Has your outlook on life /priorities changed since being diagnosed with IBD?

This week, to celebrate World IBD Day on May 19th and in aid of raising awareness of IBD and how it affects sufferers not just physically but mentally too, I will be releasing a series of blogs with contributions from the IBD community.
Blog 5
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Some people go through life with nothing going dramatically wrong. They make a drama out of a row with their parents because they’re untidy around the house because that’s the most distressing thing that has happened to them. I am not in any way belittling their problems and how they affect them and how they feel about it because they don’t know any different.
I believe you could ask me a question today and get different response if you asked me the same question in a year, next week, tomorrow, depending on what has happened in between. Opinions are formed by experiences and experiences come from life. What your life throws at you will be the basis of your opinions, the foundations so to speak. That is not to say that the people who have had the same experiences as me will end up with the same opinions as me because that’s not necessarily true. Your personality and your disposition will play a part in building your opinions on the foundations and your personality and disposition will be dependent on both external and internal factors. We could have the whole Nature vs Nurture debate but let’s just say for arguments (and this blogs) sake that we all agree that both have a massive impact on shaping ones personality.
For example, people that have been brought up in a family that are loving, comforting or wrap their children in cotton wool will be used to that from people, therefore when they’re poorly and their friends and partners want to look after them then that’s fine, they’re used to it and have probably even come to expect it, but then there’s people like me that have never been in a very tactile environment so when people want to look after me it evokes feelings of discomfort.
You can put a group of people in exactly the same shitty situation and depending on their nature, some will run and hide and pretend it isn’t happening, some will be so completely overwhelmed and out of their depth that they feel anxious or angry, for some this will be the reason that they have a substance abuse problem, some will curl up and cry and just pray it goes away, some will slap on their war paint, pick up their shield and go charging in to battle. You might start like one of these and end up somewhere completely different! It is impossible to judge how a person is going to react to a given situation; the only way that anyone can deal with it will be in whatever way they know how.
People that have lived through nothing probably haven’t learnt as much, probably aren’t as wise and probably haven’t felt the need to sit and consider their priorities. Some may consider the people that haven’t lived through hardship to be lucky bastards. I do not, I feel lucky because I have learnt so much about life, the world, people and myself.

My response:

Just the other day my dad said to me “You get to a certain age and you just stop giving a shit about the small unimportant stuff, it’s just not worth it”. I declared that I don’t think it’s anything to do with age, I think it depends on your life and what you have been through.
I hate stress, if I can avoid it I will because I know it makes me even more poorly so stressing about things that aren’t even important in the grand scheme of things is really not worth it.
I have never really been a soft person but living with IBD for 8 years has made me even tougher. Don’t get me wrong, I am softie at heart when it comes to things and people that matter but I don’t waste it on people that don’t. If someone is boring me I will turn around and walk away and if someone is being ridiculous I will tell them. If someone fucks me over they don’t get the opportunity to do it again. Forgive and forget? I won’t forgive but I won’t dwell on it either because I won’t give someone else the power to make me angry. It’s far too strong an emotion to waste, and the forgetting part comes with time and eventually I will forget the person that’s not worth reserving an area in my memory bank for.
I really don’t have any sympathy for people that take a day off work for a cold. What I do understand is that pain is relative and someone might have belly ache or period pains that are horrific to them and even though on a pain scale they wouldn’t be anywhere near the pain I have managed to exist through, the pain to them is still the worst pain that they have ever felt so it’s hard for them. Even I can piss and whine because I’ve got toothache – that shit hurts!
My outlook on life has changed dramatically. I have written in blogs before how grateful I am that I’m poorly and what it has taught me. Obviously whilst I’m rolling around in pain I am not grateful for being poorly but I’m grateful for the lessons and I can honestly say that even if I could turn the clock back, I wouldn’t change a thing because everything that has happened leading up to this point in my life is what has made me who I am right now and I like me.
I was on a downward spiral before I was diagnosed with IBD, I drank too much, took drugs too much and generally didn’t give a fuck enough.
