Category Archives: Transformation

Square One: Or the Time I Poured Gasoline on a Raging Fire

It was about midnight on a Tuesday. After a few fitful hours of sleep, I awoke to my heart racing, feeling like it was about to flutter right out of my chest. I glanced at my Garmin and saw 100 for my heart rate. It’s usually around 60 when I sleep. I checked the monitor to see if the puppies were still asleep and they were, curled up tight against each other into one little fur ball. We adopted them five days ago from a local rescue and my body has been in full rebellion since the second day. That night, I was up running to the bathroom every few hours with what I thought was a digestive bug, but by Monday it was apparent something more sinister was at play. I couldn’t eat and my gut was still a wreck. Add in the periodic episodes of tachycardia waking me up at night and something was clearly amiss. I worry the puppies are too much, and text M as much in the middle of the night.

We talked for almost an hour, with me being as quiet as possible as I didn’t want to wake the puppies. Being so young, they’d soon be up to go outside and I wanted to put that off as long as I could. I don’t understand what’s happening to my body and am worried about what’s going to happen in the three+ days until M gets home. He’s only been out for a day and it’s already a shit show. I wonder if we should contact the rescue, but he thinks he can get home early. He will make some calls first thing in the morning and I will do my best to keep my head above water until then. As someone who’s always prided herself on having her shit together, I hate that I need help. I hate that this is too much. I hate that my body is rebelling in such an obvious way that it cannot be ignored. I deeply resent that after everything that’s happened in the last three months, that now my body is like a wildfire raging out of control.

It’s June 11, 2019. Just over three months after my dad died from pancreatic cancer. Not yet three weeks since my old-lady dog Abby died unexpectedly. Adopting the puppies was supposed to be a bright spot in what has been an incredibly shitty year so far. We’ve lived with at least one dog since we got Sadey, our Lab, in September 2001. She was with us until August 2016. We rescued Abby in October in 2004, and with her passing that chapter of our life officially came to a close. Sadey and Abby brought so much life and joy to our home. Sadey with her love of naps in front of the fan and Abby with her gentle scolding when the popcorn I tossed her didn’t land to her liking. With them gone, M wanted to take a break from having pets. But with him away for work as much as he is, a quiet house in the midst of this dreadful year seemed like a miserable idea. So one adult dog became two puppies after our dog sitter reached out when these two came into the shelter. It’s one of those moments that when I look back on it, replays in slow motion as I scream at the woman to stop and pay attention.

I navigated my dad’s passing fairly well, all things considered. He lived with pancreatic cancer for 3-1/2 years, which is practically an eternity for that particular cancer. As with a lot of terminal cancers, there were warning signs those last few months that suggested we were running out of time. Which is to say that while his passing was tragic, he was only 65 and we should have had much more time with him, it was not unexpected. What was unexpected was how much time we had following his diagnosis. When you expect someone to be gone in less than a year and one year turns into 3-1/2, the extra time feels like a tremendous gift, even as the ending is the same shitty ending. Three and a half years is a lot of time to acclimate to what’s about to happen. I started grieving the minute we got confirmation of his diagnosis. Which isn’t to say that a tsunami of despair didn’t accompany his passing, but I was prepared for it.

When my dad was diagnosed in the summer of 2015, I did the math and realized I was going to be the girl who lost her dog and her dad in the same year. I assumed that dog would be Sadey, as she was 14 years old at the time. Abby was 11. But then my dad and his treatment team found a groove, and when we lost Sadey the following summer, my dad was humming a long just fine. I thought I’d dodged a bullet.

The years clicked by with my dad holding his own, even as we knew it wouldn’t last. By late 2018, it was clear the cancer was getting the upper had. He looked as though he’d aged ten years since the summer and he was sleeping more. Other troubling symptoms started to pop up. The clock spun faster. We had our last lunch together on Monday, February 4th. Exactly four weeks before he died. And I knew it was our last lunch. Just as I knew he had pancreatic cancer when my mom mentioned his symptoms on that July evening in 2015. So when he passed just after midnight on Monday, March 4, I was as prepared as one can be.

What I was not prepared for was Abby’s quick decline two months later. She was so spunky, so full of life for being 14 years old. We knew we were on the short end of her time with us, but it wasn’t until 36 hours before we said goodbye that we knew anything was amiss. And with her passing, a small little fire that had burning in my body since the death of my dad, grew into a bonfire, but a fire I could still ignore. With the adoption of the puppies a few weeks later, I poured gasoline on the fire and it quickly over took my life.

It would take months for me to recover from the aftermath of that June. M did the heavy lifting on so many fronts, most especially in caring for the babies. Part of me resented them, thinking they were responsible for what happened to me. Which of course they weren’t. They were a catalyst, but they weren’t the cause. The cause was my own inability to see what was happening. When the dust finally settled from that terrible time, my takeaway was that when a fire is burning, pull up a chair and watch. Don’t ignore it. And for the love of god, don’t add more fuel.

It wasn’t until last fall when I started my coach training that I had language beyond metaphor for what I experienced that summer. One of the first concepts we learned about was the change cycle. Life transformation follows a cyclical course with four phases, a course that we navigate many times in many aspects of our life. We can be in different phases of the change cycle in different aspects of our lives – Square One in our career, Square Four in our relationship with our significant other for example.

The cycle kicks off with a catalytic event. Catalytic events are a shock, an opportunity, or a transition, and can be good or bad events. The catalytic event sends us into the first phase of the change cycle – Square One. Square One is a time of fundamental death and rebirth. Old identities, old patterns, old versions of the self are shed to make way for the new. It is a deeply uncomfortable stretch of time. Martha Beck’s mantra for Square One is “I don’t know what the hell is going on, and that’s okay.” (For reference, Square Two is for dreaming and scheming, the motto is “there are no rules and that’s okay”; Square Three is the hero’s saga, the motto is “this is much harder than I expected and that’s okay”; Square Four is the promise land and the motto is “everything is changing and that’s okay”. For more information, Martha Beck goes in to detail on the change cycle in her book Finding Your Own North Star.)

As it turned out, I had two catalytic events right on top of each other – my dad’s death and Abby’s death. Then, because apparently that wasn’t enough, I added in a third for good measure by adopting two young dogs. Looking back now with the context of what I know about Square One, it feels like a foregone conclusion that the summer of 2019 was going to be a fucking disaster. There was no other way for it to go. Two of the most important steps for navigating Square One are to stay present and make small moves. Stay present and make small moves = pull up a chair and watch the fire burn, maybe make some s’mores and read a good book. In other words, don’t adopt two young dogs after the death of your father and beloved old lady dog.

For better or worse, holding still goes against our cultural narrative of what it means to be a worthwhile human. We worship productivity culture and resist pausing for any reason at nearly all costs. It didn’t occur to me when everything was going wrong in the first half of 2019 that it was a warning sign, a caution light encouraging me to slow down. In fact, slowing down was the exact opposite of what I wanted do. So I ran head long into a situation that would be my undoing. It took about four months to crawl out of the hole I dug for myself in June 2019, an incredibly high price to pay.

But the next time I land in Square One, I’ll recognize it and know what to do. I’ll know to stand still and wait. To pause as long as it takes for the dust to settle. To let the fire burn itself out. To not make any big decisions, even if big decisions seem like wonderful distractions. They are not. They are fuel on the fire and I know how spectacularly that can blow up.

And while that summer was traumatic (not an exaggeration), we made it thanks to a lot of help from other people. My sister watched the puppies while I showered those first few days. Our dog sitter, the local doggie daycare, and Bob the trainer, who helped us teach the puppies not to be assholes (Jack is still working on this), saved our butts time and time again. I still need a lot of help with the babies, but we’re managing. And when one or both of them curl up on me in the middle of the night, I am so deeply grateful to have not missed out on this. They’ve been my greatest teachers, it turns out.

Healthism is Ableist, Capitalist Bullshit and Musings about What’s Next

Healthism: identified by Robert Crawford in 1980, healthism is “the preoccupation with personal health as a primary – often the primary – focus for the definition and achievement of well-being; a goal which is to be attained primarily through the modification of life styles.”

Ableism: discrimination in favor of able-bodied people

Capitalism: an economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for-profit, rather than by the state.

Six years have passed since my health started its downward spiral. Fall of 2014 was the first clear inclination that something was up, beginning with exercise intolerance and weird night sweats. The downturn continued for four more years, with sprinkles of hope and improvement mixed in, but it would be fall of 2018 before any marked recovery took place. In that time, I burnt my career to the ground – not by choice, stopped running for months at a time, radically modified my diet, all in hopes of reclaiming a shred of the wellbeing I once took for granted.

It’s quite common in our culture to hear people brag about how they don’t take medication. It’s not meant to shame those that do, but folks take pride in being medication-free. It bothered me before, as someone who’s needed thyroid medication to function since I was 25, and allergy medicine to prevent me from taking my eye balls out of my head and scratching my face off since a decade before that. But as someone who now requires handfuls of supplements a few times a day, in addition to the aforementioned thryoid and allergy medication, to make up for the nutrient deficiencies documented within my body, it reeks of ableism. Folks who are medication free are largely so because of good fortune and good genetics.

But what is healthism, beyond the overly stuffy definition quoted above? Our attitudes about overweight and obesity are perfect examples. Folks are blamed by society if their bodies don’t fit our fucked up ideas about what bodies should look like. All bodies must be thin, ideally white or white passing. Anything other than that is subpar and a problem to be addressed. Never mind that a person’s body sized is influenced by many factors, most significantly genetics. It’s also affected by income levels, food security/insecurity, access to healthcare, stress, a community’s built environment – or how people move about one’s community (are there sidewalks, is it safe, is it bikeable), all things partially or completely outside an individual’s locus of control. In spite of all of that, a person’s weight is viewed as a moral issue. An urgent problem that must be solved.

