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Ask Me About My Period 2: Slowly Bleeding to Death

[Ask Me About My Period: A Series]

Things just seemed to get worse.

I’d been falling asleep at my desk for weeks. I’d lost weight, really didn’t have an appetite – and when I did, I wanted all the food. I felt so off, so completely exhausted. And, as typical of me, I did a lot of pretending that I was okay.

But the bleeding didn’t stop. Ever. My period – my terrible period – just became… life.

I was afraid to go anywhere without a pad. (Hell, without a purse full of pads. I couldn’t even tell you the last time I could use a tampon.) And I mean PAD, the kind women use when they have bladder issues. I was going through several a day. Had extra clothes at work.

I was miserable.

I finally confided in my roommate what I was dealing with. And not because I thought she could help me, but to explain why I was a walking, talking, EXHAUSTED nightmare of a roommate that left a MESS everywhere. I just didn’t have the energy to finish anything. I was just barely getting by. And most of the time, not even that.

I was so utterly depressed. I would cry, begging God to take me if that was his plan. I couldn’t do this anymore.

A year ago – a year ago today – she told me to shut up and get in the car.

The night before she had said if I wasn’t feeling better the next morning, she was taking me to urgent care.

(I found out later that everyone knew something was wrong, they just weren’t sure what or how to help.)

I would have never gone on my own. I even told her that morning I just wanted to go to work. (I *had* to go to work.)

“Shut up and get in the car.”

The nurses and receptionists were all looking at me, watching me, as I filled out the paperwork. (I had to sit down at the counter/desk to fill it out – I hardly had the energy to stand. Had started using a cane.) And the doctor saw me right away. He touched my eyelids, my lips – “Do you have any blood in you?”

What?

I needed to go to the Emergency Room right away. He’d call ahead to let them know I was coming.

Checked in there. Waited. More waiting. Tests. Moved into a room. Sleeping – I did a lot of sleeping.

Finally something.

My hemoglobin was at a 5.7. (For reference, it’s supposed to be a 12. At 7, they do a blood transfusion.)

I was getting checked into the hospital…

Ask Me About My Period 1: Everyone Has a Story

[Ask Me About My Period: A Series]

Period.

A taboo subject.

Even amongst groups of women.

Never in front of men (they don’t *want* to know).

And doctors, for the most part, don’t listen.

So, women suffer (if they even realize they are) in silence.

At first, I thought nothing of it. I’ve never been regular. And the longer I went without having a period, the worse it got.

But this time it was… different.

I didn’t know who to talk to.

Mom had been gone for almost a year. I had fired my OBGYN because her bedside manner was atrocious.

I felt lost… alone. Scared.

A friend of mine, in passing, said she had an OB appointment, and I asked her where she went. Tampa. The guy was “great.” I decided to go there.

I left feeling rage.

He didn’t listen, didn’t understand, didn’t care. Despite me trying to explain just how much blood I was losing. Despite my fears and concerns.

“This is what happens when women get old.”

Old? I had never even considered myself old before.

“You just need to get used to it. This can go on for years.”

Get used to it??!! Get used to feeling constantly tired, to feeling ugly and disgusting and gross? To be afraid to leave the house? For years??!!

My insurance allows you to speak to a doctor via video chat and I set up an appointment. This time with a female. And I was picky.

I just wanted someone to hear me…

She was no different. Rude, abrupt. Made me feel silly, stupid. “He should have used the word perimenopause. Maybe then you would have listened to him.”

Perimenopause. The phase before menopause.

A word I had never really heard before. But things made sense. No wonder women are so angry during menopause – they bleed half to death during perimenopause and doctors call them old, tell them there is nothing they can do about it.

I even (half) joked with older ladies I’m friends with about it, saying we should talk about this subject more so that women are more prepared for this stage in life.

I was opening the door… and so many people had a story.

Maybe they were right. Maybe this was normal. Maybe I did just need to get used to it. Maybe.

