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January 07, 2009  
WOUND NEWS: Feature Story

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  • A Story of Diabetes, Meningitis and Melanoma

    With a Little Help from my Friends – A Story of Diabetes, Meningitis and Melanoma


    October 14, 2005

    By: Jean Johnson for Wounds1

    Part One

    Flat on your back under the fluorescent lights of the Emergency Room is no place to be on an inky spring night, says Tara Sullivan. Thinking back on her venture into one of Portland, Oregon’s finest in 1998, she said, “I was really there for cramps, but they didn’t find anything. In the process, though, they did a urinalysis, and the nurse said the sugar was high. I didn’t think anything at the time, until on our way out my husband asked the physician about it. Then came the bombshell. It was something like, ‘oh yes, by the way, you’re diabetic.’”
    Learn More
    Diabetes symptoms may often seem harmless. It is important to recognize diabetes early to reduce the complications of the disease

    Some diabetes symptoms include:


    Frequent urination

    Excessive thirst

    Extreme hunger

    Unusual weight loss

    Increased fatigue

    Irritability

    Blurry vision

    To learn more about diabetes and its treatments, visit
    The American Diabetes Association

    “Here he was this white male in his fifties,” sixty-five-year-old Sullivan continued in her Irish spitfire. “He seemed so indifferent to me. Even before during the exam, he acted like he was tired and bored. I thought to myself ‘who cares, all I need is a good scientist, so to heck with the bedside manner.’ But the way he delivered the news on the diabetes – like he didn’t think it even important. I mean, how could he not tell me? In my book that was not good science, so it goes without saying that I was not impressed with him – his indifference.”

    The diagnoses – and the experience – couldn’t have come at a worse time. She and her husband had just moved from San Francisco to Portland so he could take a position as lama at one of the Buddhist centers. “My health status at the time was really bad – fatigued, run down, depressed. Oh my heavens, I was in terrible shape. The diabetes was doing a number on me, and I didn’t realize it,” she said. “I felt tired a lot and totally uprooted. My husband had a full-time engagement immediately, but did I have one? No. And it was further emphasized by him being the teacher, while I wasn’t anything.”

    “You feel so mean. Like some horrible monster. Sometimes I just furious at my husband and any student that got too close to him. I was so angry that if my feet were damp, and it was hard to put my socks on, I’d go off on a rage. Just flaming anger, you know?”

    Although Sullivan studied art at the Pratt Institute, UC Berkeley’s San Francisco campus, and the San Francisco Art Institute and has earned a living as an illustrator, book designer, and in advertising for years, it took her awhile to get her studio going after the move to Portland. The Pacific Northwest city’s gray skies and dreary rains didn’t help matters.

    “Oh yes, the weather. Hardly what I was used to as a Californian. Between that and one health problem after another, I just ran out of strength. At one point I was so depressed I was suicidal. Going through menopause wasn’t helping of course – I think the ringer that menopause sends you through is way underestimated. Anyway, there I was just lying around the house and doing nothing with this new diagnosis of diabetes hanging over my head, and my husband worried.”

    Continued in Part Two

    Last updated: 14-Oct-05

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