How many companies exist for the sole purpose of “helping” people lose weight? Who is making money off of our culture’s obsession with thinness? Who benefits? Certainly not women who are taught from a young age that our unruly bodies are something to be controlled and managed. Our healthcare costs are some of the highest in the world, our outcomes not befitting those of a wealthy nation, a nation obsessed with health. Where’s the disconnect? Never mind that our bodies are no one’s business. The size of it, the state of it, what we do with it, how we treat it, none of it.

The chronic flare of my autoimmune condition started because of stress. Specifically stress at work. I cared deeply about my job and it was incredibly challenging. So I did what many women do, I ran myself right into the ground, without a second thought. I spent the decade before burning the candle at both ends and getting away with it. I climbed ladders, took on more responsibility, earned a decent salary, all for someone else’s – namely my employer’s – benefit. Sure I had some money in the bank, but I was not the main benefactor of my labor. It’s what I was supposed to do though, right? Bust your ass, even if it costs you nearly everything. This is capitalism. An economic system that benefits a small class of wealthy people, not the everyday folks stuck in the middle of it.

So now I am a person with a chronic illness, someone who will forever exist outside our culture’s obsession with health. I no longer possess the capacity to burn the candle at both ends. Most days I feel pretty good, but I still have days I can barely get off the couch. Less often than a few years ago, thank goodness. I sleep a lot, not by choice. It’s the only way I can function. I spend an inordinate amount of time prepping food. Taking care of myself feels like a full time job most weeks. I’ve spent the last few years trying to figure out where my career fits in the midst of all of this. I’m young enough that I still have a lot I want to accomplish, a lot to offer. I want to be of service, to make all of this mean something. I explored, and even started, going back to school. I’ve explored a number of other options, none of them feeling like the right fit. All of those options have been within how we traditionally define work, namely my working for someone else. My pay, my worth, defined by others.

Finally, it occurred to me that perhaps the way forward isn’t the way it’s always been. What if I worked for myself, on projects that matter most to me? Where I have complete control over how and when I work, taking advantage of when I’m feeling great, scaling back when I need more rest. What if I created a career for myself that can go wherever I go, wherever we go?

Months of soul searching, questioning, and facing a whole host of fears I didn’t even know I had (thanks to M for his tremendous patience while I worked through these) has me on the cusp of starting my own business. I’m a few months from launch, but I am starting Juniperus, a leadership and communications coaching service focused on quiet, introverted, empathetic women who want to cultivate more courage and resilience in their work and in their life. What I loved most about being a leader was mentoring and bringing up other women with me. When I thought about how I wanted to spend my limited resources going forward, I realized it is here. I think the concept of work-life balance is bullshit, especially as someone with a chronic illness. Work-life integration is what I’m going for, and what I hope to help other women manifest in their own unique ways. In addition to my nearly two decades of experience as a quiet leader, I’m also taking a life coach training that starts in October. Not because I want to be a life coach (NTTAWT), but because I want to enhance my question-asking and listening abilities. And a coaching certification seems important in the longterm. I’m exploring anticapitalist pricing strategies and plan to increase our giving as I earn income again. I have very modest goals initially, but I’m not ashamed to say that I want to make up for the income that I’ve lost out on the last five years. I believe I can help quiet women leaders be more effective and fulfilled in their work AND earn a decent salary while I do it. Creating work that accounts for my very real limitations in a way that doesn’t feel like a compromise feels pretty damn good too.

I’ll post on the socials when I officially launch, but none of this would be happening without this persistent, relentless flare, and the wildfire it created. Without being forced to burn it all down, I wouldn’t have had the time or the space to think about the kind of impact I want to have with my work and how I can make that happen. In a different society, one that valued true health and wellbeing, that honored different abilities, I could likely go back to a more traditional career. I could still be a leader in an organization. That is not an option for me, or thousands of other people in similar situations. And what a loss that is. Our talents and our skills are missed because our capacity is different. Because workplaces care more about my butt in a seat for eight+ hours than the quality and quantity of work I can offer. I’m grateful for the privilege to go out on my own. Grateful for a husband that’s been a rock through these last terrible years. Grateful for our good financial decisions that provide the resources to get Juniperus off the ground. Grateful to Vasavi Kumar, the extremely talented business and mindset coach who’s helping me nail down the specifics of this business.

The fire is out, the smoke has cleared. Little bits of life are poking up through the charred earth. I turn 45 in eight weeks. LFG.

Wilson Mountain

It was my last full day in Sedona. After a dear friend had a last-minute change in plans and was unable to travel, I’d spent the last few days exploring on my own. While I’ve traveled extensively by myself, I’ve always met up with folks wherever I’m going. This was my first time being somewhere, just me. Fortunately, M and I visited Sedona in April 2018, so I was familiar with the area, and I’d spent the prior weekend there with friends. But I was still quite intimidated by the solo 3-1/2 days.

I woke up that morning and considered my plans for the day. I really wanted to hike Wilson Mtn., a long, tough hike a guy at the hike shop told me about on Friday. It would be my first time on this trail, and a challenging enough hike that I knew I wouldn’t see many people on a Wednesday early in March. While I’ve hiked extensively, the only solo hiking (or trail running) I’ve done has been in places where I live – the lake outside of town where we live now, the mountains just west of Fort Collins where we lived several years ago. Hiking alone somewhere new is intimidating to me for some reason, even though I’m good with a map and know how to look after myself. To build up my courage, I hiked a beautiful and familiar trail on Tuesday, exploring four miles of new trails at the end. In the back of my mind I knew I was testing the waters for Wednesday. Poking at the edges of my comfort zone.

Boynton Canyon

As I eat my breakfast Wednesday morning, I know I’m going to Wilson. I’ll regret it if I don’t. So many things that are a stretch for me I end up doing not so much because I WANT to do them, but because I’ll hate myself if I don’t. Not hiking this trail, a trail that is within my physical capabilities, because I’m afraid I’ll get lost (absurd) or that I’ll get eaten by a mountain lion (it’s more likely that I’ll be abducted by aliens), would leave me with a kind of self-loathing that would make getting out of bed the next morning very difficult. And I had a plane to catch. So I packed up my stuff and drove to the trailhead.

Most of the hike I thought about my dad. That very day happened to be the one year anniversary of his leaving his mortal body for whatever waits for us in the beyond. His death revealed to me that the most horrible things can happen and yet we endure. Life really does go on, whether you want it to or not. I always knew that my dad and I were a lot alike, but it wasn’t until he passed that I realized what a comfort it had been to have someone close to me who experienced the world much the same way that I do. I would talk to him about work stuff and barely have to explain how I’d responded to a situation because he just knew. Because my instincts, my perspective, was most often his instincts, his perspective. My mom and I were driving back from picking up dinner this past Christmas Eve and she was talking about a problem she was trying to solve. I told her that I was really, really good at coming up with a solution three days from now, so I’d get back to her on Friday. I needed time to think about things before the good stuff bubbled up. She looked at me with a half smile and said “you’re just like your father”.

The farther I hiked, the higher I climbed I felt myself getting closer to him. Not because I believe he’s perched on some throne in the sky, but because it was just me, the trail, and my thoughts. The noise of the trip, the noise of the past month, slowly fell away. I saw one other person in the 4.5 mile hike to the top. I let the effort quiet my over-active imagination and only once thought I heard something in the brush (an actual miracle, really). The view from the top was as spectacular as the hike-shop dude promised. There was some snow still, and snow on the San Franciscos of Flagstaff which were prominent in the distance. It reminded me that it was still March, even as the sunshine and warmth of Sedona lured me into thinking otherwise.

I spent longer than usual taking in the view, making small talk with an older couple from Utah. I took too many photos – as always – and hiked to the other side to see the canyon. Part of me wanted to stay up there forever, as I knew that this hike was essentially the end of the trip. And waiting for me at home was reality and whole bunch of uncertainty around COVID-19, which was just starting to reach its tentacles into the country. I didn’t want to come down from this quiet place, this haven of solitude. My fear of hiking alone felt ridiculous to me now, small and insignificant, as most of my irrational fears do once I’m forced to address them.

While I’m still brokenhearted that my friend couldn’t travel, the silver lining was rewriting a story I frequently tell myself…that I’m unadaptable and that fear controls too much of my life. There was so much about this trip that was uncontrollable but I handled it and made the best of it. I took up space in a way I’m not used to, and that felt really powerful. I went for a burger and a beer after my hike on Tuesday because it was hot, I was starving, and I’m a fucking adult. I found THE breakfast joint on Thursday morning and took up a table by myself while they were on a wait (yes, I tipped my server very well). I helped quite a few people on my hike on Tuesday when they got turned around because of their inadequate maps, or in the case of the guy who was leading his family on a loop hike into a box canyon (impossible) – was on a completely different trail than he thought. Being out in the world by myself meant that I was a pile of mush by the time I got back to my Airbnb late in the afternoon each day – being a human is A LOT of work sometimes, but that was ok. I like what I learned about myself. I liked the person I was for those 3-1/2 days. I want to embody her more. I’ll always be someone who thinks deeply and is slow to act. But this trip showed me that sometimes I can think deeply AND act at the same time. I can be paralyzed by fear and still do the thing. That’s the energy I’m carrying into this decade.

