A blog about my experience with chronic illness and finding hope in the darkest days

Tag: salt tablets

You get used to chronic illness, but you also never do.

It is a typical Tuesday morning, and my mother is knocking on my bedroom door. She comes bearing breakfast, carrying a vibrant red tray that holds a plate of fried egg and potatoes, a small, ripe orange, salt tablets and an electrolyte-filled water bottle. She’s wearing a smile and summons the sunshine, opening up my blinds to let the light in. “Good morning” she says, delivering a kiss to my head. She leaves me to wake up, and heads back downstairs.

I nibble on the kind food, waiting for my medicine to kick in before I can rush to the bathroom. I am grateful for her generous labor in the kitchen, aware of how much thought, time, and energy she put into making this food, but I also feel angry that I couldn’t walk downstairs and cook breakfast myself. I juggle this gratitude and resentment as I lazily circle my feet, stimulating blood flow and nudging my tired, cranky body to begin this new day. 

My mornings weren’t always so slow, and it didn’t always take an average of two and a half hours to get my body functioning, but everything changed after being diagnosed with a chronic, disabling health condition last December. Vaguely, I can remember the days where I’d spring out of bed, throw on my sneakers, and head out for a two mile run before school. Those mornings seem like ages ago, like memories that belong to someone else except they don’t. They’re still mine. I have to remind myself of this often.

 It’ll be at least another hour of circling my feet and waiting, an hour of getting up just to sit back down all the while chugging oceans and oceans of water. I’ve gotten pretty good at filling the minutes, taking up journaling, meditation, and games of Words With Friends, but some days I can’t help but loathe my demanding illness and the way it steals time from me, daily. Some days I’d trade the extra hour in bed in a heartbeat for those dingy sneakers and early morning runs. Some days I’m tempted to scream, “Screw it!” to the salt tablets and the water and the waiting, throwing on a pair of workout clothes and running out the front door. But I know I wouldn’t make it very far. I know with my condition and these early hours, I’d hardly make it to the living room, let alone down the street. On these days especially, my body feels like a cage.

Picture of my old running shoes.

It was December of 2019 when I was officially diagnosed with a common yet scarcely known medical condition. After over a year of debilitating fatigue, dizziness, heart palpitations, and other miscellaneous symptoms, my doctor confirmed I was suffering from a form of dysautonomia called Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (also known as POTS). This condition affects my heart rate and blood pressure whenever my body is upright, making it difficult to walk or stand for long periods of time. Things like dehydration, heat, or extended periods of inactivity can intensify my symptoms, which is why mornings can be such a particular challenge.

With POTS, every morning is a battle. After lying horizontal for eight hours, it takes a lot of time, salt, and fluid for my body to tolerate being vertical again. A good, long night of sleep means waking up dehydrated, and waking up dehydrated means it’s even harder for my stubborn, misbehaving nervous system to regulate my heart rate and blood pressure. On good days, my body will wake up within the hour. On bad days, it can take up to five hours before I am finally functioning. On flare days, I never reach “functioning” at all. It’s been almost a year and a half of these fluctuant mornings, and waking up into a flare day is still an infuriating letdown. 

On this typical Tuesday, I have physical therapy in the late morning. After all my tedious preparations, my mom and I climb into my car, her in the driver’s seat and me riding shotgun; a switch that is now routine. I sneak a quick glance at my mother sitting in what used to be my seat and feel my heart twinge with longing. As a twenty year old, I miss the freedom of sitting behind the wheel, and the independence that comes with a license and a set of wheels. I miss coasting down wide Texas roads, belting all my favorite songs, and mindlessly heading wherever I needed to be headed. These days, I’m scarcely headed anywhere, save physical therapy and my favorite local burger joint, and even before the entire nation locked down for a raging pandemic, I’ve been essentially homebound, my life revolving around physical therapy, doctor’s appointments, and sitting in the park. How did this happen? I wonder yet again. When did I become so boring and sad and crippled, and how do I make it stop? Turning my head, I look out the window, knowing the unchanged answer to these persistent questions. Still, I can’t help wishing it was different. 

Picture of me after physical therapy with lunch from my favorite local burger joint, P. Terry’s; My family likes to call this “PT after PT”.

