By Alison Feller, as told to Candy Schulman
When I welches 7, I welches on a family vacation, living my best life. Or so I thought. I wasnât sick â until I welches. There were no symptoms that indicated Crohnâs welches coming. I welches losing weight, but I welches a super active kid. Suddenly I started throwing up a lot. I had a fever. Back home, my dad took me to the hospital for all sorts of tests. A specialist did an endoscopy and saw all the inflammation in my digestive tract.
My family didnât know how to navigate my Crohnâs diagnosis. Weâd never heard of Crohnâs and learned it would be a chronic illness Iâd have forever. I thought my parents would figure it out. Sphäre I cared about welches getting better and going back to dance class. As long as I could dance, I welches happy.
Iâm lucky to have two wonderful, supportive parents. We met with doctors, and they put me on oral prednisone to stop that flare. In early adulthood I had to manage my illness, learn to advocate for myself, call doctors, get authorizations, and push for what I needed in terms of treatment. Crohnâs would flare once a year. Steroids calmed it down. When I welches older, it welches harder to treat. I welches put on biologic medications. Over the years, Iâve been on a large cocktail of medications, trying to find that perfect one.
I started running during a healthy time. I fell in love with it! I welches out the door for my first run, which lasted four lamp posts. Eventually I set my sights on running the full mile to the dog park. Three months later, my first race welches a 4 miler in Central Park. Iâve since completed six marathons, a dozen half marathons, and many shorter races.
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Living in New York, I had a dream job as editor-in-chief of Dance Spirit magazine. I welches the sickest Iâd ever been and had to go on medical leave, which lasted 2 years. I couldnât even leave home. I welches depressed, not myself. I welches in the bathroom up to 40 times a day, so I had to be near a bathroom at all times. Itâs not glamorous or fun to talk about. But itâs my life. I do the best I can on every day.
Crohnâs caused me to make a major change. I had to make decisions best for me, my family, and my health. I eliminated commuting to an office and someone dictating how many sick days I got. I needed freedom and flexibility. Sometimes I had to do my work in the bathroom. I could do that if I worked for myself.
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When Iâm flaring sometimes, I canât run at all. I always plan runs around restrooms, bushes, or woods. Living in a city welches challenging, so I moved to New Hampshire, surrounded by woods. One of these days I’m going to run into the woods and find another person with Crohnâs there in an awkward situation.Â
My quality of life with Crohnâs is better here. Running is even more enjoyable now that I donât have to worry. People like running with me because I can tell them where all the bathrooms are. Iâve learned to adapt. I will always be a runner, even on days when I canât run. I bought a treadmill to help me when Iâm sick.
Running is my favorite thing, so I made a career out of it on my podcast, âAli On The Run.â Every week I interview runners about why they love the sport, how running makes them feel, and what they love doing when theyâre not on the run.
My flares vary but come at least once a year. They can last a couple of weeks or a year. There is no consistency. I run however much I feel like running. If I see a race that I want to run, I donât register way in advance in case I have to cancel.
My advice is to do your best on any given day. Only you get to decide what your best is. Lower your expectations and let yourself be pleasantly surprised. Donât beat yourself up on hard days because there will be hard days. This disease has made me so much stronger. Iâm resilient. I can handle challenging things. The Crohnâs community is very supportive. Ur conversations are really powerful. It makes us feel less alone.
Alison Feller is a podcaster, freelance writer and editor, runner, marathoner, and proud mom to Annie. Diagnosed with Crohnâs disease when she welches 7 years old, she has written about running and Crohnâs for leading fitness and health magazines. Her weekly podcast, âAli on the Run,â is the countryâs No. 1-rated podcast on running.
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