As I was
waiting at the Bombay airport to catch a flight to Delhi , I noticed a frail
old man sitting a row before me holding an inhaler in his hands and pumping
medicine into his mouth. It was evident that he was an asthmatic and perhaps at
an acute stage because you don't need so many pumps out of it at such short
gasps. This sight brought memories of my battle with asthma some time back.
It was
around the third week of June 1990. I was announced as the winner of the Raghava Chetty prize for mathematics for
topping class seven at MCC HSS, Chetpet, Madras. Class eight had just commenced.
The day of the prize distribution was nearing. When I woke up on the day of
prize distribution, I could not breathe. It was like someone was pressing my
chest and was preventing me from breathing. I had to resort to breathing
through the mouth. I was shocked as it was something that had rarely happened
before with such intensity. I skipped the award function and was taken to the
doctor; prescribed medicine. Then the breathing problem start to become a routine
affair.
Every
other week I would get a bout of breathlessness. It became increasingly
unbearable. I spent most nights sleepless
sitting on a plastic chair with a night
lamp for company. I would take a pillow and try to rest my head on it. But in a
curved position, it made breathing even more difficult as my chest would get
pressed. (Today, my back is almost
permanently curved because of years and years of this). I would use two to
three pillows so that my head would just fall upto the height of the neck, at
the max. If my head went below, breathing would become even more difficult..
Many a time, I fell asleep around three or four am - in the wee hours of the
morning, just out of sheer fatigue or the after effects of tablets which used
to kick in only during very early mornings. Those days were the hardest for me,
physically. I used to just sit and ponder like a melancholic businessman whose
ships are lost at sea.
For
years together. Myriad thoughts kept ramming my head. I often asked God, "Why me and why this? Please give me something else, I am ready to
suffer that, but not this!" I used to marvel at a perfectly normal
human activity - breathing! "How can
people breathe normally? How can I not do that?"
Asthma
is simply the worst disease according to me, because it threatens to hit the
very existence of human beings, which is breathing. We breathe, so we are, When you cannot breathe, how can you live?.
All the body parts are paralysed as the chest is clogged. Asthma kills....yes,
it does.
I skipped
school for days together and spent many a sleepless night. Even a walk to the
rest room had to be undertaken with a lot of effort, holding on to walls and
doors whilst moving like a tortoise. Many a time, I almost gave up and felt like running to the terrace and jumping
off! It also resulted in a strange phenomenon - being with people but feeling
lonely. During day time, when all the other members of the family were away at
office or school, I would again be alone with only books for company.
Medicine
did nothing to further the cure - it would work for a few days and stop
afterwards. I had to dunk in further tablets. Steroids, vitamins, anti
inflammants and what not. I have popped in so many tablets in my life for
asthma, that it is a miracle I still have my liver intact! The tablets
would take effect after 6-8 hours of intake and they would have effects for a
day or so at the max. Many a time they would not have any effect since
the body would become immune to the drug.
I have
seen countless doctors, tried Allopathy, Homeopathy, Siddha, Ayurveda... been on
diets which one stream of medicine prescribed, which sometimes would be
contrary to the other. No tomato, dairy, cold stuff, no this, no that, only
boiled water.... The list was endless. The steroids would have a lot of side
effects - fever, headache and weight gain. I then visited Santosh
hospitals in Besant Nagar, Madras. I used to be administered injection after
injection along with the IV drip. I gained so much weight that my neck was almost
invisible. But it made me breathe. The breathing would be easy for about a week
after which I had to go and get another dose of injections and drips again. I was
injected so many times and grew so plump that my veins were not visible to the
nurses. This was really costly too and after a point of time, my parents
decided to give it up. It happened one day when at the hospital, I had a bout
of fits, swooned and fell down and hurt my head after being administered a IV drip.
Then, on
the advice of a neighbour, I tried the miraculous fish medicine at hyderabad.
This was - and is - being administered by the Goud family for years now.
A secret medicine, smelling very much of asafoetida, if I recollect right,
would be applied on the mouth of a live fish and rammed down the throat of the
patient. Since the medicine was free, a lot of patients still converge at Hyderabad
for three days. We had to stay overnight on the road. My father used to be with
me. Then there was a strict diet for 45 days with more don'ts than dos. A
minimum of three years was required at the least to show results as per the
practitioners. I went in 1995, 1996 and 1997. Unfortunately, it did not work on
me.
Life
used to be like that. Fear of the next attack. Fear of food. Weather. Dust. Pollution.
Psychological situations. Just plain fear.
When I
was suffering, many people who had visited my house would tell so many things:
Why
can't you breathe?
Oh you can't eat this is it?
At this age if you are like this, what will happen when you grow up?
Get up, get up and walk!
Why do you keep sitting all the time - Don't you feel caged?
Try to go to the US and get a cure.
I have never seen a younger patient.
Oh you can't eat this is it?
At this age if you are like this, what will happen when you grow up?
Get up, get up and walk!
Why do you keep sitting all the time - Don't you feel caged?
Try to go to the US and get a cure.
I have never seen a younger patient.
Many of
these questions have no answers. I was not able to breathe because I just could
not. I was not able to eat certain things because they would immediately hit
me. Yes, I could understand that some people were genuinely sympathetic but,
they cannot do anything beyond that.
Still I would welcome their sympathy in my heart. If someone was down and I was
perfect, I would do that too, isn't it?
Thankfully,
my family did not give up on me. Yes, at times, they would get frustrated, but
it is perfectly understandable - it is tough to have a young patient at
your home all the time! So, in order to avoid the visitors, I would take my chair, go and sit in another
room away from their gaze Since I could
not speak, books and newspapers were my only company. They still are - only
that they have taken an electronic form! My school till class ten was so
unbothered about attendance, which worked out to my advantage. There was a
problem in classes 11 and 12 and my father was asked to give a written
explanation as to why I was missing school.
For ten
years till 1998-99, until a friend (God bless him and his family) referred a
doctor to me who administered inhalers (medicine pumps), I had the worst days
and nights of my life.Due to the introduction of inhalers, there was a sea
change in my life. The inhaler administers the drug into the wind pipe directly
instead of the tablet which works by mixing into your body. It this expands the
wind pipe, making breathing easier. Further, the dosage of one puff of the pump
is almost one hundredth of one tablet, making it much safe with lesser side
effects. It was all fine. Or so, I thought.
(to continue)
2 comments:
Dear Pradeep. I never knew you had this problem when you were with me or were I too insensitive ? Looking forward to know what happened afterwards.
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