Three
months after I returned from Athens, I was living back at home with my
parents. I was limping along, working half-time, but I'd completely lost
interest. I felt like a monkey, set in front of a computer, expected to
perform like a cog for the greater good. What was so
great about doing good, after all? I had a niggling feeling that it was exactly my passion for
good work that had gotten me sick. It was becoming a haunting pattern...
So
I bought a hat that looked like a dead black cat wrapped around my
head. I figured since I bought it in London, it must be fashionable.
I drug myself around the city to see doctors who failed to see the gravity of the situation. They gave me antibiotics and sent me home, but
the mysterious fever persisted. One doctor wasn’t sure what was wrong
with me, but he was convinced that Americans didn’t know how to speak
proper English and felt compelled to lecture me on that point.
I
would stay in my dorm room for days reading Mansfield Park, known for
being Austen's most complex and possibly worst novel. But it became my
best friend as I lay in my twin bed by the radiator, the duvet cover
pulled up, listening to carefree college students talking up and down
the hall. I can still see all my vitamins sitting next to various
antibiotics on my desk. Once in a while I would creep down the hall and a
few flights of stairs to call my mom on the pay phone. I was an ocean
away from anything familiar, suffering from an unnamed malady, wondering
what to do. I should have gone home much sooner, but I waited until
December.
Now, three years later, I was there again. I was weak and tired, but the constant burning agitation that hummed through my body made it impossible to rest. And when I didn't feel desperate, I felt nothing at all. I couldn't even cry. I couldn’t laugh either, and that was worse. I watched The Daily Show, a one time favorite, thinking how Jon Stewart's news stories were hardly well-researched, lacking in depth, and never offered enough information to satisfy. The humor became ludicrous. I was alone, without comedy, in a world where everything seemed much much too serious. I sat in front of the television screen, staring blankly ahead at what I imagined to be the rest of my life.
It was nearly Christmas when my mom found a doctor on the east coast who had an answer. On the phone he said, "I have good news and bad. There is no cure for what you have, but you can get much better."
I felt relief because someone believed I was sick. It wasn't 'just in my head'--there was a name for my suffering. Dr. N. specialized in something called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or more technically, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, which no one can pronounce. But what little hope I'd kept alive ran out with the words 'no cure' echoing off an impenetrable barricade to the future. I'd been depressed, but now I felt what makes a person get up in the morning literally leave my body. I sat outside on the front door stoop, covered in late afternoon sun, trying to pray. But I had nothing to say. I was physically bereft of joy. At dinner, I looked at my parents and said, "I don't want to live anymore."
But I wasn't dying. I was gagging on licorice powder and coconut milk first thing in the morning, per Dr. N.'s instructions. I watched episodes of Clean Sweep, where professional organizers come in to someone's home and sort through years of piled up possessions, getting rid of the junk, clearing the way for a fresh start. I wanted a fresh start. After a month, I decided to admit myself to Dr. N's clinic.
To be continued in a bonus Friday post...
Amazing writing–tragedy in poetry. Feels like a novel. I mourn. I weep.
ReplyDeleteThe NHS can be so very...as they say in proper English...crap. Sorry you had to experience proper England in that way.
ReplyDeleteHugs.