fear
The conversation spun round and round until I finally stopped her, having been sufficiently spanked for not picking a primary doctor sooner.
Dr. Rheumy's medical assistant seemed angry with me, her tone curt and unhelpful. She said things I know are not true. (She was adamant that some blood work, ones she has ordered for me before, are outside of their scope.)
So, I stopped asking questions and told her I would search for a new doctor without her input, and her response was to give me a customer service line, as if I called to complain.
I had called for her help, and when she called back days later, my request was met with fear and threats. Threats that if I don't 'take care of myself', the consequences could be serious.
(I called to get an appointment, to be seen. Oh well.)
I got off the phone and realized how often I react to fear. Fear if I don't take certain meds, my autoimmune disease will take over my life. Fear that if I take immunosuppressants, I will trash my liver or face lymphoma.
Fear my kids are not prepared for the future, when I visit the school.
Fear over the economy.
Fear I will pick the wrong candidate.
And when I am scared, I am easy to bully.
I am capable of making difficult decisions and taking charge when I need to. I tend to forget that. I tend to look too long and hard at the experts - the church, the politicians, doctors - for answers.
I'm sick of it.
The bus rolled up and soon, my garage was full of neighbor kids, ones I worry about during these hard times. I tend to hold my fear inside; cry privately over their often neglected lives, their families stretched further than mine.
I feel powerless.
But I'm not. Neither are you. I made simple snacks and sat out on the porch, watching the kids run and play.
One of the boys - one that's in foster care and has already suffered enough, born to meth addicts and saddled with chronic health problems of his own - smiled and thanked me for the snack.
I told him he is always welcome here, and I meant it.
And at the risk of sounding trite, I believe we have the tools to make our world whole, to make a difference, each in our own small way.
Dr. Rheumy's medical assistant seemed angry with me, her tone curt and unhelpful. She said things I know are not true. (She was adamant that some blood work, ones she has ordered for me before, are outside of their scope.)
So, I stopped asking questions and told her I would search for a new doctor without her input, and her response was to give me a customer service line, as if I called to complain.
I had called for her help, and when she called back days later, my request was met with fear and threats. Threats that if I don't 'take care of myself', the consequences could be serious.
(I called to get an appointment, to be seen. Oh well.)
I got off the phone and realized how often I react to fear. Fear if I don't take certain meds, my autoimmune disease will take over my life. Fear that if I take immunosuppressants, I will trash my liver or face lymphoma.
Fear my kids are not prepared for the future, when I visit the school.
Fear over the economy.
Fear I will pick the wrong candidate.
And when I am scared, I am easy to bully.
I am capable of making difficult decisions and taking charge when I need to. I tend to forget that. I tend to look too long and hard at the experts - the church, the politicians, doctors - for answers.
I'm sick of it.
The bus rolled up and soon, my garage was full of neighbor kids, ones I worry about during these hard times. I tend to hold my fear inside; cry privately over their often neglected lives, their families stretched further than mine.
I feel powerless.
But I'm not. Neither are you. I made simple snacks and sat out on the porch, watching the kids run and play.
One of the boys - one that's in foster care and has already suffered enough, born to meth addicts and saddled with chronic health problems of his own - smiled and thanked me for the snack.
I told him he is always welcome here, and I meant it.
And at the risk of sounding trite, I believe we have the tools to make our world whole, to make a difference, each in our own small way.
Comments
Thank you!
I can be crippled by fear. Sometimes I literally yell "f*ck it!" to snap out of it. Try it...it works.
I had one of those snap out of it moments when I got off the phone Monday. Something shifted.
I feel like I've been in this weird fugue lately, in robot mode.
And so scared all the time...
I don't know what I'd do without my blogging community. :)
I understand your fear, from the other side. My husb has an autoimmune disorder. I've faced down that fear many times.
What autoimmune disease is weighing you down? For me it is rheumatoid arthritis and it BITES. Let's stick together sister. Sisters in meds.
And lovely about the little boy down the street.
Can we schedule the after-school-meetings thing again? I relish your presence :)
Thank you.