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Re: A Sudden ILlness

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This is really interesting. i saw the movie and read the book and I

really like them both. I never knew she was sick with so many

similair things to us. Very interesting information!

In , " *~Patty~* " <fdp@l...> wrote:

> This is the story of the author of the bestselling

book " Seabiscuit " . I've heard it is a good movie--guess I need to

see it! And the fact that this lady wrote the book while so ill with

chronic fatigue makes it all the more intriguing.

>

> http://www.cfids-cab.org/MESA/Hillenbrand.html

>

> A Sudden Illness -- How My Life Changed

>

> by Hillenbrand

>

>

>

> We were in Linc's car, an aging yellow Mercedes sedan, big and

steady, with slippery blond seats and a deep, strumming idle. Lincoln

called it Dr. Diesel. It was a Sunday night, March 22, 1987, nine-

thirty. Rural Ohio was a smooth continuity of silence and darkness,

except for a faintly golden seam where land met sky ahead, promising

light and people and sound just beyond the tree line.

>

> We were on our way back to Kenyon College after spring break. Linc,

my best friend, was driving, his arm easy over the wheel. My

boyfriend, Borden, sat behind him. I rode shotgun, a rose from Borden

on my lap. Slung over my arm was a 1940s taffeta ball gown I had

bought for $20 at a thrift shop. I was 19.

>

> The conversation had dropped off. I was making plans for the dress

and for my coming junior year abroad at the University of Edinburgh.

My eyes strayed along the right shoulder of the road: a white

mailbox, the timid glint of an abandoned pick-up's tail-light. The

pavement racing under the car was gunmetal gray. We were doing 50 mph

or so. A balled-up bag from a drive-through burger joint bumped

against my ankle.

>

> A deer.

>

> At first, he was only a suggestion of an animal, emerging from the

darkness by degrees: a muzzle, a sharp left eye. Then the headlights

grasped him.

>

> He was massive -- a web of antlers over his head, a heavy barrel,

round haunches lifting him from the downward slope of the highway

apron. Briefly, his forehooves rested on the line between the

shoulder and the highway. I saw his knee bending, the hoof lifting:

he was stepping into the car's path.

>

> In the instant that I spent waiting for the deer to roll up over

the car's hood and crash through the windshield I was aware of my

body warm in the seat, Linc's face lit by the dash, Borden breathing

in the back, the cool sulfur glow of the car's interior, the salty

smell of the burger bag. I watched the deer's knee and waited for it

to straighten. I drew a sharp breath.

>

> The bumper missed the deer's chest by an inch, maybe two. The

animal's muzzle passed so close that I could see the swirl of hair

around his nostrils. Then he was gone behind us.

>

> I blinked at the road. My eyes caught something else. A brilliant

light appeared through the top of the windshield and arced straight

ahead of the car at terrific speed. It was a meteor. It burned

through the rising light of the horizon and vanished in the black

place above the road and below the sky.

>

> My breath escaped in a rush. I turned toward Linc to share my

amazement. He was as loose as he had been, his eyes slowly panning

the road, his long body unfolding over the seat. I looked back at

Borden and could just make out his face. They had seen nothing.

>

> I was about to speak when an intense wave of nausea surged through

me. The smell from the bag on the floor was suddenly sickening. I

wrapped my arms over my stomach and slid down in my seat. By the time

we reached campus, half an hour later, I was doubled over, burning

hot, and racked with chills. Borden called the campus paramedics.

They hovered in the doorway, pronounced it food poisoning, and left.

>

> I fell asleep sitting up on my bed, leaning against Borden's

shoulder. In the morning, my stomach seethed. I walked to the dining

hall and sat with Linc, unable to eat. In my history seminar, I drank

from a water bottle and tried to concentrate. After class, I walked

to my apartment and heated some oatmeal. I swallowed a spoonful;

nausea rose in my throat and I pushed the bowl away.

>

> In the next few days, everything I ate made my abdomen balloon. I

radiated heat, and my joints and muscles felt bruised. Every day on

the way to classes, I struggled a little harder to make it up the

hill behind my apartment. Eventually, I began stopping halfway to

rest against the trunk of a tree.

>

> One morning, I woke to find my limbs leaden. I tried to sit up but

couldn't. I lay in bed, listening to my apartment-mates move through

their morning routines. It was two hours before I could stand. On the

walk to the bathroom, I had to drag my shoulder along the wall to

stay upright. Linc drove me to the campus physician, who ran test

after test but couldn't find the cause of my illness. After three

weeks of being stranded in my room, I had no choice but to drop out

of college. I called my sister and asked if she could drive me home

to land.

