Keeping the lymphatic system moving

Keeping the lymphatic system moving…

Hello all. I woke up today thinking about how much I miss my rebounder. I had it for many years, but it finally ripped and had to go to the recycling bin. I bought it back in 2007, after being bed ridden for two years with what I was just finding out was Lyme Disease. I knew how terrible it was for my bones and overall health to not be able to move around much. I had been a runner and always into fitness and here I was barely able to lift my feet off the floor to shuffle into my own kitchen! I started doing some research on the lymphatic system and read about the benefits of using a rebounder. I ordered one immediately.

When I first got the rebounder, I could not jump up in the air, but I found that I could stand on it, while holding the bar and sort of jiggle my body gently so that I was ‘bouncing’ up and down. My feet never left the rebounder, but that didn’t matter, the rebounding motion was, well, in motion and therefore helping wake up my very sluggish lymphatic system, getting it moving a little better. When I first started, it was just about 5 minutes per day with the ‘jiggle’. I had days when I just couldn’t do it at all, but over the years, I used it more and more rigorously. I noticed changes early on. It lifted my spirits a bit and we all now how important that is! My brain cleared a little, as in I experienced more hours, with more clarity. I could feel it waking my muscles up which was painful at first, but also very exciting. Over the years it became a fun part of my fitness routine.

But let me go back to why keeping the lymphatic system moving is so important. I’m going to use a quote from livescience.com that came up on my google search. “The lymphatic system is a network of tissues and organs that help rid the body of toxins, waste and other unwanted materials. The primary function of the lymphatic system is to transport lymph, a fluid containing infection-fighting white blood cells, throughout the body.”

It of course is very complex, but really this is the most important thing for us to know and will hopefully get anyone who hasn’t thought about it, looking into it further! As Lyme Disease sufferers, we struggle with both killing off and clearing the lyme bacteria/infection (and other co-infections) from our bodies and we also struggle with Jarisch Herxheimer reactions, due to the toxic load that makes us feel even worse, from the bacteria die-off. So believe me, we WANT that lymphatic system moving and working as well as it can. Being so sick overwhelms it and slows it down. Being sedentary slows it down, so what can we do? Aren’t we stuck? NO! There are things we can do, even when we are barely able to move.

I started out talking about the rebounder, because it is a great way to get this system moving and it also can, if we start VERY slowly, help us build strength. If you can stand at all, you can stand on a rebounder for a few minutes and get a tiny, beneficial bounce going.

Another great way to help the lymphatic system, that costs close to nothing? Sip hot water all day. This is a traditional Ayurvedic recommendation. There are various sites on line that suggest adding an assortment of herbs and such to the water, but the most important thing is to sip hot water all day. It keeps the lymphatic system moving, strengthens digestive power and keeps us hydrated. This is very different than chugging down a glass of ice water, something so popular here in the west. The warm water works with our bodies instead of shocking them. It is the frequency rather than the quantity that is most important in this practice. You can add a little lemon to the water or ginger or look up some other options. I always encourage people to keep it simple so that you can stick with it! I fill my tea pot every morning and boil the water for five minutes and then fill two thermos’s and sip them throughout the day. I always have them with me and this makes a difference. My brain stays clearer and my energy is better.

Some other things that I will just touch on here as ways to help the lymphatic system:
Infrared Saunas. I was blessed in that a friend stepped forward and helped me buy my own IR Sauna. There are more and more options out there at various price points, but they all cost money which we all know can be an area of great struggle and stress when we are sick for years! Brain fog clears, headaches go away. Sweating it out is a great thing! While IR saunas have some specific benefits, simply taking a hot bath with epsom salts and/or baking soda and getting a sweat going is also helpful.

Massage, especially manual lymphatic drainage, can be very beneficial. But even self massage or any tissue manipulation can make a real difference!

The last thing that I will mention for today, is diet. And I mean ‘mention’, as this is a huge topic unto itself! Following a diet strong in anti-inflammatory foods can make a huge difference in terms of keeping the lymphatic system functioning well and in aiding our body’s ability to heal.

