Health

Living with Endometriosis: Finding My Voice

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Before I was diagnosed with endometriosis, I was convinced that having painful and heavy periods was normal. My friends never seemed to have it that bad every month, and they also didn’t bleed or experience pain in between their periods like I did.

I started going to doctors for the pain and heavy bleeding in my teens and I was put on birth control, but it didn’t help. It seemed like doctors were just gaslighting me every time I tried to explain what was happening to me. They made me feel like the pain was all in my head, and I believed it. I was also getting misdiagnosed with colitis, celiac disease, kidney infections, fibromyalgia, and other conditions that didn’t match how I was feeling.

Finally, in 2017, after spending Thanksgiving in the hospital due to excruciating pain, a gastroenterologist listened to me. He was the first doctor to suggest that I may have endometriosis. Once I came home from the hospital, I immediately scheduled a diagnostic laparoscopic surgery, a procedure to find the cause of pain or growth in the abdomen and pelvic area. My husband researched the condition so I could be prepared to handle the test’s results.

Getting a Diagnosis

After 20 years of debilitating pain, and numerous hospital stays, I was diagnosed with endometriosis on January 4, 2018. During the procedure, some of the growth was removed via ablation, which destroys tissue in the uterine lining. At 32, I didn’t know what I was up against, so I found myself turning to Dr. Google for information because all I was given at the time was a small pamphlet and little explanation. I wanted to know more because I didn’t like not knowing. I also decided to not go on medication to suppress the disease.



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