Fast forward to the weekend. It was our song class show night. I kept coughing and coughing. I was worried I wasn't going to be able to sing, but the adrenaline kicked in and everything was fine.
The next day I checked into the hospital.
The pulse ox read 80%. For my non-medical friends, a pulse oximeter tells you how much oxygen is in your blood. Normal is above 95%. Below 90% is getting dangerous. Being at 80% is bad. I was put into the ICU and put on something called a VPAP. A VPAP looks like the masks a fighter pilot wears and forces oxygen into your lungs. Whenever I took the VPAP off I would only be able to say a few words at a time and then take a breath and continue.
So I have the best- and by the best I mean the worst- timing ever. My parents were overseas on their anniversary vacation so they couldn't get home quickly to help me. I'm lucky that I had Carina there who could come over periodically throughout the day while she was running her own architecture business like a badass (shout out to Restructure Studio!). But there were periods of time were I was alone in the hospital with doctors coming in and out.
As soon as Mercedes heard that I was in the hospital and knew that Mom and Dad wouldn't be making it there any time soon, she took off from work hopped onto a plane. She was the advocate and friend I needed in that hospital 24/7. But she wasn't there before I had probably the worst encounter I've ever had with a doctor.
Now I was on strict instructions from my Cincinnati BMT doctors to NOT let them biopsy my lung because the irritation could cause GVHD (graft versus host disease) of my lungs. Then this doctor came into my room and said that she wanted to biopsy my lung to see what kind of infection it was so they could make an antibiotic cocktail to combat that specific type of bacteria. I said no and explained why I couldn't. They could afford to give me the gamut of antibiotics and I could not afford to get GVHD of the lung. She then proceeded to bully me and ended with the sentence "fine then, if you want to die" and left the room.
I was 23 years old, by myself and afraid. I called my parents (who were working hard to get back to the US) and my dad said that the next time she was in the room, to call him so he could talk to her. An hour or two later she came back to try to convince me to get a biopsy, but my dad was on the phone. I don't remember exactly what was said. All I know is that he was somehow advocating for me from the other side of the Atlantic ocean. They had a heated argument in which my dad said that she was way out of turn in saying that I was going to die if I didn't adhere to her treatment plan (because that's NOT true at all) and that she could not come back into my room until Mercedes arrived.
Mercedes was there a few hours later, heard what that doctor said to me and then told her off again. Needless to say, I am so thankful for my family. Merce and Carina spent the evening with me while Brandan facetimed with us. Mercedes spent the night and by 10 am the next morning my parents were there.
The ill-spoken doctor was allowed back in my room since I had a family member there who could speak up for me (while I was huffing and puffing between words). She returned when my parents came and apologized for how she spoke to me and agreed to not biopsy and continue with giving me the wide scope of antibiotics.
I was in the hospital for a week before I was able to go home. My family standing by me through all of it.
But over the next few months I noticed that I was short of breath a lot of the time. When I went up to Cincinnati for a check-up with my BMT docs, they scheduled an appointment with a pulmonologist. I did a pulmonary function test (PFT) and they told me I was at 42% lung capacity. They said this like I should have been expecting it, but it was a complete surprise to me. In fact, the doctor told me that I had to have known that since after I had my BMT. After understanding I had no idea what he was talking about, he told me I had bronchiolitis obliterans- that my lungs are slowly scarring over which is why I get winded so easily. Also, this means that I could quite possibly need a lung transplant in the future.
I freaked. I didn't understand how I could not have known, how they could not have told me that I had another disease due to the transplant. That my lungs were slowly dying.
I went back after another few months and I was down to 38%. Another few months down to 35%. Another few down to 33%. And then it stopped...
I am a lucky person. I have to admit it. I have been at 33% for a few years now and I don't intend on going down any further. I breathe ok, but I will never be a marathon runner. I do dance for exercise that gets my heart rate up and makes me breath hard. I choose to walk to my grocery store around the corner and carry all of my groceries back even though I know sometimes it will be heavy and I will be panting when I get home. And I chose not to waste time and to walk up 6 flights of stairs when the elevators were backed up at work. I got to the top and all of my muscles ached, not because they aren't strong, but because they didn't have enough oxygen. I will do these things and continue to push my body and lungs because I will not let my lungs tell me what I can and cannot do.
I will take a breath and keep going.