Life is too short to piss around not doing what you want to do or doing things that you don’t want to.
I have days of course, sometimes weeks if I’m in a lot of pain and not sleeping where I’m angry and bitter.
I don’t want to waste my time listening to other people’s pointless dramas and there’s nothing I appreciate more than having some ‘me time’ and just chilling in my PJ’s with the dogs and reading a book or watching movies.
Over 3 years ago, my now boss asked me in my interview where I wanted to be in 1 year / 5 years’ time and all I could tell her was that I want to be happy. What is more important than that? And what leads to happiness changes as life and priorities do.
I could sit and contemplate why I am here, what my purpose is, what life’s all about, but I’ll never figure it out. It does bring back a memory of poem I wrote, years before I was ill though, but the only line I can remember is the last two;
When it comes to the end, if I find out that life was a test,
At least I can say I did it, and I tried my bloody best.
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Your responses:
My outlook on life has changed so much since my diagnosis although it all happened so quickly for me. From having no symptoms or problems at all to having a bowel perforation and almost losing my life all in 2 weeks certainly does make you think and take a look at what you are doing. I had a sub total colectomy and stoma formation in October 2008 this was a very big shock to me as I was always perfectly healthy previous to those 2 weeks. 5 days later I was taken back to surgery due to a twisted bowel. Living with a stoma I thought that my life was over I was only 24 years old and a single mother of 2 but finding out I would be eligible for a reversal soon had me thinking more positively. I had reversal surgery in June 2009. And from then on I’ve had very few problems. April of 2010 I decided to seize the day and I left my hometown of Birmingham and moved 160 miles away to the Isle of Wight and have lived here ever since – I came on my own with my 2 children and started a new life. Would I have had the courage to do this if I had not been so close to losing my life due to Crohn’s? No I don’t think I would have.
–              Laura Pengelly
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Since being told I had IBD, my outlook on life has changed dramatically. Before I was money motivated and never had a day off sick and went out whenever I wanted, brought anything, went on holidays, I didn’t have a care in the world, didn’t have to know where the toilets were beforehand either and I ate whatever I wanted.
Every morning when I wake up I take 6-10 pills, (4 for diarrhea, 2 for spasms, 1 for anti-sickness, 1 for anxiety, 2 for pain), then 6 pills every 4 hours, (3 anti-diarrhea, 1 for spasms, 2 for pain) and even they don’t always work. I go into work as and when I can, and I have at least a week off most months, I’ve receiving numerous warnings for my attendance. I have a 4 year old now and I can’t take him to the park as and when I want to, or take him anywhere else. So I feel extremely guilty that he doesn’t do what most children do. If I do want to go out it’s got to be planned a few days in advance, so I can get my body more ready and it’s a last minute definite decision. If I’m going somewhere new I have to research the area for toilets. If there are none around I start to panic which can make me worse. On major flares I’ve been known to OD on pills just so that I can do stuff in the house. I also have to be very careful with what I eat, and I tend to eat bland foods when I know I’m due to go out etc. All in all IBD has ruined me completely.
–              Jennie Maccoll
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I’ve realised more about my own limitations since being diagnosed. I had pneumonia because of it and was severely ill and it made me realise that my health is more important than anything. I’ve always been a bit of a control freak, and it’s the one aspect of my life that I can’t control, which I really struggled with. As part of that I’ve had to cut back on organising my life as it stressed me out too much which was affecting me. My outlook has very much become based around whether I will okay to do something, not how much I WANT to do it. I’ve come to accept that sometimes I just need to have days where I do nothing in order to recover, which I really hate!!
–              Claire Farrow
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Being diagnosed with IBD has changed my outlook on life, it makes me appreciate the good days more because who knows when there could be a bad day. It has also changed my priorities because I now know what I can and can’t do and where my limitations lie so I know when I have to sacrifice being able to do some things to be able to do others.
