
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Adriana E. talks Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, finding a new balance after diagnosis, and unpacking your own internalized ableism.
I’m Brianne Benness and this is No End In Sight, a podcast about life with chronic illness.
Quick update before we get started: This is the last of the interviews that I recorded in 2019. I’m really excited to finally be getting it out there, and I’m also excited that this means that work really is underway on our next batch of episodes. I’m so grateful to the folks who have signed up to financially support the show at patreon.com/noendinsight, and this week I want to thank Wingspan Health for sponsoring the episode transcript.
So far, I’ve recorded five new stories and I’ve hired Drew Maar, who you might know as @fibrofuckboy on twitter, as a new associate producer to get things running more smoothly. You’ll be learning lots more about Drew over the next couple episodes, so for now let’s travel back to the fall of 2019 when today’s story was recorded.
Today I’m talking to Adriana E about Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, finding a new balance after diagnosis, and unpacking your own internalized ableism.
Before we start, here’s my disclaimer:
This podcast is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Make sure you talk to your practitioner about any questions or symptoms.
[guitar riff]
Brianne: Well, I like to get started just by asking people, how was your health as a kid?
Adriana: Alright. So that’s kind of a difficult question because I thought it was normal up until I got my diagnosis and then I started thinking back, and I’m sure I can’t remember everything, but it explains a lot of things. I was delayed in standing and walking. I also was really physically just slow.
Brianne: Oh, no.
Adriana: Yeah. All my teachers even called me that. It was like, you know, “This
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. You stopped growing. And so that one’s a really interesting one to
Adriana: So I think it felt actually like growing pains, cause they were just random, everywhere, but I think they were more intense because of my condition. It kind of might’ve made it more difficult, so things were stretching and you know, being…
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Kind of. I always… my health was always just inconvenient. I always was going to the doctor for things that I had… I have hypothyroidism and then I have anemia that comes back that I always have to treat. So I always thought something was up with my health, but they were so minor, and
Brianne: Okay, all at once.
Adriana: All systems failure. Yeah. All at once. It was one by one, but it was super quick, just dramatic decline in health.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. There’s like a, “Oh, wait a minute. These things that have always been normal for me, it turns out aren’t normal for other people.”
Adriana: Yes.
Brianne: And so, just to back up for a sec, so you said you were hypothyroid and anemic, is that right?
Adriana: Yeah. So the overall, umbrella condition that I have is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, but it comes with a lot of friends.
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Yeah they’re still working on it.
Brianne: …or something. I just saw things about it. That it’s much less rare than people have been saying for a long
Adriana: It’s just not diagnosed, yeah. Because doctors don’t even really know about
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But yeah, it comes with a lot of comorbidities that get diagnosed on their own, and nobody really puts together the big picture.
Brianne: Yeah. Okay. So it had been like… and also those are kind of easy ones, like thyroid problems in general and also anemia, so iron levels. They show up in standard blood tests.
Adriana: So it was about a year and a half ago and it’s kind of… there was kind of like a wrench that was thrown into my finding out what’s wrong with me. And that was my trip to Europe. So, things started after that. So I kind of attributed it to the trip. Like maybe I caught a virus or something, or
Brianne: Right. That’s not like a classic symptom or
Adriana: Exactly. So that’s kind of a piece of the puzzle that really isn’t even solved.
Brianne: Yeah. It’s drastic even if it’s hard to explain.
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. But even my doctors at that point were still like, “No, it’s probably from your trip.”
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Yeah. But of course they run a bunch of tests on me, and they come back fine. Maybe some mild issues that are just negligible to them or just things that can easily be explained by hypothyroidism.
Brianne: That’s a hard question
Adriana: to say.
Brianne: Because of the joint pain?
Adriana: Because of the joint pain.
Brianne: I guess, and the fatigue
Adriana: And the fatigue and some of the other symptoms that I was having. I had weird, like bleeding under my skin, like random bruises when I don’t remember hurting myself. And then also, petechiae, which are little red dots of broken blood vessels.
Brianne: Right or just inflammation. Cause it’s
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. And then there’s some other specific, antibodies that are for lupus that are also kind of just barely positive, which could be just written off.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But yeah, he was investigating more of an autoimmune disease, like lupus or Sjogren’s, and so he’s the one who put me on Plaquenil,
Brianne: Right. So
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. Cause lupus is so hard to diagnose also there’s no one test. So all these random tests that were looking a little weird, plus, you know, “Let’s try the Plaquenil.”
Brianne: On Plaquenil?
Adriana: So that was… yeah. That was a few months ago.
Brianne: Yeah, like what’s happened, basically.
Adriana: Yeah. So, but I don’t think it’s doing anything and I haven’t seen him again yet.
Brianne: Okay.
Adriana: So I’m still in that area of figuring out what’s what.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: And I think in my research of looking for what’s wrong with me, lupus did come up a lot, but then Ehlers-Danlos syndrome came up a few times too, but I completely dismissed it because
Brianne: Yeah. Well, all those descriptions, like what you just said, they’re still relative and both, actually for diagnostic, but yeah. If your skin is the only skin you’ve ever had, you’re not like, “Oh yes. I definitely feel…”
Adriana: Nothing to compare it to.
Brianne: Yeah. “I feel confident that this is much stretchier than other people’s.” It’s not until you find out that it is that you’re like, “Oh, okay.
Adriana: “That’s weird.” Yeah. And I don’t think I also ever stretched my face skin, which is stretchy. And then I tried that once and I looked in the mirror. I was like, “Oh my God, I can see how that’s probably not normal.” But, you know, skin on my hand, I just would kind of play with, and it was stretchy, but I thought it was fine.
Brianne: Okay. So she was just like, “Your joints are loose.
Adriana: Yeah. And she’s like, “Yeah.” So at that point I was having the pain. So she’s like, “That explains your pain.” She was not convinced that it was anything autoimmune, or anything that was under her realm at all. So yeah, she basically was like, “You just need to work out more, and then it’ll be fine.”
Brianne: Yeah, like fatigue
Adriana: Right, exactly. So, she totally was super satisfied with that analysis of me and that conclusion that she came to, but I wasn’t.
Brianne: If exercising
Adriana: Yeah. Then you’re fine. So… but I looked into it a little bit more cause like I said, I was super surprised that she said that, and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome came up again in my research. And I would always only look at actual studies. Subjective websites I always stayed away from, cause I didn’t want to turn into that person.
Brianne: Also hard.
Adriana: It is
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: Yeah. And then I read all the comorbidities and the symptoms of them, and it just matched everything that I was having, all the problems I was having. And so I went back to her and I was like, “Okay, what do you think it’s Ehlers.. Do you think it’s maybe Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?” I sent her a message, I think, and then she got back to me and she was like, “It’s the same thing.
Brianne: Yeah. Which has its own baggage associated. I’ve definitely been that person, and it doesn’t feel good and it’s not always… well, it’s usually not fruitful, so yeah. But, okay.
Adriana: It’s difficult.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah, so she was just like “When I told you that your joints are hypermobile, it’s the same as if I had told you that you had Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, basically.”
Adriana: Yeah. And that goes to show how misinformed people are, even doctors. But that is not at all. That is one of the many, many, many symptoms of Ehlers-Danlos and the systems… it does affect other systems in your body. Pretty much all of them, between the comorbidities or just something weird happening from the disease itself,
Brianne: So number three.