>

> I sat in the doorway of the apartment while Borden and Linc packed

my sister's car. As they pushed the last of my belongings into the

back seat, a downpour broke over them. We pulled out, and Kenyon was

lost in a falling grayness. I turned to wave to Borden and Linc, but

I couldn't see them anymore.

>

> My mother's house was a dignified Colonial that sat back from the

road, behind a pine tree that had been mostly denuded by Hurricane

Agnes and an anemic cherry tree that would soon collapse onto the

den. In the back yard stood a hemlock that had been missing its upper

third since my brother and I accidentally set it on fire. Inside, the

house was a warren of small rooms that had suited our two-parent,

four-kid, two-Collie family when my parents bought it, in 1971. My

father had walked out in 1977, the elder collie had died three days

later, and the house had gradually emptied until my departure for

Kenyon, which had left only my mother and my cat, Fangfoss.

>

> The sun was setting as we pulled up to the back door. I walked

upstairs and lay down in my childhood bedroom, which overlooked the

back yard and the charred tree. The next morning, I stepped on a

scale. I had lost 20 pounds. The lymph nodes on my neck and under my

arms and collarbones were painfully swollen. During the day, I

rattled with chills, but at night I soaked my clothes in sweat. I

felt unsteady, as if the ground were swaying. My throat was inflamed

and raw. A walk to the mailbox on the corner left me so tired that I

had to lie down.

>

> Sometimes I'd look at words or pictures but see only meaningless

shapes. I'd stare at clocks and not understand what the positions of

the hands meant. Words from different parts of a page appeared to be

grouped together in bizarre sentences: 'Endangered Condors Charged in

Shotgun Killing.' In conversation, I'd think of one word but say

something completely unrelated: 'hotel' became 'plankton'; 'cup' came

out 'elastic.' I couldn't hang on to a thought long enough to carry

it through a sentence. When I tried to cross the street, the motion

of the cars became so disorienting that I couldn't move. I was at a

sensory distance from the world, as if I were wrapped in clear

plastic.

>

> I had never been in poor health and didn't have an internist, so I

went to my old pediatrician. I sat in a child's chair in a waiting

room wallpapered with jungle scenes, watching a boy dismember an

action figure. When my doctor drew the thermometer from my mouth, he

asked me if I knew that my temperature was 101. He swabbed my throat,

left for a few minutes, and returned with the news that I had strep

throat. Puzzled by the other symptoms, he prescribed antibiotics and

suggested that I see an internist.

>

> The doctor I found waved me into a chair and began asking questions

and making notes, pausing to rake his fingers through a hedge of dark

hair that drifted onto his brow. He ran some tests and found nothing

amiss. He told me to take antacids. A few weeks later, when I

returned and told him that I was getting worse, he sat me down. My

problem, he said gravely, was not in my body but in my mind; the test

results proved it. He told me to see a psychiatrist.

>

> I went to Dr. Troshinsky, a respected psychiatrist whom I

had seen when I was fifteen, after my high school boyfriend had died

suddenly. He was shocked at how thin I was. I was just under five

feet five, but my weight had dropped to a hundred pounds. Dr.

Troshinsky said that he had seen several people with the same

constellation of symptoms, all referred by physicians who dismissed

them as mentally ill. He wrote my internist a letter stating that he

would stake his reputation on his conclusion that I was mentally

healthy but suffering from a serious physical illness.

>

> 'Find another psychiatrist,' my internist said over the phone, a

smile in his voice. How did he explain the fevers, chills,

exhaustion, swollen lymph nodes, dizziness? What I was going through,

he suggested, was puberty. I had just turned 20. ', everyone

goes through this,' he said with the drizzly slowness one uses with a

toddler. 'It's a normal adjustment to adulthood. You'll grow out of

it in a few years.' He told me to come back in six months.

>

> 'But I'm not happy with my treatment,' I said.

>

> He laughed. 'Well, I am.'

>

> I called his secretary and asked for my medical records. I sat on

my bedroom floor and flipped through the doctor's notes. Couldn't

handle school, he had written. Dropped out.

>

> My next doctor was a plump, pink man with the indiscriminate gaiety

of a golden retriever. He was halfway through a hair transplant, and

clumps of hair were lined up in neat rows on his scalp, like spring

seedlings.

>

> I again tested positive for strep, and he renewed the antibiotics.

He ran a blood test for a virus called Epstein-Barr and found a

soaring titer, a measurement of the antibody in my system. I had, he

said with pep-rally enthusiasm, something called Epstein-Barr virus

syndrome. He had it, too, he said, but he had discovered nutritional-

supplement pills that cured it. 'Whenever I feel it coming on,' he

said, 'I just take these.' He talked about how much skiing he could

do.

>

> I took the supplements. They had no effect. Nor did the

antibiotics; the strep raged on. The doctor changed my prescription

repeatedly, to no avail.