–              Jane Goben
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100%! Less than a year after being diagnosed I even quit my job as a hairdresser, not just because it was difficult and tiring but because it made me realise there was more to life, especially as I didn’t even want to be a hairdresser. So I did a bit of psychology, and then moved abroad to enjoy my life once I was “well”. And I refuse to waste my time on people that create drama in their life.
My Main priority in life, not just for myself but the people around me, is happiness. I had a lot of years robbed off me, the years that are meant to be easy going and care free. I lost my freedom, my dignity, friendships and myself! So when I eventually got my life back and got well again I vowed I’d never let that happen to me again, even if I get poorly again! When I was younger I never really knew what I wanted from life, I just knew I was a career girl and I  kid myself that that would be what made me happy. But once I got poorly my whole prospective on life changed. A career didn’t matter to me anymore. I just wanted to be happy. So I cut out the people that brought me drama, looking back I probably cut too many people off, but at the time it felt right. I went back to enjoying my life, and most of all, I started telling my family I loved them, which I never did before! Going from being a career girl, my happiness and priorities are family. My family and creating a family. So now I feel like I have the right prospective on life and I’m finally Truely happy. And with that happiness it’s brought me a loving partner, and my own home – all I ever truly wanted.
–              Danielle Emma Gooch
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My life has definitely changed due to having Crohn’s. I had to stop working and my dream of going to college has ended because I’m too sick. So yes things definitely change.
–              Kelly Chamberlain-Downs
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My priorities have changed since my diagnosis, I used to be a carer for the elderly and now I can’t do that job my doctor and consultant have said that I should look for something else but signed me off for 2 yrs, I have to plan my day rather than just going out. I’ve got to make sure that I have access to a toilet at all times and I have to watch what I eat.
–              Louise Rutherford
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Since being diagnosed with IBD I wouldn’t say my outlook on life or my priorities have changed, I’ve just had to change the way I do things day to day, to accommodate it. My outlook on life is if anything more positive. I realise now more than ever that health is so important and life is short, this illness shouldn’t hold us back. My dreams and aspirations haven’t changed like travelling or owning my own business, but the way I do them will, for example I can’t have live vaccinations for exotic country’s so will have to overcome problems like that.
–              Kate Keen
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Definitely! Especially since nearly dying after a perforated bowel last year. I am less tolerant to peoples, excuse the language, bullshit and if I want to do something unless there’s some major reason that I can’t then I will as you don’t know if the chance will get taken away from you.
–              AJ Mooney
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My outlook and priorities have changed considerably since being diagnosed with IBD. It totally gives you a new perspective on life (in my opinion) and makes you realise truly what is important and what is not in life. Before being diagnosed with IBD, I suffered other physical conditions as well as ongoing mental health issues that continue now, and to be quite honest I think if I had not been diagnosed with IBD I would have drank myself into an early grave. I was very reckless in my behaviour, would rather go out and binge drink every night and get entirely wasted and destroy my body from the inside out. Being diagnosed with IBD has changed this completely. I can have one pint of lager and my stomach be in agony, and if I drink heavily I am in bed for a week and suffering, so it is just not worth it. It has made me appreciate the little things in life, like sunny days, and good, sober times with friends and family. It has made me more focused on experiences and good times rather than material possessions (mainly because it has removed my ability to work so I have zero money all the time!) My outlook on life wasn’t very great before, and it still isn’t massively good now but I would like to think that despite the trials and tribulations of this disease, overall I am a more positive and strong person because of it. Sometimes I dwell on things and I think, what’s the point? Am I just going to be like this forever? No working, barely any social life, no potential or future? And that scares me and makes me wonder what the point in being here at all is if I am just going to be like this forever, as currently I am not living, just existing. However, some days I feel raring to go and ready to fight this disease and not let it consume me and take over my life, determined to make the most of what I have got rather than focusing on what I don’t have and can’t do. It has also made me realise who my true friends are, I have lost a lot of friends since being diagnosed due to the fact I don’t go out drinking anymore and don’t have the energy to socialise a lot, so I have lost many people. But I am glad of this in a way, because the friends I DO have are amazing and stick by me no matter what, they don’t care if I don’t see them for weeks because I am ill, they will come see me if I’m too poorly and send me messages to make sure that I am okay. I have also made more friends due to this condition because I have met other sufferers who understand what I go through, and I know some of them will be friends for life.