Emmaus Retreat Weekend

For the past year, it seemed like almost everyone that I came into contact with was telling me how amazing the Emmaus Weekend is and how I just HAVE to do it because it will change my life.

I really felt like this was a Holy Spirit moment (you’ll get used to me talking about those) because, in my personal reflection time, I had been thinking a lot about going on a retreat and getting to know the Lord more.

Based on what people said, I knew this one was going to be emotional, and as I worked through some of the emotional cleaning house that became the motto of 2023, I did a lot of praying on whether this was the place for me and, more importantly, whether this was the right TIME for me. (Yes, I did make a list of reasons why this was not the right time for me.)

You see, people who have attended Emmaus do not give you much information on what happens at Emmaus (it’s like Vegas). I will admit that this was very frustrating for me, leading up to the weekend AND while on the weekend, because I like to know what happens (I’m a rules and agenda kinda gal). It makes sense, though, as every person who goes through this retreat is going to gain something different because we are in different places on our path, and if I had known the things that were going to happen before they happened, I wouldn’t have gained as much as I did. Every piece of the weekend fit together perfectly, and each “surprise” broke down my wall just a little bit more. (I had a rather high wall, and there is still quite a bit of it in place, but this was just the beginning of the construction that needs to be done to it.)

Starting on my ride home, the thought/idea had been in my head that I want to write about my experience, careful not to share anything that would ruin the moment for the next person (yes, now I am one of those people that tell everyone how much it will change their life), but every time I sat down at my computer to begin writing, I just… couldn’t.

Side story: I have struggled with writers’ block for some time now. To make a long story so short it’s almost cryptic, several years ago (another lifetime, it seems), I was bullied by another blogger, someone I thought was my friend. The worst part was that he was telling people that I was the bully, and people believed him. It has made doing anything with my blogs… emotionally painful. But I refuse to give up – I am just sure that one day I’ll be able to do this again. (Maybe today is the day, and maybe soon there will be a post about the struggle.)

I blamed still processing – and to be honest, I am still processing a lot of the things that came up for me – and almost decided to not say a thing because it’s far too late for any of it to even matter. (That’s a brain trap I fall into all the time. There may be a post about that in the future, too.)

I feel emotionally drained, emotionally raw, to this day. Not just sharing and contemplating stuff in my life – my story – some things I hadn’t thought about, had almost forgotten, or even thought were healed – but hearing the stories of some amazing women, in talks throughout the weekend and in sharing in my small group. The empathy and love I had for these strangers (I did not know the people in my small group before that weekend, but did know a few of the other attendees and people putting on the retreat), and the empathy and love they had for me, was powerful, and lifelong friendships were made between lots of us.

But I almost didn’t go.

It’s silly, really. Silly now that I look back at it.

I prayed on this for months and made the decision, after a Come & See (and personal reflection story told by an Emmaus sister at the Come & See), that I was going. I even told them that evening before I left the Parish Hall. But, as happens when you grow closer to God, demons try to stand in your way.

And Satan, he uses people that are currently in your life as his pawns. (It’s so easy for him to grab ahold of us – through sin, through anger, through hatred – he uses the things that we dislike about ourselves to turn us against people that we once cared about.)

On the day we were leaving for Emmaus, the Devil started his push to get me to quit before I had even started. I almost overslept, I wasn’t feeling well, and earlier that week I had stepped on some glass in a parking lot that left me with stitches and using a cane. (I’m stronger than that.) I overpacked (don’t all women?) and forgot the most important thing – my hairspray. (You just don’t know the Lady Gaga monstrosities that I have woken up with, hairstyles that can only be tamed with some water, a blow dryer, and a few sprays from a bottle of hairspray.) After joking around about it on Facebook, a friend of mine offered to bring me a bottle, and she did. (She reminded me that I was going to be very out of my comfort zone all weekend and I should make sure I have hairspray if I’m going to need hairspray, and thank goodness she did because it was BAD hahaha.)