>

> At the end of one of my appointments, the doctor followed me into

the waiting room and asked my mother to make an appointment so that

he could test her for strep. She said she felt fine, but he insisted

that she might be infected but asymptomatic.

>

> Our appointments fell on the same day. I went in first and sat

while a nurse swabbed my throat. A few minutes later, the doctor

bounded in, waving the positive-test swab, and bent over to look at

my throat. I'd had strep for nearly three months. I dropped my face

into my hands. He straightened abruptly and backed out of the room,

repeating that the pills would cure the Epstein-Barr. 'I go skiing a

lot!' he hollered from down the hall.

>

> I was still crying as I paid the bill. The receptionist gave me a

sympathetic smile. She understood how I felt, she said, because she

had Epstein-Barr, too. 'It's amazing,' she said. 'The doctor has

found that everyone working here has it.'

>

> I sat down. Several other patients were sitting near me, and I

asked if the doctor had given any of them a diagnosis of Epstein-

Barr. Each one said yes. While we were talking, my mother emerged

from the doctor's office. He had told her that she, too, had Epstein-

Barr.

>

> That year, millions of cicadas boiled up from the ground, teemed

over tree limbs, and carpeted lawns and roads. The TV news showed

people eating them on skewers. Cicadas burrowed into the house,

scaled the curtains, swung from our clothes. I sat in bed, watching

them bounce off the windowpane and nosedive into the grass, where

they flapped and floundered as if they were drowning. Newton, the

Dalmatian puppy my mother had adopted, zigzagged around the yard and

snapped them out of the air. We called them flying dog snacks.

>

> My world narrowed down to my bed and my window. I could no longer

walk the length of my street. My hair was starting to fall out. I

hadn't had a period in four months. My mouth and throat were pocked

with dozens of bleeding sores and my temperature was spiking to a

hundred and one every 12 hours, attended by a ferocious sweat; in

addition to the strep, I now had trench mouth, a rare infection of

the gums. Sleeping on my side was uncomfortable because I had little

body fat left and my bones pressed into the skin on my hips, knees,

and shoulders.

>

> In sleep, I dreamed of vigorous motion. I had swum competitively

for 10 years, from age 7 to 17. I had been riding horses since

childhood. Smitten with thoroughbred racing, I had spent my mid-teens

learning to ride short-stirrup at a gallop, and praying that I

wouldn't grow too tall to become a jockey. At Kenyon, I had been a

tennis junkie. Now, as I lost the capacity to move, sports took over

my dream world. I won at swimming in the Olympics, out-pedalled the

peloton in the Tour de France, skimmed over a racetrack on a Kentucky

Derby winner. When I woke, I felt the weight of illness on me before

I opened my eyes.

>

> Most of the people around me stepped backward. Linc said my friends

asked him how I was, but after one or two get-well cards I stopped

hearing from them. Now and then, I called people I had known in high

school. The conversations were awkward and halting, and I felt

foolish. No one knew what to say. Everyone had heard rumors that I

was sick Someone had heard I had AIDS. Another heard I was pregnant.

>

> I missed Borden. At Kenyon, I had often studied in a deli run by a

groovy guy named Craig, who cruised around the place in fluorescent-

yellow sunglasses. It was there, in September of 1986, that Borden

had first smiled at me. He was a senior, with a gentle, handsome face

and wavy black hair. He had torn up his knee running track, and to

avoid walking he used a battered bike to get around campus. The bike

had no chain, so he could really ride it only downhill wiggling it to

keep it going when the ground levels out. On the uphills, he stabbed

at the ground with his good leg, Fred Flintstone style. Eventually,

some frat brothers kidnapped the bike and hung it from a tree over

the Scrotum Pole, a stone marker that had earned its nickname during

a legendary fraternity vaulting incident.

>

> From the day we met in the deli, Borden and I had been inseparable.

Since I left Kenyon, he had sent me off-color postcards and silly

drawings, mailed between papers and finals and graduation. I wrote

dirty limericks and mailed them back to him.

>

> That summer, he showed up at my door. He got a job as an assistant

editor at a foreign-policy quarterly, moved in with my mother and me

and took care of me, making plans for the things we'd do when I got

better.

>

> Of my friends, only Linc visited. Home for the summer in Chicago,

he drove Dr. Diesel fifteen hours to my house, where he would sit in

a dilapidated denim armchair at the foot of my bed. The seat on the

chair had collapsed, but he sat there anyway, his long thighs

pointing up at the ceiling. Each time he saw me after a long absence,

a wide startled look would pass over his face. He once said that he

could sense the disease on me. I knew what he meant. I was

disappearing inside it.

