Recently I saw a post on social media that said something like “I apologize if I was ever the toxic person in your life, but I’m working on becoming a better version of myself” and it just hit me hard. Looking back at my life, I realize I was that toxic person. I wasn’t hurting the people around me, at least I don’t think so, I just had a lot of negative energy. I realize now, I was carrying the enormous weight of emotional trauma and insecurities from my youth that I wasn’t fully mature enough to process or manage. It had become a quagmire of pent up negativity that I often seemed to blame others for and let it dim my light. The funny thing was, I preached positivity and spoke often about the need for it and the importance of it, but I couldn’t muster it in my own psyche. My well was dry.
That post made me realize how much things have changed in the four years since my aneurysm has ruptured. My perspective on life has shifted. And, while, one would expect such a change to occur after a near death experience, I think it goes deeper than than that. I feel this glow from inside of me that wasn’t there before…or rather, it was, but it was clouded by a window covered in soot. The light couldn’t get out. In the past, I think my light gave up trying. I was stressed, tired, angry…life got in the way. I gave up. And I let that happen.
It’s no surprise that brain damage changes a personality. Sometimes it’s for the better, sometimes it’s for the worse. For me it has been this metamorphosis of balance and peace that I never thought possible. My mother used to always tell me that I was extremely high strung. I think her exact words were that I was “wrapped around the axle”. I have always been a Type-A personality and never been able to truly relax. I had no idea about that concept. I used to say that I never knew how to have fun. When we would go on vacation, I would have a folder with the itinerary of each day planned out. It wasn’t specific down to times, unless there were tours, but each day was scheduled. Now, everything is different. We went on vacation last year and my husband asked what we were doing one day and I said “whatever we wanted”. I’ve stopped planning my life and started living it.
It’s been no secret that I have had a lot of medical issues following my rupture. My challenges are significant at times. Better than a lot of survivors, worse than others. Life isn’t easy. It isn’t what I wanted. There are days I have temper tantrums. There are days I ask God why he saved my life. But when it truly comes down to it, I’m grateful for my aneurysm rupturing. Yep. You read that right. It doesn’t seem like something anyone with any sense would say. But here I am saying it (although some that know me may say I don’t have any sense, but that’s another story entirely). My reasoning is simple…I’m no longer that toxic person. Oh, don’t get me wrong, I am still passionate about certain things…politics, sports, social justice issues. And I’m still going to get all fired up about those things, but I hope that my positivity outshines the negativity that I feel about the world sometimes.
I’ve learned to deal with the issues of the past and truly forgive, not just lip service, but true forgiveness. I’ve even learned to be a little easier on myself…not much, but a little. I look at the world realistically with the positivity of the future…with the beauty of each moment that exists right in that space in time. It may not be perfect, but it’s what we have and I promise you there is something beautiful right where you are standing.
So if I was ever that toxic person in your life, I apologize…I’m working on becoming a better version of myself…someone I like a lot better.
Trauma never really goes away, you just learn to live with it. Some days it feels like I’m living in a tense hostage situation and other days I feel like it’s simply a roommate I navigate life with, dancing through a too small space to avoid bumping into each other. My four year anniversary of my ruptured aneurysm is today, April 14, and I don’t understand how it can be both simultaneously ALREADY four years and ONLY four years. Time and trauma are funny that way.
It took me a long time to reconcile the fact that I was still alive and that I deserved to be alive. And to be honest, some days that’s still a struggle. There are days when I don’t want to be alive either. Those days have become fewer and my resolve has become stronger, even as we have discovered more problems. I believe I survived for a reason and I intend to make the most of this second chance. I struggled so much at the beginning of all of this after losing my career and trying to figure out what I was supposed to do with my life now. How do you suddenly pretend that life didn’t exist? I knew that I wanted to help the aneurysm community so that’s what I have set out to do.
I started my blog as part of my own recovery, but also to help other survivors and to help educate others to understand what we go through, what risk factors to look for, and how to help the community. I wanted to do more though…so I wrote a few articles for some other publications. I’ll admit, that was exhilarating to me. I love to write and it helps my healing. There was still room for more.
This year, for the first time, I participated in Advocacy Day at the Capitol. I had planned to do it two years ago, but it was canceled because of the pandemic. I was scheduled to meet with members of Congress from my state to discuss support for Ellie’s Law and share my story about my aneurysm. I have shared my story so frequently that I thought it would be easy, and while it was easy, it was mentally exhausting. It sapped all of my energy. The event was both terrifying and the most fulfilling thing I have ever done. It made me feel more alive than I have in years. I realized, without question, that this is what I have been called to do.