When I got to the church parking lot, I was met at the car by someone I had seen but never met before, who took my luggage, gave me a piece of paper to put in my front window (so no one would tow my car), and told me where to park.

They had my luggage… There was no changing my mind now. (Trust me, I thought about it.)

I was one of the first to arrive, but it was already so loud, and because of that, the Parish Hall seemed so full. And the more people showed up, the louder it got and the more crowded it felt.

The anxiety I felt in that room, the overload I felt because of all the noise, the fear (that’s a strong word but it works) I felt going on this retreat… I wanted to curl up in a corner and pretend I wasn’t there.

To add to all this, someone I have been struggling with since the beginning of the new year came in, floating around like she had reason to be there, making it all about her.

The anger that I felt was uncontrollable. And I couldn’t calm down.

I went through the beginning ceremony, the welcome and our priest’s blessing, and went to the car with my small group for the weekend. We chit-chatted on the way there as I sat back and looked out the window, eating a bag of trail mix.

When we arrived, we met even more of the people who were putting the event on and were given some rules for times when we were not on the third and fourth floors (the monks live and work on the first and second) before we headed inside to see where we would be spending most of our time – the Lake Room and Library. (We would not be going to our rooms until the end of every night, so everything we needed, we needed to bring with us throughout the day. …….. Did I mention I overpack?)

My small group was unexpected and a Godsend. As I said, I knew no one in it, and that is just what I wanted. (I would have had a hard time sharing with someone in there I knew – if I wanted them to know, I would have already shared with them.) They were brave women who had done brave things, strong women who had struggled. I was the youngest, and felt like these people saw their daughters in me, though we had different stories, and saw themselves as a mother-figure to me.

I talked a lot about my mother that weekend, though I had no intention going in to bring her up. From day one, everything was a reminder of her. I had thought of things I hadn’t thought of in some time. I felt old hurts with the same pain I had when they first began. I was there to grow closer to God, but God needed me to let go of some of my load before that could happen. He needed me to start forgiving myself. And in forgiving myself, I could begin forgiving her, and my sister, for so much.

I stood in front of this group of women, women on the retreat and women who had taken their Emmaus walk before us, women who came to help us down our road as others had done for them, and I shared my “darkest secret,” unable to hold back tears, that I could not believe God loves me because there is nothing to love about me. In theory, I know that he loves me – Jesus DIED for me! – but the hatred I have felt for myself, the blame I have taken on, the repeated record of my mother and sister telling me all the things no one could ever love about me, those were all things I just could not look past. Over the course of the weekend, though, He had shown me this great love He had for me, He had loved me through these women, a very real, and palpable love.

Throughout the weekend, there were reminders (Holy Spirit moments) of my mother. The coincidences (if you believe in those things) showed me that she had a hand in the entire weekend, because there were things that only she would know, but she would have known I’d notice. (Like a picture of a little white church.) I felt loved, like she was reminding me that she did love me, like she was apologizing to me for not reminding me of that every day of my life. I have had such anger for her (another story for another time), but I went home feeling that anger soothed over, that wound beginning to heal.

I laughed and I cried. I felt empathy and showed compassion. I hugged. I shared and I listened. Evern when I hurt the most, I made sure that the people around me knew that I cared, knew that they mattered.

My advice to you: If someone invites you on an Emmaus Weekend (you don’t have to be Catholic to go), take them up on that offer. It really will make such a difference in your life if you open yourself up and let it.

Favorite Saint

Catholics spend the first two days of November each year celebrating the dead. November 1st is All Saints Day (a holy day of obligation), dedicated to the saints of the Church – all those who have attained heaven. November 2nd is All Souls Day, dedicated to those who have died but not yet reached heaven.

This morning on Facebook, a friend of mine asked his followers “Who is your favorite saint?” and that question has been on my mind all day.