>

> I saw my next physician only once. My jeans slid down my hips as I

walked into the exam room, and he watched me tug them up. He asked

how often I weighed myself. Often, I replied.

>

> You shouldn't weigh yourself, he said, and you have to eat. I'm not

dieting, I replied. Girls shouldn't be so thin, he said. I know, I

don't want to be this thin. Yes, yes, but girls shouldn't be so thin.

>

> After the appointment, I went to the bathroom, and as I opened the

door to leave the doctor nearly fell into me. I was halfway home when

I realized that he had been trying to hear if I was vomiting.

>

> The next doctor was a pretty, compact woman with a squirrelly

brightness. She found that I still had strep and changed the

antibiotics. She ran the same tests that everyone else had run, and,

again, the results were normal. I fought off the strep, but the other

symptoms remained. I kept returning to see this doctor, hoping she

could find some way to make me feel better. She couldn't, and I could

see that it was wearing on her.

>

> In September, I was so weak that on a ride over to her office I had

to drop my head to my knees to avoid passing out. When the nurse

entered, I was lying down, holding my head, the room swimming around

me. She took my blood pressure: 70/50. The doctor came in. She

wouldn't look at me.

>

> 'I don't know why you keep coming here,' she said, her lips tight.

>

> I told her that I felt faint and asked about my blood pressure. She

said that it was normal and left, saying nothing else. She then went

to see my mother, who was in the waiting room. 'When is she going to

realize that her problems are all in her head?' the doctor said.

>

> I returned home, lay down, and tried to figure out what to do. My

psychiatrist had found me to be mentally healthy, but my physicians

had concluded that if my symptoms and the results of a few

conventional tests didn't fit a disease they knew of, my problem had

to be psychological. Rather than admit that they didn't know what I

had, they made a diagnosis they weren't qualified to make.

>

> Without my physicians' support, it was almost impossible to find

support from others. People told me I was lazy and selfish. Someone

lamented how unfortunate Borden was to have a girlfriend who demanded

coddling. Some of Borden's friends suggested that he was foolish and

weak to stand by me. 'The best thing my parents ever did for my

deadbeat brother,' a former professor of his told him, 'was to throw

him out.' I was ashamed and angry and indescribably lonely.

>

> For seven months I had remained hopeful that I would find a way out

of my illness, but the relentless decline of my body, my isolation,

and the dismissal and derision I was experiencing took their toll. In

the fall of 1987, I sank into a profound depression. I stopped seeing

my physician and didn't try to find a new one. One afternoon, I dug

through my mother's drawer and found a bottle of Valium that had been

prescribed for back spasms. I poured the pills onto the bed and

fingered them for an hour, pushing them into lines along the patterns

on the quilt. I thought about Borden and couldn't put the pills in my

mouth.

>

> I went back to Dr. Troshinsky. He told me to make an appointment

with Dr. G. Bardett, the chief of the Division of Infectious

Diseases at s Hopkins University School of Medicine. Bardett was

the foremost authority in his field, Dr. Troshinsky said. If there

were an answer, he would have it.

>

> At s Hopkins, after a lengthy exam and review of my records,

Dr. Bartlett sat down with Borden and me. My internists, he said,

were wrong. My disease was real.

>

> 'You have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,' he said. He explained that it

was one of the most frustrating illnesses he had encountered in his

practice; presented with severely incapacitated patients, he could do

very little to help them. He suspected that it was viral in origin,

although he believed that the Epstein-Barr virus was not involved;

early lab tests had liked the virus to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, but

subsequent research had demonstrated that some patients had had no

exposure to the virus. He could offer no treatment. Eventually, he

said, some patients recovered on their own.

>

> 'Some don't?'

>

> 'Some don't.'

>

> That night, for the first time since March, I didn't dream of being

an athlete. I dreamed of being ill. In my dreams, I was never healthy

again.

>

> In the ensuing months, I began to improve. I hitched Newton to a

leash and she tugged me through the neighborhood, first one block,

then two, then three. My feet, soft from months in bed, blistered.

The fever remained, but I was less prone to chills.

>

> In the fall of 1988, Borden began graduate studies in political

philosophy at the University of Chicago, and I felt well enough to

move there with him. From the airport, we took a cab to Hyde Park,

where Borden had rented a one-room apartment. The front door appeared

to have been crowbarred for criminal purposes at least once. Inside,

there was a mattress splayed across plastic milk crates and a three-

legged dresser propped up on a brick. Roaches skittered over the

walls and across the floor. The bathtub was heaped with used kitty

litter. A weeks-old hamburger sat on the stove, shrunken into a shape

that resembled the head of a mummy. The roaches were in various

attitudes of repose around it.