Adriana: Yes. And he was… he took a blank piece of paper when I first saw him and pushed the computer screen aside,
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: So he’s like, “Continue the Plaquenil.”
Brianne: Yeah. “Stick with it.”
Adriana: Just we’ll see how that goes. Yeah. But you’re definitely hypermobile, and I can definitely see that, that accounts for many of your symptoms.
Brianne: So,
Adriana: Yes, exactly, for the other ones, but I don’t think I have any of the other types.
Brianne: Yeah. You just go find someone who knows enough about the specific thing that you need them to know about, and like, as you have just described, you can go through a lot of people first. How has insurance been with going through a bunch of specialists?
Adriana: That is an excellent question. And I am extremely, extremely lucky. My boss has been very, very understanding, very understanding, and so I kind of am working more remote sometimes. So he’s been great, and I’ve been kind of working remote and also being more part time. And my staff have kind of been helping me too. They’ve been taking on some responsibilities. Nothing too administrative but just some of the things that… the smaller things that I would have to worry about normally, they just
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: Yeah, so they’re doing their best. I can tell sometimes that they also have their own opinions about what’s going on, but anyway.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Since my boss has been so understanding that even though I’m part time, I’m still on the insurance.
Brianne: It didn’t… the list lost its meaning at a certain point. You’re like, “Okay, it’s a lot. I get it.”
Adriana: Yeah, I think I might’ve fallen asleep.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But it definitely covered my CT scans and MRIs and emergency room visits and all that… all my doctor visits. And I always had a copay and stuff, but very, very low copay, and my deductible is $250.
Brianne: Great!
Adriana: Yeah, I know. And some of the times they don’t even have a
Brianne: Yeah, if you have fatigue.
Adriana: She sent me to a sleep doctor. Yeah. It’s yeah. Sleep Hygiene. So she sent me to a sleep doctor and h e kind of was like, “Why are you here?”
Brianne: Yeah. Good
Adriana: And I was like, “I don’t know. I don’t know.” But it turns out, I actually do have sleep issues, so… but he’s like, “I don’t know why you’re here, but we can just look into it and order an in-lab sleep study, but your insurance probably won’t cover it. And we’ll probably have to do the home one first, so, but we’ll try it.”
Brianne: “Yeah, go ahead.”
Adriana: “We’ll cover in lab. That’s fine.” No diagnosis needed. They didn’t have anything.
Brianne: Right, right. Yeah. If the doctor was like, “I don’t really know why we’re looking,” then what are you going to put on the form? Like “tired.” God, insurance authorizations are their own bizarre quagmire, but…
Adriana: Oh, my goodness.
Brianne: Yeah, I bet. It’s… yeah, I grew up in Canada, where there is socialized medicine, public
Adriana: You never needed to think about it.
Brianne: No, no. And it’s… all of these things, like choosing insurance, I think two years ago, maybe when I hadn’t really been through as much of the chronic illness side of it, I was like, “I don’t know how to pick this. I don’t know what any of this means.”
Adriana: It’s confusing.
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Yep. Definitely. And, I don’t know anyone in healthcare who is like, “Yeah, I like our healthcare system,” which is what a lot of people argue who are for privatized healthcare. They argue that doctors get paid more, all that. Nobody likes it, not even doctors. Doctors don’t get paid more. They’re terrible.
Brianne: Yeah, well the billing systems are, right?
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. And I actually want to touch on that, because a lot of people. Rag on hospitals and clinics on how much they charge. It’s like “They should… it’s should be illegal to charge this much,” and all that, but what actually is happening is that insurances only reimburse a certain amount of what we charge them.
Brianne: Right. You can’t take insurance
Adriana: It literally can shut our doors.
Brianne: Yeah, cause that was one of the things that I just really had no idea about. Even if your insurance isn’t paying for anything, you will pay less out of pocket
Adriana: They still will cover something. And that’s another thing, they don’t actually pay. So when you have a high deductible, and you haven’t met it, they don’t actually pay us. They tell us to write off the amount that they’re going to cover, quote unquote.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Yup. Everybody kind of loses with high deductibles. We don’t get paid what we’re supposed to by the insurance, and you don’t get coverage like you’re supposed to by that insurance. So, it’s just miserable. It’s a terrible system.
Brianne: Yeah. It’s baffling, and I also… now I just want to rag on the system more.
Adriana: That’s like the opposite.
Brianne: Yeah. I’m like, “I don’t… What do you mean?” And she’s like, “Their choice of providers.” And I was like, “Well, when I lived in Canada, I lived in a city, so
Adriana: It is. Yeah, it is.
Brianne: That has
Adriana: It doesn’t make sense.
Brianne: No, no.
Adriana: It already… well, first of all, if that was a problem, it already does. If you’re on Medicaid, they tell you where to go.
Brianne: Yeah. But so does private insurance.
Adriana: Yeah so… but it doesn’t… it really wouldn’t restrict your providers at all.
Brianne: It’s just not a real thing, so it’s all a mess. Great.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: Okay, thank you for listening to my rant about that.
Adriana: No problem.
Brianne: But, okay. So what we had been saying… so you were saying that your insurance is good as far as these things go. And so that’s been helpful. You did a sleep did a sleep test.
Adriana: And not only that, my employer is very understanding and accommodating of me. That is… both of those things are super rare with people with chronic illness, you know? And I feel terrible. I feel so bad that other people can’t actually do this. It makes me angry at our system too, again.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Just angry at everything.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But I’m also afraid of that there may be a point where I can’t work at all. Cause it’s getting harder and harder. Managing a chronic illness is a full time job.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: It really… yeah. Like I said, over 40 doctor visits and that’s not including physical therapy and acupuncture, which I’m trying.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. It’s difficult. And it’s poorly supported and yeah, you’re lucky. Especially I think when people are in the position, so you were working full time, it sounds like, previously with the same employer, and you were able to scale back your hours. It’s… a couple of people I’ve talked to have been in that position and that’s almost
Adriana: It
Brianne: Of like, “I have a good relationship with you already and you trust me and know that I’m competent. And if I can’t do…” however… I mean, you had said like more than 40 hours, but like, “I can’t work full time anymore, but what can I do a part time?”
Adriana: I kind of still do everything,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: I think in those cases, the employer is really dependent on the employee, just in my case too. So, I have job security.
Brianne: Yeah, and that helps for sure.
Adriana: It’s really difficult. I think that’s a little extra little bit that makes it difficult to live with because nobody knows about it. Nobody really knows how to treat it or how to manage it. Cause you can’t really treat it, treat it. So you’re doing a lot of the research yourself and you’re coming up with a protocol yourself.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Between the fatigue and the pain.
Brianne: Yeah, see if somebody can help. Another thing that now I’m curious about is, there’s this, I think about work trading and timebanks and stuff. I wonder if there are models for that for chronic illness, for… because cost is such a barrier for so many people, but a weird thing about chronic illness is that it can happen at any time.
Adriana: That’s true. I never actually thought of that. Yeah, people are wasting their talents.
Brianne: Yeah. And that’s…. I don’t mean it in a like capitalism way, but just when you have skills and you have interests and you want to do things, but committing to an actual job can be… is more of a risk of burnout of, “I’m going to miss deadlines. I’m not going to do it.”