And as for my dad, a year has passed now. A year of birthdays, holidays, little moments. The world ends, but it doesn’t. As I’ve said before, I really don’t understand anymore about grief than I did prior to all of this. I know it will swallow you whole if you let it. I learned that I could feel tremendous loss and deep gratitude at the same time. I think that’s much of what being fully human is, holding seemingly opposing thoughts and feelings together at the same time and knowing both are real and true. I know that there will never be enough time. That’s what I know the most. My dad could’ve lived to 90 yrs old (he was 65) and it wouldn’t have been enough. There won’t be enough sunrises and sunsets, beautiful trails in beautiful places. It is our duty, our responsibility, to soak up every ounce.

F*ck Rules or Waving the white flag

It was late June. The last few weeks had been total hell, but as I looked in the mirror, I liked what I saw. My waist was slimmer than it’d been in months, and I felt confident running in just a shorts and sports bra, even though I’d been running that way since May when the weather turned warm. I decided, at the ripe old age of 43, to dress for the weather while training, regardless of how I felt about my body, and this still felt like a radical act even as the pounds that I lost made me more comfortable with how things looked. Never mind that the six to seven pounds disappeared while not eating for five days as I endured some sort of gastric distress related to a flare earlier in the month. My waist was trim and I liked it. 

As the summer wore on and after effects of the acute flare I endured in early June became more apparent, I struggled to maintain the little amount of running I’d been doing. My heat tolerance, which was terrible under the best of circumstances (thank you heat injury in high school softball), was noticeably worse. My mental focus was not much better. My head, which was typically full of hundreds of different thoughts all racing at differing speeds and in different directions, a familiar kind of organized chaos like the airplanes coming and going at O’Hare airport, was suddenly like an LA expressway during rush hour. Lots of thoughts sitting still, baking in the heat. But those that were getting through seemed like they were from someone else’s brain. Can I just say how weird it is to have thoughts you don’t recognize as your own? And I was tired. Oh so tired. Whatever was happening felt familiar, similar to the other flares I’ve endured over the last few years, but in a lot of ways different. It would be the end of July before I’d get to see my doc, as coincidence would have it she abruptly left her old practice and opened a new one the same week as my flare. Because of course. 

When my doc and I finally connected and debriefed about what happened in early June, she saw some lasting effects in my blood work and put the kibosh on what little running I was doing. Just a few weeks out from my family’s annual trip to Cape San Blas, this was particularly devastating, as I’d had “run at the beach” as a goal for the previous 9-10 months. I wasn’t able to run there the year prior due to some persistent and stubborn gut issues, but having done a ton of work on my diet and healing my body, I held running at the beach this year as one of the clearest signs that the past was the past. Not being able to run there again this year, in what happened to be our first year there without my dad, was brutal. With my head still stuck in a foreign fog, I struggled with how I was going to climb out of yet another hole, recover from yet another setback. It seemed pretty fucking hopeless. 

But then I remembered that I didn’t have to do this alone. I messaged with Claire, the dietitian who’s program I’ve participated in since late last September, and brainstormed how best to move forward. I struggled to “get back to” (my god I hate that phrase) the more restrictive diet I followed through the winter and wondered if there was another way forward. We discussed my connecting with the other members of her team – Isabel also a dietitian and Sophie a mental health coach, to see what insight they might have. I recognized this to be a great idea, as if there was ever an all-hands-on-deck situation, this was it. Around this same time, I decide to resume running. Running didn’t have anything to do with the acute flare in June, nor was it making things worse. I’ve been running long enough that I’m comfortable looking after myself and considering that running is how I sort all of the shit in my head, I likely was better off running than not running at this point, even if I did end up paying a bit of a price physically.  

By now it’s late August, and I first connected with Sophie, who made some incredibly astute observations on our phone call that didn’t even last an hour. We talked about what she perceived to be a disconnect between my mind and body, and how that might have contributed to what happened in June. The first half of this year was filled with SO MUCH loss between my dad and our dog Abby (we lost Abby rather unexpectedly in late May). I think I’ve always been a “just plow forward” kind of person and these losses amplified that. She offered some incredible suggestions on how to rebuild a connection with myself, with starting a mediation practice and reading Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Full Catastrophe Living to guide that practice being the most impactful. I’ve experimented with a regular meditation practice off-and-on over the last year or so, but she thought that resuming the practice with the guidance provided in the book would be transformational. And she was so right.

The following week, I talked with Isabel. I rehashed my journey over the last few years, and in particular the progress I made with my health since starting to work with Claire last fall. I shared my current frustration at the difficulty I’m experiencing when trying to resume the more restrictive diet that had been so helpful earlier in the year, and how when it really comes down to it, I hate all of the rules that this approach requires. Isabel encourages me to forget all of the labels (Whole30, AIP, low histamine, paleo, etc) and to ask myself what eating like Kim looks like. I don’t say it aloud, but in my head I think, well she’s most definitely eating sandwiches. We explored what feedback I can glean from my body (beyond body weight) about what foods are working for me and which ones aren’t. She encouraged me to get curious and to feel comfortable experimenting a bit. We talked about how rules can make things easier in some ways, but how many more possibilities lie outside of those rules. Rather than getting off of the call with a recommitment to my low-histamine, AIP diet as I expected, I am instead liberated from the notion of how I “should” eat as someone living with a chronic autoimmune condition, and with a charge to figure out what eating like Kim looks like. Task #1 – find some decent gluten-free bread for making sandwiches. 

Later that first week in September, the same week I talk with Isabel, Full Catastrophe Living arrives, all 600+ pages of it. Because of my work in cardiac rehabilitation early in my career, I’m familiar with the Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction program the book outlines. But while I was familiar with it, I really didn’t know any details. So I dove into the book with a healthy amount of curiosity while at the same time being very overwhelmed by the 600 pages. But then, in the very first section about certain perspectives that must be in place for a mindfulness practice to be fruitful, Kabat-Zinn spends about a page talking about acceptance, one of those needed perspectives. He writes:

“Acceptance means seeing things as they actually are in the present. If you have a headache, accept that you have a headache. If you are overweight, why not accept it as a description of your body at this time? Sooner or later we have to come to terms with things as they are and accept them, …often acceptance is reached only after we have gone through very emotion-filled periods of denial then anger. These stages are a natural progression in the process of coming to terms with what is. They are all part of the healing process. In fact, my working definition of healing is coming to terms with things as they are. (Emphasis by Kabat-Zinn)

…In the course of our daily lives, we often waste a lot of energy denying and resisting what is already fact. When we do that, we are basically trying to force situations to be the way we would like them to be, which only makes for more tension. This actually prevents positive change from occurring. We may be so busy denying and forcing and struggling that we have little energy left for healing and growing, and what little we have may be dissipated by our lack of awareness and intentionality. 

If you are overweight and feel bad about your body, it’s no good to wait until you are the weight you think you should be before you start liking your body and yourself. At a certain point, if you don’t want to remain stuck in a frustrating vicious cycle, you might realize that it’s all right to love yourself at the weight you are now because this is the only time you can love yourself. Remember, now is the only time you have for anything. (Emphasis mine.) You have to accept yourself as you are before you can really change. Your choosing to do so becomes an act of self-compassion and intelligence. 

Acceptance does not mean that you have to like everything or that you have to take a passive attitude toward everything and abandon your principles and values. It does not mean that you are satisfied with things as they are or that you are resigned to tolerating things as they “have to be”. It does not mean that you should stop trying to break free of your self-destructive habits or to give up your desire to change and grow, or that you should tolerate injustice, for instance, or avoid getting involved in changing the world around you because it is the way it is and therefore hopeless. It has nothing to do with passive resignation. Acceptance as we are speaking of it simply means that sooner or later, you have come around to a willingness to see things as they are. This attitude sets the stage for acting appropriately in your life, no matter what is happening. You are much more likely to know what to do and have the inner conviction to act when you have a clear picture of what is happening versus when your vision is clouded by your mind’s self-serving judgments and desires, or its fears and prejudices.”

I read that section no less than five times. And I all could think about was the difference between knowing something and accepting it. I wondered how much I knew about what happened the last few years versus whether I accepted it. By this time, I’d gained back those seven or so pounds I lost in June, with an extra two or three just for good measure. Which I had been very frustrated about. I was frustrated about the flare in June, frustrated about not being able to follow the right diet, frustrated about my body not looking like I wanted it to, frustrated about my brain being a hot mess most of the summer. But in reading that passage on acceptance, it occurred to me that I could choose to not worry about any of it. I could decide that my body is just fine right now, exactly as it is. I could realize that it is really fucked up to prefer the body of an acutely sick self versus a healthier one. I could decide that those food rules that work so well for so many others don’t work for me at all. I could decide that running makes me really, really happy and it helps more than it hurts. I remembered that for 15 years I lived with this autoimmune condition, breaking all of the rules the entire time because I didn’t know they existed. I just took my meds and trusted myself to make the right decisions. And that approach remains a choice I can make. 

So here I sit I early October. I had the best month of running this calendar year in September. October’s training is off to a great start. I’m getting faster, running more miles. I’ve eaten sandwiches nearly every day for lunch the past three weeks and could not be happier about it. I made granola for the first time in years. I made my favorite Bolognese sauce (from Run Fast Eat Slow, you all should try it) that tastes amazing with Banza pasta. I’ve continued to work through Full Catastrophe Living, even trying the impossibly long 45-minute body scan meditation a few times. I check in with myself several times a day to see what I’m feeling. My digestive system is a bit more disrupted than I’d like, telling me that I haven’t found the sweet-spot with my diet yet, but I will. The next blood draw later this fall will provide important feedback, but it’s not the only feedback.  