This was an easy answer for me. A few months ago I sarcastically looked up the patron saint of sarcasm… and was not disappointed.

Ladies and Gentleman, I give you St Genesius of Rome.

Genesius was an actor, an actor that often made fun of Christianity/Catholicism in his plays. One day, while performing in a play that mocked Baptism, he had a conversion experience that made him a believer. When he proclaimed his faith on stage (in front of Emperor Diocletian), and refused to renounce his new beliefs, even when threatened with death, he was beheaded, becoming a martyr, having been killed for his faith.

He is the patron saint of actors, clowns, and comedians, as well as other stage performers. He is also, interestingly enough, the patron saint of converts and torture victims.

And They Said 2023 Couldn’t Be Worse than 2021 and 2022…

I came here to do an update post on what has been going on in my life over the last year… only to realize that it had been a lot longer since I had last posted. Which means I have a lot more to update y’all on.

We’ll start at the beginning of the year:

Instead of doing resolutions, which I inevitably fail at within a month or two (as most of us do), I started using January as a planning month, a prep month, for the new year. This has been going on for a few years now, and has worked out relatively well, though it does take a little bit of getting used to. With January being all about planning, each month after has it’s own goal – eleven things that I find important to where I am at, eleven things that will help me to curate my life to what I want it to be.

This year was no different. Several of my goals for the year had to do with my faith and I especially looked forward to those.

But 2023 had different plans for me.

In January, my mother and I both came down with the flu. (The flu. Not COVID. We both tested several times and the results were always negative.) This lasted a little over a month, and was awful.

I went back to work in mid-February, and my mom, having contracted the flu after I did, was feeling better, but was not quite 100%. She struggled with being hungry and having the energy to do anything, but that’s how we all feel when we’re sick, right?

Unfortunately, a few weeks later (February 27th), she passed away.

She was not just my mom. She was my best friend, my roommate, my business partner (in MeghanH Editing), and my Disney-trip pal. And she is greatly missed.

Her passing was completely unexpected. In fact, I spoke to her earlier that day while I was at work. She called me to tell me that the Walmart app wasn’t working, thinking (for some reason) that I would be mad at her because of it. She knew I had to go to the store after work and was trying to make life easier on me, as going there is out of my way. I told her to quit being silly and that I would call her after I left to see if there was anything else we needed. When I left work, I tried calling her two or three times, but she didn’t answer. (Honestly, this was typical of my mother, but thinking back about it now, I remember having an uneasy feeling that I couldn’t pinpoint at the time.) I ended up not stopping, instead heading straight home. When I walked in the garage (we typically went in and out that way), I announced I was home and chuckled when I asked her why she wasn’t answering the phone. She didn’t respond (also typical of my mother), and I talked to her as I was walking through the house looking for her – telling her that I didn’t stop at the store on the way home, even saying I was considering calling in the next day because I just wanted to spend the whole day doing nothing with her. When I got to the other side of the house, where her room is located, I kind of stopped before proceeding around the corner and through the door. I knew immediately when I saw her that she wasn’t there anymore, even though I could see her body lying on the bed. But it didn’t quite hit home in my brain because I said her name a few times, shook her shoulder (she was cold), even told her that it wasn’t funny (my mom had a wicked morbid sense of humor). I did all the things that you are supposed to do when you find your loved one deceased, though I can barely remember much of it all. Thankfully, the first responders sort of took care of everything after that, including keeping me sane for the several hours that they were here, letting me talk about her, talking to me about their dogs, even trying to get me to adopt the station cat that none of them wanted. When it was finally time for the funeral home to take her body, I asked Bill, one of the firemen, if I had to be there for that. He wasn’t sure where I planned to go and seemed a bit confused until I told him that if I watched them try to take her, there was a good chance I would not let it happen. He walked me outside and we stood in my side yard talking about the stars in the sky and how big the moon seemed that night. Before I knew it, all of them were standing around me, and talking to me, kept moving so that my back would be to the road when she drove past. And there we stood for another twenty minutes before I was finally able to walk back inside my house and let them all go. The silence was deafening. I just sat in there and cried.

