Archive of ‘Medical’ category

5 Years

5 years ago
On August 6, 2007, my life changed. I woke up with a normal, functioning GI system. I went to bed (on a 13 hour flight to Israel after throwing up for five straight hours) a completely different person. A sick person. A person doctors could not treat; a person who eventually ended up visiting two top surgeons at Cornell who both recommended having my colon removed. My life also changed that summer when I got my job at Merrill Lynch, which was an amazing job with wonderful people at a company I wish still existed because I wanted to stay there forever.


[Taken approx 3 hours before I became permanently sick]

4 years ago
At the very end of the summer of 2008, my life changed. The stomach issues I thought were just a weird thing that would go away were worse than ever. I felt uncomfortable, miserable and obsessed constantly about how my life changed so much in one year and wondering if I would ever be back to normal. Up until summer hit, I spent my weekends in my bed. But I love summer and I love warm weather and I was tired of being single and I decided to start dating. I met my ex at the very end of the summer.  At the exact same time as that? Bank of America bought Merrill Lynch and I actually cried, knowing that the ideal job situation I enjoyed for the last year couldn’t last much longer.  And with both these events, my life changed. For the better? Not so much, but I strongly believe that everything happens for a reason and I wouldn’t be where I am today if this didn’t happen.


[My brother and I on a ferry to Bainbridge Island]

3 years ago
In the summer of 2009, my life changed. I will always remember summer 2009 for being rainy, cloudy and cold. Almost every weekend sucked. But the summer was marked by something else. After reading blogs for awhile by then, I decided to try something I never considered: running. I wanted a way to exercise outdoors and I wanted an exercise I could do anywhere, and the bloggers I read who were running and racing made it look like fun. My first attempts were slow and difficult. My knee hurt; I tried running too fast and felt like death. For some reason, I kept trying and a couple of months after I ran for 25 minutes for the first time, I ran my first race. And I unknowingly set myself on a crazy course I could not having possibly imaged for myself, because really, a marathon? That is the summer I became a runner.

Dori's first race    Dori running first race
[My very first race]

2 years ago
By August, 2010 my life changed. My stomach was doing so much better, I thought the worst was finally over. I felt awesome all the time. I didn’t get bloated after my meals. I was single, and summer is the absolute greatest time to be single after a crappy relationship. I was taking Core Fusion. I was running a lot. I held my first backyard party. I traveled to the Hamptons to help film a Core Fusion class with YogaVibes. I hiked the Appalachian and stood in New York and New Jersey simultaneously (having no idea I would live in New Jersey two years later). I spent Labor Day weekend in the Smoky Mountains at my baby brother‘s wedding to girl who was already a sister to me. I  felt strong from my first six-months of strength-based exercise; I felt more confident and happy with myself than I ever was before. And while all those things were absolutely amazing, the GI improvements were unfortunately short-lived; a couple of months after summer ended, my stomach took a turn for the worse and it’s been bad ever since. So while everything was pretty great that summer, my life did change, but not in the way I so desperately hoped.

Dori on Appalachian in NY and NJ     Dori backyard party with Missy

1 year ago
On August 8, 2011 (one year ago today), my life changed. I started my new job.


[Thanks to my daily email from Timehop Abe.]

I didn’t feel 100% confident in my decision. I wanted to leave the company I was at (a position I also didn’t feel totally comfortable taking) and didn’t want to make the same mistake again. But I was also excited. I knew it would be a challenge, and more than anything, I needed to be challenged. I stepped off the PATH train into a world I never knew existed until my interview: Jersey City. I mean, I knew Jersey City existed, but I didn’t know it was so nice. So pretty. So quiet.

I made the right decision by accepting this job for more than just the work (which absolutely was the right choice for me, as it turns out). Not only did I accomplish more at work in one year than I ever have before, accepting this job led to Andy and I moving to Jersey City in our first apartment together which was the greatest thing that could have happened for us. Both sick of Manhattan, both unable to afford anything decent — if I didn’t work in Jersey City, we never would have known this incredible world with tons of farmer’s markets, great restaurants, cute bars, pretty parks and cleaner air was an option. And I can still get to my beloved workout Refine Method in 30 minutes (priorities, right!).

Dori and Andy - Jersey City
[Jersey City!]

The one thing that hasn’t changed? My GI issues. I am practically as lost now as I was in 2007 when it all began. While I can manage my symptoms a lot better (which happens to cost a LOT of money), I am frustrated and upset. When I got sick, I  thought it was just a weird bug that would go away; I never expected it to become a 5+ year ordeal. I can’t even believe it’s been that long; it feels like yesterday that this all began. Yet here I am, five years later, thousands of dollars poorer and without many answers. So while I plan to contact a new GI doctor soon (in case science changed since I saw the surgeons), I am frustrated. But I’m also happy that my life events of the past five years led me where I am today.

I don’t know what will happen with my medical stuff by this time next year. But I do know that by this time next year, my life will be completely different for multiple reasons. While some of the reasons are really sad, there are more that are happy. I’m excited to watch the year unfold. A lot can happen in five years — but even more can happen in six.

And I will leave you all at that.

On Burning Out

Back in January of this year, I wrote a post called Mojo, after receiving an email from a friend about exercising. She said, “I’ve become so freakin lazy. Feel like I’ve lost my mojo.”

Her email made me think about how I went from someone who lived next door to her fancy expensive gym but couldn’t muster up the motivation to actually get there, to someone who regularly traveled by subway to all corners of the city to take my beloved fitness classes — and told as much to the New York Times.

My main point from that post was this:

Exercise has become so ingrained in my life and has truly become something I love. Exercise has become a priority and a given.