For as bleak as the summer was, the last six weeks have brought nothing but hope. Hope and joy. So much joy. Joy in a diet that isn’t full of someone else’s rules, joy at running in the midst of a cool fall morning. Joy in embracing my imperfect body, because it’s the only one I’ve got…perhaps I should be a bit gentler towards it? Joy at getting out of my own head long enough to reconnect with the important people in my life, most especially M. I can see now how the last several years have been nothing but a battle. Me battling against my body and with how someone with my condition is “supposed” to conduct herself. (She follows AIP for months, maybe even years, and certainly is not a runner. Running another marathon is not a consideration for her.) Reminding myself that I make the rules, that in reality there are no rules, and that I can trust myself to take care of me has made this rebel’s dark, moody heart so happy. I’m waving the white flag in this war with myself. Even with as tough as the last few years have been, the lessons learned and tools I’ve acquired, most especially these last few months, will help me be more prepared than ever to navigate what life has in store, including the uncertainty that comes with living with chronic disease. Especially a chronic disease like mine that can be heavily impacted by lifestyle choices. I can opt out of the shame and guilt for not doing it the “right” way and just live life, trusting myself to course correct as needed. The difference between knowing and acceptance is living life according to someone else’s rules versus living life guided by my own.

Celebration of (a) Life

From the moment we’re born, our identities are tethered to our parents. They are the anchors, the roots from which we grow. And while I’ve experienced a lot of weird, unexpected things in my 43 years on this planet, events or decisions that reframed how I saw myself, nothing has so shifted the ground beneath my feet as losing my dad.

My family is close. Even when my sisters and I were young and spent most of our time driving each other crazy – or rather Megan spent most of her time driving Erin and I crazy – we were always around each other. My sisters and I are far enough apart in age (four years for each of us) that we didn’t share friend groups, but in many cases we were friends with siblings. As we got older, we realized that perhaps maybe we did actually like one another, and in what my 13-year-old self would call nothing short of a miracle, my sisters have become some of my closest friends. As I’ve gotten older and fully inhabited my introvertedness, my sisters and their husbands, along with my parents, form the inner ring of my social circle. Before my dad got sick, I’d tag along with he and my mom on their Friday night Chipotle dates on the weeks M was flying. My sisters and I took weekend shopping trips to Chicago a few times a year (note to Meg and Erin – we need to resume these). Between my sisters, our husbands, and my nieces/nephews, there are no shortage of birthdays to celebrate. Mom makes brunch and we stuff ourselves silly, just for fun. Toss in holidays and our annual pilgrimage to Cape San Blas, and my family is the common thread weaving the years together.

Cape San Blas, FL
August 2017

Because my family has always been so present in my day-to-day life, my favorite memories of my dad aren’t so much of these grand, seminal moments, but of regular life-stuff. They’re of going to work with him on Saturdays when I was a kid. He’d work on the Monte Carlo he was restoring, and I’d help him sand for a while and then spend the rest of the time wheeling myself around on his creeper. Eventually, those Saturdays evolved in to actual work for him, and I’d file repair orders while he toiled in his office. They’re of riding along on my bike while he’d run, which when I was 11 turned into us dropping my bike off mid-run so I could run too for a few miles, which then evolved into just going out for runs together. We ran around Abingdon, we ran with my Uncle Bill at the beach, we even ran a half marathon together in 2002. We ran the Indy Mini-marathon, because of course it was the incentive of running on the track at Indianapolis Motor Speedway that got my dad to run a half even as his back was protesting. More recently, they’re of the time he built a ramp for my old-lady dog who couldn’t climb stairs when we stayed with them for a few months upon moving back from Colorado. They’re of lunches at Red Robin where we’d enjoy cheeseburgers – his always cooked with lots of pink, topped only with American cheese, and open-faced – with diet cokes and talk about nothing.

Indy Mini-Marathon
May 4, 2002

My dad’s ability to fix literally anything, and because he was essentially unflappable, meant that he received a lot of bizarre phone calls from me and my sisters over the years (to be fair, my mom receives her share of these calls too). We called him with car trouble, house trouble, after car accidents, and in my case one time when I trapped a wasp in my bathroom and didn’t know what to do about it. He’d talk us down off the ledge and help us figure out what to do next. He and mom could have wrote a book with the phone calls they’ve gotten from us over the years. I don’t think it’s so much that my sisters and I can’t figure these things out ourselves, but when you have Mike and Renee Tolle as your parents, why wouldn’t you call them when shit is hitting the fan? They’ll help you solve the problem, make you laugh, and then remind you that you’re lucky. A good blueprint for navigating any crisis, I think.

While I treasured the everydayness of my relationship with my dad, there are a few times in my adult life where a conversation between us reorganized how I saw myself or what I prioritized. The first time this happened was 15 years ago or so when I vented to him about some problem at work. I managed a medically-based wellness center and led a staff of 35. I was frustrated about a situation with a colleague, a situation that revealed a lack of integrity and laziness in my coworker. I felt irrationally irritated by it. In talking with my dad, he apologized with humor and said I got that particular brand of impatience from him. There was something comforting in being able to make sense of the frustration, to know where it came from. And when that same frustration would pop up repeatedly in the years following, I could see it and recognize it, which made it much easier to navigate. I loved knowing where it came from, that it was a trait I shared with my dad.

More recently, it happened again as he was being diagnosed in August of 2015. I was an administrator at the same hospital where his doc was and he stopped by my office after one of his appointments. My family isn’t prone to talking about stuff, so he caught me off guard when he mentioned that he regretted how much he worked while we were growing up. I was so grateful he said it though, because I could reassure him that my sisters and I had an amazing childhood. I could tell him how I never once felt like he was absent from our lives. The conversation was a short one, as we moved on to other topics fairly quickly. But it stayed with me and has factored into most of the decisions I’ve made since. At the time, I was knee deep in an autoimmune flare that was taking over my life. The job I was in was making it worse, much, much worse. Six weeks later I’d walk away from it. Until this point, I’d prioritized my career. I’ve always enjoyed my work, but when a stressful job triggered the flare in 2014, I had a hard time making the necessary sacrifices to get better. That conversation with my dad was the start of my making the changes I needed to recover my health. And work has not held the same prominence in my life since. That might mean I may never hold a job with a fancy title again, but if I can be healthy and participate in life on my own terms, it will be worth it. When I was sick, I couldn’t run like I wanted, I was too tired to ski, traveling was A LOT of work, and the brain fog made even reading a book difficult. It was a really high price to pay for an office and set of business cards, and my dad unintentionally revealed this truth, a truth I desperately needed to see.

But for almost a week now, I’ve been living in a world without this man. This quiet, stubborn, practical fellow who formed one of the two earliest anchors of my time on this planet. I’ll forever be his daughter, but I’ll miss calling or texting him with my latest house or car drama, I’ll miss sharing a cheeseburger with him at lunch on Mondays. The world will never be the same without him in it. I have moments where I think if we could just go back to a week ago, to ten days ago, then he’d still be with us. But when I remember how sick he was, how much pain he was in, I realize we have to go back further. Even last summer, the cancer was slowly staking its claim. Two years ago, things were pretty good, but he still had a devastating illness. So if we go back four years ago, he was healthy but the tumor was there, waiting to make its presence known. So now we go back six or seven years, and well it becomes obvious of how ridiculous an exercise it is. This is all we have, today. Right now. And that means making sense of a world without my dad in it. Reorienting myself and learning to live with the tremendous void left in his wake. But I won’t be doing it alone, as I’m surrounded by an army of people who miss him as much as I do. Who knew what a character he was, who understand how lucky we were to call him dad.

Turning A Corner: Or When Progress Looks Different Than You Expect

It was early last year (2018). I don’t remember the date exactly, and can’t find it on my calendar, which is really annoying for some reason. It was my regular quarterly appointment with my doc. I’d been stuck in a sort of groundhogs day over the previous year or so, not getting worse but not getting better. I’d recently started to see a *slight* improvement in how I felt, so rather than keep doing what I was doing, I decided to cut back on the amount of meat in my diet.

I’d only been eating meat again for a couple of years, after being vegetarian for well over a decade. Meat got reintroduced not because I decided I couldn’t live without cheeseburgers, but because I started having trouble maintaining iron levels. A dietitian I was working with at the time thought I would see more progress with food and supplementation, rather than just throwing some pills at it. So I gingerly began eating meat again, figuring I’d go back to being vegetarian when things normalized. So when I started feeling better in late 2017, instead of realizing this was likely due to my having left my job at the end of June that year, I decided it was a good time to start cutting back on meat.

Which means that when I walked into my doc’s office that day in early 2018, before I even sat down, she said to me “what’d you do?” And not in a good way. She told me some of my markers were off, worse than three months prior and she wanted to know what I’d changed. I reluctantly told her I’d cut back to having meat once/day, to which she replied “you can’t do that!”. She explained that my body might never tolerate being vegetarian again, and that if it was something that was really important to me, I’d likely be sacrificing some of my recovery. We moved on to other topics, with more conversation about why things weren’t improving, just like every other appointment. It was a reminder to me that food would play an important part in my recovery, but I didn’t yet have any idea of how big of a role it would end up playing.

