Lauren

PHOTOGRAPHED BY MORGANA WINGARD

“As someone who’s always been incredibly active, high energy, and healthy, I would have laughed if someone told me I’d be battling 4 months of persistent, debilitating symptoms from an invisible foe.”

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BOSTON, MA: As someone who’s always been incredibly active, high energy, and healthy (aside from a lifelong battle with chronic insomnia), I would have laughed if someone told me I’d be battling 4 months of persistent, debilitating symptoms from an invisible foe. If someone told me that at age 32, during the exact month that I was hoping to start a family, that I’d be diagnosed with a novel virus seemingly from a sci-fi plot, it’d be fuel for some amazing jokes. So while there’s not much to laugh about when you get a Covid-19 diagnosis, it’s somewhat comical how much you feel like you’re living in a bad X-Files episode, although that alien that you want to believe is a virus that makes it impossible not to believe.

My name is Lauren and I’m a Federal Manager, Spiritual Medium, cat mom, and wife, who now goes by the title of Covid Survivor, “Long Hauler”, Advocate, and Study Subject. I began feeling ill the week of March 9 when Covid was first becoming documented in the US, and despite difficulties accessing a test because of medical gaslighting, I received a positive PCR test on March 17. My first symptoms were unlike the symptoms shared by the CDC at the time, with severe upper and lower GI issues and pain, dermatological, neurological, temperature regulatory, and respiratory symptoms seeing the start of my battle. These were just some of the dozens of moderate-to-severe symptoms I’ve battled throughout my (thus far) 4 month fight.

After remaining in isolation in a tiny room for 4 weeks - since hospital beds were scarce at the time of my diagnosis, and although I was waking up gasping for air, I was not ill enough to be on a ventilator - I quickly realized that my battle was unlike the 2 week battle touted by the government. I realized that the only way the public could relate and listen, and for the public and policy makers to know the truth from patients, was to set aside fears of public vulnerability and share the reality of the fight from a patient’s perspective. Although I truly did not have the energy to do so, I fought through the extreme pain and discomfort to share my symptoms and experiences via Instagram daily for over 100 days, to help enlighten others. 

My fight has been physically and emotionally terrifying in many ways, and as us first wave patients are truly pioneers (with doctors learning from us, versus the other way around), it’s as if we’re the test dummies in the first cart of a brand new rollercoaster, praying that we don’t fall out with each bump felt, and praying that an end will come and that we’ll return to solid ground safely. After over 120 days of constant symptoms - with many diminishing at 3.5 months, and others remaining strong at 4 months - I have not yet found that safe ground and I have no idea when or if I will.

For me, Covid has been both a physical and mental isolation sentence within isolation, but has also been a way to use my pain for good: to help spread transparency, awareness, and truth, free from politics or divisive beliefs, at a time when humanity needs it most. I could talk for days about my symptoms and share the gory details, but that’s not most important to hear. What’s more important is sharing that Covid is the ultimate humanizer: this virus crosses all demographics, geographic boundaries, cultures, political parties, religions, and so on, and the sooner we listen to what it’s doing to humans on a human level, the sooner we can face this foe from a united, collective mindset. Scully would agree.

There’s still so much unknown about this virus and it’s long-term effects, and there are still so many people feeling invincible and in denial about its reality. I implore you to understand that when your once normally operating body fails you, your once normally positive medical experiences turn into traumatizing and unhelpful battles, and your once normally active life turns into a distant reality, you will ‘get it’. But as a Covid survivor I want you to ‘get it’ now. I want you to never feel like the crash dummy constantly on the verge of falling, and constantly staring at a horizon of potential lifetime of complications, requiring patients to live an unprecedented, debilitating and unknown virus before science, medical knowledge, and policy catch up.

@laurenthemedium helps manage the @wearebodypolitic COVID-19 support group on Slack. For more information, visit https://www.wearebodypolitic.com/covid19. The group consists of people from all over the world who have tested positive, are experiencing symptoms, or are recovering from COVID-19. Our discussion groups includes 50+ channels for based around different communities and topics. Their channels include one for those symptomatic for 30+ days or 90+ days, caretakers of sick friends or relatives, those who have recovered from being on ventilators, those experiencing known and lesser known symptom groups such as respiratory, neurological, GI, and others, and forums to discuss mental health, financial and employment concerns, medical advocacy, along with many others. 

 

In lieu of my pun posts, I wanted to take this time to do something that needs to be done, from one COVID fighter (patient) to another (medical professionals). It's one thing to see the general public share their gratitude, but it's another to hear it from someone living the reality, who's life is so heavily reliant upon the dedication, strength, and profound love and empathy of our masked and gloved heroes. . I'm 32, had no pre-existing conditions, and lived a very healthy lifestyle. I was diagnosed with COVID (officially) on March 20 and am on day 18 of debilitating symptoms. I had a chest X-ray today that lead to troubling results. And what did you do? Did you cringe and show worry? No. Did you look at me like I was just another statistic? No. . You, dear healthcare professional, looked at me with calm eyes and a gentle tone and said "I have faith that you'll beat this." You held emotional space for ME, one of your hundreds of COVID patients, all while selflessly repressing your own profound exhaustion and fears, feeding me the hope that I needed just as badly as that antibiotic. . You are so much to so many right now, and to me, both on day 1 and on day 18, you are my perpetual gratitude. You are the voice inside of my head when my breathing becomes sharp and cutting. You are the medicine that I and all COVID sufferers need, beyond any antibiotic or drug, keeping our spirits locked into warrior mode and our hearts fixed on a healing path ahead. . You are the strength that we are lacking and the warmth that we desperately need to melt away the fears and anxieties that inevitably creep in from time to time. . To the Boston healthcare professionals fighting tirelessly alongside our personal fights, thank you. You are the reason I do not add 'worry' to my list of symptoms. To the global healthcare professionals, you are the hope of the world. . No celebrity status, award, or amount of money could repay you for all that you are to us patients. You are our guiding light and you are forever immortalized as the warriors that you are in our hearts and minds. Thank you for helping me to stay present in more ways than one.💙 . Covid-19 Reel for more. #thisiscovid19

