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, May 23

Patience: Can you lend me some?

Patience Can You Lend Me Some

Poetry isn’t my typical style. Even in my job as an author I write children’s books and YA fantasy fiction. However putting pen to paper and writing whatever comes out is how I deal best with my emotions.

I wrote this last night while in the bath. I’ve been struggling with nerve issues recently along with another round of optic neuritis that has drastically impacted my sight. This is the unedited raw poem that came from the turmoil. It may not be the best but it’s the best representation I have of me right now. I know others will understand.

Posted in Archive, January 2023

Surgery 1 Done

Well that’s the first surgery of the year done and dusted. After much anxiety over preop appointments falling through, fear of it being cancelled due to arriving on the ward and finding out that surprise surprise I had a temperature, and the team not being overly sure over the best way to handle my misbehaving jaw – to now be recovering on the ward is such a relief.

There had been some back and forth over how they were going to carry out the surgery due to my jaw having the potential to spasm and dislocate which could impact their management. My last surgery went fine until waking up when it dislocated and I needed to be sedated to have it relocated. A situation we all wanted to avoid repeating. One option presented was to have a spinal anaesthesia and be awake. I declined this as my neurology team have always stressed that they don’t want anything invasive being done to my spine due to all my health complications. This disappointed the team here and we chatted about this a few times, as understandably to them this was the safest way to proceed, however I chose to go ahead with the general as my neurologist was always very clear on the matter.

It went really well which is fantastic. They’ve inserted a suprapubic catheter; which is a catheter that is inserted through an incision in my lower abdomen and into a small incision in the bladder. I’ve had bladder issues for about eleven years now but over the last year these got severe. I reached the point in the summer where my bladder just stopped working and I was unable to void anymore. We tried intermittent catheterising but due to my tremors and spasms in my hands along with frequent dislocations in my fingers this was impossible on some days. Over the last few months I’ve ended up in hospital on multiple occasions with UTIs, kidney infections and retention.

When my consultant originally announced this next step I felt quite down. It seemed like such a spiral in health and I was overwhelmed. However I’ve had time to come around to it all and the relief I now feel having had the operation is significant. This should hopefully mean I start feeling much better, infections should stop being a regular occurrence and life should return to its usual level of uniqueness. So I’m embracing my new addition with a happy heart. Now to recover and get well enough for surgery no2 on my jaw.

Posted in Archive, November 2022

Return to the Hospital

Well I’m back. In the hospital that is. After a short escape and my catheter spectacularly failing I was instructed back to return to the hospital. I was ushered back to the ward and greeted by baymates from the previous day. The nursing staff quickly whipped out the original catheter and placed a larger one in.

Whilst the original one was by no means pleasant, I’d got through the insertion with barely a grimace having been used to catheterising myself daily anyway. This second one was something else. It took several painful attempts to insert, immediately I found myself experiencing a burning sensation that left me in tears and trying not to move so as not to aggravate the sensation. The staff reassured me it should pass.

This morning, after no sleep thanks to pain, the consultant ordered medicine to ease the bladder spasms, assured me it would help and then I’d be discharged. It took 12 hours for the medicine to come to the ward, I’ve only just been given it. I have spent the day begging for relief. The bladder spasms I could deal with, the bypass round the catheter I could deal with, the burning sensation in the urethera? That I couldn’t cope with. The searing relentless sensation frankly overwhelming. After a day being inconsolable the nurses removed it. The relief was immediate. I’ve no idea why it happened when the first one was ok. They are now monitoring to make sure I don’t go back into retention and can cope with intermittent catheterising in the meantime.

The indwelling catheter was meant to be a solution until they could do the op to fit the suprapubic catheter. Hopefully I’ll be able to manage without it until then.

Diagram of Suprapubic catheter
Posted in Archive, November 2022

Fridays Ambulance Call Out

As the early light of Friday morning broke through the damp cover of night I lay in bed counting the minutes until my Drs practice opened. The pain in my lower back had been agony all night and I suspected my ongoing UTI had progressed. After a night of no sleep 8am couldn’t arrive quick enough.

By the time I arrived at my doctor’s for my 11am appointment my temp had hit 40.3c and I was in urinary retention, my heart rate and blood pressure were through the roof. I can vaguely remember being encouraged out of my wheelchair chair and onto the bed whilst they phoned an ambulance. Shivering with fever chills, and desperately tired. Three hours later I was in the back of an ambulance on my way to the hospital.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen A&E so busy. The staff were amazing and after quickly establishing my veins were playing hide and collapse they had an ultrasound out to guide them. They hooked me straight up to antibiotics for an upper kidney infection and told me urology would make me a plan.