>

> We gave the mummy head a proper burial, roachproofed our

toothbrushes by storing them in the refrigerator, and tried to make

ends meet on Borden's $9,000-a-year stipend and our savings. The

apartment was four flights up, with no elevator, so most days I spent

my time inside, reading about the French Revolution and listening to

our neighbor throw things at her husband.

>

> I wanted to be useful but I wasn't strong enough for a conventional

job. The one thing I could still do, however, was write. Shortly

after arriving in Chicago, while watching a video of the 1988

Kentucky Derby, I had an idea for an article on the impact of

overcrowded fields on the race. I researched and wrote the piece,

then mailed it to an obscure racing magazine. I got a job offer.

Fifty dollars per story, no benefits. I took only assignments that I

could do from home and wrote them in bed. The magazine never paid me,

but my bylines drew assignments at better publications, ultimately

earning me regular work covering equine medicine and horse-industry

issues at Equus.

>

> I was growing much stronger, but whenever I overextended myself my

health disintegrated. One mistake could land me in bed for weeks, so

the potential cost of even the most trivial activities, from

showering to walking to the mailbox, had to be painstakingly

considered. Sometimes I relapsed for no reason at all. Living in

perpetual fear of collapse was stressful, but on my good days I was

functioning much better. By 1990, I could walk all over Hyde Park,

navigate the stairs of the apartment with ease, and, for half an hour

on one blissful afternoon, ride a horse. Three years after becoming

ill, I wrote to Linc about the curious sensation of growing younger.

>

> In the summer of 1991, while visiting my mother during Borden's

summer break, he and I decided to drive to New York to see the

racetrack at Saratoga. A 10-hour road trip was risky, but I had grown

tired of living so confined a life.

>

> As we set out, the skies darkened. By the time we reached the

interstate, a ferocious thunderstorm was crashing around us. Rain and

hail hammered the roof of the car and gusts of wind buffeted us

across the lane. We were caught in speeding traffic, but because the

sheets of rain sweeping down the windshield limited visibility to a

blurry tinge of lights ahead and behind, we couldn't slow down or

pull over. It was more than an hour before we were able to escape

into a rest stop. I sat on the floor of the bathroom, looking out a

high window and watching the trees sway. The rain tapered off. My

hands were shaking.

>

> We had planned to stop at the New Jersey farmhouse where our

friends Bill and were staying, but we were very late. Borden

called them on a pay phone while I waited in the car, watching him

through the beads of rain on the windshield. He climbed back in, and

we sat with the engine idling. I was frightened by the draining

sensation in my body.

>

> Should we turn around? I asked. Borden's brow furrowed. Sometimes

you've gotten a second wind, he said gently, as if asking a question.

I wanted to believe him, so I agreed. He put the car in gear and we

drove in silence. I felt worse and worse. I think we should turn

around, I said, struggling to push the words out. We're closer to

Bill's than we are to home, he said. If we keep going, you can rest

sooner. He was scared now, leaning forward, driving fast. We entered

New Jersey. We have to turn around, I said. Please. My head was

pressed against the window, and I was crying. We're almost there, he

said. We turned into the farmhouse driveway. There were rows of

melons in the field.

>

> Bill took us to a guest room. Borden turned on the TV and left me

to rest. By the time he returned to check on me, I was sweating

profusely and chills were running over me in waves. He took my hand

and was horrified: it was gray and cold, and the veins had vanished.

>

> He spread blankets over me and tried to help me drink a glass of

milk. I couldn't sit up, so he cupped my head in his hand and tipped

the milk into my mouth sideways. It ran down my check and pooled on

the pillow. My teeth chattered so much that I couldn't speak. Borden

called an emergency room. The nurse thought that I was in shock and

urged him to rush me in. But we were far from the hospital, and

doctors had never been able to help. I was sure that being moved

would kill me.

>

> Borden lay down and held me. Wide awake, I slid into delirium. I

was in a vast desert, looking down at a dead Indian. His body was

desiccated and hardened, his skin shiny and black and taut over his

sinews, his arms bent upward, hands grasping, clawlike. His shriveled

tongue was thrust into an empty eye socket. I lay there and trembled,

whispering I love you, I love you, I love you to Borden through

clenched teeth. I'm sorry, he said.

>

> Hours passed. The sun rose over the melon field.

>

> Borden drove me back to my mother's house. I lay exhausted for

three days. When I opened my eyes on the morning of the fourth day, I

had a black feeling. I couldn't get up.

>

> For as long as two months at a time, I couldn't get down the

stairs. Bathing became nearly impossible. Once a week or so, I sat on

the edge of the tub and rubbed a washcloth over myself. The smallest

exertion plunged me into a 'crash.' First, my legs would weaken and

I'd lose the strength to stand. Then I wouldn't be able to sit up. My

arms would go next, and I'd he unable to lift them. I couldn't roll

over. Soon, I would lose the strength to speak. Only my eyes were

capable of movement. At the bottom of each breath, I would wonder if

I'd be able to draw the next one.