Adriana: That’s interesting.
Brianne: But yeah, having help… yeah. Cause it’s stuff like cleaning, like you say, or food prep that can be really difficult.
Adriana: she does that too. Yup. And she just… it’s just overall… she’s also researching things for me and just really involved with my health and that…. even just that alone, if she didn’t do anything else, like clean or do food prep, even just helping me manage my health, it is… it’s just such a huge weight
Brianne: Yeah. Outsourcing. One thing that I think about a lot… you just said that you sort of become your own primary care practitioner in a lot of ways. There isn’t… this is sort of the job of a PCP, but we don’t really have case managers built in a lot of the times. So for people who have this weird kind of disparate symptoms, and it takes a while to try to put them together.
Adriana: Definitely. Yeah.
Brianne: And certainly more efficient than somebody who’s sick. And it also boggles my mind that that’s not something… that would make the rest of the system more efficient, and it’s weird to me that it’s not a part of it.
Adriana: Yeah, it is. And I definitely think everybody should have at least one person who is an advocate for what they’re going through.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And so on the… not even really the flip side, but as another part of the daily life stuff, since you’ve been navigating the symptoms much longer than you’ve been navigating the diagnosis, have you done any experiments yourself? So you’ve been trying Plaquenil more recently, but I know a lot of people when they first get fatigued or when they first get unexplained joint pain will end up with dietary interventions and other lifestyle interventions.
Adriana: I did.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: I did try… it’s just so much, you know? I did. I’m still trying different things. I take different vitamins and a lot of pills, to just see if that will help. I take vitamin D, which… I’m in Seattle, everybody’s deficient here.
Brianne: Oh yeah.
Adriana: You have to do the best you can, but it’s just hard. I mean, I’ve been trying to eat different things, to see if that helps some symptoms. I’ve been trying to be more active,
Brianne: Yeah. Of course.
Adriana: But it’s hard to tell. I could not tell you right now that this has been helping or this has been helping. The only thing that I can say for sure that makes things worse is lack of sleep, and I do have insomnia that’s really difficult,
Brianne: No, I relate to that. That’s… I feel like I’ve said that to people so many times. Sleep is the only reliable connection with how I’m doing. And still, like you just said, I could have a really good night’s sleep and have a shitty day, but good days pretty much always follow good nights of sleep, and bad night of sleep,
Adriana: Yup. Exactly.
Brianne: And then it’s hard. Cause stuff like diet say… cause I’ve been down a lot of diet rabbit holes to try to figure stuff out, and there’s never any connection. Maybe I feel like my baseline’s a little bit better, but I also seriously wonder how much of it is not being worried that what I’m eating is making me sicker.
Adriana: Yeah, there’s two sides to it.
Brianne: The mental side of it, of the worry that I’m doing something wrong and that that’s contributing to how I feel… eating paleo or the autoimmune protocol or whatever… doing that and doing that pretty strictly for a couple of weeks, I’ll always be like, “Okay, now I can let go of the worry that food is causing me problems.”
Adriana: Yeah, it’s hard. It’s impossible to tell. And even…. and also it’s hard to make all these changes in your life and stick to them. I tried the autoimmune protocol, but I never… it was so hard for me to stick to it just because it’s not something I did before, and I’m also changing this and this and this and this.
Brianne: Yeah. And I think that’s one of the places where if it’s obviously making a difference, it’s so much easier. So the first time that I did a really kind of intense dietary intervention, I had really bad eczema all over my body. I was scratching until I bled all the time. Whatever my doctor was giving me wasn’t helping.
Adriana: That’s like a dream. When you find something that actually is helping, it’s amazing.
Brianne: And the connection was so obvious. It was so easy, and so I was following that diet pretty strictly for quite a while. And that situation, it was like, “Yeah, this is a no brainer. Not feeling that way is worth not eating bread or whatever.”
Adriana: Well, that’s great. I mean, it’s little victories, one victory at a time. You can’t conquer the whole thing at once.
Brianne: No.
Adriana: It’s a long process to conquer things, but
Brianne: Yeah, like, “This is a helpful thing. I will do this helpful thing.”
Adriana: “I will continue doing this.”
Brianne: Yeah. And so then related to all of the different things that you can try, have you gotten very involved in any online spaces around chronic illness?
Adriana: I actually, yes. I am definitely involved in a lot of them. I’m not… I don’t do social media really, so I’m not all about being on there with my real identity, so things like Reddit where you have a username. That’s kinda how I communicate, and things like even the Ehlers Danlos society and certain groups that are here in Washington… I just still have a voice, but I just don’t want to really put my identity out there just yet.
Brianne: Yeah. And there’s two sides of it cause there are definitely people who are doing advocacy stuff, which is great, and I also do not think that everyone needs to do that cause it takes energy. And then there’s also… yeah, the support group side of it, which I think anywhere can do and could be good and bad.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: That are sometimes really helpful. And sometimes, really like, “Okay, that was a lot of whatever
Adriana: perspective that was.”
Brianne: Yeah, “I’m ready for a break.” I just joined a bunch of new chronic illness related Facebook groups, and in some ways they are the worst because whatever it’s for, there will be people naming really normal experiences.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: It’s
Adriana: Are you just rolling your eyes?
Brianne: Yeah. And you’re like, “Okay, I don’t… I get it. I have questions like this too.”
Adriana: have the exact same symptoms as me, and ask those questions. And that’s super unrealistic, but when good questions that relate to you come about in those forums and stuff, it’s awesome. Like things on, like I said, Reddit… when somebody posts a question like, “Is this
Brianne: Oh my
Adriana: So yeah, sometimes we do know things more than you. You don’t live with this.
Brianne: Yeah. And also, it was probably covered for like half an hour in one lecture in medical school, and then if you never saw it during your early training, you just don’t know about it. That’s not… it doesn’t. Ugh.
Adriana: And you know, doctors like that actually make it worse than people think, because sometimes they get so upset at that, or just, they need to validate their knowledge, that they go against what you say that you found out about… that they make it an effort to say you’re wrong, that your Google search is wrong and I’m better.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And I… cause I’ve been… you were talking about systemic stuff earlier, and I’ve been thinking a lot now, cause this is like my past 50 interviews. So I think by the end of this… I’m doing an interview sprint right now. I’ll be close to 70, and I’m at a point where I’m like, “I would actually love to start talking to doctors about the pressures that make it so difficult to handle chronic illness in general.”
Adriana: Like house.
Brianne: Yeah. House or Grey’s Anatomy or whatever that… if your doctor is good, they’re going to figure out what’s wrong with you right away, and that’s just not realistic.
Adriana: No, and it’s not going to take one hospital visit. It’s probably going to take many, and you’re the one who has to put the puzzle pieces together, just cause you’re going to get a different doctor every time. And yet doctors… they do have a defense in this whole, struggling to find a chronic illness or get a diagnosis, and it is how they are trained in medical school.
