I'm using the Story-Time Tuesday format for this and each week I will be doing a giveaway for "A Different Kind of Medical Care" but Dr. Tina Marcantel.
You can read about this book by clicking here.
Giveaway Information: Enter to win a copy on this post today or you can purchase at that link. 10% discount code is 'healthy1'.
I will have Mr. Jenny select a random number from all the comments on this post. Feel free to enter any time before Monday.
Winner will be announced next Tuesday along with the continuing story. Autographed book will be mailed out on Wednesday!
The winner of last weeks book is this comment:
Ms. Asaid...
Congratulations, Ms. A!
PART FIVE - IF GOOD HEALTH WAS EASY, EVERYBODY WOULD HAVE IT!
She felt
like my last hope.
I don’t
remember this first hand. I remember the kind eyes, crying in the office and
drinking the milky liquid.
Within a
few days we were at the new doctor’s office.
I had
been physically sick with anxiety in the hours leading up to the appointment.
“Will she
help me? Will she hurt me? Will this just be a dead end? What’s the point?”
Unanswered
questions that tumbled in chaotic repetition through my pain-pill addled brain.
When we
were kid’s we learned fire safety as, ‘Stop! Drop! And Roll!’ During especially
severe pelvic and leg bone cramps, I would mutter that to myself as a distraction.
The bone cramps did that to me. Literally. The attacks would be so sudden and
so intense that I would stop whatever I was doing, drop whatever was in my hand
and drop to the floor where I would writhe and roll about in pain trying not to
scream. I didn’t always succeed in the not screaming part…especially awkward
while in public or in close confines such as a car.
My poor
husband would turn pale, try to rub my head while I shoved his hand away, get
me cold washcloths or whatever he thought might help. Nothing ever did. Usually
partway through the bone cramps my heart arrhythmia would get involved and by
then I’d be praying that a heart attack would kill me.
On the
way to the doctor’s office for that first appointment, I had an especially
horrid cramp in my pelvic bones. By the time we got there it had subsided, but
I was left shaky and weepy and sweaty. My skin was a lovely, flattering greyish
green and my clothes were damp and wrinkled.
During
those months I could not get in or out of the car unassisted. Mr. Jenny helped
me out and then helped me walk inside. I was in my early 50's but I felt like I
was 95. And NOT a young 95! I was shaking with exhaustion by the time we
traversed the short distance to the office door.
Mr. Jenny
helped me sit on a long, plush couch. I closed my eyes and just cried while he
checked me in.
I didn’t
look around. I just sat there hoping to die.
“She’s
not gonna help me, she’s just gonna hurt me more,” I whispered to
He hushed
me.
If you
know anything about me, the fact that I easily followed his direction is an
indicator of how badly I felt at that moment.
A woman’s
voice called my name a short time later.
I cried
harder when Mr. Jenny helped me to my feet.
I hobbled
the short hallway back to the exam room and sank into the chair.
I can
tell you today, years later, what the doctor looks like and what her offices
are like, but that day all I could truly do is sit in the chair, crying. I was
hopeless, helpless, broken.
Mr. Jenny
and I have talked about that visit many times. To be honest, I don’t remember
much of it. I had done all the paperwork prior to the visit from home and
answered a multitude of questions.
The only
thing I recall clearly is looking into the very kind golden-brown eyes of the
doctor and feeling afraid.
That
probably sounds dramatic. It probably IS dramatic, but I was truly at the point
where I couldn’t keep living as I had been. I wasn’t sitting around
thinking…hmmmm…pills or razor blades. I was just praying to die…in a passive way…that
wouldn’t make my family feel bad…and wouldn’t actually hurt me.
The
Doctor asked a few questions and then left the room. She came back a short time
later with a large glass filled with some milky liquid. “Magnesium,” she said
before we could ask the question.
“Let’s
start with the magnesium and potassium. Let’s get your heart issues and the
bone cramps under control.”
We left
her office over an hour and a half later with a big shopping bag filled with at
least twelve different bottles of supplements and support potions. The bag also
contained a flat blue box filled with small empty vials for saliva testing, an
order for precise blood work, and a diet listing specific foods and where to
buy them.
Once all
the testing came back, we would jointly develop a plan to improve the quality
of my life.