>

> The corpse of the Indian hung in my mind. Borden and I never spoke

of it, or of the events of that night, and we never spoke of the

future. To corral my thoughts, he made lists with me: candy bars from

A to Z, Kentucky Derby winners, Vice-Presidents in backward order,

N.F.L. quarterbacks, Union Army commanders. Over and over, I asked

him if I was going to survive. He always answered yes.

>

> Late one night, as I walked down the hall, I heard a soft, low

sound and looked down the stairway. I saw Borden, pacing the foyer

and sobbing. I started to call to him, then stopped myself realizing

that he wished to be alone. The next morning, he was as cheerful and

steady as ever. But sometimes when I looked out the window I'd see

him walking around the yard in endless revolutions, head down, hands

on his temples.

>

> One afternoon in September, he came in, sat on my bed, and told me

that classes were starting and he had to return to Chicago. Before he

left, he gave me a silver ring engraved with the words 'Vous et nul

autre (You and no other).' I slid it on my finger and pressed my face

to his chest.

>

> With Borden in Chicago and my mother at work, I needed assistance

to get through the day. I went through several helpers hired from

nanny services. The first one clattered in with stacks of crimson-

beaded Moroccan shoes and harem pants. She dumped them on my

bed. 'Twenty for the shoes, thirty for the pants,' she said. She

prowled through the house, appraising the furniture. 'How much do you

want for your refrigerator?' she asked.

>

> When I asked the woman who followed to take Newton into the

backyard, she opened the front door and shooed the dog onto the

street. Lying in bed upstairs, I heard the dog barking gleefully as

she galloped westward. I called to the woman but got no response. I

sat up and looked out the window. The woman was standing high in our

apple tree, mouth open, gaping at the vacant sky. The dog returned;

the woman did not.

>

> The third helper sympathized and commiserated, then bustled around

downstairs while I lay upstairs in bed. It wasn't until she abruptly

vanished that I discovered she had been packing armloads of my

belongings into her car each evening. I went to the closet and found

only a hanger where my taffeta ball gown had been.

>

> On a rainy afternoon in January of 1993, I was sitting on the bed

reading a magazine when the room began whirling violently. I dropped

the magazine and grabbed on to the dresser. I felt as though I were

rolling and lurching, a ship on the high seas. I clung to the dresser

and waited for the feeling to pass, but it didn't. At five the next

morning, I woke with a screeching, metal-on-metal sound in my ears.

My eyes were jerking to the left, and I couldn't stop them. My eyes,

upper lip, and cheeks were markedly swollen.

>

> I went to a neurologist for tests. A technician asked me to lie

down on a table. He produced something that looked like a blowtorch

and pushed it into my ear. A jet of hot air roared out, spinning the

vestibular fluid in my inner ear. It triggered such a forceful

sensation of spinning that I gripped the table with all my strength,

certain that I was about to fly off and slam into the wall. The tests

determined that my vertigo was neurological in origin and virtually

untreatable. The doctor prescribed diuretics and an extremely low-

sodium diet to control the facial edema, which seemed to be linked to

the vertigo. He could do little else.

>

> The vertigo wouldn't stop. I didn't lie on my bed so much as ride

it as it swung and spun. There was a constant shrieking sound in my

ears. The furniture flexed and skidded around the room, and the walls

folded and unfolded. Every few days there was a sudden plunging

sensation, and I would throw my arms out to catch myself. The

leftward eye-rolling came and went. Sleep brought no respite; every

dream took place on the deck of a tossing ship, a runaway

rollercoaster, a plane caught in violent turbulence, a falling

elevator. Looking at anything close-up left me reeling. I couldn't

read or write. I rented audiobooks, but I couldn't follow the

narratives.

>

> Borden called several times a day. He told me about Xenophon and

Thucydides, the wind off Lake Michigan, the athletic feats of the

roaches. When I asked him about himself, he changed the subject.

>

> On Valentine's Day, a package from Borden arrived in the mail.

Inside was a gold pocket watch. I hung it from my window frame and

stared at it as the room bent and arced around it. Weeks passed, and

then months. The watch dial meted out each day, the light sliding

across it: reddish in the morning, hard and colorless at midday, red

again at dusk. In the dark, I could hear it ticking.

>

> Outside, the world went on. Linc got married, my siblings had

children, my friends got graduate degrees and jobs and mortgages.

None of it had any relation to me. The realm of possibility began and

ended in that room, on that bed. I no longer imagined anything else.

