Dear Doctor,
I still remember the first day we
met. I was looking forward to the meeting, finally getting to see a “Pain
Medicine Doctor”. I went into that meeting so optimistic: I hoped that you
would finally have the answers I had been waiting for. A way to stop living in
constant pain. A way to get back to living the life pain took away from me.
And to your credit, you did have
some answers. No clear ‘magic bullet’, but you did suggest other tests I should
have done, medications we could try, and other specialists who might be able to
help. Most importantly, you assured me that you would help me, that you believed
in my pain and you would work with me to make it better.
But I was also very disappointed. I
had hoped that you would be able to take away the pain, but you made it clear
that wasn’t possible. Over two years later, I still remember only one thing you
told me. You had asked what I was doing before I got sick, and I explained how
I had loved hiking with friends and farming. You told me “If two years from now
you want to be hiking, you need to learn to hike with pain. I won’t be able to take
away the pain, but I can help make it more manageable and I can teach you how
to hike anyway.”
I love hiking |
Today, two years later, I am infinitely grateful for what you told me. First of all, it showed that you believed me. After being told so frequently that the pain was “all in my head”, this was a huge relief. It also showed that you understood the effect the pain was having on my life. Unlike some other doctors, you didn’t tell me that I should just “start running again” or pretend the pain wasn’t there. You didn’t blame me, and you didn’t make me feel like I was too weak to handle the pain.
Instead, you gave me hope. It took
me a while to see it, because it wasn’t the hope that I was expecting. I had
assumed a pain medicine doctor would get rid of pain, which you didn’t. But you
did give me hope that I would be able to get my life back. You were honest, and
didn’t pretend it would be easy, but you made it sound possible. At a time when
I couldn’t see any future for myself, you showed me that one was still
possible.
Not only did you give me hope, but
you told me that you would help me get there. You told me that you would help
me learn to manage the pain. You made living with pain a skill that could be
learned, instead of an inherent trait that I thought I was too weak to handle.
You made me believe that my life could get better. And unlike the many doctors
before you who had been eager to pass me off, you assured me that you would help
me along the way.
I’m writing this letter two years
ago after an incredible weekend of hiking. During a 20 mile hike, I remembered
what you had told me. And I realized that I am living a life I wouldn’t have
believed is possible: working a job I love, in graduate school, and I get to go
hiking. There are days when it is unbelievably challenging and when I am
overwhelmed by the pain. But even with the pain, there are days when I am able
to go hiking and do the things I love. And for that, I am infinitely grateful.
From my hike last weekend |
Thank you for everything you did to help me. Most of all, thank you for
believing in me when I couldn’t. Thank you for reminding me that hope can take
many forms, and for helping me build a life I love.
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