My
husband tells me that during the exam he learned my blood pressure was quite
low, I had extreme dryness in my ear canals, that my heart arrhythmia was quite
possibly caused by hormone depletion leading to marked magnesium/potassium
deficiency. She told my husband that many of the problems I currently had were
decades old. She talked about estrogen imbalance and cortisol production, and
yeast overgrowth (okay, this is probably way TMI but yeast overgrowth is not
necessarily yeast infections. I had never had one of these infections in my
life) caused by the surgeries, illnesses and related antibiotics over the
years.
While we
were waiting for the tests to come in, I was to follow an extremely limited
diet (Candida diet), take all the supplements EXACTLY as ordered, minimize and
try to eliminate the use of narcotic painkillers and I was supposed to rest,
rest, rest.
She told
my husband which supplements might help with the bone cramps, which support
mixtures would probably make me feel sicker before they made me feel better,
and gave him multiple pages of instructions.
I’m sure
if I had been able to look beyond my own suffering, I would have seen a scared,
bewildered husband. It makes me sad to this day to think of all he suffered
with my health issues.
We went
home and organized all the bottles on the kitchen counter.
We read
the saliva testing instructions together.
Mr. Jenny
scheduled the blood tests and went to the store.
I lay on the couch waiting for the next bone cramp attack and for the
arrhythmia to start up again.
PLEASE READ BOOK GIVEAWAY INFORMATION AT THE TOP OF THIS POST.
16 comments:
So I had that exact same crying jag in my Dr.'s office last December and all she did was give me a prescription for anti anxiety meds. I did figure out I needed potassium by myself by doing a little internet research, but I will try adding the magnesium. If I don't take a potassium pill every day or so I wake up with cramps in my feet.
I never had anywhere near the terrible symptoms you had, but they were enough to get me to pay more attention to my health.
Thanks for sharing your story, it helps to know that you aren't the only one...
xxoo,
RMW
I cannot imagine what you and the Mister have been through. I just thank God and the doctor they have discovered what works.
I won't even go into details but natural medicating has helped me more than years of doctors.
I am so glad you found her.
God bless Mr. Jenny.
I fired my old dr and in the process of looking for one like you have! I am so tired of feeling like I am being ignored and disregarded. I have gone to him for the same thing a few times and every time I come out of there with something different and no further ahead on a diagnosis and he is constantly contradicting himself....NO MORE!
Jenny your fear and pain jump off the page. I am so grateful you found this amazing Dr! I'm ready to see this story get to the healing part!
hugs, Linda
Wow! That must have been awful. For both of you!!
Oh my friend! Happy you got the help just when you needed it;). Hugs and prayers
these posts are heart-rending, Jenny. can NOT imagine what you've been through. but it seems that you went through hell and kept going. amen, sister.
Jenny I am so glad you telling your story, so real and so heartfelt. I am in agony with you every week -
I just went back to the beginning and read it all...and I'm not even sure what I'm thinking. I am so sorry that this was your life, you so didn't deserve it. I'm feeling grateful that while I've had some issues that have made my life not exactly "normal", I haven't had physical pain. I feel guilty that I was whining on my post yesterday about being sick...it is nothing, really nothing. I'm also thinking you are the strongest person I know to have survived and to be the sweet, kind, funny person you are today. Hugs to you my friend.
I'm really hoping that this all helped!
I just came across your blog today, and I'm absolutely riveted by this story! You've been through such unimaginable pain, I'm glad you're finally on the up and up. Can't wait to hear more about this amazing doctor you found! Definitely bookmarking this for the future.
I'm glad we bumped into each other (can't remember how now) so that I can hear your story. I am so glad you (must have!) found some relief. Waiting to hear the rest of the story as it unfolds. :)
Again, I thank YOU for sharing this with us. If your story helps one person.....{and I'm sure you have} it is worth you retelling your pain.
You are awe-inspiring Jenny.
XO
It's great that you are sharing this, Jenny. I have a feeling you will help a lot of people.
And I think I may need some magnesium myself!
=)
I haven't had the emotional strength to read your story until this week, but I'm now on my knees and reading f eels like my only option. Pain hasn't beenmy thing, but problems breathing, no energy, no hormones, no thyroid, endless depression and umpteen diagnoses have been. I'm now facing a diagnosis of bi polar and hope seems so far away. I knew I needed to read your story, I know I was meant to meet you, I now pray that as your story continues it might be something that will help me too. God bless xxx
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