The funny part is that these
emotions seem to come out with the “wrong” triggers! Sickness itself was so bad. This last flare-up was so
strong, so altogether crushing, that maybe there just wasn’t time to feel things as they happened,
and now, months after the worst of it, the tiny things are the button-pushers.
This past week I had to cut my
hair off. The rounds of powerful medicines we had to use for this flare-up made
it rapidly fall out, and by the time this month came around it was clear that it
wasn’t salvageable and that I was going to be a short-haired bride afterall.
Not what I’d always dreamed of, but also NOT a huge deal; it’s definitely
just hair! But somehow the no-choice-in-the-matterness of it all shook me up more than I expected, and on the
happiest of girly days—when I got to go pick up my wedding dress and do the
first fitting—I started to weep. Maybe these tangible things exist to put form
to something we wouldn’t be able to process another way. Lost tresses and the
way they change my face force me to move forward, to take a deep breath and
chose bravery in the small stuff, leaving loss behind and pursuing confidence
again after feeling tossed around by feisty circumstances.
And I have been given the BEST
support team for this stuff… two brothers and a sister that came along for the
chop, and didn’t make me feel silly in any way, a mom that wiped my tears at
the bridal salon, a pappy that nuzzled the words “you’re beautiful” into my
cheek, and a fiancé that has only gushed delight, excitement, support, and
anticipation at a lifetime of seeing each other grow and change.
A few days later, we needed to
administer the second “loading dose” of the new “biologic” medication (given in
my arm this time, instead of the initial 4 in my belly – see the pic!). This
one is replacing the Remicade that was causing the hairloss, exhaustion, and
brain-fog. We’re really hopeful that this is the one we can stick with for many
years to come, and are praying that as it gets in my system, I will become able
to wean off the steroids again and remain on only 1-2 medicines! It’s awesome
to be able to give myself the shots (it’ll be 1 shot every 2 weeks now), and to
no longer have to plan around intravenous infusions every 8 weeks! This
medicine still suppresses my immune system, which potentially still limits
where Johnny and I will be able to serve with Wycliffe in the future, but that “limit”
no longer feels scary, and I stand firmly on the knowledge that no medicine will
wrangle any limitation on God’s will.
So change pummels forward, but good things are afoot. Smiling today at
the oddity of this summer, and thankful for all the ways this body is calming
down.
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