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: They learn a phrase in medical school which is along the lines of, “If you hear hoof beats behind you, don’t assume it’s a zebra. Assume it’s a horse. Go for the more common diagnosis, not the rare ones.” And they kind of drill that in too much, to the point where doctors just don’t believe they could ever get a rare illness in their clinic.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And I think it’s also compounded by all of the tendency to assume that anything vague, so unspecific pain or fatigue or whatever, is a mental health problem. One question that I have that I don’t think there’s good data on really, is if we looked at every single person that went to their PCP with that kind of complaint, so vague pain, fatigue, I really sincerely wonder what proportion of that population
Adriana: It is. It definitely is. And then sometimes when the person comes back and says, “It’s not helping. I’ve been on this antidepressant for a long time, it’s not helping a lot of my symptoms.” They kind of, then at that point, just think the patient is making things up,
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. It’s just that part because no part of me is like, “People aren’t really depressed. Everybody who’s been told they’re depressed is actually chronically ill.” I am not trying to make that claim. It’s just that… it’s the differentiation process that’s so strange to me because it just doesn’t seem to happen with most people, at least initially.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: Because obviously the people… I’m biased, because I’m only interviewing people who eventually found out that they were in fact chronically ill, so how much of the population never lands there? I don’t know, but I’m really curious because there’s all of these things that contribute to doctors
Adriana: Yeah. Especially if they already have a mental illness. I have anxiety, and I’ve been diagnosed with it. I’m on medication for it, and so that was a hindrance in my search of finding a diagnosis because they wrote it off as anxiety. Some of the pain you feel and the fatigue, you just… which kind of boggled my mind
Brianne: Yeah. It didn’t all of a sudden morph into having all of these other new symptoms after being relatively successfully managed for however long, and if it did that still a problem that should be looked at.
Adriana: And taken
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: So another thing that would be great to just touch on is the misunderstandings that happen to people with chronic illness from people who don’t have chronic illnesses. And I am, I have to say, I’m not innocent at all. I thought all the stereotypes before I had a chronic illness. I wasn’t the kind of person who’d be like, “That person totally isn’t handicapped,” and just go up to them and yell at them.
Brianne: Yeah. Classic.
Adriana: But we really are sick, and you don’t see us at our worst because we don’t want to come out at our worst. So you see us when we’re okay. So it looks like we’re fine
Brianne: Yeah, and
Adriana: Yeah, either it’s too much to talk about your illness or it’s not their business… I don’t…
Brianne: Yeah. And I think that some of the tension is… it would be really great if… whoever, all of the people that I need to interact with in my day to day life, just had a baseline understanding of what was going on, and it would be great if they could get that baseline understanding somewhere else.
Adriana: It doesn’t.
Brianne: If someone’s really dedicated and curious, you can read a lot of writing on the internet, you can find a lot of blog posts, and you can kind of piece it together, but there’s not like, “Oh, you know, just watch this movie,
Adriana: It’s difficult. Even with a chronic illness now it’s difficult to kick those habits, that immediate thought of someone in a handicapped spot who looks fine, that immediate thought of. They’re abusing the handicap spot, just pops in my head. But yeah, I think about it.
Brianne: Yeah. I know better now, but it’s so entrenched. And it’s so in the culture that… even that, what you just said, I feel that way too, of like, “Oh my brain still wants to think that.” And I have to actively… it’s an active on learning process, and that’s from my own experience and from talking to so many other people, but your healthy colleagues or my healthy even family members, they’re not having these experiences that are constantly forcing them to confront their bias because experience again, it’s not there.
Adriana: Yeah, I mean, healthy people just don’t care. Why would they care? It doesn’t affect them. So, they just don’t care. Who is going to be like… what person, who has no family member or friends who has a chronic illness, is going to look into chronic illnesses? Especially if they don’t have one too.
Brianne: Yeah. And there’s also… I think in both cases, there’s definitely a kind of subtle assumption that if you’re experiencing this, then you brought it on yourself. Like you could have done something to prevent it.
Adriana: there And like I said earlier, it’s a lifestyle change. It’s changing everything. And to be expected to adhere to that, to be as proactive as you possibly can be all the time, is something that people with chronic illnesses, need to understand. It’s something that I’m still working on too. But
Brianne: You keep crashing.
Adriana: Yeah, you do need time to yourself, that good time. So don’t take that away from yourself. Take that break.
Brianne: Yeah, yeah. Take lots of breaks, and I also really struggle with not feeling bad and not thinking that it means something if I choose to rest before I’ve hit a wall. But it’s a process for sure.
Adriana: Yeah. And it looks like… to other people that you’re just being lazy too. Even people as close as your parents or your wife or husband, a lot of… even them don’t understand
Brianne: Yeah. Yep. That’s at the heart of it. Oh yeah. There’s a lot. There’s a lot that I just want everyone to know. The way that… I probably use this example a lot, but I don’t think that it’s fair to compare chronic illness to cancer, for example, but I do think it’s fair to compare public awareness about the experience.
Adriana: No, I’m with you. I totally agree.
Brianne: There’s so many movies, and it’s in so many TV shows. And if someone that you work with, for example, gets cancer, most colleagues will have some idea of what the appropriate response might be.
Adriana: They’ll be more understanding and…
Brianne: And they’ll still expect it to have an end point, which is part of the difference.
Adriana: Yeah. And you know, a lot of times cancer does have an end point in one way or another.
Brianne: Yeah, you’re not getting better. Like, “I don’t know about anything where you would not get better, so you must be doing something wrong.” That’s the thing. Yeah.
Adriana: And, I also, at one point they thought… they thought it was so many things, and at one point they actually kind of thought it was Hodgkin’s lymphoma, which is a type of cancer. And it’s a type of cancer that’s extremely curable. You go through chemo, maybe for six months or however long you need it,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: That’s such a faux pas, you know, “Don’t wish that on yourself cause you never know what you’ll get.” But I’m like, “Yeah,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Because I would have gone through six months of misery, but then I’d have been fine and move on with my life. But this is not the case. This has stuck with me forever.
Brianne: Yeah, yeah. And I think it’s hard to… it’s easy intellectually to say… whenever we try to compare our experiences to other experiences, intellectually, we know that that’s not a real thing that’s
Adriana: That’s a really hard part too. You just don’t know when you’re going to feel okay, and people will get upset that you’re constantly canceling. They think that you’re just blowing them off and work gets frustrated, but you just don’t know how you’re going to feel any given day. And it’s difficult.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And that’s like, the heart of it is the like every day is going to be like that. Cool. Yeah.
Adriana: This great.
Brianne: Thank you. Thank you, health determiners.
Adriana: This is awesome.
Brianne: I think we’ve covered most of the big stuff, that I usually like to talk about. So
Adriana: It’s a pretty blanket.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah, this is… it’s nice. it’s warm, but it’s good, but thank you.
Adriana: Well, thanks for having me.
[guitar riff]
Thank you for listening to episode 69 of No End In Sight!
You can find me on twitter and instagram @bennessb, and you can find space to talk about your own experiences with chronicillness using #NEISVoid on twitter and a little bit on instagram.
And don’t forget you can sign up to support the show over at patreon.com/noendinsight. Or, if you want to support the show but don’t have a few bucks to spare, I’d be just as grateful if you left a podcast review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes.
Thanks for listening.
The post 69 – Adriana appeared first on No End In Sight.
By Brianne BennessAdriana E. talks Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, finding a new balance after diagnosis, and unpacking your own internalized ableism.