I felt like I couldn’t longer relate to how my friend felt. I understood it because once upon a time I had been there, but now that I saw and felt everything exercise did for me, I could not imaging any other way.

And then last week happened.

The pain and pressure in my stomach that started suddenly one evening never dissipated. I tried to run 8miles on it and miraculously made it to 7.5.  In fact, it kept getting worse. I spent my entire second week at my new job sitting at my desk, unable to eat, feeling sick and trying to be on top of my game as I tried to do my job well, attend meetings with CEOs and overall make a  good impression.

I was able to put on a good show at work. What I wasn’t able to do, however, was exercise. Not only was I not able to — I did not want to.

For the first time in a year and a half, the thought of exercising was daunting, overwhelming and completely unappealing.

Scheduling my classes for the week, an activity I normally love and work on multiple times throughout the week, was just not something I was interested in doing. When Jess posted her weekly Say It Do It post, instead of commenting with my weekly plans as I usually loved to do, I closed the page. I couldn’t even consider an entire week of exercise. No interest.

I did not open the Refine schedule. I did not open the Core Fusion schedule. I almost attempted waking up a couple of mornings to run, but shortly before falling asleep I reset my alarm to sleep instead.

To be totally honest, I was not feeling well. I wasn’t able to eat anything without experiencing painful spasms, and while on the Cooler Cleanse from Tuesday through Friday, I was not able to drink more than four of the six juices each day — if that. I was nauseous, but luckily not eating stopped that pain from happening. But four juices a day is not enough to subsist on, let alone work out on. I did not have much energy. I felt weak and a little lightheaded. Working out would have been stupid and irresponsible.

But my attitude went beyond that. It was more than just not feeling well. I did not even welcome the idea of returning to exercise even after feeling better. The thought of it was revolting! I felt lazy. I  felt smothered by the idea of making exercise a part of my daily routine again. I wondered how, after experiencing the luxury of waking up at a decent hour, getting ready for work leisurely, and coming home right after to rest, would I ever want to make working out a regular part of my life again.

And I felt so weak that I couldn’t imagine ever not feeling that way. I felt like I lost so much of what I worked for so easily. Walking up the stairs in the train station seemed like too much. I took the escalator.

I thought about the Queens Half Marathon just a few weeks ago. I felt so strong, the speed came so easily. And my 14 mile run the following week was also phenomenal. How could I run 14 miles a few weeks ago, and now the thought of a single flight of stairs overwhelmed me? How would I ever run 14 miles again? Much less 26.2?

After an endoscopy on Friday, I spent the rest of the day in bed resting. I also spent much of Saturday resting before getting out and enjoying the beautiful weather. I had signed up for the NYRR Long Training Run Sunday. But late Saturday night, still feeling a bit weak, I turned off my alarm. I missed the entire sixth week of marathon training.

But on Sunday evening, I made a choice. I was going to slowly ease my way back into exercise. I took a full week off from any exercise at all, for the first time since January, 2010. At most I had taken a few days off in a row. At most.

I was able to eat on Saturday, and I was started to feel better. I ran 3 miles. They were not easy miles, but they also were not the worst miles. I went next door to the treadmill at that same fancy gym I once belonged to. I forgot my headphones and had to run the entire treadmill run with no entertainment, just my thoughts. And I did fine.

That run gave me the boost I needed.

The next morning, I went to Refine Method. I emailed Brynn, the owner and instructor of the class I signed up for, to let her know about my situation — which, being my friend, she already knew. But I wanted to be extra clear: I had not been feeling well, I had not worked out in over a week, my stomach might hurt, I might feel weak, I will be taking it easy. I wanted to ease back into working out.

The class was rough. I am used to feeling strong and confident at Refine, but yesterday I felt like the weakest one there. I did my best and I allowed myself to go slow. During jumpbacks, normally one of my favorite exercises, I started off slowly and eventually changed to step-backs, a slightly easier version. Normally, I am the person taking the harder modification.

During triceps with the kettlebells, I switched to a lighter weight rather than try and push through. I felt very aware of my limitations. And while the entire class was difficult and I certainly did not love it, I got through it and felt great after. And hungry — a very good sign.

And this morning, in an attempt to resume my marathon training this week (I simply crossed last week’s workouts off as though I did them), I ran 7 miles on the treadmill since it stays dark outside now. I gave myself permission to do less, but as the run went on I felt better and better.

And now I am back on track. I’m not going nuts scheduling classes like crazy, but I am easing back into my routine, most importantly my marathon training. I don’t think missing a week will ever hurt anyone, and because of the Queens Half Marathon I was already ahead in my training anyway.

After this morning’s run, I am no longer doubting my ability to train for the mararthon. I am no longer feeling a lack of motivation. My own mojo is slowly but surely returning.

The mood and energy boost I felt after Refine yesterday — despite the fact that it was not even close to one of my best workouts — and after my long pre-work run today . . . nothing else can make me feel this way. It is good to take a week off sometimes when you feel burnt out. I might not have even realized this if I hadn’t gotten sick. And no, I don’t believe my stomach pains were at all related to exercise — they were (and still are) very clearly eating related. The doctor saw something not normal with my stomach. But that week put my training and my attitude towards exercise and rest in perspective.

And now I am back. I walked into that fancy gym last night and once again became a member for the remainder of my marathon training. I happily signed the forms. I am not overwhelmed. I am not feeling smothered. I felt invincible to feeling a lack of motivation to exercise because I just loved everything it did for me. I heard others talking about it, but simply could not imagine, at the time I wrote that Mojo post, that it would happen to me.

But it did. And now I am back to myself. Just slightly wiser.

 

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