My name is Nono Osuji and in Skin Struggles I recount my personal experience and struggle with Lupus. Welcome to the 2nd post on my ongoing journey.Â
So as I mentioned in my previous post almost two years ago, at the age of 28, I was diagnosed with Lupus. Lupus is an auto-immune disease where the body sees its own cells as foreign cells and starts to attack and  kill them. This leads to the deterioration of that system. It can attack any system in the body, but it usually goes after the skin, hair, bones, kidneys, muscles, and heart. In my case it first manifested itself on my skin. Which now looking back was both a good and bad thing. Bad of course because it ruined my skin and left it with deep large discolored marks, good because it is what helped doctors identify it so quickly.
My 28th year of life was supposed to be one of growth, fun, and love. I was about to complete my first year of graduate school and I absolutely loved it. I was dating/seeing etc a man named, we’ll call him Z. He certainly was not the one but we had great chemistry together and were very attracted to each other. I think that was one of the reasons why I continued to see him, he was only supposed to be a filler until the right guy came. Anyway as a part of my growth and fun I took a solo trip to the Dominican Republic where I soaked up the sun, food, and hospitality of the people.  I can’t go into detail about what happened on my trip because like Vegas what happens there stays there. A couple of weeks after my trip I noticed that I started to develop a rash that was all over my hands, and on both of my eyelids.  My skin on my hands started get extremely dry, it was peeling and developing bumps. I let it go for a few weeks thinking that this was an allergic reaction to something. I was most concerned with the rashes on my face for obvious reasons, it was a raised rash that had a very deep purple/reddish tone. The women at my hair salon told me to put some sort of astringent that they used in the islands. It had a strong smell and burned like hell, but it didn’t take away the rashes on my eyelids that were now developing all over my face. After nothing was working and I had accused the woman who threaded my eyebrows of unsafe and unclean practices, I made an appointment at a dermatologist office.
She was my friend’s cousin so I thought that I was in pretty good hands.  However, I should have gotten an indication of what kind of care I was going to receive by the look of the waiting room. It was gray, had metal chairs, and one generic skin ad on the wall. It kind of reminded me of the rooms in an insane asylum. I shook off the weird feeling and helped myself to three travel size lotions that were sitting next to me in a tray.  At this point the rash was on both of my eyelids, my cheeks, and hands. When my name finally got called to see the doctor, I was unsure of what she would say, but I was confident that it was nothing more than an ugly allergic reaction. When I removed the makeup I was wearing to cover up the rashes the doctor took one look at me and said, “Oh that looks like Lupus.” She said it so nonchalantly as if I had a zit. I was shocked and just started crying right there in the middle of her office. I was crying because the only image I have had of Lupus up until that point was one of my best friend’s friend. Who had Lupus since we were in college and now at the age of 30 she was living in a hospital with a failed kidney transplant and three hip replacements. When the doctor realized how her unsympathetic delivery of the news hit me she started to back track. “You know this could really be anything, it’s unlikely that it is Lupus, why don’t we take some blood tests and a skin biopsy, I am sure it’s nothing”, she re-stated. “Yeah,” I thought, “you should have started with that.” I was still shaking and crying as she wrote out an order for me to get a blood test at a lab.  Her bedside manner improved when she took the biopsy of the dried flaky skin on my arm that didn’t look anything like what was going on on my face. Her nurse held my hand as I cried while the doctor snipped a piece of my arm off for the biopsy. I gathered myself in the bathroom and re-applied my makeup. I thanked the receptionist and when I walked out of the office I began to cry uncontrollably. I was paralyzed from the appointment and was not even aware of what was going on around me. I called my mom, who was more upset than I was at my doctor’s appointment. She told me in her deep Nigerian accent that, “No such thing is in my family and if that woman were half of a doctor she would know that.” In the midst of my tears and worry I smiled to myself because only my mother would make an insult that made no sense, but would make you believe that she was right. She told me to pray and not to worry about it anymore. I then called my older brother one for his pity and two because he hadn’t called me back in a week and I wanted him to kind of feel bad for not doing so. He, like my mother, re-assured me that it was definitely not Lupus and that I had nothing to worry about. I hung up the phone feeling a little better but I still needed a hug, and unfortunately neither my oldest brother or my mom were able to do that since they both lived in another state. So I called the only family I had in the city, my brother Uche and asked him to meet me in Union Square where I had stayed after the doctor’s appointment.
He met up with me within 20 minutes and listened to my experience and what had been going on with me. He gave me the hug I needed when I started to talk about my pre-mature diagnosis of Lupus and what I had heard about the disease through my best friend. He told me not to worry and that it wouldn’t help me at all, we sat and talked and he called one of his friends who is a doctor to ask her about Lupus. After 2 hours of talking and watching the diversity of people in Union Square we went our separate ways and I felt calmer about the situation. This calm lasted for as long as my 30 min ride home. Then the crazy started…