Welcome

Welcome to my Lyme blog where you enter the world of Lyme Disease and get a firsthand glimpse of what Lyme can do to a person!

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Springtime Ticks


SPRINGTIME TICKS
Dorcas Annette Walker

Springtime is when the horrible creatures called ticks come out targeting any human body they can latch onto.  One red, swollen, hot itchy tick bite is very irritable; more than one is pure misery.

When you discover a tick embedded in your skin your first reaction is to panic, “Oh no!  Not again!” feeling horror at seeing the tiny crawly black insect sucking out your life’s blood. 

Then you go into denial trying to put an optimistic spin on it saying to yourself, “surely this time I will get lucky and not have a reaction”, but the red rash spreads and becomes very itchy.  It drives you crazy trying not to itch the bite while putting stuff on it to keep it cool and heal up, especially as the bites are usually located in a most inconvenient spot like on your buttocks, breast or groin area.  I’ve even had a tick bite right in the middle of two fingers causing both to swell.  Tick bites are uncomfortable to say the least. 

Next you start dragging, having a sick headache, and feeling like you are coming down with the flu.  Since it is the spring season you try to reason that your sinuses are acting up or you just caught the flu bug while deep inside you know it is your Lyme’s flaring up again.  You play mind games like weighing your options, “Surely this time my body can override the Lyme’s virus.  What is worse: battling the virus or suffering through the reaction of the antibiotic?” even though you already know the answer.

You procrastinate.  “I’ll just wait a couple of days to see if I don’t feel better.  You don’t.  You just feel worse.  You can sense the virus slowly surely taking over your body. You fight the feeling of losing control, but know that you will have to get back on antibiotics to stop the virus even though you dread the thought of what the med is going to do to your system knowing from past experience that the longer you put it off the worse it will become.

You finally give in and go to the doctor.  The tick bites are small red spots now that occasionally flare up almost unnoticeable- something you could put out of your head if the rest of your symptoms would only disappear.  You go to the drugstore, fill your prescription, and begin popping pills.