Right before I started working with Claire (my dietitian) in September, I coincidentally had another quarterly appointment. I didn’t get to see my physician this time as she was on maternity leave, but I met with the nurse practitioner. All of the providers in my doc’s practice go through extensive training in functional medicine, and even though my doc was on leave, she still kept an eye on all of her patients. So the nurse practitioner knew of my story and where I was at in my recovery. I told nurse practitioner that I was embarking upon some significant dietary changes, and she was incredibly supportive. The paleo diet, and a more restrictive version of it called the autoimmune protocol, is best practice for addressing autoimmunity in the functional medicine community. So my working with a Whole30 coach was right in line with recommendations supported by my physician. While we’d discussed diet, my doc hadn’t come right out and said that NEEDED to change my diet. But I’d done enough reading and had enough understanding about where I was in my own journey to know that diet was the next step. It was the only health behavior I hadn’t touched. The best part about the timing is that I’d have blood work from right before I made any changes, and blood work again three months into the program. At this point, I still doubted my ability to follow-through as I’d made countless attempts to change my diet over the last couple of years and got myself nowhere.

I’ve written about my experience through the first two-thirds of Claire’s program, so won’t rehash that here. The last month didn’t bring anything too exciting, beyond the reintroduction of a few foods and several more pounds lost. I learned that I tolerated small amounts of cheese, enjoyed some amazing gluten-free sourdough bread from Bread SRSLY, and successfully reintroduced Picky Bars. Most, but not all, of my digestive issues were resolved, and I lost 13 lbs. The weight loss puts me exactly halfway between my starting point in the program and my former training (running) weight. My former weight isn’t the goal, but it’s a good benchmark of a time when I was much healthier and fit. Other “wins” included: increased self-efficacy in taking care of myself, complete elimination of cravings for foods I shouldn’t be eating, resolution of the brain fog that’s followed me around for the last three+ years, no more colds or stomach bugs which were so prevalent the last few years, and running is much more enjoyable. The big test would come at my doc appointment scheduled for early January, which required a blood draw on Christmas Eve. I was so anxious to see if my dietary overhaul would show up in my blood work, and if we’d finally see some resolution of the persistently high (dangerously high) inflammation levels.

So when I walked into my doc’s office on Wednesday, January 9, I was cautiously optimistic. I told myself that even if my blood work hadn’t improved, that I still had so many wins from the last three months. In addition, I had a very bizarre occurrence of hives in early November that I hoped she could shed light on, as my allergist was no help beyond testing me for an almond allergy (eating a higher-than-normal quantity of almonds seemed to be the trigger, but the allergist determined it was nothing more than a coincidence). And I’d also had some eczema on my face this past spring that I still didn’t know the cause of. I really felt this was all connected somehow. The medical office assistant walked me back to the office, and again before I even sat down my doc exclaims “what did you do?!”, but this time with a smile on her face. I didn’t get a chance to respond before she exclaimed “you look so healthy!”. I just grinned. I sat down and she walked through my lab results. The first thing she pointed to was that inflammation marker. For the first time in several years, it dropped, and dropped significantly. My HS CRP has been routinely in the 8-9 range, way too high, but this quarter it dropped to 2.0. That is still in the moderate category, but a significant step in the right direction, especially considering the improvement in just three months time. The reduction in inflammation is also what allowed me to finally lose weight. Everything else appeared to be normalizing, including my iron levels, which have been slowly climbing since that fateful appointment earlier last year led me to add more meat to my diet.

My doc and I spent quite a bit of time talking about the dietary changes, and she was happy to hear I was working with a coach/dietitian. I mentioned the hives in November, and how I was eating more almonds than usual that week, and she immediately brought up histamine intolerance and mast cell activation. Coincidentally, I read about mast cell activation syndrome recently, so her mentioning that phrase scared me a bit. But as she explained more about histamine intolerance, it made a ton of sense. And totally explained the eczema in the spring, along with the hives in November. We nerded out a bit while she explained the biology behind how all of this stuff is related, and she added a few more supplements to my regimen. While it seems counterintuitive to think that an appointment that ended with more dietary restrictions and more supplements was actually the best appointment I’ve had in three years, that is absolutely the case. My addressing the dietary sources of inflammation allows us to dig deeper and get to the root cause of what’s going on, and it also revealed that diet was a HUGE root case in-and-of itself.

I did some quick research on my own when I got home Wednesday evening, just to see what this low histamine diet was all about. I immediately noticed that many foods I eat regularly are either high in histamine or histamine liberators. The upside to this is that there was the potential for substantial improvement (which includes never again being woken up in the middle of the night by hives, as I was for five nights in a row in November), the downside is that I’d be removing some staples. But the success of the last three months helped me get over any feelings of scarcity pretty quickly. If I feel this good already, how much more of my health and well-being can I recover by taking this next step? Since we’d just returned from vacation on Monday evening, I needed to do some cooking anyway, so this was actually a perfect time to start walking down this road. Armed with this new information, Thursday evening’s grocery list looked a bit different than normal. Gone were the avocados, tomatoes, strawberries, fermented veggies, lemons, bananas, spinach, nuts (which I’d already been avoiding for the most part since November anyway, even though my allergist told me I was fine to eat them), chocolate, collagen peptides, and cheese. Also gone was my beloved sourdough bread. Some of these foods I wasn’t eating much of yet, but others like the collagen peptides in my coffee, avocados, fermented veggies, tomatoes, strawberries, bananas and lemons, I used frequently. And because we’d just returned from vacation, where I enjoyed more than a few treats that aren’t normally part of my diet (which I thoroughly enjoyed without any feelings of guilt or shame – REVOLUTIONARY), I choose recipes from the autoimmune protocol in hopes of more quickly reducing the increased levels of inflammation that I’m certain are present, unrelated to this histamine business.

In just a couple of days, I’ve noticed a significant change in my allergies. I normally take Allegra and Benadryl, even this time of year in the midwest when everything is dead. And even with those medications and a sinus rinse, I still have sinus and nasal congestion all day, every day. Within 24-hours of walking towards a low-histamine diet, I saw substantial improvement in my allergy symptoms. I’ve had bad seasonal allergies since I was a teenager, allergies that have only gotten worse as I’ve gotten older. I never considered improvement in them to be a possibility. I’ve had allergy shots, but because I’m allergic to so many things, they didn’t help much beyond allowing me to be in a room with a cat without wanting to claw my eyes out. So not only will these new dietary modifications likely ensure I won’t ever wake up in the middle of the night with a terrible case of hives, or get eczema on my face after eating a burrito, but they’re already making my day-to-day life more pleasant. It took well over a month this fall for me to see significant improvements in my gut health, three months for me to lose 13 lbs, but these improvements were comparatively immediate, and I haven’t even started the new supplements yet (they’re being shipped), or talked with my dietitian to get her insight on next steps (that happens Monday afternoon). To say I’m encouraged is an understatement.

A few months ago, before working with Claire and doing the hard work of straightening out my head as related to diet and getting out of my own way with regards to my recovery, I think an appointment like Wednesday’s would have left me feeling defeated. As for all of the progress and wonderful improvement in my blood work, I still walked out of there with more supplements to take – not fewer as I hoped, and more dietary restrictions – which came on the heels of the successful reintroduction of some foods I really enjoy. But rather than view this as a set-back, or a recalibration of what I believed to be tremendous progress, I saw it was one more step forward in this journey back to health. More dietary restrictions and more supplements is not a step back, it’s true progress, as we’re uncovering the real issues at the heart of my poor health the last four years. If I don’t do the hard work of the last three months, and cover all of that ground, these remain questions without answers. And there’s a good chance I get woken up with a bad case of hives again. And I continue to test the upper limits of how much Benadryl is safe to take before one spouts a third arm or something. I am so excited to have this information, and to know that there is more I can do to help myself get better. I am drunk with progress.

As I’ve looked back over the last few years, something that’s really bothered me is how long it took me to make these changes to my diet. Everything I read told me it was important, my doc told me it was important. In my over-analyzation of it all, I realized that several factors contributed to my figurative feet-dragging. Initially, I was way, way too hung up on what used to work. I was vegetarian for well over a decade, I was an endurance athlete who trained a lot and raced a lot, and incredibly healthy while doing both. Both of those go against convention in the autoimmune community. I got stubborn about what worked for me in the past, instead of realizing that the paradigm had shifted and that what worked for me previously was no longer relevant. Secondly, it’s really hard to made big lifestyle changes when you feel like shit. Overhauling ones diet takes a ton of mental energy, not to mention the physical labor of preparing food. There was a fair amount of time where I didn’t have the mental or physical resources to dedicate to the change. Which super-sucks, because it turns into a chicken-and-egg situation. The very changes that would help the most are out of reach, but the changes need to be made or recovery won’t happen. I think leaving my job allowed for just enough improvement for me to commit the mental and physical resources to the diet change, which ended up facilitating the big improvements I desired. Lastly, I realized I couldn’t do it on my own and sought out help. I knew that my biggest gaps weren’t in knowledge or information, but in changing habits and behaviors, especially since my health still wasn’t great and making the change was going to take a lot of effort. Having a good understanding of the type of help I needed allowed me to find the right person to partner with, and that was Claire. Her program focused way more on the process of the change as opposed to simply sharing a bunch of information about what a person should be doing. And her program was set-up so that the responsibility of doing the work lied completely with the client, which went a long way towards rebuilding my self-efficacy in doing Hard Things.

