Well, I've been checking in and reading posts for the last few weeks or so, but with this being the busiest time of my year, I have not had time to post. But things should be slowing down for a little while anyway. My students turned in their final work today, so now I've just got to get it all graded, which will take forever but is not terribly stressful.
To update you, I have now been GF for about four months. I have been CF/DF for about a month and a half, and man do I miss cheese! I decided to go SF and corn F, too, to see if I can get this figured out. I did EF, too, for awhile, but found I had to eat something, and I noticed that not many of you have a problem with eggs. So far, I have yet to see any improvement, which is frustrating, but I keep reminding myself that it can take months. I have ordered the Enterolab tests for casein, eggs, soy, and yeast, and the kit is sitting on my bookshelf waiting for me to stop procrastinating.
Another reason I haven't posted much is that I've been dealing with really painful arthritis in my hands and wrists, probably made worse by the days on end of typing I've been doing. I was supposed to see a rheumatologist in November, but I had to cancel bc I was too busy. (I know, I should take care of my health...it seems like a constant battle between my health and my job, which I know most of you can relate to.) My mom saw some "arthritis gloves" advertised that are supposed to help and leave your fingers free to type (anyone tried anything like that?), so I might try those. So days on end of typing and the freezing cold, wet weather probably not helping with that. Today my whole right arm felt like my bones had been replaced with metal dowels.
On a good note, though, I think (hope) that this whole experience is making me a mentally healthier person. My whole life I have been very Type A, etc, thinking that I was only as good as my last grade. I am still like that, but I have been trying consciously not to be such a perfectionist and not to let other people make me feel like I am the scum of the earth if I get a comma in the wrong place in a manuscript. (Academics are like wolf packs--they'll turn on the weakest member, so you learn quickly to never, ever, show a weakness. Apologies to any of you who are/know academics, but for anybody pre-tenure it's pretty much true, although there are certainly exceptions.) I keep telling myself I am more than my punctuation, as MC reminds me frequently, but sometimes it's hard to remember. I keep reminding myself that it's okay to be "good enough" against all logic to the contrary.
Well, that's probably enough venting from me. Thanks for being here. I don't know what I'd do without you all.
Love,
Courtney

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