I’m Brianne Benness and this is No End In Sight, a podcast about life with chronic illness.
Quick update before we get started: This is the last of the interviews that I recorded in 2019. I’m really excited to finally be getting it out there, and I’m also excited that this means that work really is underway on our next batch of episodes. I’m so grateful to the folks who have signed up to financially support the show at patreon.com/noendinsight, and this week I want to thank Wingspan Health for sponsoring the episode transcript.
So far, I’ve recorded five new stories and I’ve hired Drew Maar, who you might know as @fibrofuckboy on twitter, as a new associate producer to get things running more smoothly. You’ll be learning lots more about Drew over the next couple episodes, so for now let’s travel back to the fall of 2019 when today’s story was recorded.
Today I’m talking to Adriana E about Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, finding a new balance after diagnosis, and unpacking your own internalized ableism.
Before we start, here’s my disclaimer:
This podcast is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Make sure you talk to your practitioner about any questions or symptoms.
[guitar riff]
Brianne: Well, I like to get started just by asking people, how was your health as a kid?
Adriana: Alright. So that’s kind of a difficult question because I thought it was normal up until I got my diagnosis and then I started thinking back, and I’m sure I can’t remember everything, but it explains a lot of things. I was delayed in standing and walking. I also was really physically just slow.
Brianne: Oh, no.
Adriana: Yeah. All my teachers even called me that. It was like, you know, “This
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. You stopped growing. And so that one’s a really interesting one to
Adriana: So I think it felt actually like growing pains, cause they were just random, everywhere, but I think they were more intense because of my condition. It kind of might’ve made it more difficult, so things were stretching and you know, being…
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Kind of. I always… my health was always just inconvenient. I always was going to the doctor for things that I had… I have hypothyroidism and then I have anemia that comes back that I always have to treat. So I always thought something was up with my health, but they were so minor, and
Brianne: Okay, all at once.
Adriana: All systems failure. Yeah. All at once. It was one by one, but it was super quick, just dramatic decline in health.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. There’s like a, “Oh, wait a minute. These things that have always been normal for me, it turns out aren’t normal for other people.”
Adriana: Yes.
Brianne: And so, just to back up for a sec, so you said you were hypothyroid and anemic, is that right?
Adriana: Yeah. So the overall, umbrella condition that I have is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, but it comes with a lot of friends.
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Yeah they’re still working on it.
Brianne: …or something. I just saw things about it. That it’s much less rare than people have been saying for a long
Adriana: It’s just not diagnosed, yeah. Because doctors don’t even really know about
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But yeah, it comes with a lot of comorbidities that get diagnosed on their own, and nobody really puts together the big picture.
Brianne: Yeah. Okay. So it had been like… and also those are kind of easy ones, like thyroid problems in general and also anemia, so iron levels. They show up in standard blood tests.
Adriana: So it was about a year and a half ago and it’s kind of… there was kind of like a wrench that was thrown into my finding out what’s wrong with me. And that was my trip to Europe. So, things started after that. So I kind of attributed it to the trip. Like maybe I caught a virus or something, or
Brianne: Right. That’s not like a classic symptom or
Adriana: Exactly. So that’s kind of a piece of the puzzle that really isn’t even solved.
Brianne: Yeah. It’s drastic even if it’s hard to explain.
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. But even my doctors at that point were still like, “No, it’s probably from your trip.”
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Yeah. But of course they run a bunch of tests on me, and they come back fine. Maybe some mild issues that are just negligible to them or just things that can easily be explained by hypothyroidism.
Brianne: That’s a hard question
Adriana: to say.
Brianne: Because of the joint pain?
Adriana: Because of the joint pain.
Brianne: I guess, and the fatigue
Adriana: And the fatigue and some of the other symptoms that I was having. I had weird, like bleeding under my skin, like random bruises when I don’t remember hurting myself. And then also, petechiae, which are little red dots of broken blood vessels.
Brianne: Right or just inflammation. Cause it’s
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. And then there’s some other specific, antibodies that are for lupus that are also kind of just barely positive, which could be just written off.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But yeah, he was investigating more of an autoimmune disease, like lupus or Sjogren’s, and so he’s the one who put me on Plaquenil,
Brianne: Right. So
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. Cause lupus is so hard to diagnose also there’s no one test. So all these random tests that were looking a little weird, plus, you know, “Let’s try the Plaquenil.”
Brianne: On Plaquenil?
Adriana: So that was… yeah. That was a few months ago.
Brianne: Yeah, like what’s happened, basically.
Adriana: Yeah. So, but I don’t think it’s doing anything and I haven’t seen him again yet.
Brianne: Okay.
Adriana: So I’m still in that area of figuring out what’s what.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: And I think in my research of looking for what’s wrong with me, lupus did come up a lot, but then Ehlers-Danlos syndrome came up a few times too, but I completely dismissed it because
Brianne: Yeah. Well, all those descriptions, like what you just said, they’re still relative and both, actually for diagnostic, but yeah. If your skin is the only skin you’ve ever had, you’re not like, “Oh yes. I definitely feel…”
Adriana: Nothing to compare it to.
Brianne: Yeah. “I feel confident that this is much stretchier than other people’s.” It’s not until you find out that it is that you’re like, “Oh, okay.
Adriana: “That’s weird.” Yeah. And I don’t think I also ever stretched my face skin, which is stretchy. And then I tried that once and I looked in the mirror. I was like, “Oh my God, I can see how that’s probably not normal.” But, you know, skin on my hand, I just would kind of play with, and it was stretchy, but I thought it was fine.
Brianne: Okay. So she was just like, “Your joints are loose.
Adriana: Yeah. And she’s like, “Yeah.” So at that point I was having the pain. So she’s like, “That explains your pain.” She was not convinced that it was anything autoimmune, or anything that was under her realm at all. So yeah, she basically was like, “You just need to work out more, and then it’ll be fine.”
Brianne: Yeah, like fatigue
Adriana: Right, exactly. So, she totally was super satisfied with that analysis of me and that conclusion that she came to, but I wasn’t.
Brianne: If exercising
Adriana: Yeah. Then you’re fine. So… but I looked into it a little bit more cause like I said, I was super surprised that she said that, and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome came up again in my research. And I would always only look at actual studies. Subjective websites I always stayed away from, cause I didn’t want to turn into that person.
Brianne: Also hard.
Adriana: It is
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: Yeah. And then I read all the comorbidities and the symptoms of them, and it just matched everything that I was having, all the problems I was having. And so I went back to her and I was like, “Okay, what do you think it’s Ehlers.. Do you think it’s maybe Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?” I sent her a message, I think, and then she got back to me and she was like, “It’s the same thing.
Brianne: Yeah. Which has its own baggage associated. I’ve definitely been that person, and it doesn’t feel good and it’s not always… well, it’s usually not fruitful, so yeah. But, okay.
Adriana: It’s difficult.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah, so she was just like “When I told you that your joints are hypermobile, it’s the same as if I had told you that you had Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, basically.”
Adriana: Yeah. And that goes to show how misinformed people are, even doctors. But that is not at all. That is one of the many, many, many symptoms of Ehlers-Danlos and the systems… it does affect other systems in your body. Pretty much all of them, between the comorbidities or just something weird happening from the disease itself,
Brianne: So number three.