Waiting for ward rounds

Saturday morning three burly Urology consultants appeared at the end of my bed. “What would you like us to do?” The question caught me offguard. I’m rather used to staying quiet and listening so as not insult god complexes, or putting my thoughts across in a tonned down manner. When I explained I’d be happy to be guided by them, it was really refreshing as they took the moment to explain my options. I could that day under local anesthesia have a suprapubic catheter put in: this would involve a small incision in the tummy allowing them to put the catheter through and to the bladder. Alternatively I could have an indwelling urethera catheter and go home, to come back at a later to have the suprapubic catheter put in under a general. I chose the latter option giving them a brief explanation about my Ehlers-Danlos and how due to EDS you can pump me full of local but I’ll still feel everything. They happily accepted my decision .

Back in 2019 whilst pregnant with my daughter I’d agreed to surgery where they attempted to remove a large suspicious mole from my breast without pain relief or sedation due to the pregnancy. The local failed. I felt every cut. The team did their best to distract me but the whole thing was traumatic. I made the decision at the time to not put myself back in that situation ever again. So even though the suprapubic catheter is meant to be better long term I’m happy to wait a few extra days/weeks for it if it means they can put me under.

So why has this all happened? My guess is that it’s down to the Ehlers-Danlos. My bladder has been dodgy for well over a decade, it’s just recently sped up in its decline. I’m feeling a little emotionally up and down, frustrated mainly but I think it’s healthy to acknowledge that. I know this will all feel normal soon.

*On a side note if you use catheters and have any tips on making it more comfortable please get in touch!

Posted in Archive, November 2022

Motherhood and Pacing

Being a mum is without a doubt one of the best, and most challenging, joys in my life. Whilst there is an element of predictability, there is also the beauty of their ever growing imagination. We never quite know what they will ask next or what game they’ll invent. It really is a blessing. Hearing my youngest call out in her sleep the other night “Sing for your treasure pirates!” is a memory I will treasure with a chuckle.

Last week my son and I found ourselves in the local children’s ward again. Luckily this time our stay was short. He had clung to me like a young monkey. The way children do when they’re feeling awful. He’s five now, and as much as I love holding him, especially as he’s usually so full of beans and always on the go, 13 hours like that took a physical toll. I knew better, but when our children are ill pacing goes out the window. It’s a week on and I’m only just starting to feel myself again.

We had found ourselves in hospital without much warning having been sent straight there by the GP. Normally I go armed with extra clothes, extra meds, books, etc. This time I just had my handbag. I will now always carry an extra day’s worth of meds with me.In the days after his discharge the fatigue was at levels it hasn’t been for awhile. My partner found me taking a break whilst getting ready for church on Sunday morning. I felt ridiculous but at the same time knew I needed to listen to my body

It’s a new balance I’m needing to learn to walk. In reflection I can see ways I could have helped limit the physical impact. For example I could have explained my conditions and asked if I could have had a small blanket to fold up to cushion behind my back where it was spasming etc. Hopefully this will help a tad next time.

You’ll be glad to know that although still on antibiotics my eldest is back to his bouncing about cheeky self.

Posted in Archive, November 2022

First Neurology Appointment

The nerves leading up to today’s appointment had been doubling with each sunrise. I was dreading meeting my new neurologist. After a decade under the care of Prof Wonderful, and have met more than a handful of neurologists with severe god complexes before I wasn’t feeling very optimistic. Whilst I knew that it was ridiculous to tarnish all neurologists with the same brush, I had met multiple neuro’s from this particular hospital before who had awful bedside manners. Previously they had refused to take me on as patient as they had deemed me too complicated at my first appointment. The second time they met me my symptoms were brushed under the rug with a quick “ah it’s most likely a side effect of your Ehlers Danlos” but didn’t run any tests to back this up. So I was hesitant to say the least, and that I would once again be swept under the rug.

The appointment had come rather suddenly as an opening slot had become available via their virtual neurology clinic. Whilst it meant that I still wouldn’t get my botox, it would at least mean that my foot would be in the door, my name on their patient list, which feels like a positive step forwards after several months of floating around in the neurology space waiting to be allocated to a hospital.

I was pleasantly surprised by the neurologist who met with me. He was open about his retirement plans and understood my wishes for continuity of care due to the complex nature of my health. It was agreed that I would be assigned to a different neurologist, whose specialism was Dystonia, he reassured me he would book me into the botox clinic as soon a space became available. I had expected there to be an issue when I brought up the frequency of my injections (6 weekly) as this is quite a small gap between treatments than what most prescribe. His understanding of the matter was not one I’d been met with before. Normally I have to really battle to get my Drs to understand that this treatment regime was one created out of necessity to keep me out of the hospital due to the severity of my Oromandibular Dystonia.