While I look back and see a lot of things I could have done differently the last several years, the one single thing I’m most proud of is that I didn’t give up, and that I found a health care provider who didn’t give up on me either. This summer, I started to think I might not recover, that this crap was the new normal. Which honestly was depressing as fuck. Signing up to work with Claire really felt like a last-ditch effort. A hail mary. The crazy thing is, it worked. The same relentlessness and tenacity that served me so well in running, and in my career once upon a time, turned out to be the most important characteristic that I carried into this mess. We just got back from Breckenridge where I skied for the first time in a few years. When I was sick, just putting on all of the gear seemed like SO MUCH WORK, not to mention the actual skiing part. But this year I skied, several days even. On two of those days, I skied for a few hours and then went for a run or a hike. At 10,000ft. A few months ago, none of that would have happened. And I came home from that vacation, not in a fatigue hole like normal, but ready to hop back into regular life, which ended up including a big change to my diet. It’s like my world has been in black-and-white for four years, and someone suddenly flipped the color switch. Everything looks so bright and vibrant. And I have hope, so much hope for the future. I still don’t know what role running will play in this new normal, or if I get to race marathons – including Boston, again. I’ve decided it really doesn’t matter. I still love to run, and running 25-30 miles/week while barely half of my old “normal” mileage, feels like a wonderful miracle. The racing question will answer itself in due time. And I can wait.

Chronic Illness: A Reconciling

It was Thursday evening, November 15th. I was tired. REALLY tired. As in, I can’t get myself off the couch or even read a book tired. Again. M had been gone for nearly three weeks, at training for a new airplane. And despite having the best week of training since at least April the week prior, I hadn’t ran a step in a five days and counting. But I wasn’t frustrated, mad, or disappointed. Of course I was tired.

It’s been three years since the flare of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis really ramped up and laid me flat for the first time. Four years since it started percolating in the background. During that time, it’s only been in the last 17 months that I’ve fully committed to regaining health and wellbeing. The first few years consisted of a heavy dose of denial with a side of stubbornness and a shot of insolence. Because I lived with Hashi’s for so long without any of the “normal” complications (I was initially diagnosed in 2000 at the age of 25), I assumed I was different, special even. I trained harder and at a higher volume than medical professionals said I could, I didn’t follow a paleo diet or the more restrictive Autoimmune Protocol. In fact, I was vegetarian for nearly fifteen years, which flew in the face of known best practice (in my defense, none of this I knew for the first ten years). I held stressful a job, and trained hard even while giving plenty of attention to my career. It wasn’t unusual for me to get up at 4-4:30am and run 10-12 miles before work. I didn’t consider the pace I kept to be remarkable or unusual, most of my runner-friends did the same, many raising a family on top of it. M and I traveled, going on vacations where we hiked or skied the days away. I thoroughly enjoyed my life and how I spent my time.

When I first started to get sick, I didn’t realize what was happening. I thought if I just waited it out, it would resolve itself on its own. Initially, signs of the flare only showed up in training. My exercise tolerance was down, my weight started to creep up despite few changes to diet or training volume. I thought I was just getting “old” as this was about the time I turned 40. And recognizing that I’ve been running since I was 11, I expected my performances to plateau sooner than some of my friends who didn’t begin training until later in life. I could explain it all away. My job was stressful, but I didn’t consider this to be the source of the problem, even though intellectually  I knew the dangers of chronic stress. After six months, I went to see a Naturopath in Fort Collins who worked with athletes. My local endocrinologist was terrible and I knew she’d be no help. He uncovered some nutritional deficiencies and saw some warning signs in regards to the Hashi’s, but being a Naturopath couldn’t do anything about it. Looking back, this is the moment, in late 2014, when I should have found a functional medicine MD. I don’t know how much of what followed could have been prevented, but with the right medical care I’m guessing a fair amount of it. I worked with a dietitian to address the nutritional deficiencies, which included adding meat back into my diet (something I still haven’t fully reconciled, four years later), and talked to my endocrinologist back home in Illinois about the Hashi’s. He didn’t see anything that concerned him, he assured me I was fine. I trusted him.

Throughout 2015, things got much worse. I’d run my last marathon in April of that year, which coincidentally was also my last Boston. I ran well through the summer, but my dad getting diagnosed that August coupled with an even more stressful new job seemed to be my undoing. By October of that year, my weight was as high as it’d ever been and I was barely running. My endocrinologist continued to insist I was fine – the 20-25 lb weight gain was not a red flag to him, neither was my nearly complete intolerance to exercise. Late 2015 is when I finally found a few doc. I’d researched Hashi’s extensively by now, and knew what I needed. Using the website for the Institute of Functional Medicine, I found Dr. Sarah Zielsdorf. I saw her for the first time in January 2016. We talked about chronic stress and diet, but I still underestimated the work I needed to do to get well. I didn’t make meaningful change to my diet, still riding the wave of cockiness born from 15 years of doing what I wanted while living with this condition. I worked part-time from Oct. 2015-Oct 2016 – this was my “sacrifice” – and in seeing some recovery, assumed I was out of the woods. My weight was still high, my training still a third of what it used to be. Turns out, I was still standing in the middle of the forest, not remotely close to finding my way out. I took a full-time job at the local health department in Nov. 2016 that kicked off the final march to rock bottom.

In the eight months I worked at the health department, I came down with five colds, had the stomach flu for the first time in over a decade, had more asthma flares than the entirety of my previous 41 years on the planet, and gained an additional five pounds, just for good measure. My training came to a complete halt that spring. I’d applied to Wilder a week into my new job, while still riding the wave of progress I made in 2016. I learned I’d been accepted before Christmas that year, and by the time I arrived at Caldera in late May 2017, I was a sick as I’d ever been. While I would give about anything to go back and attend that retreat healthy and fit, meeting those women for that weekend in the woods at precisely the moment I did gave me the courage to make the radical sacrifices needed to get well. In them, I could see how sick I was. How I could barely complete the workouts, how much I missed being able to use my body in sport. I’d go home from the retreat and give notice at my job, committing to myself to take as much time as needed to get well.

It would take another year and the onset of some fairly disruptive digestive issues for me to finally tackle my diet, but in doing so, I’ve found what I believe the last piece of the puzzle. I’m still frustrated with myself, that it took this long for me to finally address my diet, but stubbornness is a hard drug to quit. My weight fluctuated over the last year, consistently hovering 15-25 lbs above my former training weight, with another high point coming this past September. Since I’ve been addressing nutrition, I’ve lost about 10 lbs and started training again. By early November progress was coming quick, quicker than it has in some time, before fatigue forced some time off mid-month.

Addressing the digestive issues brought forth an unexpected benefit, a full reconciling of how life has changed with this flare. Somehow in recognizing that my body won’t tolerate certain foods as it has in the past, it allowed me to make peace with other things that were altered by this flare. I acknowledge that my body will likely never tolerate the stress levels it did before, which dramatically shifted how I think about my career, and role it plays in my life. In October, I took a part-time job as the education coordinator at the local arts center, working with a friend I made through rotary when we lived here the first time. The flexible schedule and reduced hours (~20 hrs/week compared to 40+) fit perfectly with where I’m at right now, as does my lack of responsibility when compared to my previous work. I’m still considering going back to school, having been accepted to an online Masters program that starts in January. Working part-time and with less stress leaves physical and mental energy for me to devote to other areas of my life such as training and traveling. During the flare, work got most of my focus. It was a choice I made, but not consciously. It took taking a break from my career to really sort through how I wanted to divvy up my much smaller pie. We’re going to Breckenridge in January, and I expect to have the energy to ski for the first time in a few years.

Lastly, I acknowledge that getting over-tired is part of my life now. I can’t just power through being over-scheduled as I did pre-flare. I can’t train through fatigue as I did pre-flare. De-programming YEARS of “just endure and persevere” mentality, which running and training only reinforced, has been very, very hard. But I’ve done it. Which is how I found myself couch-bound last week, without much disappointment or animosity. Of course I was tired. We traveled to see three concerts in October. M was gone for three weeks in a row, highly unusual for him outside of deployments, leaving me to get up with our early-rising pup while I was already short on sleep. I started a new job. Lots of good stuff, but lots of good stuff that made me tired. So I took a week off of running. A week off, immediately following the week where I had a breakthrough with training. A recognition that it would be a big set back, as I don’t have enough training under my belt to just jump back in after a week away. But by eating a nutritious, anti-inflammatory diet, and resting as much as I could, I knew that I was doing what I needed to do to ensure the fatigue resolved itself as quickly as it could. And that I’d be ready to resume training when it passed.

I still don’t know what all of this means for racing, if I’ll ever be able to train for and race marathons again. I don’t know if I’ll be able to work full-time in the future, at a job with a nice office and fancy title again. I don’t know if I care. My pie might have permanently shrunk itself during all of this. If it did, I can live with that. I have a lot of pride for what I accomplished professionally and through running while I was healthy. I never thought I’d be fast enough to run Boston five years in a row, or that I’d be a dean. But those accomplishments don’t carry as much weight as they used to. They didn’t make me a better person, or more valuable to society. I’m certain I over-valued them at the time. I appreciate the perspective I’ve gained while being sick, the clarity it fostered. The recalibration of priorities. I’ve been forced to make hard choices about how I spend my time, as doing it all is literally not an option anymore. I’m young enough that I hopefully still have quite a bit of time on this earth. It’s safe to say that the next 20 years will look radically different than the previous 20. And while I wouldn’t have chosen any of this, and I occasionally do get very angry about it all, I’m curious and invigorated by this knowing.


“Illness is the night side of life, a more onerous citizenship. Everyone who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick. Although we all prefer to use the good passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at least for a spell, to identify ourselves as citizens of that other place.” ~ Susan Sontag

42 Days Without Sandwiches Or Bad Foods Do Exist

Six weeks. It’s been six weeks since I had a sandwich. You see, I love sandwiches. Soft bread, crusty bread, lots of toppings, a few toppings (I’m looking at you PB & J), I don’t discriminate. They’re all wonderful little creations that I enjoy immensely. Part of joining the Nutritional Freedom program was reconciling that I’d be breaking up with sandwiches for a while, potentially a long while. Sure I enjoy pizza, burritos, toast, and the occasional beer, but I REALLY LOVE sandwiches. This would be hard. But not being able to run and race, and seeing the physical manifestations of inflammation in and on my body, was much, much harder. I could give up sandwiches for a while if it meant I could train again, if I could repair my relationship with food – a relationship that was heavily damaged over the last several years of being sick.