Adriana: Yes. And he was… he took a blank piece of paper when I first saw him and pushed the computer screen aside,
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: So he’s like, “Continue the Plaquenil.”
Brianne: Yeah. “Stick with it.”
Adriana: Just we’ll see how that goes. Yeah. But you’re definitely hypermobile, and I can definitely see that, that accounts for many of your symptoms.
Brianne: So,
Adriana: Yes, exactly, for the other ones, but I don’t think I have any of the other types.
Brianne: Yeah. You just go find someone who knows enough about the specific thing that you need them to know about, and like, as you have just described, you can go through a lot of people first. How has insurance been with going through a bunch of specialists?
Adriana: That is an excellent question. And I am extremely, extremely lucky. My boss has been very, very understanding, very understanding, and so I kind of am working more remote sometimes. So he’s been great, and I’ve been kind of working remote and also being more part time. And my staff have kind of been helping me too. They’ve been taking on some responsibilities. Nothing too administrative but just some of the things that… the smaller things that I would have to worry about normally, they just
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: Yeah, so they’re doing their best. I can tell sometimes that they also have their own opinions about what’s going on, but anyway.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Since my boss has been so understanding that even though I’m part time, I’m still on the insurance.
Brianne: It didn’t… the list lost its meaning at a certain point. You’re like, “Okay, it’s a lot. I get it.”
Adriana: Yeah, I think I might’ve fallen asleep.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But it definitely covered my CT scans and MRIs and emergency room visits and all that… all my doctor visits. And I always had a copay and stuff, but very, very low copay, and my deductible is $250.
Brianne: Great!
Adriana: Yeah, I know. And some of the times they don’t even have a
Brianne: Yeah, if you have fatigue.
Adriana: She sent me to a sleep doctor. Yeah. It’s yeah. Sleep Hygiene. So she sent me to a sleep doctor and h e kind of was like, “Why are you here?”
Brianne: Yeah. Good
Adriana: And I was like, “I don’t know. I don’t know.” But it turns out, I actually do have sleep issues, so… but he’s like, “I don’t know why you’re here, but we can just look into it and order an in-lab sleep study, but your insurance probably won’t cover it. And we’ll probably have to do the home one first, so, but we’ll try it.”
Brianne: “Yeah, go ahead.”
Adriana: “We’ll cover in lab. That’s fine.” No diagnosis needed. They didn’t have anything.
Brianne: Right, right. Yeah. If the doctor was like, “I don’t really know why we’re looking,” then what are you going to put on the form? Like “tired.” God, insurance authorizations are their own bizarre quagmire, but…
Adriana: Oh, my goodness.
Brianne: Yeah, I bet. It’s… yeah, I grew up in Canada, where there is socialized medicine, public
Adriana: You never needed to think about it.
Brianne: No, no. And it’s… all of these things, like choosing insurance, I think two years ago, maybe when I hadn’t really been through as much of the chronic illness side of it, I was like, “I don’t know how to pick this. I don’t know what any of this means.”
Adriana: It’s confusing.
Brianne: Yeah,
Adriana: Yep. Definitely. And, I don’t know anyone in healthcare who is like, “Yeah, I like our healthcare system,” which is what a lot of people argue who are for privatized healthcare. They argue that doctors get paid more, all that. Nobody likes it, not even doctors. Doctors don’t get paid more. They’re terrible.
Brianne: Yeah, well the billing systems are, right?
Adriana: Exactly. Yeah. And I actually want to touch on that, because a lot of people. Rag on hospitals and clinics on how much they charge. It’s like “They should… it’s should be illegal to charge this much,” and all that, but what actually is happening is that insurances only reimburse a certain amount of what we charge them.
Brianne: Right. You can’t take insurance
Adriana: It literally can shut our doors.
Brianne: Yeah, cause that was one of the things that I just really had no idea about. Even if your insurance isn’t paying for anything, you will pay less out of pocket
Adriana: They still will cover something. And that’s another thing, they don’t actually pay. So when you have a high deductible, and you haven’t met it, they don’t actually pay us. They tell us to write off the amount that they’re going to cover, quote unquote.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Yup. Everybody kind of loses with high deductibles. We don’t get paid what we’re supposed to by the insurance, and you don’t get coverage like you’re supposed to by that insurance. So, it’s just miserable. It’s a terrible system.
Brianne: Yeah. It’s baffling, and I also… now I just want to rag on the system more.
Adriana: That’s like the opposite.
Brianne: Yeah. I’m like, “I don’t… What do you mean?” And she’s like, “Their choice of providers.” And I was like, “Well, when I lived in Canada, I lived in a city, so
Adriana: It is. Yeah, it is.
Brianne: That has
Adriana: It doesn’t make sense.
Brianne: No, no.
Adriana: It already… well, first of all, if that was a problem, it already does. If you’re on Medicaid, they tell you where to go.
Brianne: Yeah. But so does private insurance.
Adriana: Yeah so… but it doesn’t… it really wouldn’t restrict your providers at all.
Brianne: It’s just not a real thing, so it’s all a mess. Great.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: Okay, thank you for listening to my rant about that.
Adriana: No problem.
Brianne: But, okay. So what we had been saying… so you were saying that your insurance is good as far as these things go. And so that’s been helpful. You did a sleep did a sleep test.
Adriana: And not only that, my employer is very understanding and accommodating of me. That is… both of those things are super rare with people with chronic illness, you know? And I feel terrible. I feel so bad that other people can’t actually do this. It makes me angry at our system too, again.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Just angry at everything.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: But I’m also afraid of that there may be a point where I can’t work at all. Cause it’s getting harder and harder. Managing a chronic illness is a full time job.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: It really… yeah. Like I said, over 40 doctor visits and that’s not including physical therapy and acupuncture, which I’m trying.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. It’s difficult. And it’s poorly supported and yeah, you’re lucky. Especially I think when people are in the position, so you were working full time, it sounds like, previously with the same employer, and you were able to scale back your hours. It’s… a couple of people I’ve talked to have been in that position and that’s almost
Adriana: It
Brianne: Of like, “I have a good relationship with you already and you trust me and know that I’m competent. And if I can’t do…” however… I mean, you had said like more than 40 hours, but like, “I can’t work full time anymore, but what can I do a part time?”
Adriana: I kind of still do everything,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: I think in those cases, the employer is really dependent on the employee, just in my case too. So, I have job security.
Brianne: Yeah, and that helps for sure.
Adriana: It’s really difficult. I think that’s a little extra little bit that makes it difficult to live with because nobody knows about it. Nobody really knows how to treat it or how to manage it. Cause you can’t really treat it, treat it. So you’re doing a lot of the research yourself and you’re coming up with a protocol yourself.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Between the fatigue and the pain.
Brianne: Yeah, see if somebody can help. Another thing that now I’m curious about is, there’s this, I think about work trading and timebanks and stuff. I wonder if there are models for that for chronic illness, for… because cost is such a barrier for so many people, but a weird thing about chronic illness is that it can happen at any time.
Adriana: That’s true. I never actually thought of that. Yeah, people are wasting their talents.
Brianne: Yeah. And that’s…. I don’t mean it in a like capitalism way, but just when you have skills and you have interests and you want to do things, but committing to an actual job can be… is more of a risk of burnout of, “I’m going to miss deadlines. I’m not going to do it.”
