Finding Relief with Fellow Patients: Meet @gardeningjunkie 

Nov 8, 2019 | Teresa, Volunteer Mentor | @hopeful33250 | Comments (32)

Member Spotlights feature interviews with fellow Connect members. Learn more about members you’ve connected with and some you haven’t met yet. Nominate a member you think should share the spotlight.

2019.11.5 Janis @gardeningjunkie Connect member spotlight

TERESA: What brought you to Mayo Clinic Connect?

@gardeningjunkie: I learned individuals must become involved in self education about their diseases so they can ask their doctors the right questions. Doctors are indispensable, but with my chronic autoimmune issues, often prescriptions do not help. By talking with others with the same condition, I have learned from their personal experiences how they treat it and of new and unique treatments that have helped them.

TERESA: What motivates you to take part in the community?

@gardeningjunkie: I began participating regularly on another site where I learned a tremendous amount from others about my most debilitating health issue, eczema. I was so confused after diagnosis and was blessed with several knowledgeable fellow sufferers who mentored me. I have 3 forms of eczema. On this other site, one of my rare forms, Grover’s Disease, is never discussed. In my misery, I was searching for more information on it and found an active discussion on Mayo Clinic Connect where people share their frustrations about treatments that don’t work and how they have found relief. 

TERESA: What about Connect makes you feel comfortable to share and be open with the community?

@gardeningjunkie: In the online communities in which I participate, I feel a comradery because fellow members understand how I feel. I have learned it serves no purpose sharing with family members or friends who feel helpless. It’s depressing for them, plus I do not want to be defined by my health issues. If I need to connect, I can sound off in my anonymous online communities.

TERESA: What groups do you participate in?

@gardeningjunkie: I participate in groups with issues relevant to me: Women’s Health, Skin Health and Joint Replacements.

TERESA: Tell us about a meaningful moment on Connect.

@gardeningjunkie: I came to Mayo Clinic Connect because I found an active discussion on transient acantholytic dermatosis, aka, Grover’s Disease (GD). I was only participating in the Connect community a few weeks when a guardian angel by the username @kimass1 shared life-changing information. This caring GD sufferer gave me my active life back. She told us about a daily herbal treatment that appeared to help some people with GD. I tried it skeptically, because to date nothing ever helped me with the rash, pain, itching and misery of GD. I turned out to be one of the 50% of sufferers it works for. I have shared it with my dermatologists who had never heard of it, hoping they pass it along. If I had not been participating on Mayo Clinic Connect, I would be suffering today. Now, rash-, pain- and itch-free, I have resumed my normal lifestyle. Amazing.

TERESA: What energizes you, or how do you find balance in your life?

@gardeningjunkie: This is easy to answer: Gardening pulled me out of my depression after being diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) at age 50. Surrounded by growing plants full of life and beauty, I found myself praising God for our glorious world and grateful for it. Gardening and working with plants also made me thankful for the time I had been given and the time I had left. I became a master gardener and enjoyed giving back to the community. CLL is chronic and supposedly incurable. However, a few others I know and I have had spontaneous regression. After my blood counts had slowly worsened for a decade, now all blood counts, even the lymphocytes which were previously cancerous white cells, are normal. This is a very rare occurrence, and I never had any treatment. I believe the peace and joy I got from our glorious world helped with the healing. My hematologist-oncologist is naturally cautious and refuses to call it gone. He calls it preleukemia and continues with my follow-up, as he hasn’t had a case like mine. So, every six months now for 21 years I drag myself to the blood lab for testing. Still, I always have a sense of dread with each test.

TERESA: Tell us about your favorite pastime or activity.

@gardeningjunkie: Gardening.

TERESA: Do you have a favorite quote, life motto or personal mantra?

@gardeningjunkie: I have 2:

  1. “When will you learn, it’s going to make you burn?” I made this jingle up and repeated it dozens of times a day early on and still do occasionally, reminding myself to be true to my anti-inflammatory diet. It helped brainwash me into passing the candy bowl by or when salivating watching my family eat the desserts I bake. As of this month, it’s been one year that I’ve followed this now lifelong diet, and my sugar craving is gone!
  2. “I felt sorry for myself because I had no shoes, until I met a man with no feet.” This proverb, said to be Jewish, Italian or Indian, is my all-time favorite. I have several autoimmune diseases and other issues, and I have been humbled reading from others in online communities who are surviving with greater afflictions.

