It Will Change Your Life # 5

November 5th 2019 – the Surgeon.

Life with an invisible illness is an interesting voyage. People cannot see what you are going through, what you suffer- physically, emotionally, psychologically, socially –  your invisible scars – so it’s hard for others to empathize.

People would often say to me, ‘Your life has been so easy. Everything just falls into place. Good things always happen to you. You’re always smiling.’ It used to frustrate me. They had no idea what I was going through. They had no idea I worked hard to be where I was in my career, my family, my three children. Nothing ever “fell into place”. It was earned.

During the hardest time of my Meniere’s disease, I was in very deep and dark depression that I couldn’t climb out of. Yet, I kept smiling. It was easier that way. I would patch up the cracks in my mask before I put it on and met with others. If I could meet others … if my shadow, Meniere’s, hadn’t imprisoned me for five hours of violent, debilitating spinning that would land me in hospital at times.

In hindsight, I’m glad my illness is invisible. It makes it easier to pretend that I am okay. I don’t have people avoiding me like I have a contagious condition. I don’t have people looking at me with well-meaning concern, or that “pity” look. I hate the pity look. I don’t have people devaluing the severity of my symptoms, like:

‘It’s okay, dear, we all get dizzy sometimes.’

‘Oh, I have tinnitus too. It’s so common. When it’s really quiet, I can hear a little “sssssssssss”. You’ll be fine!’

My friend had Meniere’s disease – he got a bit faint sometimes. He went to the doctor and is cured.’

Meniere’s disease. No cause. No cure. Yet.

Good things are coming. I know it. I follow the research.

My Cochlear Surgeon is younger than me, as my ENT had said.

I follow the surgeon into his office, my shadow, Meniere’s, behind me, then my husband, and anxiety far behind. The more I know about the Cochlear Implant the less anxious I feel. And I am so thankful to hundreds of people with Cochlear Implants who have reached out to me. The world is a wonderful place.

The surgeon tells me that my ENT believes my Meniere’s disease has “burnt out”.

“Burnt out”. There’s those two words that float around in Meniere’s groups.

According to menieres-disease.co.uk, “the term ‘burn out’ is frequently used to describe Meniere’s as though it is the end of the line, that it has finished. However, it really means that the vertigo attacks have disappeared as the vestibular function has now been destroyed. The disease continues to progress as hearing is completely lost, tinnitus and fullness will continue even after burn out.”

‘Hmmm … I’m not so sure that it has burned out. I still get little mini spins at times,’ I say. And it’s definitely not BPPV.

I am questioned about the history of my Meniere’s, then the surgeon asks me to sit on a stool so he can look inside my ears.     

‘Spin to your left,’ he says.

‘Spin?’ I say with a smirk, referring to the spinning of vertigo, then swivel the chair to the left, slowly.

Turn to your left,’ he says, smiling. Ah – he has a sense of humour. Good. He uses the auriscope to look inside my ear canal.

Turn … to your right,’ he says with a smile in his voice. I swivel the chair to the right, slowly, and he checks inside my ear canal.

The remainder of the appointment flows with quick succession:

Surgery date: 19 December. Overnight stay. $25, 000 Cochlear Implant cost covered by the health fund. Any questions?

I take a deep breath. ‘Will my vertigo return?’

He considers my question, then says, ‘I don’t expect it to, but there are no guarantees. For Meniere’s patients who still have some balance cells left, I usually wash out the inner ear with gentamicin while I am in there as an insurance that they will not have vertigo anymore, but since you have been so good for quite a while without vertigo, I won’t do that, in case it upsets anything.’

I nod, feeling a little numb. There is still no certainty that my vertigo will not return. How can it be burnt out if the vertigo returns? My shadow, Meniere’s, crosses its arms and grins.

Before I leave, the surgeon gives me a form for an MRI and CT Scan, and tells me I need balance rehabilitation before I have surgery, and to continue afterward. I raise my eyebrows and nod. I have never had balance rehabilitation; I just relearned my balance to walk by myself after the gentamicin was injected into my middle ear in 2004.  

I leave the surgeon’s office. Anxiety is waiting.

Next – MRI and CT SCAN

About this blog …

My Shadow, Meniere’s, is not just about the physical aspect of a Cochlear Implant – you can research about them online. I am sharing the human side of the journey towards a Cochlear Implant – feelings, appointments, the process, apprehensions, successes, highs and lows as I step into the next chapter of my Meniere’s journey.

I am mindful of those who also have incurable diseases or are walking the path of a diagnosis that is life changing. My blog never aims to undermine the severity of anyone else’s illness, disability or journey. We all deal with life with different tolerances, attitudes and thresholds.  ‘My Shadow -Meniere’s’ is my journey. It is my hope that it can help others with Meniere’s disease, or hearing loss, or simply when life has a plot twist.