I stroll up to the front desk, signing in for my session and beginning my usual small talk with the charismatic receptionist. “What did you do this weekend?” she asks, innocently and unassuming. Considering how it rarely varies, this question shouldn’t be so hard, but I find myself scrambling to think of anything significant. “Uh, honestly, I can’t remember. Just a typical weekend I guess.” I reply, paired with a basic shrug. My weekends are quiet now, given that I’m still quite physically limited and because of this they blur together, usually consisting of the following three things: reading, writing, and completing my at-home physical therapy exercises. It’s a routine that still feels novel and odd, another aspect of my new life I’ve yet to settle into, and I often find myself embarrassed of its stark simplicity; it’s painfully uncomfortable to admit how physically limited I currently am. 

My illness has changed many things about me, including what I can and can’t do, and this new life I’ve been thrusted into frequently feels like it was meant for someone else. Even in the forgiving privacy of my bedroom, I am constantly surrounded by pictures, clothing, trinkets and trophies curtly reminding me of the life I’ve had to let go of this past year. I can’t get dressed in the morning without seeing t-shirts representing programs and communities I used to be a part of, or hop in the car without seeing college bumper stickers that were once filled with pride and promise, but now burn with the sour taste of sorrow. Every new day of mine starts and ends in a shrine of my old life, while the hours in between burst with reminders and recollections of everything I’ve lost. For the past eight months, I have fumbled around my childhood home, trying to accept this new version of myself, all the while resenting that it even exists. 

I’ve become a regular at the physical therapy clinic over the past five months, consistently coming twice a week for my hour-long sessions. I’ve never really been a regular anywhere, and I certainly never expected it to be here, of all places. As I set up in the gym, waiting for my physical therapist to finish up with a previous patient, I take in my familiar surroundings and wonder how this accustomed routine can still manage to feel so foreign. A year ago, I was in class at a university I adored. A year ago, I was juggling homework assignments with rehearsals, singing Italian arias in practice rooms and wondering what musical might be chosen for the upcoming semester. Now I’m sitting in a gym at a physical therapy clinic, peddling my feet on a recumbent bike and doing exercises that are designed to help me stand in the shower and go to the grocery store. The change is enough to make me dizzy, or maybe that’s just POTS.

Despite the overwhelming change, I’ve discovered the remarkable capacity to adapt that every human carries within. I’ve learned that it doesn’t take long to latch onto the in’s and out’s of chronic illness, and I’ve quickly gotten used to the salt tablets and electrolyte drinks and slugging liter after liter of water. I’ve gotten used to my medication regimen, the slow mornings, even having to sit in the chilly, shorter showers I’ve begrudgingly been forced to adopt. But I’ve never gotten used to the loss illness brings, the persistent canceling of plans, and all of the sacrifice that comes with putting your health first. I’ve not yet gotten used to the novel post-diagnosis life, the “new normal” people speak about that’s never once felt normal to me. I trust one day it’ll click for me and I’ll find a way to live beside or without my illness, going through my days unchained, but for now, I’m still figuring it out, half heartedly trying to get used to things I frankly don’t want to get used to. 

An assortment of my favorite salt tablets and electrolyte drinks.

I can get through a Tuesday with my eyes closed, and I can recite the sodium content in various different electrolyte drinks without missing a beat. Off the top of my head, I can tell you the average time it takes for someone to get diagnosed with POTS – a lengthy four years – and I can also probably crush you in a game of Words With Friends (I’m kind of a pro by now…). But the one thing I can’t do is get used to the realm of chronic illness, and all the sacrifice it demands. I can’t get used to the world of symptoms, the too many days spent feeling unwell, and the holidays and birthdays shared with my condition. I still have yet to settle into the unforgiving flare days, the laundry list of limitations, and all the stolen time that’s taken from me daily. I can’t, I won’t, and I don’t think I ever will.

You get used to chronic illness – after all, it is chronic – but you also never do.  At least, I certainly haven’t.