TERESA: What do you love about where you live or vacation?

@gardeningjunkie: My husband and I are snowbirds with two homes. Each is surrounded by natural beauty overlooking majestic bodies of water with spectacular views, and, of course, enough land for my landscaping projects. We have always been boaters — and still are —  but sadly, there’s no more waterskiing for us, as our joints won’t take it. Both locations are close enough to good medical, shopping and airports. Out West, we belong to a Jeep club with adventurous trail runs. We also do some off-roading with four-wheelers or side-by-side vehicles  — our two-wheel motorcycle days are over — in the wide-open, semimountainous Bureau of Land Management  property surrounding our land. This land looks much as it did at the time we started coming to the area in the ‘60s.   

I am also an avid rock collector and builder of rock walls and gardens. We love to read and belong to book clubs, and we try to save time each afternoon for a good read. Birds fascinate me, and I feed birds of all types at each location; out West, I throw out seed to feed a minimum of 75 of the lovely Gambel's quail each morning. Our grandchildren adore each of our locations, as it is nonstop zip-a-dee-doo-dah fun. Retirement is a full-time activity.

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Sounds good but be aware it can still have a blizzard at the Grand Canyon late in March. I know first hand!
Like you I am not a gambler, the casinos are amazing there but overall I feel depressed watching the unhappy looking gamblers. Vegas has expensive but many good shows. We always fly to Vegas to get to our western home, but the city for me is too commercial and artificial and we leave ASAP. Another choice is to visit Sedona on your way to the Grand Canyon; fly to Phoenix and drive up through Sedona. Sedona is a magical relaxing place surrounded by gorgeous natural beauty and I know this sounds crazy but I feel a spiritual connection to nature there because of the astounding beauty of the rock formations. A plus is it has good restaurants, but my draw had always been the hiking. Sadly 2 years ago had to stop the hiking with my group of college girlfriends who met up once a year. My darn knees simply won't handle basic easy climbing. Even if hiking is not feasible for you they have the Pink Jeep tours which take you to various gorgeous red rock locations. The drive up to Flagstaff from Sedona is one of the most scenic routes in the US. Reservations are a must at least 6 months in advance if you plan to stay in a hotel or motel, the nicer ones require more than a year ahead in warmer weather. Nothing is cheap there. Phoenix is about the same distance to the Grand Canyon as Vegas is. I know I would not have the courage to walk out on the clear platform, yet it is very popular standing on top of the Grand Canyon. If you do it let us know.

REPLY
@gardeningjunkie

Sounds good but be aware it can still have a blizzard at the Grand Canyon late in March. I know first hand!
Like you I am not a gambler, the casinos are amazing there but overall I feel depressed watching the unhappy looking gamblers. Vegas has expensive but many good shows. We always fly to Vegas to get to our western home, but the city for me is too commercial and artificial and we leave ASAP. Another choice is to visit Sedona on your way to the Grand Canyon; fly to Phoenix and drive up through Sedona. Sedona is a magical relaxing place surrounded by gorgeous natural beauty and I know this sounds crazy but I feel a spiritual connection to nature there because of the astounding beauty of the rock formations. A plus is it has good restaurants, but my draw had always been the hiking. Sadly 2 years ago had to stop the hiking with my group of college girlfriends who met up once a year. My darn knees simply won't handle basic easy climbing. Even if hiking is not feasible for you they have the Pink Jeep tours which take you to various gorgeous red rock locations. The drive up to Flagstaff from Sedona is one of the most scenic routes in the US. Reservations are a must at least 6 months in advance if you plan to stay in a hotel or motel, the nicer ones require more than a year ahead in warmer weather. Nothing is cheap there. Phoenix is about the same distance to the Grand Canyon as Vegas is. I know I would not have the courage to walk out on the clear platform, yet it is very popular standing on top of the Grand Canyon. If you do it let us know.

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@gardeningjunkie Sedona was a destination on our way back, if this trip materializes. I already looked at inns there! I did realize that Phoenix is about the same distance, we looked into that hoping Grand Canyon could be a stop on our way to Hawaii but the airports are too far for it to be a brief stop.
I definitely want to go out on the glass platform. I am fine as long as I am surrounded by something solid up to around my waist. I don't like being a few feet high if there is nothing on either side of me. We bought a house under construction once and on many days I couldn't get up the courage to walk the plank over the pit around the house to get in!
JK

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