Messy (Blog #1073)

This morning and afternoon I was supposed to attend a writing class I signed up and paid for last week. Alas, sick with the crud and feeling like a bag of ass, last night I emailed the organizer and said I wouldn’t make it. So I’ve spent the day in bed, sneezing and reading and saying, “God help me” over and over and over again. Now it’ 9:30 at night, and I’m propped up in the living room in order to blog, sipping tea, the inside of my shirt covered in snot. God help me.

One of the books I’ve been reading today (I’m always working on more than one at a time) is called What’s in Your Web? Stories of Fascial Freedom by Phil Tavolacci. It’s about myofascial release (MFR), as taught by John F. Barnes, which I’ve been receiving recently from my myofascial release wizard (MFRW) and is changing my body and my life for the better. Specifically, the book is about how our fascia or connective tissue literally forms a web inside us that not only holds our bodies in space but also holds our mental and emotional memories. For anyone interested in the topic, I highly recommend it.

Maybe it’s just because I’m not feeling well, but something the book mentions that resonated with me is what’s called a Healing Crisis. Basically, it’s the idea that whenever you truly begin to heal, things are going to get worse before they get better. (This sucks, I know.) Why? Because you’ve poked the bear, disturbed ancient junk. Think of the way a dirty casserole dish initially gets dirtier and murkier when you first start running water into it. Ultimately the water is cleansing, but first it’s disturbing. So like, hang in there, Sweetheart, it just takes time.

Along these lines, apparently John F. Barnes says, “Healing is messy.” Amen. In my experience, it’s anything but a straight line, more like what happens when you poke a hole in a helium balloon and it goes flying every which way. One minute you’re up, the next minute you’re upside down. Or flat on your back. You think, This sucks. I’m getting nowhere. Even if you are. Even if you can’t see it.

Something I’ve been thinking about lately is how, if we’re really on our path, we’re led to where we need to go, to whom we need to meet. Used to I’d read books about people who had healed and think I had to do what they did, just the way they did. Alas, this always ended in frustration, since it’s impossible to take the exact healing route someone else has taken. Not only because working with their particular doctor or therapist, or eating their specific diet, would be unreasonable in terms of logistics and money, but also because what works for one person almost never works the exact same way for someone else. Because no two people have the same history or set of problems. Consequently, no two prescriptions for wellness can be the same.

More and more I’m learning to trust my path for me. I’m learning to trust that the professionals I’ve been led to and the books and information that fascinate me hold an important piece of my healing puzzle. Maybe not someone else’s healing puzzle–maybe, but maybe not–but my healing puzzle. Again, this whole process is messy. (Achoo!) It never happens as fast as you want it to. (Boo.) But it does happen. Over time, that which has been broken is put back together. That which has been shattered is mended.

God help us.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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Take your challenges and turn them into the source of your strengths.

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Tired of Being Strong (Blog #369)

Today has been a long, long day, and I’m over it.

This morning I saw the immunologist I’ve been waiting to see for three months. Uh, I guess it went well. The staff was superior, and after listening to me recount my somewhat long list of health problems, the doctor’s nurse said, “You’ve come to the right place.” Then I talked to the doctor. Again, I guess it went well. I’m still trying to wrap my head around the whole conversation, but he essentially said that “on paper” I’m healthy. “Your bloodwork is pristine,” he said. I’m pretty sure that was the word he used–pristine. Of course, I don’t actually live “on paper,” and I haven’t felt pristine for a while now. In fact, I’ve felt perfectly un-pristine, and–some days–quite shitty, thank you very much.

This is where things get “interesting.”

The doctor said that some people have what’s called (I think) a functional immunodeficiency, that things look good on paper but don’t quite cut the mustard in the real world that you and I live in. “It’s possible that your immune system is quirky,” he said. Quirky–that was the word he used, that was the explanation he gave me, the closest thing I got to a diagnosis. Quirky. I thought, Okay, I’ve been going through hell these last six months, and you’re telling me that my body is just weird? Exactly how is this supposed to make me feel better?

Clearly, I’m disappointed. Granted, I’m glad I don’t have a fatal disease, that I was just “born this way.” And there is this–the doctor ordered more bloodwork. “Let’s test your lymphocytes,” he said. “We’ll also test more of your antibodies in order to get a baseline for where they are. Then I want you to get two vaccines (tetanus and pneumonia). Four weeks after that, we’ll re-test your antibodies to see how they’re responding to the viruses.” Looking back, I can see that the doctor was really thinking (he’s obviously highly intelligent), actually making a plan to figure things out. But here’s what I heard at the time–more waiting.

“If we do find something wrong, you could get injections every month, but you probably wouldn’t want to do that,” he said. (At this point, I probably would. I’d try anything that would possibly help.) “Either way, the knowledge would be good to have–it could change how aggressively you treat future infections.”

My shoulders slumped. “So just ‘hang in there’ for now?” I said.