Life changes in ways you never expect them to. And that was the first day of my unexpected life change.

The next day I had to call my sister (I am the oldest of two, and my mom and I had been estranged from her for over a year) and my aunt (my mother was the oldest of seven, but only one was in contact with her at the time of her passing, a newly rekindled relationship that both were excited for), one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do. My sister decided she was coming out for a few days, my aunt wanted to know when the funeral would take place so she could be there.

I did not have a funeral for my mother. And here is why. My mom would have hated it. She used to joke about how funerals were for people who should have treated the deceased better in their lifetime to come and “mourn” and she wanted nothing to do with that. And every time she would say it, I’d remember this guy at my father’s funeral crying and saying how much he loved my dad, how they were best friends. When he walked away, my mom very nonchalantly said to me and my sister: “They hadn’t seen each other in seven years and your father hated him.” Hate is a very strong word, and one my father would not have used, but I understood what she was trying to say.

Instead I had a ceremony at her graveside. We’ll talk about that in a second.

My mother was a very faithful Catholic and always seemed very proud that this was something she passed on to her oldest daughter. Even though she was now gone, and all I wanted to do was stay in my house and never see anyone in the real world again, I knew that me not going to things I planned to do at church would anger her, so a few days later I went to a talk that Father was doing on forgiveness, something I had been planning to go to since I heard about it. It was the first time that I told anyone from church (other than a different priest) that she had died. I just sort of blurted it out when she asked me how I was doing, not sure how it was I was even supposed to tell people this. Within a few minutes, she had told other people I knew there (we had all been part of a year long Lay Ecclesial Ministry program), taking the horrible pressure off of me to say it.

I was convinced and always had been that when mom died, they would have to commit me because I would not be able to handle it (and those first few weeks, I didn’t handle it well at all). I was most sure of the fact that I would be all alone. I found out that night that I was not. People I had liked and enjoyed speaking to, people I thought were just classmates, proved to be way more than that, way more than even friends. They proved to be family.

To celebrate my mother’s life in a way I found most fitting, a friend of mine (a co-worker that my mother loved) and I went to a plant show (my mother and I both gardened quite a bit together) and a Strawberry Festival together. (The plan had been for my mother to join us, and I feel like she really was there with us.)

My sister came out that same day, and while I was at mass the next day, where my mother was being remembered (my sister is a lapsed Catholic with no interest in setting foot in a church even for her mother), my sister went to my dad’s grave to see him privately.

The next day we went to the funeral home where just the two of us were there for her burial. Bill (yes another Bill), the man from the funeral home who helped me set everything up, and the guy who drove the hearse were the only ones there with us. As I wanted it. As I think my mom would have wanted it. My sister and I have always had a very interesting relationship – at times close, at times the worst of enemies – and having not seen each other in person in over ten years, and being together after my mother died, the awkward between us was sometimes so thick it was suffocating. Neither one of us are or were willing to be emotional in front of each other and have the same wicked morbid sense of humor that my mother had, something I had warned Bill about, so to keep ourselves from showing emotion, we both asked questions about the apparatus that was lowering my mother’s coffin into the hole, curious if it had ever broken. (I had seen an episode of Murder, She Wrote where the coffin had fallen over in the middle of a scuffle, and the body fell out, but it wasn’t the body of the person who was supposed to be in there.) When my sister asked the hearse driver what the weirdest thing was he’d seen at a funeral, half listening I swear I heard him say something about a sword fight (and now I expect someone to have a sword fight with my sister when my time comes). We decided after that we would drive to Orlando and walk around Disney Springs, just me and her together.