In closing, I encourage you to do your own searches on how to support the Lymphatic System. It can make a real difference in daily functioning and in supporting your body’s ability to heal.

Take good care!
Judy

 

STRESS: Relapse and recovery

Hello all!  Well, I set up this page and then disappeared.  I thought it was time that I explained and started communicating!  After a number of years doing better (after being wretchedly sick with Lyme disease for years), I went through some very stressful life events and found my health slipping away again.  It’s been a tough stretch but I’ve also learned a lot!  And, I have come out of it without falling into total disability for years as I did when I first got sick. 

I want to share what I’ve learned in a case it can help any of you!  I know that we all know this, but boy it has been made so obviously, directly and abundantly clear to me that stress is bad news for our bodies.  After so many years and so much neurological damage from Lyme disease, the smallest amount of external stress causes my energy and general feeling of well-being to slip noticeably.  Life does happen though and sometimes stress is simply unavoidable.  I went through a period of extreme stress and trauma from a few sources all at once and it took me from almost well to a state of extreme fatigue and general feeling of terrible sickness.  This round, some issues arose that were new to me.  I ended up with silent reflux.  This is different from heartburn or ‘Gerd’.  Small amounts of acid come up quietly and start burning and damaging the soft tissues of the larynx and throat.  It is torture, especially for a singer such as myself.  I started all kinds of treatment and nothing seemed to work, but time and a calming of the stress and nervous system have slowly improved my over all situation.  My energy, while still quite challenged, is much better and the reflux has started to calm a bit as well.  I’m still working on all of it, but at least I can get back to living and working….very carefully… 

So, stress.  How do we manage it?  It is utterly unavoidable in life but the reality of chronic illness of any kind, is that we must do everything we can to avoid and manage it so that we don’t ‘crash’.  Meditation is about the best thing that I know of.  But it’s not always easy to find that ‘zen’ when we are super worried about someone we love or something critical in our lives.  So the thing that I turned to most in my ultra-stressed out state, was breath.  I practice intentional breathing every morning when I wake up and every time I think of it or am aware that I’m feeling worried or anxious. You can do this any time and any place.  Just pause and take a few deep, slow breaths.  Try to count and match the length of the inhale with the exhale.  It is scientifically proven to calm the fight or flight state.  And I can attest to this!  Other great breathing exercises that I use a lot are alternate nostril breathing or just left nostril breathing.  When you alternate, put a finger on one nostril as you slowly breathe in the other one, then you switch the finger to the other side and breathe out the opposite nostril.  So it’s in the right, out the left, in the left, out the right, in the right, out the left and so on.  With left nostril breathing you simply plug the right nostril and slowly breathe in and out of the left nostril.  I like to count, as I breathe in and out, working to slowly increase the length of the inhale and exhale.  This is very effective.  You just can’t feel stress while you are practicing intentional breathing and it calms everything down so that you can think more rationally about what ever is causing worry or anxiety. 

I’ll give some more tips next time, but for now, just breathe!

With love, Judy

An article and a video…both worth viewing.

I’m on a few ‘Lyme’ lists and all kinds of information shows up in my in box.  I confess that I do not view, nor do I read all of these articles, although I am eternally grateful for the people running these support lists, taking the time to gather and share!  In fact I skip more than I want to admit.  But the fact is, we can only process so much information and sometimes it can feel like we are getting buried in too much, too overwhelming, too scary information so I encourage others and myself to hit the pause on it periodically and simply take time to be still with ourselves/our bodies/our own deep intuition.

Having said that, here are a couple of offerings that I want to share.  These are both informative and to the point. These are good for understanding what we are going through and great for sharing with our loved ones so that they can understand as well.

 

The first:

Visiting physician sheds new light on Lyme disease

And second:

On Thursday, June 30, New York’s FOX 5 news proved there is great public interest in learning more about the complexities of Lyme disease.

Take good care!!

Judy

My Story

Hello! Thanks for checking out my website and blog.