So to answer the question, yes, my outlook on life and priorities have changed incredibly since being diagnosed with IBD. In a negative way but also in a positive way. I worry about my future and about what potential there is for me, but at the same time I feel stronger than I have ever felt before in my life and I know with the people I have around me I can continue to fight and find a cure, and make the most of the life I have got as I can’t change my illness but I can do my best to change my circumstances. It also saved my life in a way, due to calming my social life down!!
–              Abby Mae Matthews
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If you had asked me this question when I got diagnosed I would have said no. For the first 8 months of diagnosis it was as if I didn’t really have Crohn’s to be honest. I had occasional stomach ache but I was just taking Pentasa for it and nothing else. And even then I didn’t really respect the disease and was very bad at even taking my Pentasa, sometimes not taking my medicine for over a week. It was at the 8 month mark where I went into A+E with my Crohn’s suffering from abscesses which had to be drained and ultimately led to them discovering I had two very complex fistulas, an issue with my right kidney and extreme inflammation in my bowel.
I spent the next three weeks in hospital with two surgeries, my 19th birthday and had to spend the next 2 months on a liquid diet, no solid food at all as my insides were that damaged. This is when I realised how bad Crohn’s can get unmonitored and when I don’t take care of myself sufficiently. I had to leave university and move back home I dropped down to 55kg (roughly 7.5stone) when I am at a height of 6ft3. I was extremely poorly and ended up having to drop out of uni completely. This is when I started becoming severely depressed, I hadn’t got any friends around me, I wasn’t getting out the house for studies or work and suicidal thoughts had started.
I didn’t tell my family about the depression for probably close to a year when I finally broke down in front of my parents, it all came out, even told them about the suicidal thoughts I was experiencing. The first time I started noticing suicidal thoughts was when things like driving in the car with my family and all of a sudden a thought would pop up in my head would think ‘I hope we crash’ and would imagine a crash. This became progressively worse and one time I seriously considered committing when at the train station watching the trains go by really fast. I was extremely scared and I didn’t really know why I was having these thoughts, I didn’t want to be having them, it was a very dark and strange period in my life. After letting my family know I was given all the support you could ask for, they were helping me with my everyday life and issues, trying to help wherever they could. My IBD team organised for me to see a psychologist and I started having CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy). This was summer 2014, where I first thought maybe I can do this maybe I can beat this, as I was still confused as to why I was having these problems. This is when I realised my family are really there for me, especially my sisters. I was slowly improving but I realised the CBT wasn’t going to fully cure me and I started holding things in again.
This past month (april 2015) has also been an extremely tough time for me. Suicidal thoughts had started coming back and I began to feel worthless to those around me and again I had a breakdown and phoned my sister in tears. I just wanted my pain to go away and for those around me I didn’t want to hurt anyone any longer. But this time when they showed they cared and I spent the next few hours on the phone to my sister, and the next few weeks thinking about everything that has happened I had a sudden realisation. I realised that I don’t want to die and that I never really did. I was just in a dark place and was looking to extreme measures to end my pain, mentally and physically. So it has been a huge breakthrough. So to put it in short, at first it made me feel like the world was cruel and that I didn’t want to go on anymore, but it has taught me that people are there for me and that I actually want a happy future for myself. By all means I haven’t beaten my depression, but I think I can say I have beaten any future suicidal thoughts. So here’s to a happy future!
–              Finlay Hards
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Even though having UC 11 years, I’m still learning a lot as I go along. Hearing other people’s stories of how IBD has affected them has made me think of how strong we really are. People have had surgery and they still do everyday things. When we are pushed to breaking point and we want to give up, there’s that little voice telling you that you can do it, life goes on and it can be so hard and knock you down.