We had had a brief chat over where we felt my treatment needed to be going moving forwards as whilst the majority of my body is fairly well controlled my jaw is feeling much like a losing battle. I still have a lot of baby teeth as I don’t have the adult teeth for them in my mouth, which at almost 30 I’m pretty happy their still in place! However several are now painful and wobbly due to the battering they have received from my tremors, spasms, and dislocations. We know from previous experiences there is no point in wiring the jaw shut as the spasms are strong enough to break the wires, but further intervention in some form is needed. We briefly discussed today playing around further with the EMG machine to see if that can pinpoint better the areas needed to be injected and some surgeries we can try. These though will obviously be needed to be discussed again in greater detail face to-face.

Overall it was a very positive appointment. I’m still devastated not to be under my old neurologist, he really helped me not only accept my conditions but also reign myself back in when I needed it. He helped me to adapt to my new life and for that, I will be forever grateful.

Posted in Archive, July, July 2022

Urology Pick Me Up

Yesterday I attended my first appointment with my urology consultant. I had no idea what to expect. Urology issues are common in my family but I’ve never pushed to have my issues investigated. I had a scan once in 2012 and was told oh it’s just an overactive bladder just try to go to the loo less and you’ll be fine. I was training to be a midwife, I was queen of going to the loo less.

I hadn’t realised just how nervous I was. I’ve been coping with on/off incontinence issues for a longtime now, it can take me twenty minutes to void my bladder and it’s never fully empty. Throw in my prolapse on top and things are just not great in the pelvic region. When he asked me to explain what was wrong the words just tumbled out at top speed, I was vaguely aware of my hands nervously shaking. He stopped me a few times, got me to take a breath, reassured me there was no rush he had time to listen to me and that I could explain in as much detail as I could.

He was eccentric in his mannerisms, but put me completely at ease. After my neuro left this was the pick me up I needed. Before I left his clinic I had appointments in my hand to come back for further testing, instructions for at home testing and a date to review the results. The NHS at its finest.

Posted in Archive, may 2022

Reintroducing Me

I’ve had a few people on the Facebook fan/follower page for this blog asking for more information about myself recently. After coming up to ten(!) years of blogging and activism I feel it makes sense to post this small reintroduction for those who have joined me on my journey more recently.

First off my name is Rebecca, but please call me Becca. I’m 29 years old and not quite sure how I’m turning 30 this year when it feels like I only finished sixth form a year ago. I grew up in the south of England in Hertfordshire, and now live in the North West with my Fiancé and our two beautiful children.

In 2012 I became ill with Dystonia, untreated chronic Lyme disease, and worsening classical Ehlers-Danlos syndrome amongst many other things. I was bed bound for a very long time and took to blogging as a way of therapy, advocating, and connecting with others in similar positions. I’ve come a long way since then thanks to getting my Lyme disease treated, along side getting a medication routine that has helped control my other symptoms somewhat.

Back in the early days when I didn’t have much control

I have continued to blog on here, do lives on facebook, and advocate in various other ways as life with chronic illnesses is never the same. Even now when it’s drastically different from when I first became symptomatic there are still occasions where I have to fight for help. Without access to the medication I take daily I would be in hospital constantly.

Blogging has helped me feel less alone in this journey. I hope it’s helped those who read these post too.

Posted in Archive, march 2022

Bandages & Bruises

Last night I spent hours upon hours sitting in my local hospital A&E waiting room. I witnessed paramedics having to treat patients on board their vehicles as the hallways were already overflowing. Drs were having to discuss treatment and admit/discharge from the waiting room. It was heartbreaking. I’d have left if it weren’t for the fact my jaw had been out for three days and desperately needed relocating.

When I was called through, the Dr passed me the penthrox and told me to use it for five minutes and she’d me round to relocate me after. They left the curtain open to keep an eye on me. I vaguely remember feeling giggly. I’ve had this medicine a few times and that’s my normal response. But never this long. Next thing I know I’m coming round having lost consciousness and somehow ended up on the floor. They quickly got me back on the chair, manipulated my jaw into place and bandaged me up. The bandages must remain on now untill I see my neuro.

Ready for mass

I mentioned at the time I had considerable pain on my left pain but this was ignored. Despite falling unconsciously and somehow to the floor they never thought to look me over. I now have a significant bruise, my pain is high and I’ll be heading to the walk in tomorrow to get checked over. When I was diagnosed with EDS it was impressed on to that swelling and bad bruising always need to be looked at.

Whilst I appreciated the hospital was indeed ran off its feet. People like myself with chronic complex conditions can’t afford to slip through the net. I hope the demand eases off them soon.