Five years ago, before the autoimmune flare that changed the entire fabric of my life, I was vegetarian and had been for more than ten years. I certainly held no shame for those that chose to eat meat, but animal welfare was important to me and our food system  was/is terribly broken. I ate when I was hungry, enjoyed treats on occasion, and ran A LOT-50-75 miles most weeks. I was thin, fit, healthy. Having been active my entire life, I avoided the complicated relationship with food that is many woman’s experience. I knew I was extremely fortunate.

Then I got sick, and was sick for a good long while. I no longer had energy to cook, and a stressful job changed what foods I craved. Low iron levels were suddenly an issue, and a dietitian I was working with at the time suggested I start eating meat again. I thought about it extensively and decided that I wanted to be healthy more than anything, so I reintroduced meat into my diet. It was super-weird at first, and while it’s been four years since I began eating it again, I still haven’t reconciled how I feel about our food system and how we treat our animals. I am careful about what meat I purchase, and get the best quality I can find. But this was the start of my using food to heal myself, a journey that would come full-circle this fall.

As my health issues progressed, I read extensively about other women who’ve used a paleo diet, or a modified version of it called the Autoimmune Protocol, to recover from autoimmunity. Inspired by their experiences, I dabbled with changing my diet, never fully committing. Beyond being vegetarian, I’ve never excelled at following dietary rules of any kind. I bought into the “all foods in moderation” philosophy, even though this approach was clearly not doing me any favors. I’d experience small improvements in my recovery and see it as proof that I was different, that I didn’t need to take such drastic dietary measures to heal.

But then this spring happened. As I shared on social media and here on my blog earlier this year, I felt good enough through the winter to ramp up training again, to think about racing. I ran the Tenacious Ten in Seattle in April with some of my Wilder sisters and ran a local race, a 12k, a few weeks later. Both were terrible, but most especially the 12k. I walked the last half of that race because of how upset my digestive system was, eventually throwing my bib in a trash can at the last aid station before the finish. This was the start of what would be several months of significant digestive issues, issues that were made especially worse while running. Things escalated even more when on vacation with my family in early August, which effectively ended my outdoor running until joining Nutritional Freedom in mid-September. The five months it took me to seek out help is a good indicator of how stubborn I was about not changing my diet. “There is no such thing as a bad food or food group”, I kept telling myself, “moderation is healthier”!

For some people, perhaps. But not for someone who has an autoimmune condition and the gut issues that typically accompany them. I felt like I was at a real fork-in-the-road. Either I wanted to train and race again, or I didn’t. Either I wanted to continue carrying the extra 20-25 lbs I’ve had the last three years, or I didn’t. Either I wanted to repair my relationship with food, damaged by years of being sick, or I didn’t. Finally in mid-September I was tired of my own bullshit. I reached out to Claire, committed to her program – a significant time and financial commitment, and got down to the hard work of fixing what was broken.

I wrote about my first few weeks in the program and the early wins I had here. Good stuff continues to happen. I’ve been at this long enough now that following a paleo diet is not hard. I can quickly discern what I can eat at a restaurant, avoid cookies in the break room at work, find compliant ways to satisfy food boredom. Being able to run again, especially outdoors, is a tremendous reward. I’ve lost enough weight that I’ve had to take a few pairs of pants to the tailor to be altered. I don’t feel like food has a mental hold on me anymore, and even when I’m busy and distracted, I’m still able to make good decisions for myself.

About two weeks ago, I discovered that coffee was the culprit of the digestive issues that lingered, so I cut that out too. I’ve delayed reintroduction a few weeks to let the inflammation from the coffee resolve itself fully before tossing anything new into the mix. And when I do get to reintroduction, there is a lot I won’t reintroduce. There are things I know I shouldn’t be eating and foods I already know I don’t tolerate well, so those foods automatically go into the “rarely consume” category. Foods such as milk, yogurt, and gluten-containing grains. Foods I’m curious about include cheese, peanut butter (peanuts are legumes so not considered paleo), chocolate and gluten-free alcoholic beverages such as wine and margaritas. My beloved sour beers will likely remain a “rarely” food thanks to the gluten they contain.

During the six weeks in this program, I’ve thought a lot about the “there is no such thing as a bad food” movement. I’ve decided it should read “there’s no such thing as a bad food if you have a normal, well-functioning digestive system”. I believe people who promote these food-inclusive messages mean well, but seriously do not appreciate the problems that arise when you live with an irritable or malfunctioning digestive system. And how sometimes healing requires drastic measures. The more my gut heals, the more foods I will be able to healthfully tolerate. But the healing must come first. A healing diet in my case is a restrictive diet, and I am grateful that it’s a tool available to me. I refuse to feel shame because I am not eating certain foods. While I am jealous of those who can eat grains and dairy without any issues, I finally realize am not one of those people. Many of us who follow a restrictive diet do so for health reasons. Whether it be weight management, insomnia, digestive issues, acne, gallbladder attacks, diabetes, irritable bowel syndrome, Crohn’s, celiac, heart disease – or any other inflammation-related condition, many, many people are able to heal themselves through diet. Recovery for each of us looks different, especially for those of us living with chronic health conditions, but food is one of the tools at our disposal and we shouldn’t be shamed for using it. I’m getting more comfortable pushing back when I see the no-such-thing-as-a-bad-food-group messages, even though I hate to be contrary. I literally would not be running at all right now if it weren’t for switching to a paleo diet. The foods we eat is such an individual act, and there is room for all of us at the table. If women such as Kristen Boehmer and Sarah Ballentyne, Ph.D. hadn’t shared their own journeys and shown the way, I wouldn’t have known how a healing diet could help me. I wouldn’t have known that Claire’s program was the right one for me, as I could see where I needed to go thanks to Kristin and Sarah’s blogs/social media, but had no idea how to make it happen for myself. Claire provided the road map.

Six weeks remain in the Nutritional Freedom program, and once I start reintroduction, I will be getting into the “freedom” part of the show. Patience will be required, as foods that I don’t tolerate now, might be agreeable with another month or two of healing. I’m so encouraged by the progress that I’ve made so far that I can give my body the space to heal on its own timeline. I don’t need to rush it or force anything. I’m signed up for a trail race outside San Francisco in February with some girlfriends, and just want to make it to the start line fit and healthy. Without Nutritional Freedom, I would’ve been spectating. Again. Optimism has been on short supply the last four years, but this really does feel like the last climb out. Life will be different on the other side, and I’m ok with that. I’ve been deeply changed by what’s happened the last few years and my priorities are much different. But my love of running and desire to share races with my friends is one thing that’s remained. I’ve held onto it more tightly than is probably healthy, and I think a lot of people would’ve given up by now. But I’m extremely stubborn. Running that race with my friends in February would be a nice bookend to the last few years, a way of putting it behind me. And it would make 42 days (and counting) without sandwiches totally and completely worth it.

Nutritional Freedom/Whole30 – The First Quarter

I mentioned briefly in my post about crewing for my girlfriends at Yeti 100 that I had started working with a new dietitian to address what had become chronic digestive issues. I also suggested I might write a bit more about that later, this is that post. I’ll start from the beginning…

Earlier this year, I shared in both blog posts and through social media that I was finally getting back to some decent running mileage after a spectacularly terrible couple of years due to ongoing issues with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, an autoimmune thyroid condition. Any hint of the speed I used to enjoy was nowhere to be found, but quite honestly I was thrilled to just be able to put in some mileage. I started dreaming about racing again, feeling that I was finally on the road back to competing. I raced the Tenacious Ten in Seattle in April with some of my Wilder sisters and ran the Lake Run, a local race, a few weeks later in early May. Both were terrible. I don’t think the issues at the Tenacious Ten were digestive related, but at the Lake Run they most definitely were. I wrote it off to the sudden onset of summer, as my body never manages the heat well, especially when we go from snow to 80* in a matter of two weeks as we did this spring. Feeling really discouraged after the Lake Run, I backed off the mileage hoping I to relocate the good groove I was in. It was nowhere to be found.

May slid into June, which dragged into July. The digestive issues only worsened. By late July I wasn’t running much at all. I’d tinkered with my diet, but without the focus to sustain any of the changes I attempted, I understandably made no progress. In early August, my family made our annual pilgrimage to Cape San Blas, FL (which was heavily impacted by Hurricane Michael last week – {{sobs loudly}}) where I hoped the change in scenery would reinvigorate my training and help me get back on track. Instead, the opposite happened. Despite eating quite well while we were there, my digestive system was a wreck. I only ran twice and regretted it both times. Usually I run big mileage while we’re there, in fact my only 80+-mile week was on the Cape in 2013. To not even be able to manage a few short runs without issue was a huge disappointment. And knowing what I do now about what would happen to the Cape just two short months later, I’m even more disappointed about it. By not buckling down and addressing my digestive health earlier this year, I missed what turned out to be my last opportunity to run through St. Joseph Peninsula State Park, to take photos of Eagle Harbor, before they both would be devastated by the hurricane.