If I was asked what month it was, I had to think a while before I

could answer.

>

> While I was lying there, I began to believe that we had struck the

deer back in 1987, that he had come through the windshield and killed

me, and that this was Hell.

>

> Two years passed. In late 1994, Borden took his qualifying exams,

and left Chicago. When I first saw him, lugging his green backpack,

he was so thin that I gasped.

>

> In 1995, by tiny increments, the vertigo began to abate.

Eventually, I could read the back of a cornflakes box. My strength

began to return. Instead of sitting on the edge of the tub with a

washcloth, I could sit on the shower floor while the water ran over

me. The first time I showered, dead skin peeled off in sheets. A hair

stylist came and cut off eight inches of my hair, which had been

growing like kudzu for several years and was now nearing my waist. In

time, I could walk down the stairs almost every day. I sat on the

patio looking at the trees.

>

> Since my visit to s Hopkins, I had searched for an internist I

could trust. In 1988, C.F.S. had been officially recognized and

described by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Subsequent research suggested endocrinologic, immunologic, and

neurologic abnormalities in many C.F.S. patients, though the cause

remained elusive. Physicians were becoming aware of the disease, but

many of them knew less about it than I did. Others hawked dubious

treatments. For a while, I tried almost anything. A few treatments

caused disastrous side effects. The rest did nothing.

>

> Then a friend referred me to Dr. Fred Gill, a renowned infectious-

disease specialist. He was an angular, elegant man with a neat, Amish-

style beard rimming a sharp jawline. As Borden and I told him my

story, I found my stomach tightening in anticipation of a dismissive

verdict. But Dr. Gill listened for the better part of an hour. When

he had finished, he nodded. He couldn't cure me, he said, but he

would do everything he could to help me cope with the illness. In the

following years, Dr. Gill managed my symptoms and coordinated my care

with other specialists.

>

> Eager to be productive, I called my Equus editor, Laurie Pfinz, and

asked if I could write something. She assigned a story on equine

surgery and told me not to worry about a deadline. I did the

interviews on the phone from bed. Because looking at the page made

the room shimmy crazily around me, I could write only a paragraph or

two a day. When I could no longer stand the spinning, I'd take a

pillow into the yard and lie in the grass with Newton, fixing my eyes

on the treetops while she dissected a bone. It took me six weeks to

write 1,500 words, but, four years after the abortive trip to

Saratoga, I was coming back.

>

> In 1996, with Borden and Fangfoss the cat, I moved into a small

apartment in northwest Washington, D.C. One block away stood a fire

station, and if Washington has an arson district we were in the heart

of it. At the Taiwanese consulate, which was next door, a group of

protesters soon set up camp, hauled in a loudspeaker and blasted a

Chinese rallying song, sung by shrieky children. They apparently had

a loop tape, so the song never ended. It was like listening to a bone

saw. After a few weeks, I started dreaming to it.

>

> I turned up my radio and wrote as much as I could, mostly equine

veterinary medical articles for Equus. On breaks, I took brief walks.

I bought new shoes -- I'd been lying around in socks for years - and

discovered that my feet had shrunk two sizes. I had lived for so long

in silence and isolation that the world was a sensory explosion. At

the grocery store, I dragged my hands along the shelves, touching

boxes and bags, smelling oranges and pears and apples. At the

hardware store, I'd plunge my arm into the seed bins to feel the

pleasing weight of the grain against my skin. I was a toddler again.

>

> After years of seeing people almost exclusively on television, I

found their three-dimensionality startling: the light playing off

their faces, the complexity of their hands, the strange electric feel

of their nearness. One afternoon, I spent 15 minutes watching a

shirtless man clip a hedge, enthralled by the glide of the muscles

under his skin.

>

> On a cool fall day in 1996, I was sifting through some documents on

the great racehorse Seabiscuit when I discovered Red Pollard, the

horse's jockey. I saw him first in a photograph, curled over

Seabiscuit's neck. Looking out at me from the summer of 1938, he had

wistful eyes and a face as rough as walnut bark.

>

> I began looking into his life and found a story to go with the

face. Born in 1909, Red was an exceptionally intelligent, bookish

child with a shock of orange hair. At 15, he was abandoned by his

guardian at a makeshift racetrack cut through a Montana hayfield. He

wanted to be a jockey, but he was too tall and too powerfully built.

That didn't stop him, though. He began race riding in the bush

leagues and fared so badly that he took to part-time prizefighting in

order to survive. He lived in horse stalls for 12 years, studying

Emerson and the 'Rubaiyat,' piloting neurotic horses at 'leaky roof'

tracks, getting punched bloody in cow-town clubs, keeping painfully

thin with near-starvation diets, and probably pills containing the

eggs of tapeworms.

