Blind(side)ed by Lupus - How was I to know!
After coming across the infographic I posted last Monday, in
conjunction with an older post I did about a survey regarding diseases like lupus and how they affect decisions regarding pregnancy, I feel I need to make a point. (Nothing new,
right?)
According to the infographic, 63% of lupus patients
polled say they decided to retire or quit work earlier than they had planned. And the
findings of the survey showed that 64% of women with lupus who participated in
the survey said they had fewer children then they had originally planned.
Okay, so these are major decisions we’re talking about – life-altering kind of stuff that requires a complete change of plans and a big dose of acceptance. And it’s these kind of big lifestyle changes that I had no idea might be required when I was diagnosed with lupus. I didn’t understand that with a diagnosis like lupus, life as I’d known it was going to be different. I didn’t get that my lifelong plans were going to be altered, and that my goals, long and short term, might shift. I didn’t know I was going to have to do things differently, or that lupus was going to affect everything from the way I got dressed in the morning, to the cars I drove, to the way in which I interacted with people. “Life upheaval” wasn’t in any of the lupus literature I read, and so I didn’t even think to add it to the list.
I promise you – I wasn’t in denial, those issues just
weren’t even on my radar. What did I think
would be in store? Definitely a couple of prescriptions. Maybe a few dietary
restrictions. But as for an overhaul of
the way I lived and breathed? No way.
Of course, now, I’ve fully embraced my new way of doing
things, and I think my contentedness stems from a combination of time, experience, as well as expectation.
Now that my expectations are set to include big and little changes, lifelong goal alterations and daily routine accommodations, it makes it much easier for me to "live normally", because I understand that my "norm" is now a "new norm".
And although I hate to be a resounding gong, that's why I wrote my book, and why I keep this blog. So that others who are diagnosed with lupus aren't blindsided down the road like I was. Ideally, you embrace the disease early on, and set your expectations for a new norm (not necessarily worse, just different), and then you begin to shape and rebuild your life around lupus, living well, despite it.
Now that my expectations are set to include big and little changes, lifelong goal alterations and daily routine accommodations, it makes it much easier for me to "live normally", because I understand that my "norm" is now a "new norm".
And although I hate to be a resounding gong, that's why I wrote my book, and why I keep this blog. So that others who are diagnosed with lupus aren't blindsided down the road like I was. Ideally, you embrace the disease early on, and set your expectations for a new norm (not necessarily worse, just different), and then you begin to shape and rebuild your life around lupus, living well, despite it.
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