Posted in August 2025

A Hospital Stay Gone Wrong

The last five weeks have been an uphill battle, with far too much of it spent in the hospital. My sickness reached a point where I couldn’t keep fluids down, my electrolytes were out of balance, I was fighting another infection, and my body rejected almost every medication. As I’m currently in my third trimester, this was more than just uncomfortable; it was a serious concern.


When I was first admitted, we were hopeful. The medical team tried two different anti-sickness IVs and even steroids, but nothing made a difference. My body wasn’t tolerating anything. Eventually, the dieticians came to see me to create a plan to get some much-needed nutrition into me. However with Drs unable to agree with each other on cause – alternating between putting it down to a late appearance on Hyperemesis or a flarr up of my Gastroparesis, it became difficult to create a plan to follow.


This is where things started to go dramatically wrong.

Despite being reassured by the dietician that the Ensure Juice they provided was dairy-free, I went downhill almost immediately. My vomiting worsened, my brain fog intensified, and all my usual allergy symptoms flared up. The medical team dismissed my concerns, insisting these were just part of my condition. After several days of this, I asked to see the bottle myself. There, in clear, bold letters, were the words: Milk Protein.

I immediately stopped drinking it and demanded to speak to the dietician. When she arrived, she insisted my notes said I was lactose intolerant, not that I had a milk allergy—a distinction I had clearly emphasized in our previous conversation.

After an urgent meeting with the multidisciplinary team, the decision was made to place a nasojejunal (NJ) tube. This tube goes through the nose, down the throat, and into the intestine, bypassing the stomach completely. It was supposed to be a solution, but even getting the tube placed took nearly a week because the ward couldn’t provide the necessary care, and the receiving ward kept refusing the referral.

Once the tube was finally in, a nutritional feed was started. About an hour in, my vomiting increased again, and I started to feel a sense of déjà vu. I checked the ingredients. In bold letters, once again, were the words Milk Proteins. It felt completely inconceivable that this same mistake could happen twice.

I called the dieticians again, and this time, they informed me they couldn’t find a suitable feed for my allergies. I pointed out that a quick two-minute Google search brought up several options, but they explained they didn’t have contracts with the suppliers, so they couldn’t prescribe them.


Instead, they suggested trying a different high-calorie nutritional drink. We carefully went over the ingredients, and it seemed safe. Within minutes of trying it, I went into anaphylactic shock. My throat started to close, my heart rate skyrocketed, and I couldn’t breathe. Thankfully, a nurse was in the bay and immediately passed me my Epipen which I administered. The Epipen saved me, but we still have no idea what caused the reaction. It’s now simply labeled as an “unknown new allergy.”

At that point, I was discharged home with no feed. The plan was for me to push fluids and manage my medication through the tube on my own. I was happy to leave—I had lost all confidence in the hospital. We even managed to go on holiday, balancing making memories with my children and trying to manage the extreme fatigue.

A community dietician visited us not long after we got home. We made a plan for a soya-based feed and a pump. I was optimistic. But that optimism lasted only a few hours. I received a phone call informing me they had arranged for me to be readmitted to the hospital due to my continued vomiting, poor blood results, and significant weight loss. I was devastated.

I’m now back in the hospital, waiting for the daily doctor rounds, hoping they will discharge me. But in all honesty, I have little faith left. I’m currently on a soya-based feed we had to buy privately, but at over £160 a week, this isn’t a long-term solution.

My mental health has been impacted massively. I’m exhausted and I just want to be home with my family. Between these repeated failures and having to constantly advocate for myself—including after a nurse spent ten minutes passionately telling me I could be cured if I simply changed my diet, took supplements, and prayed hard enough—I am at my wits end.

Posted in Archive, February 2017

Functional Paralysis = Quality Floor Time

Pain at the moment is my constant companion. After weeks of agonising, seizure inducing pain, and more hospital visits than I care for, I was informed I’d dislocated two ribs. I normally handle dislocation rather well; if my thumbs have popped out, it’s no big deal, I can pop them back in with ease, my jaw causes a fair bit of pain and in some cases I need help relocating it, but the majority of the time I can manipulate it back into place myself. My ribs however are a completely different story, there’s not a lot that can be done about it. I’ve had several medical professionals try and get them as close to where they should be as possible, a tear-jerking process might I add, and every time within hours they are back out of place. Sometime it’s simply because I twisted too fast or I sneezed or, if I’m a real dare devil, I tried to get out of bed. Everyday basic activities cause enough pain for me to be on regular codeine four times a day, and tramadol if I start seizing. The hospital doesn’t know what to do with me at first, they admitted me to: rule out anything more serious such as gallbladder problems; keep a close eye on the baby (who’s coping miraculously well with my faulty body) and keep me on regular doses of paracetamol, codeine and oramorph. Whilst they thankfully didn’t find anything on the scans that needed surgery, they did notice that both my kidneys are distended which won’t be helping my pain.

f241a67e6c487184511e59ee194802ae
Most days I’m a 6. Currently I’m a 9.

Now I’m back at home and it’s hard to know what to do with myself. There are some brief moments in the day when my pain feels manageable, like earlier today. Foolishly this afternoon, I decided to take advantage of feeling okay and fold some baby whilst clothes sitting on the floor. You would think that this is a job that shouldn’t take too long and isn’t exactly taxing, right? Wrong. The pain quickly got extreme enough, despite codeine, for me to realise if I didn’t lie down flat on the floor asap I was going to risk hurting myself as I knew my ability to stay conscious was fading. Whilst being on the floor was enough to keep me conscious for the majority of the time (I’m pretty sure I had 2 or 3 seizures), it wasn’t enough to stop my brain from going into functional paralysis mode. I spent just over an hour unable to move any part of my body, struggling to get my eyelids to flicker and completely unable to make a sound. I knew I needed help and that my partner was in the next room, but I had zero ways of indicating to him that I was in trouble.

It’s like having your mouth gagged, your eyes taped shut, and your entire body rolled up and bound tightly in a weighted blanket; the entire time even your thought processes become sluggish and it takes effort just to think. There’s so much temptation to just give in to unconsciousness, I can feel it on the horizon, creeping closer and there’s not a lot I can do to keep it at bay. Some days I admit I welcome it; being functionally paralysed terrifies me, I can’t bare being aware of how helpless I am at the moment in time. Other days simply managing to remain conscious feels like the biggest victory I could ever ask for and achieving it is my way of fighting back.

After about an hour on the floor I had regained enough control of my body to make small noises and through the blessing that is voice technology instruct my phone to call my partner. Eventually we got tramadol into me and managed to move me to our bed. I’m exhausted, it sounds bizarre but having your brain cut off from the rest of your body is shattering. I’m now curled up, wrapped in a fluffy blanket, relishing in the slightly duller pain. I’m admittedly scared to even consider moving but the pain killers have enabled me to feel my body and I’m in a safe place which is all I can ask for.