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Category Archives: Life with Masto

I Leave It In Your Hands

Mastocytosis Flare Recovery Month 8 Day 13

 

Should We Stay Or Should We Go?

Since we have been home from our trip it has been a whirlwind to say the least. While on a recent trip to the beach nearly all the symptoms went away. You can read more about that here. Many of you wrote to me saying we should move, others have encouraged us to get a vacation home on the beach to allow me to travel to seasonally. My mast cell specialist was very encouraged about my progress while away and not surprised symptoms returned after a few days. He said my seven-day trip was not long enough. He wants me to go away for a month during the fall flare time. In theory this will not only help heal my current symptoms but also avoid getting worse during the most dangerous time of year. We are working out arrangements to make that happen. Although a month-long trip to the beach may sound great, there are many details to work out. Add to that all the arrangements if you are on a PICC line and receiving home health care.

Hidden Triggers

Since I generally get better when going out-of-town, my doctor wants me to run a little experiment to see if I am reacting to something in my home that we are missing. This week I am staying with my parents. It has been good spending time with them. We will know more by the end of the week how it will turn out. The fact that my swelling started to return 93 miles from the coast tells me that it is likely environmental. However, like everything else with this disease, there are many pieces to the puzzle. We are going to be diligent and run down any possibility he suggests.

Leave it in His Hands

At this time our future us unclear. Our thoughts are filled with confusion and hope.  God is bigger! I want to share my new fav song that I have been listening to repeatedly. I’m so grateful for artists that write music that express what is in my heart and soul. I hope this song blesses you today.  No matter what you are going through God is bigger.

In your hands by Unspoken

The dawn is breaking and I can hear Your whisper in the breeze

The world is waking and I am here to meet You on my knees

When I’m with You my soul finds rest

Cause I can leave it in Your hands

The day keeps coming pulling me a million different ways

I’m always running but never seem to catch the things I chase

When I’m with You my soul finds rest

Cause I can leave it in Your hands

Every sorrow, I leave it in Your hands

Every sickness, I leave it in Your hands

All my failures, I leave them in Your hands

Amen, I leave it in Your hands

So I am laying the weight of all these burdens at Your feet

No more waiting, cause You’ve already won my victories

In Jesus my soul finds rest

Cause I can leave it in Your hands

Every promise, I leave it in Your hands

Every healing, I leave it in Your hands

And my future, I leave it in Your hands

Amen, I can leave it in Your hands

It’s Your hands that form the mountains

Your hands set boundaries for the seas

And in Your hands You hold tomorrow

The same hands that took the nails for me

Every sorrow, I leave it in Your hands

Every sickness, I leave it in Your hands

All my failures, I leave them in Your hands

Amen, I can leave it in Your hands

Every promise, I leave it in Your hands

Every healing, I leave it in Your hands

And my future, I leave it in Your hands

Amen, I can leave it in Your hands

I can leave it in you hands.

 

Christal

Vacation from Mastocytosis

Mast cell vacation on the beach

Mastocytosis Flare Recovery Month 8 Day 5

I have not posted an update recently because we were out-of-town. It was a great trip! It was pretty challenging getting everything ready to travel with I.V. Nutrition and all that goes along with it. It reminded me of traveling when the children were babies and all the extra stuff they require. Once we were finally gone it was very good. After 4 days of being gone almost all my symptoms were gone. It was the first time I have felt “normal” in a very long time. My hair quit falling out, my lip swelling was gone, throat swelling was about 90% better, abdominal pain was greatly reduced, lymph node and bone pain were gone, my face redness mostly went away along with face swelling. My face did not feel like it was on fire, I had energy, heart palpitations were gone, and I only had one night of insomnia. I was able to be outside in the sunshine and the sun felt fabulous on my skin. The temps were pretty consistent so heat was not a problem in fact we were able to set the a/c as high as 75 and I was perfectly comfortable instead of the usual 65 at home. I was able to walk on the sand and get some exercise, which is usually a trigger. I played games with the family and put together a 500 piece puzzle so cognitive dysfunction and brain fog went away. It was wonderful! I was able to decrease my steroid use with out the swelling returning and was able to add a medication I have attempted for several years. I felt like myself again.