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. . If you like helping people, please share. It doesn’t matter if you have Covid-19 or not: one of your followers is bound to have another follower that’s directly affected and feeling incredibly alone and scared. For mental health, for symptom checking, for vitally needed support, patients *need* other patients, as going through this alone is terrifying (take it from someone who did for 4 weeks, only finding the group on my 5th week). . . If you click on the IGTV icon on the vid (which opens the vid), and click on the downward facing arrow next to the title, this description will appear and links will be clickable. If you view this on a computer (not phone) all links are clickable without having to open the vid. The link is below👇🏼: . . If you’re a Covid-19 patient (based upon symptoms and not just test results), a caretaker of a patient, a medical professional with or without Covid-19, a data scientist, or a member of the media, regardless of where you’re located, you can join the global Body Politic Covid-19 Support Group here: ➡️ https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScM2EeJhgisTUdo5Op6euyx1PYu8O-aNeDVYhXuPFa_Gs9PnQ/viewform . . Also, if you’re a patient experiencing 14+ days of symptoms, your response to this survey will benefit health scientists, data scientists and other patients alike: ➡️ https://forms.gle/gpJobfBLVABMz6JF7 . . #thisiscovid19 #pleasehelp

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. I may not have spoken as eloquently as I would’ve liked, or articulated the reasons why protests are harmful in as detailed of a way as I would’ve liked, but hopefully the emotional pain that these protesters are causing for patients will get just one supposed “patriotic” crusader to see the carelessness of their actions. . If you’re a protester watching this, I get that you believe that your government is imposing stringent restrictions upon you. I get that you feel that businesses being paused and social distancing being required is hurting citizens and their pocket books. That you think it’s an overreaction and that your civil liberties are being attacked. I get it. . I get that the issue at the core is that because businesses are shut, access to money and food are becoming increasingly limited for some. And I understand how it’s a horrifying predicament when you have a family to care for and no sense of when money will begin flowing in. . But please understand that if states are opened prematurely and without tight requirements on how to appropriately reopen in a SAFE way (via a staggered, monitored approach, etc.), getting food onto your table will be the last of your worries. . You’ll be too busy dealing with dying and chronically ill, suffering loved ones, who will have little that can be done for them because we’ve reopened states without FIRST understanding the virus. You assume a reopening is safe because we have a name and some basic, short-lived data from the virus. You think that means we understand it and are controlling it, and can predict what recovery looks like for those that get Covid-19, if they’re lucky enough to eventually recover. But you’re wrong. We are ACTIVELY learning about the virus from patients as each day progresses. . If we reopen now, more cases will flood in. More cases that will be in the same position as me: cases that are advising science, and not the other way around. . That is not what you should want for your family or yourself. That is why patiently waiting for more to be understood about this virus is imperative before any reopening. . If you want to protest, do so remotely about using taxes for social welfare needs.

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#thisiscovid19 . My name is Lauren and I’m 32 years-old with no pre-existing health conditions, currently on day 34 of symptoms. I am not yet classified as recovered by my state due to not being symptom-free for 24 hours straight, let alone 72 hours straight. My symptoms began around March 12, 2020 and I tested positive for Covid-19 on March 17, 2020. I’ve been sharing my daily virus experience - including symptoms, my test results, my treatments, etc. - for over 4 weeks, saved as a “Covid-19” highlight reel on my profile. . My reason for sharing both daily Covid-19 stories and this video is the following: if we truly want to understand the virus and demystify it (helping others to realize just how real and non-linear this virus is, hopefully inspiring more personal and societal responsibility), then we must SHARE. . To truly understand Covid-19 we need to hear directly from those experiencing the virus on the front lines, from both medical professionals and patients alike. That information will only better our ability to paint a true picture of “recovery” at both the patient-level and national-level, as returning to work will look differently for those who have been stricken with this virus. It will also help us to move forward as a nation with compassion and true understanding about what we can expect from our afflicted but slowly recovering workforce, and what can be expected if a diagnosis hits closer to home for you or your loved ones. . Transparency and knowledge is the best medicine that we can provide at this point, and that is something that ALL of us can contribute without relying on others to do so on our behalf. . At the end of the day this virus affects PEOPLE and it’s PEOPLE that we can relate to and learn from. It’s PEOPLE that will help to better our global understanding of this virus and it’s many facets from day 1 of symptoms to day 51 of symptoms, and surely well beyond. . Real personal stories trigger real personal accountability and awareness, and that is vital to being holistically responsible in how we approach the topic of “recovery” as both a nation and as individuals.

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