I am already working on plans for smaller events locally to educate and raise awareness and I know it won’t be easy, but nothing worth it ever is. I was saved for a reason and on this anniversary, I am not going to question why I am alive. Today I am remembering that day I woke up from my coma and heard those words whispered in my ear as I sat alone in my hospital room…”Be still and know that I am God” and I am living with purpose and gratitude.
Be well, my friends. Go shine your light on this world.
April 14 has new meaning to me now. Each year, as it approaches, I am reminded of how my life has been forever changed and how I am beyond blessed. Since my aneurysm ruptured on April 14, 2018, my life has changed in ways that I could never have imagined. Each year since has brought new challenges, frustrations, fears, anger, growth, and promise. And through it all, I have somehow managed to find a peace that was missing in my life prior to this disaster.
I struggled with defining myself after being declared unable to work. Who was I if I wasn’t an IT Leader in Supply Chain Process Improvement? Who was I if it didn’t say “Project Manager” after my name? It was an obstacle that was impossible to leap. I couldn’t just be someone else…even when my brain refused to do the job anymore. I had a list of medical problems that seemed to grow daily, and yet the definition of who I was is the thing that bothered me most.
I knew who I wanted to be. I wanted to help others. I wanted to walk back into the flames carrying water for others who needed the help. But when I looked in the mirror, I didn’t believe that I had the capacity to help others. I wasn’t strong enough, knowledgeable enough, and where would I even start? But even before my aneurysm, I had always talked about feeling as though there was something missing in my life. I wanted to help people. I wanted that to be my life’s work. I started tweeting about awareness. I started sharing statistics. And finally, some amazing people jumped into my life and asked if I was ready for advocacy.
I started writing my blog to share my experiences with my recovery because, while every recovery is different, sometimes survivors need to know they are not alone. Sometimes, survivors need to see that a symptom might match theirs and maybe their care team hasn’t looked at it the way mine has…or maybe they just want to know that other survivors have bad days and cuss and throw things too (believe me, I do). I’ve also been extremely blessed to write for a few publications to share my perspective to get my voice out there even further. And I have been honored to help a few families whose loved ones were in the hospital following an event when they have needed support. That has been an extremely humbling experience to be trusted with their hearts as they navigate this new journey.
I may not be changing the world, but with each action of advocacy, I realize that my heart is full and I have found a peace that I never had during my career. Oh, don’t get me wrong, I still struggle and have my moments of wishing for my “old” life, but that wish is nothing more than longing for a life that isn’t filled with the complications of daily migraines, seizures, hypothalamus dysfunction, and whatever other medical problems they want to throw at me. There are moments of weakness when I just want it all to go away…I am human, after all. But when I really sit and think about it, three years ago, on April 14, 2018, I was not only given a miracle of a second chance at life, I was given a miracle of happiness.
If you’ve been following my journey, you’ll already know that I struggled immensely with survivor’s guilt. I had no idea why I deserved to still be on this earth, when so many others weren’t given that luxury. What did it mean? What was I supposed to do with this new found life? It was a hell of a dilemma that I struggled with. The thought of returning to my old job was gut wrenching, but the fear of failing at trying something new was just as bad. I was stuck in this limbo of breathing but not. Stuck without fitting anywhere in this world.
It’s a common struggle after any trauma, but for brain injured patients, that struggle is compounded by learning to process things in a whole new way. We are often very different people after these events. Our brains are physically altered and our thought processes change. It’s hard to just pick up where you left off. And that’s where I found myself. I was simply occupying space while my brain tried to reassess the world. For a former Type-A personality, it was an additional trauma on top of the brain damage! I was the girl who planned EVERYTHING. I organized my closet by color coding everything by ROYGBIV. Things had to be put away in a certain manner or I would have a meltdown. To say I was obsessive compulsive was an understatement. So here I was…trapped between my old life and my new life. Remembering that glassware had to be put away exactly so, but somehow having no clue where I was supposed to go in life. How ironic. I was an out of place glass with no cabinet.