When it was time to come home, I was sad. Of course everyone is a little sad when a vacation is over because it means it is back to reality. This was more than that. There is no cure for Mastocytosis. Living with an incurable disease means there is some level of suffering you must endure. Sometimes it is manageable and others it is life threatening but it is never absent. Although I have had some symptoms since I was 19, symptoms have been manageable with the exception of the last decade, most notably 2006-2008 and 2013 to present. The times I have done the best have been when I am on the beach. My family has sacrificed greatly to give me a vacation each year on the beach so I can feel normal for a little while. 93 miles from the coast my lips began to feel the all too familiar electric-like stinging in my lips as they began to swell. Fortunately, I had my new medicine I was able to take, which helped keep things from progressing. After 4 days of being back home all my symptoms have returned in spite of being maxed out on all my medication. Back to reality.

As we drove away from the coast I had a general idea of what I would be going home to. Speeding down the highway and moving closer and closer to what I knew was my reality I thought about the life of Christ. As he prepared for the Passover he knew what he would be facing and the suffering he would endure. He willingly continued on his road because he loved each one of us so much. Obviously the torture he would undergo was enormous and what I live with each day is nothing compared to him, yet he faced it willingly. Another major difference between those moments in the life of Christ and my drive back home is that I really had no choice and I am weak and powerless. I can’t hold a job, support or even take care of myself. Jesus was the Son of God, he could have done something about it. He could have called ten thousand warrior angels to fight for him but he didn’t. He laid down his life willingly for us, to allow us to have eternal relationship with God. As the miles passed and my symptoms returned one by one, I began to understand a little more and to truly appreciate what He did for me. This is one of the many reasons I love Him so very much! Thank you Jesus for loving me that much!!

 

Christal

Mastocytosis Angels in Disguise

Mastocytosis angel

Mastocytosis Flare Recovery Month 7 Day 19 – Saturday
Today, we were at the store buying a power inverter for my pump. We headed toward the front of the store when I heard a lady yelling “Wait,wait! I’m following you.” We were near the check out line and there was a sizable crowd; as one would expect on a Saturday afternoon. I turned around and to my surprise she was talking to me. The smiling woman proceeded to ask me if I was going through chemo. I told her no, I had another disease that was in the same class as cancer but instead of making tumors my body makes too many immune cells. These immune cells build up in my internal organs making me have allergic reactions to pretty much everything that enters my body through eating, drinking, medications, anything absorbed in my skin or even fragrances or aromas inhaled. I battle anaphylaxis. She introduced herself as Caroline and she was a stage 4 colon cancer survivor. She said “I just want to tell you that God is good and I’m going to be praying for you.”

I was so thankful for the kindness of a stranger who was able to look past my PICC line, mask and fanny pack overflowing with tubes. Remembering what she went through, she offered the gift of prayer. I thanked her and as we parted I was a little overwhelmed. This was the first time a complete stranger has responded with so much compassion.

In the minutes that followed, I began thinking how with just five short words she was able to explain what she had, level of involvement, and the smallest amount of time she had been cancer free to be qualified as a survivor. Having several friends with similar cancer battles, I understood what her treatment may have entailed and some of what she may have endured. I can imagine that she had surgery, was progressively sick after treatment days, she probably lost all of her hair, and she may have had the unescapable metallic taste in her mouth. Although Mastocytosis has been recognized since the 1980’s it has only recently started a growth explosion. Most people feel like pioneers because the general population and most medical providers are unaware of this debilitating disease. It is really hard, even for close friends and family to understand exactly what it is like living with this particular disease. Only by living with a mast cell disease could someone know the daily dilemmas we face.  For example, walking into a public restroom and succumbing to the combination of air freshener and bleach. Having a wave of instant and extreme nausea plus feeling like you may pass out. Holding your breath, you quickly retreat while the room gets dark and your body becomes weak. When the nausea finally leaves the it is merely replaced with brain fog, trouble concentrating, flushing, feeling like your face is on fire, itching, and possibly hives. When you finally start to feel better it is then you realize you still have to go to the bathroom.

I am not complaining. Caroline was right, God is good. He has provided everything that I have needed for this battle however, if as pioneers we do not share what it is like to live with this strange disease we will never move on from a first generation experience. Helping others identify these odd symptoms early on will help them to prevent their disease severity. I went undiagnosed for more than two decades and that is much harder to come back from than someone who receives early treatment.

It is very challenging but His grace gives me the ability to get up everyday and be his hands and feet to His people. He gives me hope that a cure will one day be found. As she endeavors to pray for a stranger, I too will be praying for Caroline and for her ministry of the heart for today she was my angel.

Don’t forget to be kind to strangers, for some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it!
Hebrews 13:2 NLB

Christal
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