Well, I came home for the weekend again. I didn't feel like sitting in my apartment alone this weekend while all my roommates had plans...so I wasn't going to mope around! I feel a lot better here right now where I am in my element, and it helps me to relax.
I was on pinterest today, and I wanted to look up some easy workouts for people suffering with lupus, but instead I found a bunch of lupus jokes that made me laugh! It feels comforting to know that people do understand how I feel. Lupus is an invisible disease, so no one can look at you and see how sick you are. They think because you don't look sick, that it can't be that bad. They can't understand how hard it is, and I don't blame them. It is just hard sometimes, because I feel like I have to suck it up because I know people will criticize me, and just assume I'm being lazy or overexaggerating. My favorite joke said that, when you have lupus, you get to tell your parents, "you'll know how I feel when you get older". So true! I'm like an old person with my aches, pains, and brain fog...also... I'm losing hair. It seems every time I run my fingers through my hair, I pull it out. I am SO gentle with it, yet it still continues to fall out. It just keeps getting thinner, duller, and straighter, and it stinks... :(. I fear one day I will have bald spots. (Pray for me, haha, I would look hideous bald). I kind of like documenting the stages that I go through in this whole lupus process, mentally and physically, because it helps me to vent my frustrations and concerns, while also motivating myself to keep moving forward. Hopefully, eventually it will help someone else who is struggling (if they happen upon my blog for any particular reason).
That is just an update of my life, but I wrote this post because, right now, I am sitting in the bedroom that I decorated (sparkly lights and all), and I am reading
Stephanie Nielson again. I have been following her since a year after her accident, and I rediscover her every few months. Every time I start reading her posts regularly again, it amazes me how strong she is. I love how she talks about her children. She talks about motherhood so highly, and you can tell that she knows how important it is. I cannot wait to be a mother, and I can think of no other thing that will make me feel so fulfilled. There is a video about her youngest daughter, Charlotte, made for the Nielson family, that she posted on her blog. It has this beautiful lullaby in the background, and so I looked it up. (I want my children to be exposed to music from a very young age, and form an appreciation for it.) Turns out, it is from a collection of children's lullabies. I have had it on repeat since. I know it sounds pathetic, but that is the kind of thing I want to do for my children. I want my children to listen to music, and read stories, and have imaginations, and love others, and love the gospel, and be good citizens, and be goofy, and helpful, and that is NOT too much to expect! I aint raisin' no unedicated little hooligans! It's hard, because I am so baby hungry...but I'm not even dating anybody! Husband...you better hurry up and find me already!
I know Heavenly Father has a plan for me, and that it does include the opportunity for me to become a wife and mother. My newly found health issues have discouraged me on many of my goals, but never this one. I know it will be a struggle to raise a family with lupus. Some days I will feel exhausted and not want to make a nutritious dinner, or clean my house, but I will probably do it anyway. I was talking on the phone with my dad during one of my low moments, and he gave me a few words of comfort. He said that they are always here for me, and that if I am feeling tired, that they are always here to help me. I am probably going to take you up on that someday, dad!
I am so grateful for my family, and good friends! I know that right now is a hard time in my life, but I will make it! I just need to stay positive, and focus on becoming the best person I can be.