The dunes at St. Joseph State Park Cape San Blas, FL Aug 2017

It took another few weeks before I would reach out for help, but through the Whole30 instagram page, I found Claire Siegel. With all of the research I’ve done the last few years, coupled with information from my physician, I knew that eating a paleo diet would help. Recovering from autoimmune flares requires reducing inflammation and healing the gut, and for many of us, diet is a huge source of inflammation which only exacerbates digestive issues. Foods that many people digest just fine, people with autoimmune conditions often don’t. Foods such as grains, dairy, and legumes all have the potential to create problems. I’ve experimented with the Whole30 in the past, but being rule-phobic have never finished one. I decided to work with Claire to give myself the best chance at completing the program and to execute a thoughtful reintroduction so I can hopefully nail down exactly what foods are giving me problems. Her program being 12-weeks long meant we’d be working on more than just successfully competing the Whole30, which was exactly what I needed.

Week 1 was a “prep week” for the Whole30. Lots of getting reacquainted with the rules, planning for the first week on the program. Week 1 also included some pretty intentional goal setting, which helped quantify exactly what I wanted from these twelve weeks. I knew I wanted to resolve my digestive issues and lose a few pounds, but what else? I included improving my relationship with food so that I can take care of myself like I need to without feeling deprived. I set some fitness goals that included my getting back to “regular” training mileage again, resuming my dormant yoga practice, and maintaining the strength training I’ve managed to stick with this year (historically, as running mileage goes up, my commitment to strength training goes down). Lastly, I included a daily meditation goal, as I’ve neglected to cultivate a regular meditation practice this year despite several cracks at it.

Week 2 brought the start of the Whole30. I was nervous thanks to past failures in completing the program, but felt I’d given myself the best chance that I could. I was armed with new information that I thought would help, reading in a recent issue of Yoga Journal of all places about how some people have electrolyte issues when switching to a paleo diet due to the body releasing the water that’s stored with carbohydrates. Considering that electrolyte issues have been an ongoing issue for me running and my doc recently noticed that my blood levels run low on the regular, I thought this might explain some of the past trouble I’ve had with Whole30/paleo eating. So I was prepared to salt the heck out of my food and see what happened (this ended up making a tremendous difference). I knew I’d be crewing for my friends in Virginia at the end of the first week of the Whole30, but I planned as much as I’ve planned for anything and was ready for the challenge. Little did I know that driving for 20+ hours on backcountry mountain roads would make me terribly car sick, bringing an unceremonious end to my Whole30 as I snacked on potato chips at 2am on Saturday morning in an attempt to calm my swirling stomach. It helped, my friends finished their race, and I kept all of the food in my stomach. It was a win for the day, but a setback for my own personal goals. Saturday with my friends was not the time to sort through what it all meant, so I did that on the 10-hour drive home on Sunday, deciding that I’d just start over. Redo Week 2 and just move on. What felt like a really big deal, a Terrible Thing on Saturday, seemed like a bump in the road by Monday.

The redo of Week 2 went fine. What lingering frustration I had about the setback was gone by mid-week. We were to see Death Cab for Cutie, one of my favorite bands, in Chicago on Sunday. I focused on preparing for the train ride and planning what we’d eat in the city. It was marathon Sunday, and I knew just being around all of the runners would be energizing, and not necessarily in a helpful way. It was a super-hard day to be in the city and Whole30ing, but thanks to the hubs, me and my Whole30 survived to see Week 3.

Week 3 brought me to the second week of my Whole30, which was getting pretty easy when I was at home. The food I make for myself is usually Whole30-compliant, so I have a lot of familiar recipes to pull from. I was eating plenty of yummy, healthy food and it wasn’t hard. Until we’d eat out. I found myself avoiding eating out as much as I could, which isn’t a bad thing. However, I did manage to attend an engagement party at my favorite brewery without eating any chips or drinking a beer. Major win. Week 3 is when Hurricane Michael devastated the Forgotten Coast, and it was a tense couple of days searching for information on our beloved Cape. During this stretch, I learned that I am not an emotional eater, which was good because I didn’t think that I was. It’s being distracted that is my biggest challenge. So it’s not that I need a cheeseburger because things are terrible, it’s that I eat a cheeseburger because all of my attention is directed elsewhere. This was a huge aha moment. It explains why I’ve had trouble making these changes in the past, and especially why my diet was so terrible when I felt my worst. I was functioning at a such a low level that undertaking something as significant as a dietary overhaul required mental resources I didn’t have. I can give some grace to that girl who was so sick a year or two ago. She was just in survival mode. Week 3 concluded with another concert, this time in St. Louis. We drove so we took dinner with us from home, making a search for a compliant restaurant unnecessary.

Sitting here at the start of Week 4, beginning the third week of my Whole30, the hardest part has been not chewing gum. It’s a bit of a nervous habit, an outlet for the extra energy that’s always bubbling around, but also helps with the dry mouth that accompanies the allergy meds that make life worth living this time of year. I’ve accepted that this is just something to endure, and I’m counting down the days until the end of the Whole30, not so I can have a beer or a cheeseburger, but so I can chew gum again. I’ve also learned that my head isn’t in a great place for meditation right now, so I’ve set that goal aside for the time being. The Kavanaugh confirmation process brought up a lot of stuff that made meditating a bad idea. I’ll try again in a few weeks and work on redeveloping the habit if it feels safe to do so.

Even though I’m only a few weeks into this process, my digestion has already improved significantly. I’ve been able to run comfortably outside again for the first time in months and have had quite a few workouts without any digestive issues. My mileage is still quite low (~20 mpw), but now that I’m through the worst of the fatigue from the transition of the diet (and two of three concerts this month are over), I should be able to start slowly increasing mileage again. I’m cautiously optimistic.

Cape San Blas, FL Aug 2017

 

Wilder

It’s just before 6 a.m., sun waking behind the mountains, early dawn filling the air. The four of us stand at the edge of the dock, toes curled over the edge, clothes tossed in a pile. My breath shallow with anticipation. Cold air tingles across my skin. Someone counts off and with a quick jump we’re in. “Holy f-k” runs on repeat in my head, heart racing. The water is so cold I can’t think beyond those two words running like a mantra. I’m kicking furiously, eager to get to the top. Seems to take an eternity, but in reality was just a few seconds. As I break through the surface, I hear the screams of the other women shrieking loudly into the dawn. I think of the neighbors who live along the lake, amused that they’ve likely awoken to the sounds of our adventure. I’m the first one out, teeth chattering, voice stuck in my throat. Wrapping myself in my towel, I turn to find the others standing near. Giggling and smiling, the weekend comes into sharp focus. Courage, discomfort, joy…this is what I was craving. Upon arriving on Friday, I couldn’t have imagined a frigid, pre-sunrise soak in the lake would manifest it.

Like most of the other 29 women who arrived at Caldera on Friday afternoon, I had a fair amount of anxiety about the weekend. I haven’t been able to run much, will I be able to hang? I’ve only recently begun writing, will I have words?  My anticipation and excitement far outweighed any reservations, but I was nervous.

Photo: Jess Barnard

Sunday morning comes, we have a “long run” on the schedule. Courtesy of some recent (and new) health issues, I’ve barely been training. Thankfully we had three distance options – 5, 10 and 14. Even though the 14-miler visited an amazing location, I knew it was out. I hadn’t run double-digits in an exceptionally long time, and am out of practice on very technical trail, which the first four miles promised to be. I decided to go with the five, playing it safe. But a conversation with one of my cabin-mates out on our deck that morning convinced me to bump up to the ten. Worst-case scenario, I walk the last few miles. There’s not much I love more than a long effort on trails, and I was excited to take some photos.

The run passes like a dream. The trail is a bit technical in spots, enough to require attention, but not so much so that it prevents getting into a groove. I run the first few miles with others, and then end up on my own with the stops for photos. The miles pass by comfortably, I keep waiting for the wheels to come off. Made it to five miles, refilled my water bottle and quickly got back on my way. The light is magical on this morning, filtering through the leaves, dancing off the water. I get to seven, then eight miles. My legs are tired, but I know I’m going to run it in. I finally get to the end of the run, and am immediately greeted by Lauren, who gives me a huge smile and hug, and asks how it was. I tell her it was great, but what I don’t have the words for yet, what I’m not able to tell her, is that on this morning I rediscovered joy. It’s been a really, really long time since running felt joyful for me, but on this day, on this trail, I’m reminded why I love this sport. Being in the mountains with these women refills my cup, a cup I didn’t even realize had gone dry.

Baggage dropped, expectations released. These are the fruits of this work. Without an ounce of hyperbole, meeting this group of strangers for a weekend in the mountains restored some of my faith in humanity. Knowing these women are out there, doing their thing, quietly, fiercely, full of lady-swagger, brings me such joy. I met women who inspired me, who helped me walk outside myself, who led with heart and grace (thank you Marianne and Lauren). Women who gave me tools for developing this craft, women who inspired me with their words, with their feet.

Monday morning post-“swim”, we go for a silent run on a different  trail. I’ve intentionally left my phone behind (which was in airplane mode most of the weekend and functioned primarily as a camera), intentionally saving my creative energy for the writing that’s to follow. Before turning that part of my brain off for the morning, I make a mental note to come back to the trail before driving to Portland later that afternoon, as I imagined the light would be perfect in a few hours (it was). The river flows swiftly, swollen from winter, the trail snaking along the bank. I feel the energy from the river, from the trees and the mountains. I feel the energy from the other women. Words dancing along with my feet, gratitude for the fatigue in my legs, the words on the page.


Freedom as I dance

Feet flickering

Breath deep and full

Sunlight streaming

Heart racing

Sweat dripping from my hat

Around the next bend

Water rushing

Moss draping

Joy,  wild and free

Photo: Jess Barnard