home page links quotes statistics mission statement success stories resources Lighter Side Authors! Search Page
November 1, 2016

Accepting Help to Heal the Heart

Published Oct 26, 2016 in Blogs, Spirituality



Taken from The Jesuit Post

Just like a pill...

"Do you have any questions?", he asked as he slid a copy of my blood test results and the freshly signed sheet from his prescription pad across the desk. "Aren't I too young for this?", I said. He laughed.

Apparently 'I'm too young to be on cholesterol medication' is no longer a valid medical excuse. Ouch. My pride wounded, I drove to my local pharmacy and stood in line, embarrassed. My cholesterol has yo-yoed up and down for the better part of a decade: several dozen points here and there, the bad cholesterol (which letters are those again?) always outweighing the good kind (I think there's an D and an L?) and my triglycerides (is that even a thing?) have too often been off the charts. I've had multiple doctors over the years warn me about the potential dangers - heart attacks and strokes at the top of the list - but none of them seemed to be too worried about it, so I never worried either. I am young, I told myself. I can get this under control. No problem.

I took on the task of lowering my cholesterol as a point of pride: I can do this. With a little exercise here and there (emphasis on little) and devoting at least some of my attention to my diet, I figured I could get my levels down pretty easily. I thought I could do it myself.

And so I worked at it, haphazardly, off and on for brief periods of time. I'd be intentional about walking for 5 days, and then stop - just as suddenly as I had started. I'd try to watch what I was eating, cutting out salt here and there, only to replace it with pastas and other carbs. I knew what I liked to eat and what I didn't. I knew what was easy to do and what was not. And I acted accordingly, eating with reckless abandon and skipping most forms of exercise.

Through the years I was able to fool some doctors over time by frantically adopting binge workouts and crash diets in the weeks leading up to my scheduled appointments. So, I was not totally surprised when, earlier this month, time finally caught up with me. Just shy of my 35th birthday, I'm the newest member of the medicated club: 40mg of Lipitor per day. A low-dose statin for my high-level problem.

***

The bottle with its child-protective cap sat on my desk for a few days, taunting me. A daily pill - probably for the rest of my life. The prospect felt so demoralizing. What's wrong with me? Can't I just get over this problem?

The truth is, I can't. Even if I could get ahold of my eating habits (I'm trying!) and work out an exercise regimen (I'm toning!), my genes still have a lot of sway over that final number. I am flawed in this way, and no amount of work I do will make me perfect or bring about total success. My body betrays me, and I am as fragile in ego as I am in health.

I've been taking the pills now for a few weeks. I don't notice any physical difference, and this isn't as much of an emotional crisis as I have feared it might be. I thought I'd spiral into some existential depression, with the dual insults of advancing age and the inability to will myself into perfection both weighing on me.

But as I pop a pill into my mouth each morning, there is an invitation to accept what's being offered to me: a dose of help in a small white tablet.

And I need that help. The reality is I am limited, fragile in health and ego. I cannot heal myself. I'm not OK - and that's OK. No one asked me to be.

***

"Do you have any questions?", my doctor asked. In that moment, I was too stung to think of anything except how I had failed to project perfection - an endless and hopeless task. Now I wonder: why did I wait so long to take advantage of the help I obviously need?

And that's not a question my doctor can answer.

-//-

Keith Maczkiewicz, SJ
kmaczkiewiczsj@thejesuitpost.org /