Those who know me well recognize that the length of time that has passed since my last blog post hints that my health hasn’t been great.

“In the fiery crucible of battling an incurable illness, she fearlessly harnesses the darkness, transforming it into fuel and igniting an unyielding spirit that blazes through life with an unwavering light that no healthy soul could ever hope to match.”
~Em Farwell
These past several months have been challenging. Trying to strike a balance between improving my quality of life, managing my symptoms, and dealing with disappointing test results has become an unexpected labyrinth that is stealing minutes from my life. Adjusting to medication changes has always been challenging for me, and it keeps adding to the torment.
It began when I contracted COVID back in December. The on-call doctor held back some of my medications while I was taking Paxlovid, but unfortunately, he didn’t withhold all the necessary ones, and it wreaked havoc on my lab results. Since then, it’s been a constant “let’s try this” game with my treatment plan, leaving me struggling with constantly changing side effects. It feels like I’m stuck on a hamster wheel; when one test improves, another one plummets.
During this time, I’ve had to tolerate changes in my medications and dosages, endure periods of isolation, watch my hair fall out, and witness my eyesight continue to decline. Adding to this jigsaw puzzle of torture, due to my medications & Sjögren’s, in just 6 months I went from having no cavities to having more than 10 cavities that I can’t afford to fix. It feels like an endless cycle of setbacks and obstacles that I am continuously struggling to overcome. All these physical changes and the thought of future ones (losing my hair, teeth, eyesight, etc.) take a huge toll on my mental health. I’m exhausted.

I am very grateful for my medical team. They’re putting in a major effort to help me through this time and to find solutions to improve my quality of life. Lately, I’ve started hearing phrases like “Hail Mary”, “last ditch effort”, “worth a shot,” and “running out of options” from my doctors, which leaves me with a sense of uncertainty.
The latest “out of the box” effort is to try biological therapy. The original thought was infusions; however, that would mean another monthly trip to Boston, which is 2 1/2 hours from my home. Instead, I will be giving myself weekly injections.
“with a biologic in the class of biologics known as selective costimulation modulators to target the cause of your inflammation and reduce the activity of your immune system”
I began the biologic last week. Thankfully, I’ve only experienced mild side effects. I did have bruising and tenderness at the injection site, along with chills after the injection and a lingering dull headache. Throughout the week, I’ve felt out of sorts, but I’m prepared to fight through adjusting to a new medication.
Finding balance and knowing if a medication is working for me can take months. Despite struggling with the thought of self-injecting, I keep reminding myself that I’m doing it with the hope that this will improve my current situation and lead to better days ahead!
Today was Week 2 of therapy. The actual process wasn’t any easier. I still hesitated and had to run through a whole gymnastic routine mentally before actually injecting the medication. But I did it, and I’m choosing to have faith in a positive outcome. I may be exhausted, but no one should be so brazen as to dare count me out!
That sucks! Keep looking forward, one day this will pass and you can put it behind. I realize you have a chronic illness and will proably always have to take some medication. I hope the side effects let up soon. The side effects can be as tough as the dieases. I had Lyme Dieases, had a port and went thru 18 months of antibiotic therapy. It was a struggle and sometimes I didn’t think I would win. I’ve been in remission since 2018. The virus doesn’t die, it is stagnat I guess. The virus went to my brain and it’s like someone took a machine gun to my brain, the past 22 years are a blur. But it’s much better than flying to D.C. every month and keeping the port perfectly clean. I hope this works for you and you can get back to your life. 🙂
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I hope your Lyme stays dormant. ♥️
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Hi Em, I can relate 🌻
These past few months or so, for me, have also been a bit of challenge as I try to maintain some balance in life.
A major change is on the horizon, which hopefully will alleviate some stresses on my life – but no doubt it will also bring about others.
Take care and look after yourself 🙂
Blessings to you and yours
Perry
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I’ll add you to our prayer list. I hope the change is the beginning of a more peaceful & happy existence for you!
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It’ll provide me the ability to pick and choose what I feel are priorities, not be bound by others’ expectations – So, that’s gotta be a good thing 🙂
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