I also acknowledge those before me, who have already had a Cochlear Implant. Your experiences, advice and suggestions are welcome.

Meniere's and me

It Will Change Your Life #1

Monday, 21.10.19

The day is overcast, mirroring my mood. Today, I go for a Cochlear Implant “work-up” for my left ear. I’ve been considering a Cochlear Implant for a while, but have bathed in the delusion that somehow, my hearing will come back. But of course, it won’t – it’s just my eternal hope that floats around me as I journey through the incurable Meniere’s disease.

My symptoms started in 1995. Ear fullness, like I had been swimming and still had water stuck in my ear canal. Bouts of unpredictable, violent vertigo. Tinnitus. And then came the hearing loss. Gradually.

I was 28. ‘Meniere’s is more common in men over 50,’ my ENT told me. Online information at the time backed up the statement.

Today, I sit looking out the window at the dark, heavy clouds, painting the state of my heavy heart and dark emotion. I’m 24 years into my Meniere’s journey, yet I’m filled with tingles of anxiety travelling over my skin like waves, with one big question bouncing around in my mind.

If I have a Cochlear Implant, will the disabling vertigo of Meniere’s disease return?

And I’m not just talking about being ‘dizzy’. The vertigo of Meniere’s disease for me was the most abhorrent, violent, room spinning. Totally debilitating. Hold on to the floor even though you are already on lying on the floor, stare at one spot on the wall for four or five hours until the spinning subsides. Beyond exhausting.   

And let’s not forget the relentless, vicious puking that feels like you’re about to turn inside-out, dehydrating the body so much you need to be transported to emergency at the hospital.

If you ever want to know how vertigo of Meniere’s feels, sit on an office swivel chair and get someone to spin you around as fast as they can, non-stop. Imagine not being able to stop it. For hours and hours and hours. Then imagine never being able to predict when vertigo will hit – because when it does, you are stuck wherever you are, and you absolutely can not move, as it will make the spinning impossibly worse. This is the vertigo of Meniere’s. Hell.

In 2004 I made the choice to destroy the balance cells in my left ear to stop the debilitating, violent vertigo. The bottle of gentamicin was now my hope. My ENT injected it into my middle ear.

Imagine for one moment, having to make the choice about destroying your balance cells. Balance. Yeah – that thing. Something you never even think about. Your body just does it for you.

I relearned my balance and retaught myself to walk with a new normal, using my eyesight as my guide for balance. But compared to the unpredictable vertigo, the destruction to my vestibular system was an answered prayer. It changed my life. It gave me my life back. With physical limitations. I was no longer spiralling down into the darkness of the Meniere’s prison where there is no escape.

But back to my question – if I have a Cochlear Implant, will the disabling vertigo return? And if it does, what does it mean for my life after living vertigo free for 15 years? 

eyeandear.org.au Adapted from images courtesy of Cochlear Ltd

I’m taking a risk. I know that. The thought of having vertigo again terrifies me. My vertigo years were a very, very dark emotional place to be. Once upon a time I had a life and lived it fully – working full-time in a job I loved, physically able to do what I pleased, and engaged in a social life. I was happy. Then Meniere’s hit, and took it all away. Every waking moment was lived in fear of a vertigo attack. Sleep was not even a safe place. I would wake in the night, spinning violently, unable to close my eyes for four or five hours until it stopped.

I need answers from my ENT and my Otologist whom I am yet to see. Can my Meniere’s vertigo return due to the Cochlear Implant?

I walk out the front door and lock it behind me, anxiety joining me for the Cochlear Implant work-up appointment. Anxiety. We have been friends for a long time. Introduced to each other by my dark, dark shadow, Meniere’s disease.

Friends already fitted with Cochlear Implants tell me it will change my life … I sigh and wonder which way it will change my life.

Just breathe, I tell myself …

To be continued.

Julieann is a multi-published author and artist who is continually inspired by the gift of imagination and the power of words. When she is not disappearing into her imaginary worlds as Julieann Wallace – children’s author, or as Amelia Grace – fiction novelist, she is working as a secondary art teacher, editor, book designer, and book magician for other authors. Julieann’s 7th novel ‘The Colour of Broken’ with a main character with Meniere’s disease hit #1 on Amazon in its category twice – all profits are donated to Meniere’s research. Julieann is a self-confessed tea ninja and Cadbury chocoholic, has a passion for music and art, and tries not to scare her cat, Claude Monet, with her terrible cello playing.

The Color of Broken: Grace, Amelia: 9780648084662: Amazon.com: Books

The Colour of Broken: Grace, Amelia: 9780648084624: Amazon.com: Books

Amazon.com: Daily Meniere’s Journal (9780648424451): Wallace, Julieann: Books