I’m Still Standing (With the Help of Beta-Blockers)

It started with a viral illness. Maybe it was from the mono during my senior year of high school that I never really felt better from, or maybe it was the upper respiratory infection that landed me in the emergency room during my freshman year of college, fainting on a Friday morning. Which one was the initial onset, it is difficult to tell, but for the past three years of my young adult life, I have battled daily, chronic fatigue, followed by dizziness, heart palpitations, chronic pain, and more. The first two years of this time was spent denying, ignoring, and wishing my illness away, until about a year ago when it exploded all over my life, forcing me to rebuild atop the wreckage. I was dragged into the chronic illness world kicking, screaming, spitting out every obscenity I know, and like so many others, it was a world I never planned on visiting, or getting to know so well. 

The first time the name “POTS” would ever be spoken to me would be in May of 2019, in the middle of a lengthy diagnosis journey. I’d been waiting on referrals for rheumatology and sleep neurology, terrified, impatient, and exasperated at how much of my worsening condition was still unknown. At the time, “POTS” was only a story about a friend of my brother, the diagnosis of a swimmer who’d battled headaches and vomited when she stood for long periods of time. In the retelling of her experience, I listened as the words “can’t stand”, “throws up”, “horrible headache”, and “no cure” poked through the narrative, striking details of a burden I couldn’t fully understand. “POTS” was still a cluster of cooking containers to me, the thing you use to heat food on the stove and the dish that’s a pain to clean. It was just a random acronym, a group of bold letters that had no significance in my life. Or so I thought. I was unaware at this point that “POTS” was in fact the name of the illness running rampant beneath my skin; the name of a chronic condition that would soon take more and more from me; the diagnosis I’d receive by the end of the long year. I remember blocking out her story, thinking my doctors would surely figure out what was wrong with me, but three months later, I would walk out of their offices empty handed, my heart dragging behind me on the ragged, grey pavement. 

The next time I’d hear the name “POTS” would be in my internist’s office that August, three months following the story of my brother’s swimmer friend. It was during a follow-up appointment to regroup and address my unnamed illness when she threw out that vaguely familiar name. She stated “POTS” was essentially the only likely condition we had yet to test for, a condition that affects the autonomic nervous system and is characterized by high heart rate and fatigue. It’s known to occur in young women, and considering my heart was pounding away at 110 bpm just sitting on her table, my persistent, prevalent symptoms were enough to enquire. She wrote a referral to an electrophysiologist, wished me good luck, and I walked out the office, clutching her doctor’s note like it was my last and only hope. At that point, it was. 

I went home and googled, my heart fluttering as I read symptoms that outlined the past year of my life. Heart palpitations, fatigue, fainting or near fainting, lightheadedness, tremors, shaking and nausea. There were GI issues, headaches, brain fog, and muscle aches. Temperature deregulation, vision changes, fast, rapid heart rate; almost everything under the sun and almost everything I’d experienced. That day I felt something I hadn’t felt in months. A tickle in my gut, an internal spark, an igniting of hope that had almost burnt out. The path forward was narrowing, a horizon finally breaking in the distance, and I wondered if walking down this road, if following this referral might finally lead me onwards and through.

I didn’t know that despite the right direction, the road would still be bumpy, plagued with heartbreak and loss. I didn’t know the road would still be a lengthy one, that although I was closer to a diagnosis than I’d ever been before, I was still three months away from sitting in the office of a doctor who could finally, actually help me. I didn’t know what was to come, I only hoped it would bring answers.

I received the referral in August, after an entire summer of medical testing, but school was set to start by the end of the month. In my mind, the summer I had just spent as a professional patient, completing three sleep studies, countless blood draws, an EEG, and a CT and MRI of my brain should’ve brought the answers I was looking for. I should’ve been going back to school with a diagnosis, with everything tied up in a nice, neat bow, figured out just in time to protect my precious plans. But the new patient appointment with the electrophysiologist wouldn’t be until October, halfway through the semester. Would I stay home from school to continue my quest for a diagnosis? Or would I continue it in an entirely other state and try to get a referral there?

I made the decision to return to school in the meantime, thinking I could either wait at home twiddling my thumbs, or I could wait at school, with homework and friends to keep me busy. Looking back, this was a bit of a mad decision, considering my body was far from well and crushing fatigue was constant, but with no diagnosis, I felt I didn’t have a concrete reason not to return. Plus, I didn’t want the unnamed illness to disrupt my life more than it already had. I’d pushed through with this unknown condition long enough, couldn’t I push through just a little longer?