I’ve had moments like that and I didn’t want to do anything or go anywhere. This illness was getting to me, days even now it does still. But I won’t let it beat me, I have to get on with my life as “normal” as I possibly can. It’s ok to be angry and upset. This illness will not win, it doesn’t define who I am.
–             Lisa Cummins
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My outlook has changed, I cling on to the good days and try do what I can to compensate for the bad days, I also spoil my niece & nephew as its affected them too, I used to be the mad, crazy auntie and feel guilty on the days I can’t!
–              Gemma Willingham
So, IBD huh? Not just a toilet disease.
It’s a whole life, creating of scars, changing of priorities, taking away your dignity, giving you strength, finding you courage, making you brave, and changing your outlook on your entire life disease. Maybe we should rename it?
I relate to Abby’s post a lot, it sounds like we were on the same slippery slope before we were ‘rescued’ by IBD.
I also relate heavily to Fin’s, – the ‘I hope we crash’ thoughts – I’ve been there, and the only person that I’d ever admitted it to was the GP who then referred me on to a counsellor.
You’ve all been very brave and I can’t thank you enough for your contributions and openness.
Best be off! See you tomorrow for ‘How, if at all has IBD changed your eating habits?

One comment

  1. […] This week, to celebrate World IBD Day on May 19th and in aid of raising awareness of IBD and how it affects sufferers not just physically but mentally too, I will be releasing a series of blogs with contributions from the IBD community. Blog 4 ~*~*~*~*~ Let’s face it, sustaining a relationship is never a walk in the park at the best of times. Everybody has something about themselves that they dislike and there’s always doubt in the back of your mind that other people might not like it either. The more you like someone the more it matters what they think. At what point do you declare your incurable disease, symptoms, scars, ostomy? How much detail do you go into about your limitations? When do you tell them your story? Your real story that sums up how you felt about what happened and the scars (permanent or mental) that it has left you with? My response: I became very ill very fast. Two weeks sick at home and a week in the hospital before having my colon whipped out. My relationship was in the exciting stage of still being very new, just 3 months. I was horrified / mortified / lots of other ‘fieds’. I had always been the ‘initiator’ of naughtiness (Sorry, TMI) because I was the confident one and all of a sudden I felt disgusting. I told him to leave a few times but he didn’t. We had one of those relationships in which we fell in love fast. It brought us closer together at the time. It may have been what broke us in the end. The day after my surgery I showed him my new belly. Crying my eyes out at the time of course, he said ‘it’s okay’. He didn’t see it again for months; I didn’t ever wanna take my T-shirt off. The fertility issues caused problems. The surgeries caused problems. My anger at the world (may have been roid rage), my sadness and my refusal to go out and socialise anymore caused problems. His lack of empathy and unwillingness to take care of me when we lived together and I couldn’t even walk down the stairs to feed myself caused problems. His refusal to answer the phone or come home when I needed him caused problems. It was all too much and it became a pretty volatile relationship. The fact that he had been there and understood what had happened made it easier to stay with him. The thought of trying to explain it all to somebody else felt far too overwhelming. He told me that no one else would ever be able to put up with me and my shit, and yes it was said that no one would have me when I was scarred or wearing a bag, (whilst in a drunken stupor, but still, it was said all the same). He told me I was horrible and nasty and because of my low confidence I believed it. It was me that had caused his depression and his alcohol addiction and it was me that had taken away his chance to have children… I now know that this is not true, but I didn’t at the time and I felt guilty. I think some of it has stuck with me, even though I didn’t make him act the way he did or make him make the choices he did, my problems were the cause of some of his pain and I hate the thought that I could be the cause of somebody else’s later down the line. That’s why I stayed for so long after the love had gone. He told me that he had been there for me through all my crap, and so I owed him… Dating is hard without medical conditions. Take a look at the IBD and dating blog from last year here. Having said that, the people that are shallow enough to not want you because you’re scarred or have an ostomy are not the kind of people you want to try and build a life with anyway. When I had the surgeries last year my confidence didn’t take a knock. I’ve got this shit and I am bloody fabulous. I’ve endured more than what most people could even imagine. I’ve