“It’s all you can do,” he said, then walked out of the room.

After leaving the doctor’s office, I spent the rest of the morning and a good portion of the afternoon trying to comply with his instructions. First, I went to a local lab and had my blood drawn. Then I went to a pharmacy to get the vaccines, but they didn’t have one of them. (Apparently there are two different pneumonia vaccines, and some places are picky about which one they’ll administer.) So I went back to my doctor’s office, and they found another pharmacy that had what the doctor ordered. But because of a kerfuffle with my insurance, the pharmacy said I’d have to pay out-of-pocket, a total of two-hundred dollars. (My insurance was up at the end of March. I was “technically” re-enrolled the next day, but not “actually” re-enrolled.)

Again, on paper, things are fine.

Well, thank God and all the saints, I have a friend who reads the blog and has been helping me with this insurance situation over the last week. So I called her, and she said, “Let me see what I can do.” Y’all, she spoke with someone who was able to escalate my re-enrollment, and it was done in three hours. That being said, the pharmacy won’t have my updated information until tomorrow. Plus, even when they get it, my insurance won’t cover the pneumonia vaccine because I’m not a senior citizen. This just means more hoops to jump through, asking my doctor to fill out a request for prior authorization and (of course) waiting up to five business days for the insurance company to reply.

I think I’ll add this to my resume–Marcus Coker, Professional Hoop Jumper.

As if all this weren’t enough for one day, I spoke with the insurance company of the guy who knocked the shit out of me and my Honda Civic eight months ago. Naturally, they’re offering me peanuts for all my time and trouble, acting like they’re doing me a favor by throwing a few dollars in my direction, adding that I just had some soft tissue damage and was practically back to my old self in no time. “I’ll be the judge of that,” I said. “This was a major disruption in my life, and if you want to settle this, you’re going to have to do better. We can talk later. For now, let’s go back to our corners.”

Y’all, I’m proud of myself for speaking up, but I absolutely hate shit like this–confrontations, arguing about money. Talk about being slammed twice. First there’s the trauma of the accident, then there’s the trauma of dealing with the insurance company. No wonder no one wants to be an adult.

The next thing I knew, the world was upside down.

By the time I got home today I was worn out, so I took a took a nap. Honestly, I don’t think it helped much. Waking up, I still felt overwhelmed. So I meditated and fell apart. Crying, I remembered being being in a car accident when I was a kid. My dad, my sister, and I were broadsided. It was our fault, but the next thing I knew, the world was upside down. Our Honda Accord had rolled two-and-a-half times. I remember trying to unbuckle my seatbelt thinking we were going to blow up, that we were all going to die, but we didn’t. Instead, we went to the hospital, my sister and I riding in the back of the ambulance next to the guy who hit us. He was on a stretcher with his neck braced. It was a long night, but the three of us went home without anything broken, just a few stitches among us. I don’t know about the guy. Personally, I was so bruised the next day that I couldn’t walk to the bathroom.

Also tonight I remembered the day my dad left for prison. I was fifteen. He self-surrendered in El Paso, and my grandpa and a family friend drove him down. After they left our house, I went in the backyard and cried. What else are you supposed to do in a moment like that? I remember the sun shining. I also remember feeling deeply alone. Later that day another family friend stopped by to see Dad, and I said he was already gone. The guy–whom I’m going to call Sam Jackson–said, “Well–if you need anything, just call Sam Jackson.” The last part–just call Sam Jackson–he stretched out like a song, like a jingle for a television commercial. I’ll never forget it. Then he walked away too. I never heard from him again, nor did I ever call him. What would I have said, “Uh, hi, Sam. This is Marcus. I need a father.”?

Now it’s one in the morning, I’m completely exhausted, and there are still tears running down my face. Joseph Campbell says when you follow your bliss, doors will open for you where there were only walls. I need a door to open. For the last few hours I’ve been trying to tell myself that everything is going to be okay, that it’s good news that nothing with my immune system is glaringly wrong and it’s also good news that I’ve finally found a highly intelligent doctor who’s willing to help me figure things out. Likewise, I keep telling myself that I’m lucky to have friends who are attorneys and insurance adjusters who are willing to help me navigate this car accident claim. (I talked to two of them today.) I keep telling myself I’m not alone. But still there is this feeling, this very old feeling, and I’m not sure how to shake it.

We think of hope as something pristine, but hope is haggard like we are.

So much of me–so very much of me–is tired of being slammed around by life, tired of waiting, and oh-so tired of being strong. I imagine a lot of people feel this way, fed up with hanging in there. We think of hope as something pristine, something that never waivers. But I’m coming to believe that hope is haggard like we are, giving up one day, refusing to give up the next. For me, hope looks an awful lot like a bruised child who learns to walk again, a teenager who somehow survives the worst day of his life, or a grown man who looks back upon that worst day and remembers both his tears and the shining sun that dried them.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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We can hang on and put everything safely in its place, and then at some point, we’re forced to let go.

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