Adriana: That’s interesting.
Brianne: But yeah, having help… yeah. Cause it’s stuff like cleaning, like you say, or food prep that can be really difficult.
Adriana: she does that too. Yup. And she just… it’s just overall… she’s also researching things for me and just really involved with my health and that…. even just that alone, if she didn’t do anything else, like clean or do food prep, even just helping me manage my health, it is… it’s just such a huge weight
Brianne: Yeah. Outsourcing. One thing that I think about a lot… you just said that you sort of become your own primary care practitioner in a lot of ways. There isn’t… this is sort of the job of a PCP, but we don’t really have case managers built in a lot of the times. So for people who have this weird kind of disparate symptoms, and it takes a while to try to put them together.
Adriana: Definitely. Yeah.
Brianne: And certainly more efficient than somebody who’s sick. And it also boggles my mind that that’s not something… that would make the rest of the system more efficient, and it’s weird to me that it’s not a part of it.
Adriana: Yeah, it is. And I definitely think everybody should have at least one person who is an advocate for what they’re going through.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And so on the… not even really the flip side, but as another part of the daily life stuff, since you’ve been navigating the symptoms much longer than you’ve been navigating the diagnosis, have you done any experiments yourself? So you’ve been trying Plaquenil more recently, but I know a lot of people when they first get fatigued or when they first get unexplained joint pain will end up with dietary interventions and other lifestyle interventions.
Adriana: I did.
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: I did try… it’s just so much, you know? I did. I’m still trying different things. I take different vitamins and a lot of pills, to just see if that will help. I take vitamin D, which… I’m in Seattle, everybody’s deficient here.
Brianne: Oh yeah.
Adriana: You have to do the best you can, but it’s just hard. I mean, I’ve been trying to eat different things, to see if that helps some symptoms. I’ve been trying to be more active,
Brianne: Yeah. Of course.
Adriana: But it’s hard to tell. I could not tell you right now that this has been helping or this has been helping. The only thing that I can say for sure that makes things worse is lack of sleep, and I do have insomnia that’s really difficult,
Brianne: No, I relate to that. That’s… I feel like I’ve said that to people so many times. Sleep is the only reliable connection with how I’m doing. And still, like you just said, I could have a really good night’s sleep and have a shitty day, but good days pretty much always follow good nights of sleep, and bad night of sleep,
Adriana: Yup. Exactly.
Brianne: And then it’s hard. Cause stuff like diet say… cause I’ve been down a lot of diet rabbit holes to try to figure stuff out, and there’s never any connection. Maybe I feel like my baseline’s a little bit better, but I also seriously wonder how much of it is not being worried that what I’m eating is making me sicker.
Adriana: Yeah, there’s two sides to it.
Brianne: The mental side of it, of the worry that I’m doing something wrong and that that’s contributing to how I feel… eating paleo or the autoimmune protocol or whatever… doing that and doing that pretty strictly for a couple of weeks, I’ll always be like, “Okay, now I can let go of the worry that food is causing me problems.”
Adriana: Yeah, it’s hard. It’s impossible to tell. And even…. and also it’s hard to make all these changes in your life and stick to them. I tried the autoimmune protocol, but I never… it was so hard for me to stick to it just because it’s not something I did before, and I’m also changing this and this and this and this.
Brianne: Yeah. And I think that’s one of the places where if it’s obviously making a difference, it’s so much easier. So the first time that I did a really kind of intense dietary intervention, I had really bad eczema all over my body. I was scratching until I bled all the time. Whatever my doctor was giving me wasn’t helping.
Adriana: That’s like a dream. When you find something that actually is helping, it’s amazing.
Brianne: And the connection was so obvious. It was so easy, and so I was following that diet pretty strictly for quite a while. And that situation, it was like, “Yeah, this is a no brainer. Not feeling that way is worth not eating bread or whatever.”
Adriana: Well, that’s great. I mean, it’s little victories, one victory at a time. You can’t conquer the whole thing at once.
Brianne: No.
Adriana: It’s a long process to conquer things, but
Brianne: Yeah, like, “This is a helpful thing. I will do this helpful thing.”
Adriana: “I will continue doing this.”
Brianne: Yeah. And so then related to all of the different things that you can try, have you gotten very involved in any online spaces around chronic illness?
Adriana: I actually, yes. I am definitely involved in a lot of them. I’m not… I don’t do social media really, so I’m not all about being on there with my real identity, so things like Reddit where you have a username. That’s kinda how I communicate, and things like even the Ehlers Danlos society and certain groups that are here in Washington… I just still have a voice, but I just don’t want to really put my identity out there just yet.
Brianne: Yeah. And there’s two sides of it cause there are definitely people who are doing advocacy stuff, which is great, and I also do not think that everyone needs to do that cause it takes energy. And then there’s also… yeah, the support group side of it, which I think anywhere can do and could be good and bad.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: That are sometimes really helpful. And sometimes, really like, “Okay, that was a lot of whatever
Adriana: perspective that was.”
Brianne: Yeah, “I’m ready for a break.” I just joined a bunch of new chronic illness related Facebook groups, and in some ways they are the worst because whatever it’s for, there will be people naming really normal experiences.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: It’s
Adriana: Are you just rolling your eyes?
Brianne: Yeah. And you’re like, “Okay, I don’t… I get it. I have questions like this too.”
Adriana: have the exact same symptoms as me, and ask those questions. And that’s super unrealistic, but when good questions that relate to you come about in those forums and stuff, it’s awesome. Like things on, like I said, Reddit… when somebody posts a question like, “Is this
Brianne: Oh my
Adriana: So yeah, sometimes we do know things more than you. You don’t live with this.
Brianne: Yeah. And also, it was probably covered for like half an hour in one lecture in medical school, and then if you never saw it during your early training, you just don’t know about it. That’s not… it doesn’t. Ugh.
Adriana: And you know, doctors like that actually make it worse than people think, because sometimes they get so upset at that, or just, they need to validate their knowledge, that they go against what you say that you found out about… that they make it an effort to say you’re wrong, that your Google search is wrong and I’m better.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And I… cause I’ve been… you were talking about systemic stuff earlier, and I’ve been thinking a lot now, cause this is like my past 50 interviews. So I think by the end of this… I’m doing an interview sprint right now. I’ll be close to 70, and I’m at a point where I’m like, “I would actually love to start talking to doctors about the pressures that make it so difficult to handle chronic illness in general.”
Adriana: Like house.
Brianne: Yeah. House or Grey’s Anatomy or whatever that… if your doctor is good, they’re going to figure out what’s wrong with you right away, and that’s just not realistic.
Adriana: No, and it’s not going to take one hospital visit. It’s probably going to take many, and you’re the one who has to put the puzzle pieces together, just cause you’re going to get a different doctor every time. And yet doctors… they do have a defense in this whole, struggling to find a chronic illness or get a diagnosis, and it is how they are trained in medical school.
Brianne: Right.