suffered in ways that I won’t even talk about because it’s too hard and the ostomy released me from the mental and physical pain that I’d been in for years. I felt empowered, I felt healthy and it felt good! I was straight up about the ostomy as soon as anyone took an interest in me and not one person was put off. The fact that you can’t always go out and do what you would like because of fatigue or pain does limit the opportunities to have a spontaneous day out or even meal. Most of the time, working is enough for one day and the thought of getting dressed and leaving the house again to for a meal rather than just sitting in with a takeaway is tiring in itself. I can’t help but feel that a lot of people would feel held back, or at least ‘locked in’ by me. I’m so independent that the thought of being looked after puts the fear of god in me. I know when people care they want to help and run around after you but I don’t like it. I don’t want the sympathy and the looks of ‘pity’. I just want to be able to do what I want, when I want and not have to feel guilty about it. People even look sad when you tell them that you don’t want their help. There’s just no winning! I struggle to let people in. I don’t tell ‘my story’ because I don’t want to go back to that place in my head. I can tell the physical side but not the emotional. If I’m sharing then it will have to be with someone that I am damn sure about because it’s not worth the distress of me telling it otherwise. I just wish I could be with someone and not cause them hurt and worry. Your responses: I am lucky as in feel not to inconvenienced in my illness. I had no surgeries. I carry on working and was with my partner before the diagnosis. He tries so hard to be understanding for me and some days will realise I am ill. Other days he doesn’t understand why I get so tired. But he is used to his role of being chief toilet sniffer outer if in a new area and helps as much as he can. As we both don’t really understand the tiredness that can be difficult but I got a good one who tries his best. –              Lorna Beeke **** No, because I don’t let it. I don’t just let anyone in my life anymore so if they get as far as that in my life, I know they are worth it. So if they’ve learnt to accept me and my flaws, then the relationship deserves my everything. Friendships on the other hand haven’t been as easy but that’s a different question. –              Danielle Emma Gooch **** I think that relationships are harder when you’re going through something in general. Having Crohn’s  and being in a relationship has to depend on the couple. My relationship is going strong. I have a strong partner. She stands by me in all of this stuff. –              Kelly Chamberlain-Downs **** Yes, very. When I first met my current partner, I was afraid to tell him that I have Crohn’s, but I met him online which made it a little easier. I hadn’t met him face to face yet so I just said it outright, which was okay as if he didn’t like it I just wouldn’t talk to him again. It was still a very terrifying thing to say though, even over a computer. As for people face to face, I try to avoid telling them I have it at all costs. If they ask or make rude comments about the way I am, then I just tell them. Having IBD makes it very hard to sustain any kind of relationship though. I can’t plan to go out anywhere as I don’t know how I’m going to be that day, if I’m going to be vomiting so many times, or stuck on the toilet. It’s horrible and is no way to live, probably one of the main reasons so many of us with this disease have mental health issues too. There’s no way to plan for the future, not even a few hours ahead as you never know what’s going to happen. There’s no way to be happy, truly happy, as there’s always that niggling pain in your gut telling you “hey, you’re sick!” which in turn gives me such low moods. It just sucks outright.  –              Shayne Grant **** Yes. I was married when I was first diagnosed and my ex husband didn’t believe what I was going through and tried to convince me it was in my head. He would often show signs of disgust when he learned how often and quickly I need to go to the toilet and wouldn’t allow for feelings of fatigue.  He managed to make me feel like a failure for having this illness and would make put down remarks about the scar from my surgery down my stomach. In my current relationship I did not know how to tell my partner about my IBD and how it affects me and how my eating habits have changed due to it. I was also expecting a negative response to my scar. Despite how positive he can be I often tell him that he could better with someone healthy. –              Hannah Tingley **** I count myself lucky, as I’m married with four stepchildren, and they have all accepted me and my illness whole heartedly. However, it was a rocky road before I met them, and even now attempting new friendships strikes a pang of terror and anxiety. I learned the hard way that not everyone is worth your time, and to hang onto those that are. One girl got mad and told me that I wasn’t worth