I made adjustments to my schedule, leaving a demanding but beloved major. It was a hard decision but I knew it was best for my health at the time. I’d shorten the amount of hours I’d take that semester, nixing any physically demanding classes, and I’d let all my teachers know I was dealing with ongoing health issues. My doctor was kind enough to write a note, officially asking for assignment and attendance flexibility, and although I didn’t know if I could make it through the semester, I knew I wanted to try. I’d go to school while waiting for autonomic testing, praying my optimism would protect me from failing. I clutched my hope like it was a metal shield, hiding behind its sturdy support, but soon I would learn no amount of hoping could salvage the unraveling of my old life. It couldn’t save me from the pain, and it couldn’t reverse what was already in motion; nothing could. My illness would ultimately consume my life, and there was nothing I could do about it. 

I lasted five weeks into the semester. In those five weeks, I never once completed a full week of classes. I crashed in bed at four in the afternoon, listening to my roommates come and go, off to parties and rehearsals, meeting up with friends. Lying on my bed, I’d watch the sun set every evening, alone, scared, and feeling so tired I could hardly move. Three weeks in, I visited my doctor in town, trying to get a referral to a local dysautonomia clinic, but it took six weeks to even schedule an appointment. By the fifth week of school, I ended up in the emergency room yet again, due to a 170 bpm heart rate while walking around my apartment. With my illness spiraling out of control once more, and after years of pushing and pushing my body to keep up, something inside me gave out, snapped, decided it had had enough. I wouldn’t be finishing the semester, and I wouldn’t find some way to miraculously soldier on. I would be going home, waiting on referrals in my hometown, leaving pieces of myself on the college campus I adored; pieces of myself that would never be mine again. 

View of the sunset from my dorm room bed.

My apartment was five minutes away from a world-renowned dysautonomia clinic. I was a young, debilitated college student desperate for medical treatment, unable to walk to classes because my heart rate got so high. My internist in town did all that he could, sending letters to the clinic, his nurses calling every morning, but the clinic simply couldn’t squeeze me into their packed, rigid schedule. They were booked six months out, into the next year. And how would squeezing me in be fair to other patients who had waited the long six months for help? The demand for autonomic testing in America is so high, dysautonomia clinics across the country are swamped. There are not enough doctors or time in the day to see all the people who need to be seen, or to help all of the people who need to be helped. I was a person of many who needed to see an autonomic specialist, who was living with a quality of life similar to patients with congestive heart failure. The reality was, I could no longer take care of myself, could no longer cook or shower, and my illness was consuming me with each passing day. I withdrew from college, said my goodbye to my family of friends, and then I went home, and I waited. Help from doctors was months away. 

The waiting was the hardest part. I watched my world become smaller and smaller, independence and freedom swirling down the drain as my mother washed my hair. Simple walks around the neighborhood became increasingly more depleting, and life became an activity I watched through a downstairs window. The sun would rise and fall, the birds would come and go. The neighbors’s cars pulled in and out of driveways, going places, doing things. I was no longer a participant in the world; all I could do was observe.

Although my body kept me breathing and woke me up for each new day, I wasn’t living, I was surviving. I waited for doctor appointments as my friends carried on at college, sending their love while their lives continued, essentially unchanged. They would continue to grow in school, continue to learn and deepen relationships, continue to live the college life that was swiftly taken from me. These were the days where movies were a life raft, floating me to the next hour; if it weren’t for the television, I would’ve drowned in my fatigue. 

After two months of being out of school, I finally met the right doctor. It had been two months of meaningless tv shows, two months of writing angry entries in my journal, two months of avoiding music and reminders of the beloved life I lost. Two months of sitting at the park, two months of lying on the couch with a heating pad, two months of hardly telling anyone where I was, that I had left school, that I was back home and depressed. By the time I finally saw the right doctor, it would be another month until I’d be able to be tested. A month of more television, a month of more angry journal entries, a month of feeling increasingly more trapped inside my home, inside my body, inside a reality that I never imagined would happen to me. It was a reality I wanted a gift receipt for, some way to be refunded for the wild, energetic, young adult years I lost. 