The next day was the ceremony at her graveside. Nothing really completely planned out, as there hadn’t been much time for that. Just someone from the church coming to say a few words. My aunt and her boyfriend came from Tampa to be there. A couple of those friends I mentioned above came, two unable to because one was comforting a dying fur-baby at the time, the other comforting her, both there in spirit by my side. My favorite Deacon (and now my Superman) and his wife also attended. That day I was very angry about the situations graveside, but looking back later, I knew it was all my mom’s doing. You see, the “someone from the church” never arrived. And it wasn’t until that Deacon I spoke of called around to find out when the person would be arriving that we found out the person would not be arriving because no one had told him to come. (Apparently there had been some miscommunication in the office, miscommunication I hope never happens to anyone else ever.) The one day that Deacon forgets his book is the one day he has to sort of ad-lib a graveside service (with the help of the internet and the Holy Spirit). And to be honest, I think THAT is also the way my mother would have wanted it. Deacon’s wife said a few words, I just… couldn’t, and thankfully my sister chose not to speak aloud the poem she brought along with her (my mother would have hated that haha). Everyone went back to their life (some had taken time off from work that day to come out and be there with me) and my family (me, sister, aunt + her boyfriend) went to Cracker Barrel, one of my mother’s favorite restaurants, for lunch before my sister and I went off to do a bit of site-seeing and retail therapy. (Interestingly enough, when I got home, by myself, the first thing I did was go out and do some gardening. I felt so very close to mom that day.)

My sister headed home the next day. I had hoped we would be able to spend some more time together, and maybe have a relationship now, but alas, that never did happen.

A month TO THE DAY of my mom’s death, my job (of over a year and a half) fired me. The first time I have ever been fired from a job. The reasons given were bogus: My customer service (I had actually just had three compliments that day alone, and was mentioned weekly in customer surveys) and my behavior (I don’t even have bad behavior outside of work). While my manager escorted me from the building, me unable to say goodbye to the team member I had been working with all day or the three customers I had been helping before being called back to the office to be fired over speaker phone, she said to me, “You’ve just been… different… since your mother died.” That comment hung in the air as I stood there looking at her, unsure that I had actually heard the words that came out of her mouth, before she slightly shrugged and I turned to go.

To say it’s been an interesting year is an understatement.

The plan had been to celebrate our birthdays once again at Disney (us being two days apart), and that good friend who went to the Strawberry Festival with me has a husband who works for Disney, her intended gift to us being to take us the park of our choosing. My mother and I both always loved Epcot. So, for my birthday, that is where we went. Epcot. And we made sure to go on Frozen Ever After, one of my mother’s favorite rides, and Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure because she would have loved that. Two days before, for her birthday, a couple of the ladies (this friend, one of the friend’s from the graveside, and the two who missed it) went to a gorgeous tea house in Lake Alfred, a place that I had heard about and wanted to take mom, but unfortunately never had the chance to. She was remembered both days as we enjoyed things she would have loved, and knowing I had such good friends there with me made it even better.

I loved my mother. It was me and her (and my cat) against the world. We did everything together. There were so many things that I didn’t do because I didn’t want to take time away from me and her. And she, for the most part, encouraged that, because she loved spending time with me as much as I loved spending time with her.

Since her death, I have been overloaded and overwhelmed with emotions. Those “stages” of grief have come all at once, and are sometimes debilitating. But at the same time, I feel like I have finally been let out of a cage that I was part of putting myself in. I finally feel like I can fly.

My relationship with those ladies I mentioned above has continued, I have made more friends on top of that, and have started dating – DATING! – something I haven’t done in over ten years. I have joined organizations at church and found a purpose again, something I fear I had lost when my mother died. I have a life that I never expected to have, and though I miss her more than words can describe, I have found a happiness I never thought I could have. I have had a renewal to my faith, found a love for myself I never had, and can look in the mirror and really like what I see, despite my flaws.

So… yeah… in some ways 2023 has sucked. And in some ways, 2023 has made me look forward to what 2024 has to offer. And that makes me happy.