HER time as I could never make time for her. Funny, because during that period I was sick as a dog and in need of surgery. Even today, as I’m writing this, I had to cancel on a new friend because of my stomach, and I’ve been having anxiety that he will give up on this, and stick to being an acquaintance. I’m not saying all people are monsters and can’t be understanding of IBD, but it grows tiresome when one cancels over and over and over because they just don’t feel well. If it bothers my own husband and kids who see me everyday but still miss me, it surely must grow old for everyone else. On a note about dating, I know it must be hard to open up and tell this new person about your illness if they don’t already know. But, again, if they are worth one iota of your time, your illness won’t matter. I wasted time on a guy who made me feel guilty when I was too sick to attend social gatherings, who wasn’t there when I was at my worst, and even left me stranded at the hospital when I was not allowed to drive home and was counting on him. Just because you are ill doesn’t mean you don’t deserve love, so hold out for it, no matter what. –              Kathrine Zahm **** I think it’s very difficult to sustain a relationship and I wouldn’t find dating easy. –              Vicki Khan **** Throughout most of my mid-20s I was in remission, so therefore my Crohn’s never really affected relationships, but the past couple of years have been a real struggle, and the chronic fatigue especially affects how people view me. I’m such a naturally busy and bubbly person, and love nothing more than being able to show someone how much they mean to me, but when my Crohn’s hits the last thing I want to do is be intimate with someone. How can you when you spend most of the day rushing to the bathroom and feeling completely drained and unworthy of love? Also never knowing how you’re going to be feeling from one day to the next is a nightmare. I’ve recently got myself back onto the dating scene, but have had to cancel dates at the last minute and it really knocks your confidence and seriously makes me question whether or not I can find someone. I don’t need someone to look after me as I’ve managed that myself for long enough, and am thankfully insanely lucky to have such a supportive family and close friends that really care about me. I just need to find someone who loves me for who I am, and can accept me, Crohn’s and all! –              Cat Lodge **** It’s made relationships difficult and different! Being ill when he wants to go to the pub or take me out for that romantic meal! –              Gemma Willingham **** I think Suffering from Crohn’s disease definitely puts a strain on any relationship and can be awkward when you’re dating. IBD can be such an awkward subject to discuss with a new person that may not understand the limitations and problems IBD brings. Then I found my amazing boyfriend who is so supportive, loving, positive and accepting of me and my Crohn’s disease. It made me feel comfortable to talk about the illness and all its gory details and made the possibility of having surgery or a colostomy bag in the future much less daunting. When you find someone like that, I don’t think it makes any difference. We have a normal and exciting relationship just like anyone else. –              Kate Keen **** Yes, so much as I isolate myself a lot. –              Diane Nugent **** The main aspect that I sometimes find awkward is when I am out on a date, or even worse when I am staying with someone or someone I’m dating is staying with me is when I need to go to the toilet so often. I get pretty self-conscious with both the frequency that I go and the smell! With regards to the longer term relationships I haven’t noticed a massive problem. I believe that if you are with the right person then they will understand what you are going through, and will do what they can to help you. I’ve not been in a relationship since my diagnosis. I know I will find it difficult to explain it to them at first and I will be nervous and scared, I just hope they can be supportive of me. But when the time is right and the right person comes along, I hope my illness won’t be a problem and they can look past all of that and love me for who I am. –              Lisa Cummins So let’s keep the faith here. The stories of happiness and understanding partners just reinforces the belief that when you find that person that slot’s perfectly in to your life like they were made to fit there, it’ll be worth all of the awkward explanations. Thank you to everyone who has contributed, I have enjoyed reading them and also feel a slight relief myself like I have just exhaled after holding my breath for a long time (maybe it’s the writing, maybe it’s the Tramodol, so just to be safe I will keep doing both). Sorry I went on for so long, but take some solace from the fact that your boredom whilst reading it made me feel better 😉 Tomorrow we will ask ‘Do you think your outlook on life/priorities have changed since being diagnosed with IBD?’ […]

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