Journal entry from 12/13/2019.

In mid-December of 2019, after a grueling tilt table test preceded by three various autonomic function assessments, I was finally diagnosed with a condition called Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome. It’s typically referred to as POTS, and it was no longer just a group of cookware or a sickness that only happened to someone else; it was now the name of the health condition that had assigned itself to me. This form of dysautonomia makes it difficult to walk or stand, as the dysfunctional nervous system struggles to regulate heart rate and blood pressure when the body is upright. Although it is a benign condition, it can be incredibly debilitating, triggered by simple things such as a hot shower, a warm day, even from eating a moderate or large sized meal. A diagnosis opened up a whole new world for me, one I still didn’t particularly want to be a part of, but a world that had access to help; I walked out of that doctor’s office with pamphlets, referrals to a physical therapy clinic and a dietician, and now I had a relationship with a doctor who validated and understood my condition. From the very beginning, I never wanted a diagnosis, but that day, the year-old ball of angst that had cemented in my gut dissipated because finally, I had answers. 

The treatment for POTS takes an individualized approach, as no two patients are the same. This syndrome can have varying degrees of debilitation, along with a vast assortment of symptoms and causes, so naturally, treatment varies per the individual. However, care for POTS often consists of increasing salt and fluid intake, modified, consistent exercise programs, various lifestyle changes, and a mixture of medications to help lower heart rate and raise blood pressure (typical medications are beta-blockers, vasoconstrictors, stimulants, and more). There is no cure for POTS so treatment is aimed at managing symptoms, and prognosis typically depends on the age of the patient and the cause of the disease. Because my doctor believes I contracted POTS as a result of a viral illness, my prognosis looks quite good, and it’s predicted I should see relief in a few years’ time. 

Because so many people have not heard of POTS (including many doctors…yikes!), they assume my condition is rare and that my experience with a viral illness does not happen to people often. I wish this was the case. I wish there weren’t so many people in the world that understood my tale of pain and the struggle of POTS so well. It is estimated up to three million people in America alone are suffering from this disease, though it is likely more, considering how often the condition is misdiagnosed and how difficult it is to get access to the correct doctors and medical testing. While not all three million of these people developed POTS as a post-viral condition (there are several other causes such as EDS, autoimmune conditions, and pregnancy to name a few), that is a staggering amount of people living with this chronic disease. I just came down with a virus, the same way you’d catch a cold. It wasn’t a rare, freak event. It can happen to anybody, and it happened to me.

One viral illness. That’s all it took to transform my life. These days, I struggle to process the lasting impact of a single infection. The fact that it’s led me to over seven doctors in the span of a year. The way it has shifted, stalled, and shattered my life, my ideal college career, and plans I had for the future. Often, I think back to stomach bugs in my childhood and the typical colds and rounds of flu I’ve battled throughout my adolescent years, baffled at the way I was able to recover from them so quickly, unscarred and whole again within the course of a week. Back at school the next week. Now I live a life where time moves slow and fatigue comes fast and standing in the shower is a victory to be celebrated. Now I am faced with the daunting task of rebuilding an entire life, starting from the very beginning: teaching my body how to walk again.

The medical condition I have makes it hard to stand or walk for moderate to long periods of time. When I do, my blood pressure drops, my heart begins to race, and my nervous system begins its fight against gravity, battling the force that always wants to pull me down. But despite it all, I get up. I take my medicine, I swallow my salt tablets, I go to physical therapy. Despite it all, I’m still standing, even though there were many days in this health journey I was convinced I’d never see the end of. The ones that felt like even when the clock struck midnight, they would find a way to go on forever. I’m still standing, even when my body doesn’t want to; when my muscles ache, my head is foggy, and my dysfunctional nervous system would rather I lie in bed all day. Despite it all, I’m still standing. Maybe not better than I ever did, like the famous Elton John song goes, but standing, nevertheless. 

Thank you to Dysautonomia International for the informative pictures, expending consistent effort to raise awareness for POTS and other forms of dysautonomia, and the resources it provides for those affected.

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