Adriana: They learn a phrase in medical school which is along the lines of, “If you hear hoof beats behind you, don’t assume it’s a zebra. Assume it’s a horse. Go for the more common diagnosis, not the rare ones.” And they kind of drill that in too much, to the point where doctors just don’t believe they could ever get a rare illness in their clinic.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And I think it’s also compounded by all of the tendency to assume that anything vague, so unspecific pain or fatigue or whatever, is a mental health problem. One question that I have that I don’t think there’s good data on really, is if we looked at every single person that went to their PCP with that kind of complaint, so vague pain, fatigue, I really sincerely wonder what proportion of that population
Adriana: It is. It definitely is. And then sometimes when the person comes back and says, “It’s not helping. I’ve been on this antidepressant for a long time, it’s not helping a lot of my symptoms.” They kind of, then at that point, just think the patient is making things up,
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. It’s just that part because no part of me is like, “People aren’t really depressed. Everybody who’s been told they’re depressed is actually chronically ill.” I am not trying to make that claim. It’s just that… it’s the differentiation process that’s so strange to me because it just doesn’t seem to happen with most people, at least initially.
Adriana: Yeah.
Brianne: Because obviously the people… I’m biased, because I’m only interviewing people who eventually found out that they were in fact chronically ill, so how much of the population never lands there? I don’t know, but I’m really curious because there’s all of these things that contribute to doctors
Adriana: Yeah. Especially if they already have a mental illness. I have anxiety, and I’ve been diagnosed with it. I’m on medication for it, and so that was a hindrance in my search of finding a diagnosis because they wrote it off as anxiety. Some of the pain you feel and the fatigue, you just… which kind of boggled my mind
Brianne: Yeah. It didn’t all of a sudden morph into having all of these other new symptoms after being relatively successfully managed for however long, and if it did that still a problem that should be looked at.
Adriana: And taken
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: So another thing that would be great to just touch on is the misunderstandings that happen to people with chronic illness from people who don’t have chronic illnesses. And I am, I have to say, I’m not innocent at all. I thought all the stereotypes before I had a chronic illness. I wasn’t the kind of person who’d be like, “That person totally isn’t handicapped,” and just go up to them and yell at them.
Brianne: Yeah. Classic.
Adriana: But we really are sick, and you don’t see us at our worst because we don’t want to come out at our worst. So you see us when we’re okay. So it looks like we’re fine
Brianne: Yeah, and
Adriana: Yeah, either it’s too much to talk about your illness or it’s not their business… I don’t…
Brianne: Yeah. And I think that some of the tension is… it would be really great if… whoever, all of the people that I need to interact with in my day to day life, just had a baseline understanding of what was going on, and it would be great if they could get that baseline understanding somewhere else.
Adriana: It doesn’t.
Brianne: If someone’s really dedicated and curious, you can read a lot of writing on the internet, you can find a lot of blog posts, and you can kind of piece it together, but there’s not like, “Oh, you know, just watch this movie,
Adriana: It’s difficult. Even with a chronic illness now it’s difficult to kick those habits, that immediate thought of someone in a handicapped spot who looks fine, that immediate thought of. They’re abusing the handicap spot, just pops in my head. But yeah, I think about it.
Brianne: Yeah. I know better now, but it’s so entrenched. And it’s so in the culture that… even that, what you just said, I feel that way too, of like, “Oh my brain still wants to think that.” And I have to actively… it’s an active on learning process, and that’s from my own experience and from talking to so many other people, but your healthy colleagues or my healthy even family members, they’re not having these experiences that are constantly forcing them to confront their bias because experience again, it’s not there.
Adriana: Yeah, I mean, healthy people just don’t care. Why would they care? It doesn’t affect them. So, they just don’t care. Who is going to be like… what person, who has no family member or friends who has a chronic illness, is going to look into chronic illnesses? Especially if they don’t have one too.
Brianne: Yeah. And there’s also… I think in both cases, there’s definitely a kind of subtle assumption that if you’re experiencing this, then you brought it on yourself. Like you could have done something to prevent it.
Adriana: there And like I said earlier, it’s a lifestyle change. It’s changing everything. And to be expected to adhere to that, to be as proactive as you possibly can be all the time, is something that people with chronic illnesses, need to understand. It’s something that I’m still working on too. But
Brianne: You keep crashing.
Adriana: Yeah, you do need time to yourself, that good time. So don’t take that away from yourself. Take that break.
Brianne: Yeah, yeah. Take lots of breaks, and I also really struggle with not feeling bad and not thinking that it means something if I choose to rest before I’ve hit a wall. But it’s a process for sure.
Adriana: Yeah. And it looks like… to other people that you’re just being lazy too. Even people as close as your parents or your wife or husband, a lot of… even them don’t understand
Brianne: Yeah. Yep. That’s at the heart of it. Oh yeah. There’s a lot. There’s a lot that I just want everyone to know. The way that… I probably use this example a lot, but I don’t think that it’s fair to compare chronic illness to cancer, for example, but I do think it’s fair to compare public awareness about the experience.
Adriana: No, I’m with you. I totally agree.
Brianne: There’s so many movies, and it’s in so many TV shows. And if someone that you work with, for example, gets cancer, most colleagues will have some idea of what the appropriate response might be.
Adriana: They’ll be more understanding and…
Brianne: And they’ll still expect it to have an end point, which is part of the difference.
Adriana: Yeah. And you know, a lot of times cancer does have an end point in one way or another.
Brianne: Yeah, you’re not getting better. Like, “I don’t know about anything where you would not get better, so you must be doing something wrong.” That’s the thing. Yeah.
Adriana: And, I also, at one point they thought… they thought it was so many things, and at one point they actually kind of thought it was Hodgkin’s lymphoma, which is a type of cancer. And it’s a type of cancer that’s extremely curable. You go through chemo, maybe for six months or however long you need it,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: That’s such a faux pas, you know, “Don’t wish that on yourself cause you never know what you’ll get.” But I’m like, “Yeah,
Brianne: Yeah.
Adriana: Because I would have gone through six months of misery, but then I’d have been fine and move on with my life. But this is not the case. This has stuck with me forever.
Brianne: Yeah, yeah. And I think it’s hard to… it’s easy intellectually to say… whenever we try to compare our experiences to other experiences, intellectually, we know that that’s not a real thing that’s
Adriana: That’s a really hard part too. You just don’t know when you’re going to feel okay, and people will get upset that you’re constantly canceling. They think that you’re just blowing them off and work gets frustrated, but you just don’t know how you’re going to feel any given day. And it’s difficult.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah. And that’s like, the heart of it is the like every day is going to be like that. Cool. Yeah.
Adriana: This great.
Brianne: Thank you. Thank you, health determiners.
Adriana: This is awesome.
Brianne: I think we’ve covered most of the big stuff, that I usually like to talk about. So
Adriana: It’s a pretty blanket.
Brianne: Yeah. Yeah, this is… it’s nice. it’s warm, but it’s good, but thank you.
Adriana: Well, thanks for having me.
[guitar riff]
Thank you for listening to episode 69 of No End In Sight!
You can find me on twitter and instagram @bennessb, and you can find space to talk about your own experiences with chronicillness using #NEISVoid on twitter and a little bit on instagram.
And don’t forget you can sign up to support the show over at patreon.com/noendinsight. Or, if you want to support the show but don’t have a few bucks to spare, I’d be just as grateful if you left a podcast review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes.
Thanks for listening.
The post 69 – Adriana appeared first on No End In Sight.