As a coach, I not only have my own experiences with Chronic Lyme Disease, but I hear many stories from others. My goal here is to share stories and tips that will offer hope, provide some tools and help you get through your days as you work toward health. I’m new to this whole blog thing, so bare with me as I get in the groove!! I’m going to start here by posting an article that I wrote last Fall for The Monadnock Ledger-Transcript in Peterborough, NH. This is the unedited version! I’m starting with this so that you know where I’m coming from. It’s an overview of my story and how it lead me to coaching others….

Why did I decide to start coaching people with Chronic Lyme Disease?

It all started back in 2005, or wait, 2004, but possibly 2002 when I had vertigo? Hmmm. It is confusing. What I know for sure is that, in 2004 I had some sort of virus. A low-grade fever on and off for weeks; headaches, insomnia, the usual ‘I’m sick with some weird virus’ sort of thing. It didn’t stop me cold but I did go to see my doctor who told me that it was a virus and I was getting older, so it might take me longer than the standard 10 days to feel better. I was 43, and fit, and had a great diet, and tons of energy, until this ‘virus’. It did finally seem to clear, but then I had crippling pain in my right hip, then my left, then my knees were hurting on and off. I chalked all of this up to the fact that I had been a runner for 20 years. I went to my chiropractor many times, then to another chiropractor, then to a physical therapist, then to a rolfer. I was desperate as the pain was getting scary. I was worried it would effect my ability to climb mountains and ski with my kids, run, perform with my band, that it would slow me down! Also, during the months after the mysterious virus, I started having crazy insomnia, as in, I. Could. Not. Sleep. This led to exhaustion and anxiety. I had been through some big life shifts just a year or so earlier, so it seemed reasonable that this could all be stress related. As the months passed, even though I kept working and climbing and running and singing, I felt worse and worse. I remember feeling as if I was coming down with the flu over and over and over again. I took all sorts of herbs and essential oils to ward off whatever was chasing me, but on October 9, 2005, I crashed. I woke at 4:00 in the morning and thought, Oh My God, I am so sick! I had a big wedding that evening where I was singing. I couldn’t miss it and let everyone down, so I went, but as the evening wore on, my voice and breath slipped away as I fell into terrible illness. I didn’t know how I would make it home. As I drove through flooding rains, I remember thinking, ‘I am sicker than I have ever been in my life’. I knew, deep down, that something was terribly wrong, that I was in serious trouble. I crawled into bed when I got home, and there I would stay, most of the time, for the next 4 years, and honestly, much of the time for 9.

Over the next few weeks, of course I tried to get up and go! After three weeks being extremely sick, I got up and went for a run. I had convinced myself that this had always worked in the past when I wasn’t feeling well, so maybe this was my answer now (of course, in the 3 weeks my muscles had atrophied..it’s crazy how fast this happens, and I had lost 12 pounds off my already thin frame). I was simply not going to accept the fact that I was done-for so easily. I would beat this out of me with a long run, a burst of feel-good hormones and blood pumping through my veins, clearing everything out. Well, that just about ended me. I couldn’t sit upright for more than 5-10 minutes on most days. I could barely lift my feet off the ground. I’d shuffle into the kitchen to prepare a simple dinner for my two sons and myself. My boys had to get used to coming into my room to do homework or visit with me. We’d read a little bit, all snuggled together. The songs that I had always sung to them had to stop though, as I didn’t have the breath to sing. After talking quietly for 10 minutes, I was out of air. The fatigue was crushing. It felt as if my body was shutting down, that it simply could not keep up with the demands of staying alive. And yet, it was also determined. I was determined! It took 1.5 years after my collapse, and seemingly every specialist known to man (some world famous), before my local doctor ordered a Lyme test from Igenix, a Lyme literate lab in California and I found out that I had Lyme Disease. Of course, I had been very sick for a long time, so it had dug in deep and there were co-infections and other viruses and bacterial infections at play. (Of significant note is that I did get a standard Lyme test done at the beginning of my illness, but it showed nothing and was eliminated from the list of possible reasons I was so sick. (testing is still completely unreliable) Also, back in2004, there was not that much Lyme Disease in this area and few doctors had come across it as a completely debilitating, chronic disease). Following the diagnosis, I went on, for years, trying one ‘protocol’ after another. In a nutshell, I treated with many different herbal protocols, and with numerous antibiotics, on and off over the years. I used Homeopathy, Ayurveda, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Acupuncture, Massage, many different types of body work and energy work. I worked with nutritionists, chiropractors, physical therapists, hypnotists and shaman. I used RIFE (radiofrequency therapy), IR Sauna therapy, ionic detox therapy, and on and on. I meditated and prayed. A lot.

