


Thoughts from Sossity & Mario on horses, pugs, natural hoof care, dressage, golf, cats, travel, wine, friends, family, California, life, love and everything in between.
Shortly after the conference, in early May, my friend Leticia passed away. It's never easy to lose someone you love, but a young friend with a family.. and someone who is such a bright light in the world... it just seems impossible. When she was getting worse, and on some level I accepted that she was no longer winning her battle, I would talk to our mutual friend Stephanie and we would repeatedly say that it just felt impossible. Just desperate and helpless and impossible, that this was actually happening. Her children carried her casket in the funeral, which was read in both English and Spanish. They seemed amazingly strong to me, standing beside their father, Leticia's husband Alex. He carried himself gravely but with inner resolve that must have been what got him through the last couple of years... I couldn't stop crying. It was incredibly touching to see how many friends and family came to the events, many friends who I had not seen in years.
In the middle of the mess Mario and I were supposed to go to see Alison and Jeremy in Milwaukee for their Stock the Bar party. They had generously given us ticket vouchers so our travel was free! It was going to be a little vacation away, much welcome and looked forward to. But obviously there was no way I could go under the circumstances, and we had to cancel. At the time I thought for certain I was going to be better in a week (having never been really sick for more than 3 days in my entire life!) and I tried to book a ticket to VA so I could be there for Alison's wedding shower. As that week passed it became obvious this was a more serious situation and I of course didn't get to attend that either.
During all of it, Mario had to step in as the full time trimmer and business manager, pet caretaker, shopper, shipper, cleaning man and most especially, my nurse. If not for him, I just cannot imagine what would have happened. He saved my business, and probably my life. He definitely saved my sanity!FINALLY things began to improve after several weeks of sickness - I finished the Flagyl and the fertility doctor referred me to Kaiser ... my new insurance, for my next steps. The new doctor was fairly horrified at what had transpired, and said he would have hospitalized me for the OHSS alone. He had me start on iron immediately for the anemia, ordered new blood work, and had me go in for a CT scan to rule out appendicitis. The CT scan showed the cysts were now the size of apricots, no evidence of other issues. The doctor said it was still possible I had appendicitis and had healed from it prior to the scan! We agreed to proceed with laproscopic surgery, which was scheduled for the 19th of July. I had about 2 week time to try to raise my hgb (improve my anemia) and just start to feel a little more normal again.
Right before all of this happened, my mom had moved out. She moved back into her old boyfriend's place (now just a friend) in Ventura, with her elderly dog, her best friend - Willy. Willy had a downturn of his health, and he ended up passing away. My heart just broke for my mom. Willy was her constant companion through all of her life's trials and tribulations over the last 16 years. That dog was an incredible and faithful friend to her, and it is hard to imagine her, without him. She was understandably emotionally unable to take his body to the vet's to be cremated, so I took them, and I picked up his little box of ashes and delivered them to her after. They were my first visits out and driving on my own basically since I got sick. It was so sad...even though he lived such a great long life, he will be so missed. My mom is a mess without him ... she's depressed and just seems kind of adrift. As always, I pray for her peace and happiness.
The night before the surgery, I was visiting my horses - knowing it would be at least a couple of weeks before I could see them again ... and that I had only gotten to see them maybe 3 times in 2 months, I wanted to really get some quiet bonding time. Still weak and anemic, I still wasn't trimming but was well enough to start going with Mario on short trim trips to talk to clients and hold the horses for him. On that night I had the brilliant idea to just slide onto Jordan's back ... just sit on him, give him a hug and slide off, was the plan. We would not leave the paddock. Mario was there holding him by the fly mask. What could go wrong? Of course, something did go wrong. For whatever ungodly unknown reason, Jordan spooked and got away from Mario. With no saddle or bridle and shitty balance from being sick and not having ridden in almost 3 months, I fell off of him backwards and landed with a hard whack onto the packed DG and sand. I landed on my right hip/butt cheek and wrist, flipped onto my belly immediately and started coughing and gasping as the wind had been knocked out of me. Mario was *horrified* and so mad at himself for allowing me to get on at all. It had seemed innocent enough, he didn't want to deny me that little wish at the time, but in retrospect it was incredibly stupid on my part.
So, I went into the surgery center the next day with a huge painful hematoma on my ass, limping into the hospital with several strikes against me already. I cannot express how much I wanted to go back in time and NOT get on that horse!! The surgery itself was planned as exploratory. Three different doctors thought the cyts were endometriomas, and thought perhaps I had adhesions of endometriosis as well. I was prepared by the doctor that my left ovary and tube were probably not going to be salvagable. Beyond that what would happen was open to see what was going on internally... our thoughts were that I could salvage the right side perhaps, and still have a chance at getting pregnant either totally naturally or doing more IUIs (but unmedicated, which is what caused the OHSS).However it was not to be. To the doctor's surprise, I had no endometriosis. Instead I had severely infected and blocked tubes on both sides, plus the large cysts. They all had to be removed. I still have my ovaries and uterus, but the middle - the connection - is gone. And with it, my fertility. Mario and I had always agreed that IVF is not for us. We don't have the financial means for it (at 10k+ per try), and I don't think I personally have the emotional fortitude. Not to mention that being 'stimmed for IVF is absolutely out of the question due to the OHSS. So for all effects and purposes, I am at absolute infertility. Saying it, typing it out - it's an attempt to make it real. I will fully admit the real, assimilated meaning of this is not in my grasp at this time... it's going to take some healing and soul searching, some good ole therapy of all kinds ... including literal, wine, equine...to come to. For now my focus has to be on healing physically.
The first week after the surgery was brutal. The gas they use to inflate your abdomen stays in your body... not settling into your organs, just kind of in the rest of the space, causing stabbing pain with every breath. It was worse than the pain in my gut from the surgery itself. I had to sleep sitting propped up in a chair for the first 4 days, because laying down at all is absolute torture. It seems to make the gasses sit around your collarbone area and it feels like you are being stabbed. No thanks.The next day I got a fever - it didn't even reach 101, but the doctor was adamant that if I got a fever at all, I would need to come in to the office. Mario rushed home from trimming that day, and we barely made it to the office before they closed. If I had missed them, I was supposed to go to the E.R. Again - no thanks! Luckily I made it, and I got a really painful antibiotic shot on my left butt cheek. No, they could not do the right one due to the hematoma. So now I had no comfortable place to sit/sleep at all!
Still, far worse has happened to people - and I survived of course. It's been almost 2 weeks since the surgery and I am doing ok now. I am able to walk upright, eat pretty normal foods, and have stopped taking the pain meds except for Advil. I'm still on antibiotics twice a day and have not actually ventured out of the house yet. It's ridiculously frustrating to me how weak I am. Walking across the house or taking a shower leaves me shaking with muscle fatigue. There are no words to describe the flatness of my butt. I have NO muscle anywhere. How can this all go south after only a few months away from the real world? It's humbling, for certain. :(
But also humbling has been the support and love from my family, friends and clients. I have received countless cards from everyone, it seems. Flowers from my client Darlene. A care package from Alison. A handmade necklace from Kim. A years supply of juice from my mom. A care package from Elaine. A funny call from Lois. Each day brings some special little something, a kindness from someone that lifts me up! I am so grateful, and so blessed in that way!
I am hoping that now that I've got this lovely update out of the way - the words are out there now...! that I can carry on with more frequent updates again. The Bressani family are coming to visit us next week, we are so excited about that. And in a few more short weeks, we will be traveling east for Alison and Jeremy's big wedding celebration. We are looking forward to both!