. Truly. Can we catch up somehow?

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  4. I have heard there is no such thing as co-incidence. It was nice to see a comment by somebody new, but when I clicked to your blog my heart almost stopped. Someone I love has a similar struggle and it seems like nobody talks about it.......So glad to hear you are managing and, especially, have an understanding and compassionate employer. I hope things continue to go well for you.

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