During my first couple of years my experience on my ‘bad’ days was one of rising in the morning (after a night of waking up 5-10+ times) and moving slowly about for 10minutes at a time, as I could not stay upright for more than that. On my good days, I’d have 1-3 hours where I could shuffle slowly and silently around the house, quietly tending to the basics and arranging rides and such for my boys. Then, by 11:00 a.m., I was done for the day. I felt, every day, as bad as if I had the worst flu imaginable, but with a different symptom picture. An interesting point is that, in the first few years my painful joints had stopped hurting for the most part (although they returned later on). The bugs had moved to another system in my body and now I simply felt worse than I ever had in my life, with crushing, completely debilitating fatigue. Crazy weird symptoms would come and go. I felt neurologically ‘frayed’. I would lie in bed with crushing chest pain and every inch of my nervous system trembling violently. Some days, it was as if my brain was at the bottom of the ocean, unable to clear. I felt as if I was just holding on, ready to break completely at any moment. I could not drive for more than a mile or two. I could not go into stores where the sounds and movement and lights and colors everywhere suddenly made me feel like I was in a war zone, where I wanted to dive into a ditch and cover my head. I could not look at a TV or at a computer screen for any length of time. I would print up articles (wearing sunglasses to search for them). I could read for very short periods off paper. It was in this way that I searched and searched for understanding and solutions. I became my own guinea pig, trying all sorts of protocols and products that had shown some success with some people. I was willing to try just about anything that offered any hope at all. It would take a book to write of all the details of my 10+ years with chronic Lyme Disease and Co-infections. It would take a book to talk about the effects on my life (financial stress, friends slipping away, new people coming in closer to help me, doctors suggesting that I might want to try antidepressants and a plan to get ‘active’ again, healers giving their time and love for little money, people suggesting in various ways that it was my ‘fault’ because I had been doing too much, people looking at me wondering how I could possibly still be sick!). It changed the way I view all of it, all of existence. It rewired my very being.

It’s true, becoming chronically ill changes everything. It shakes it all up.

There is grief. Just as with any loss, when you lose your health, you grieve. You grieve for the loss of our health and for each and every thing that you are unable to do. It breaks your heart. It shatters any sense of self-assurance you might have had. Suddenly you become very need-full. You have to learn to ask for help. A lot. You question who you are and what value you could possibly have in such a state! You have to work hard to let go of any of the ideas that you have had in terms of what you do, being who you are. It is a most scary process. As you go from doctor to doctor, trying this and then that, seemingly making no progress, you wonder what you did wrong for such a thing to have knocked you off your feet. You go to the ‘edge’ with despair weighing you down. Hopefully, you begin to realize that there are still things to be grateful for. And, hopefully, you start to see that there are bigger things at play, that maybe something good and possibly even beautiful might come out of something so terribly difficult. There is an old quote, “If you don’t have your health, you don’t have anything”. Well, this is just not true. If you don’t have your health, you still have love and compassion and gratitude. You are still you. You still have life. You can still be kind and caring or grumpy and angry! Just because you have a physical ailment does not mean that you have nothing!

