The Journey of a Lifetime is Always Worth the Wait
Have you ever had THAT feeling? The feeling in the depths of your soul that God is about take you on an exciting adventure?
I’ve
had IT a few times in my life.
When
my immunologist told me that he sent my medical case to The National Institutes
of Health, I just knew I was on the brink of something life-changing.
In 2010, I was at
a routine follow-up exam with my immunologist. During that appointment, my
doctor informed me that he sent my case to be evaluated at The National
Institutes of Health, (The NIH). There
was a new disease that was discovered at the NIH called DOCK8, and the symptoms
I had exhibited were very similar to those for this illness. My doctor
presented my case to the immunologist at the NIH who discovered DOCK8 in hopes
that she would accept me into that protocol.
He told me there
was a possibility I could receive a phone call from the NIH if she felt I was
an appropriate candidate for DOCK8. I didn’t fully understand the type of
medical jargon my immunologist was using, but immediately an excitement came
over me. For the first time in my life I thought, this could be it. I may
finally know what had been causing my illness.
If you’re confused about what
the NIH is and what protocol means, don’t feel bad because it’s taken me a long
time to understand what it fully entails. The NIH is our government’s
medical-based research facility located in Bethesda, Maryland. At this
hospital many new diseases are discovered, known illnesses are researched, and
treatment and medications are explored as solutions to help the quality of life
for people who suffer from diseases.
A protocol is the guidelines, rules, and symptoms a person must
fit into and show signs of to be accepted into a NIH doctor’s particular
research program.
In order for me to
be accepted into DOCK8’s research protocol, not only did I have to exhibit the
characteristics of the disease, but I had to fit into the set guidelines and
rules this particular research doctor had deemed necessary.
The next few months, I
was on the edge of my seat waiting to be contacted by the NIH. In my heart of
hearts, I knew it was just a matter of time before someone would reach out to
me.
After three months
of waiting, I received THE phone call. The woman who contacted me was the
research doctor’s nurse and he explained that her boss believed my case DID fit
the DOCK8 protocol. The first step they required was preliminary blood work at
Nationwide Children’s to assure my labs lined up with what my medical records
showed. She cautioned me to not get my
hopes up, because there was still a chance my bloodwork results would not fit in
the guidelines. Once again I understood the
reason she cautioned me, but the feeling was still strong— the story God was
writing for me had a new exciting chapter I was about to live.
After several months of the
NIH studying my bloodwork, the results came back. I received the word I DID
INDEED fit the DOCK8 protocol; and the research doctor wanted to set-up a week
for me and my parents to come to the NIH for more testing.
Even the research nurse told me I might not
have DOCK8 and more than likely, the doctor and her team would never unearth what
was wrong with me— it didn’t damper my spirits. There was a good chance I would
only give them valuable research through my case and nothing more. It was something they said to every patient,
so false hope is not given and end in disappointment. I understood
their message, but once again, I felt the Holy Spirit whispering in my heart I
wouldn’t be one of those patients.
My first visit with the
NIH was in August of 2011. That week was
a whirlwind of tests, procedures, and being seen by multiple speciaists .
By the end of the week my parents and I were
physically and mentally exhausted from walking to one part of the hospital to
another one and sharing every piece of my medical history from birth to
present. Through all of the testing, I endured that week, it was determined I
did not have DOCK8. Despite these
findings, my research doctor assured me her and her team were committed to my
case.
If you were wondering
was I disappointed I didn’t have DOCK8—Definitely Not! It would have been a quicker journey to
finally receive answers, but I believed God had an exciting twist He would
reveal in His time. I also came to see God
has given me another team of amazing doctors and nurses of whom I have become
very close.
Since becoming a patient
at the NIH, I have found some of the public’s persona of this facility is
negative. People assume because it’s a
government research hospital, the people who work there are robots treating
their patients like test tubes and not like people. What I have come to discover is this is not accurate
at all. Every doctor and nurse I have
come in contact with has been so personable and they have respected me as
person. What has impressed me the most
with the NIH is they have assured me that if there is any test or type of
research I’m not comfortable with, then I have the choice and right to opt out.
There was just one little glitch when I chose to
participate in the research they requested.
I came to see test results wouldn’t be available within a day or even a
week. No, it would take months and
months of research in her lab, making long spans of time just waiting.
I recently attended a
writing conference and each morning there would be a devotion before everyone would
attend the different sessions. One particular day, the woman gave her devotion
on waiting, because in the world of writing there includes a fair amount of
waiting. She gave us the clever and
profound analogy that writing is one typo off from waiting.
I have to laugh at the
fact I’m immersed in two worlds where waiting is not only normal, but should be
expected. Thankfully the waiting has not
only paid off, but has brought me tremendous blessings.
In 2013, three years
after I began my journey with the NIH, the very same nurse who told me not to
get my hopes up for my doctor and her team discovering what had been causing my
illness, gave me the most amazing news.
They had indeed discovered what was wrong with me. I must admit that while writing this, I have
tears in my eyes; because I still remember the closure and elation I felt when
I heard those words. Little did I know
at that time, God wasn’t finished with this chapter yet. The plot was about to thicken in a way I
never expected or dared to dream.
I went to the NIH in
November of 2013 for them to explain everything to my parents and I. I was taken from the waiting room to an exam
room and to my surprise…are you on the edge of your seat?
Good! Because this is the perfect place to stop, so
I can share the rest next week.
Why you may ask?
Because God wrote this
story and as with all stories that God writes, it’ll be worth the wait. :)