So, in true Michele fashion…I read. Everything I could find about recovery. Everything I could find about reinventing yourself. I talked to therapists, friends, psychics (holy hell was THAT eye opening!). And I wrote. I poured my feelings out on paper. In the middle of the night, I’d sit with my phone and jot down random thoughts that made no sense to anyone but me…and quite honestly, if anyone had gotten ahold of my phone, I cannot imagine what they would have thought of my mental state in those moments! For once, I didn’t have a plan, and I definitely didn’t have my shit together! That was scary in itself and it took lots of conversations with my therapist to get me over the whole idea that I didn’t need to plan every single aspect of my life. It’s still a struggle sometimes as my old life often tugs at me to come back, while the new me is over here spinning in a field of flowers and getting lost in the beauty of the world.
So there I was, trying to figure out who I was. For 20+ years I defined myself by my career…I was a Project Manager, a Supply Chain expert, an IT Executive. That’s how I saw myself and I truly believed it was the only definition that mattered. That was who I was. End of story. It took this trauma for me to finally break through that wall and understand that those things were just who I was for part of my life. I was also a wife, daughter, sister, aunt, friend, artist, writer, photographer, random stranger who will talk to you in line because I want to make the world a better place, and a badass. There were probably a dozen other words I could come up with, but that was a pretty good start.
So now that I realized I had more to offer and I didn’t want to (and really couldn’t) go back to the grind of corporate America I needed to figure out what the heck that new me wanted to do. I knew I wanted to make a difference in this world. If I died (well, when, since that’s inevitable), I wanted people to say that I made a difference in their lives. That the world was left better because of my influence. Okay…so I want to put on a cape and save the world. Perhaps, I needed to narrow down that scope…just a bit. I realized how little I knew about aneurysms before mine ruptured. I never suspected the headache was a brain bleed. That thought never even cracked the top 50 for me. So I started digging because…well…project manager and Type A personality. I realized there was so little information given to us when we were in the hospital. My husband, who was my caregiver, was flying blind to a degree. He didn’t know what questions to ask. As the saying goes…”you don’t know what you don’t know”. And that’s how my dream of advocacy started.
I never do anything small. I’m a “go big or go home” kind of girl. It gets me into trouble a lot because I tend to bite off more than I can chew and never ask for help (that’s a story for another week). So there I sat, brainstorming ideas of how I could help in the community. I wanted to work with doctors/hospitals on education because my brain bleed was missed by 3 doctors/hospitals during that 5 week period and I never wanted that to happen to someone else! I wanted to talk to people in the community to educate them on the signs and symptoms of an aneurysm so that they wouldn’t be blindsided like I was. I wanted to tell my story. Okay…three BRILLIANT ideas. I closed that notebook and thought…I’m an advocate. Done.
Whoa. Hold on, Sparky. I think you need to actually figure out how to do all of these things. How the heck am I supposed to do that? I’ve never done anything like this before! The closest thing I’ve done is mentoring and leading the company’s United Way campaign one year. This was a much larger undertaking and I was completely overwhelmed. So I backed off on some ideas and decided to prioritize. Telling my story was really important to me and I talked to my therapist about my desire to write a book, yet I had no idea how to go about getting a book published. I decided to work on a blog (and here you are reading it). But “old Michele” crept up and put the fear of failure in my brain and I sat on the idea for a year, while making notes in my journal of things I didn’t want to forget. My therapist finally challenged me in January of this year to get off my ass and just start it…even if I was the only person who ever read it. I started a Twitter page for advocacy and began making connections. I reached out to hospitals and affiliated medical centers to work on plans for Aneurysm Awareness Month and got nowhere fast. Hmmm. This isn’t easy. Maybe I should force myself to return to corporate life? But every time I considered that, my anxiety increased, my blood pressure rose, and panic set in. That wasn’t who I was anymore. I had to remind myself (and I still periodically do), that greatness is found outside of your comfort zone.
So here I am, stepping outside my comfort zone. I continue to pursue my passion to help others in the realm of Aneurysm Awareness and Education. I am putting myself out there because I know I have a role to fill. It hasn’t necessarily been easy, but I can honestly say, for the first time in my life, when I am working on these projects, I am excited. It doesn’t feel like work to me. It feels like I have found my home. I have found that place where I am needed…and what I have needed to heal. Don’t get me wrong…I’m scared as hell that I am going to fail miserably. But I’m more afraid of regretting not getting involved to help others come out of the flames.
In the meantime, I will continue to try to engage the local communities and medical facilities to raise awareness. I won’t rest on my laurels. And I will watch myself grow into what I was meant to do. Who knew reinventing yourself is simultaneously extremely difficult and extremely rewarding?
For the record…my closet is no longer color coded by ROYGBIV. But the glasses in the cupboard are still perfectly aligned. Baby steps.