>

> He was appallingly accident-prone. Racehorses blinded his right

eye, somersaulted onto his chest at forty miles per hour, trampled

him, and rammed him into the corner of a barn, virtually severing his

lower leg. He shattered his teeth and fractured his back, hip, legs,

collarbone, shoulder, ribs. He was once so badly mauled that the

newspapers announced his death. But he came back every time,

struggling through pain and fear and the limitations of his body to

do the only thing he had ever wanted to do. And in the one lucky

moment of his unlucky life he found Seabiscuit, a horse as damaged

and persistent as he was. I hung Red's picture above my desk and

began to write.

>

> What began as an article for American Heritage became an obsession,

and in the next two years the obsession became a book. Borden and I

moved to a cheap rental house farther downtown, and I arranged my

life around the project. At the local library, I pored over documents

and microfilm I requisitioned from the Library of Congress. If I

looked down at my work, the room spun, so I perched my laptop on a

stack of books in my office, and Borden jerry-rigged a device that

held documents vertically. When I was too tired to sit at my desk, I

set the laptop up on my bed. When I was too dizzy to read, I lay down

and wrote with my eyes closed. Living in my subjects' bodies, I

forgot about my own.

>

> I mailed the manuscript off to Random House in September 2000, then

fell into bed. I was lying there the following day when the room

began to gyrate. Reviewing the galleys brought me close to vomiting

several times a day. Most of the gains I had made since 1995 were

lost. I spent each afternoon sitting with Fangfoss on my back steps,

watching the world undulate and sliding into despair.

>

> In March 2001, Random House released 'Seabiscuit. An American

Legend.' Five days later, I was lying down, when the phone rang. 'You

are a best-selling writer,' my editor said. I screamed. Two weeks

later, I picked up the phone to hear him and my agent shout in

tandem, 'You're No. 1!' Borden threw a window open and yelled it to

the neighborhood.

>

> That spring, as I tried to cope with the dreamy unreality of

success and the continuing failure of my health, something began to

change in Borden. At meals, he sat in silence, his gaze disconnected,

his jaw muscles working. His sentences trailed off in the middle. He

couldn't sleep or eat. He was falling away from me, and I didn't know

why.

>

> He came into my office one night in June, sat down, and slid his

chair up to me, touching his knees to mine. I looked at his face. He

was still young and handsome, his hair black, his skin seamless. But

the color was gone from his lips, the quickness from his eyes. He

tried to smile, but the corners of his mouth wavered. He dropped his

chin to his chest. He began to speak, and fourteen years of unvoiced

emotions spilled out: the moment of watching the woman he loved

suffer, his feelings of responsibility and helplessness and anger;

his longing for children we probably couldn't have; the endless

strain of living in obedience to an extraordinarily volatile disease.

>

> We talked for much of the night. I found myself revealing all the

grief that I had hidden from him. When I asked him why he hadn't said

anything before, he said he thought I would shatter. I recognized

that I had feared the same of him. In protecting each other from the

awful repercussions of our misfortune, we had become strangers.

>

> When we were too tired to talk anymore, I went into the bedroom and

sat down alone. I slid his ring from my finger and dropped it into a

drawer.

>

> We spent a long, painful summer talking, and for both of us there

were surprises. I didn't shatter, and neither did he. I prepared

myself for him to leave, but he didn't. We became, for the first time

since our days at Kenyon, alive with each other.

>

> One night that fall, I walked to the back of the yard. As Fangfoss

hunted imaginary mice in the grass, I looked out at the hill behind

the house. Beyond it, downtown Washington hummed like an idling

engine, the city lights radiating over the ridge. I looked west,

where a line of row-house chimneys filed down the hill until they

became indistinguishable from the trunks of the walnut trees at the

road's end. Borden came out and joined me briefly, draping his arms

over my shoulders, then he went inside. I watched the screen door

slap behind him.

>

> As I turned back, I saw a slit of light arc over the houses and

vanish behind the trees. It was the first meteor I had seen since

that night in Linc's car. I thought, for the first time in a long

time, of the deer.

>

> In the depths of illness, I believed that the deer had crashed

through the windshield and ushered me into an existence in which the

only possibility was suffering. I was haunted by his form in front of

the car, his bent knee, the seeming inevitability of catastrophe, and

the ruin my life became.

>

> I had forgotten the critical moment. The deer's knee didn't

straighten. He didn't step into our path, we didn't strike him, and I

didn't die. As sure as I was that he had taken everything from me, I

was wrong.

>

> The car passed him and moved on.

>

>

>

>

> --------------------------------------------------------------------

------------

>

> © Copyright 2003 The New Yorker

>

> [source: The New Yorker Date: July 7, 2003]

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