As the days, months and years passed, I went through many phases. For the first couple of years every treatment protocol I started was going to be the ‘ONE’, the silver bullet, blasting through by body and putting everything back in order so that I could go ‘back‘ to my life. In the early years, every practitioner that I saw was sure that they knew what I needed. But as time went on, my view changed (as did that of my Lyme literate doctors). Of course I still hoped for the next thing to be the one that worked, but I also started realizing that it was all playing a part in supporting and helping my body. I started to think about working with the bugs instead of against them (of course I still wanted them out of my body!). I was never going ‘back’. I was living in the best way that I could, in the present, hoping, of course, for my health to return. Lyme and all the co-infections and sensitivities that gather to bring you into a chronic state of dis-ease is not a simple thing. There is no one drug or herb or mantra that will bring your health back into order. Each body is unique, so it is important to just keep trying. The combination that works for one person, can have no effect on another. If you catch Lyme Disease shortly after the tick bite, and treat with antibiotics, you will most likely recover quickly, but if it becomes chronic, it’s a whole different story. Every part of you needs support. I learned so many ways to support my body, mind and soul through the ancient healing modalities such as Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine. (I made up things that worked for me as well). I turned to Chi Gong and meditation and restorative yoga. I used positive affirmations. I wrote in a journal, even started writing poetry, just pouring out my pain and fear and hopes. I cried a lot! I used everything I could to support my body, but also my spirit, and let me tell you, they both still felt like they weren’t going to make it at times! Also, having someone who truly believes you and is deeply compassionate to talk with is imperative. I feel so blessed to have found these people, or maybe they found me.

Over time, I had parts of days and occasional stretches of days when I felt a little better, and started taking walks when my morning energy was present. I started to be able to read books and watch movies at home. It was constantly up and down, so that I might be a bit better for a few days and then hardly able to move for a stretch. It was very difficult to see any progress, but after 4 years, I started working for a couple of hours, two times a week at a fairly quiet place. It was hard on many days, but being out in the flow of humanity felt like a miracle after being isolated for so long. I ran into people now and then who were surprised to see me because they thought that I had moved away. An important note to make about healing is that it is not a steady uphill climb. It’s up 2 steps, down 1, up 3 and down 3, up 4 and down 2. Also, change is always happening, even when we can’t see or feel it. This was important for me to remind myself of. I continued to have stretches where I could barely move and had to call in sick. I continued to feel despair, right alongside gratitude. I went to the edge over and over. But, over time, my health improved.  My restorative powers grew. I now, almost 11 years later, find that I feel good on the majority of days. I’d say that I’m fragile in a way that I never was and have to be very mindful of what I do and how I spend my precious, somewhat limited at this point, energy. I still slip back a bit now and then, but overall I live a very full life and feel so grateful for every moment spent without pain and free of feeling terribly sick. I feel so grateful for life. And, I feel so grateful that I can now help others not only survive, but also thrive as they navigate their way through Chronic Lyme Disease.

I’d like to make a few points, the first being, always listen to your body. Every kind of practitioner has limits. We are all people! If something feels ‘off’ and the doctor says that nothing is wrong, go to someone else to get help. We each have our own deep intuition and we should listen to it and trust it. I did not listen to mine, and made assumptions, and let an entire year of struggling go by without seeking answers. Second, Chronic Lyme Disease happens, not only to the person who is sick, but to the people who love and care about them. They need support too. And, lastly, Lyme Disease, along with the co-infections that often accompany it, shows up in numerous ways in different people. I told my story, but there are countless ways that one can be effected. If you don’t have achy joints, but you have strange heart issues, it could still be Lyme! It is known as the “great imitator” as it can manifest in so many different ways in different bodies and appear as many diseases. If you would like to read about Lyme Disease prevention and treatment, a great site to start with is:ILADS (the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society) .

I am a certified Personal Empowerment Coach, specializing in working with people with Chronic Lyme Disease and associated illnesses. Please contact me by email at: info@survivethrivecoaching.com

Welcome to my new site and blog about Lyme Disease

I have created this site to let you know about my coaching practice, which is all about supporting people with Chronic Lyme Disease and  this blog to share my own experiences with Chronic Lyme Disease and offer stories and ideas to help you as you work on getting yourself back to good health.

I am a Certified Personal Empowerment Coach, specializing in working with people with Chronic Lyme Disease and associated illnesses.  It’s important to note that I am not a health care practitioner and not an expert!!  I simply offer you ideas and stories based on my experience.  Always seek out a professional before trying any healing ideas on yourself.

Thank you for visiting!

Judy Blake  • info@survivethrivecoaching.com