SURVIVOR:
Dextroscoliosis
“POSITIVE.” That was still fresh on my mind, as the doctor
told what my condition is. I felt nothing, I’m speechless until a tear fell
down from mom. Still I felt nothing.
I don’t really understand how serious it was. Is it a matter
of life and death or is it a virus that will slowly kill me? Am I an HIV
carrier? Absolutely, no. Am I pregnant? Of course not! Then what? I don’t have
any idea, not a single one.
Until a nurse, a doctor, some hospital staffs and mom
approached me and started to measure my body. After an hour or two, the doctor
showed a brace weighing 3-4 kilos in iron & aluminium steel and told that I
need to wear this for 23 hrs, for two years, that it was the only cure.
Wordless and dumb. I started to cry.
First night, I slept on the floor without any comforter or
mattress at all but a single blanket, and if theres a worsiest word, I’m not
allowed to sleep without a pillow on my head for two years. The pain as I laid down
wearing iron steels on my body. The tears I cried when the lights off and no
one cared to be with me. It doesn’t mean that they don t love me, it’s
just that I don’t want to be a burden.
And if only mom heard me crying or saw a single tear from me, it will cause her
too much ache and pain.
First morning. I need to go to school, and face the
reality. My dad accompanied me to our classroom and talked with my adviser
about my condition. No one dared to ask me what happened, they just gave me a
smile and a hug. And I felt I was loved.
I finished high school and entered post secondary in a
technical institute in Quezon City. The location of the school is really a
remote in space from our residence. I need to take two rides on jeepney and a
little walk to reach the school. It’s not a big deal for me, what bothered me
most is how people stare at me, they looked at me from head to toe seems like
I’m a robot, an alien, a total stranger. It continued until I entered college,
I found friends but I can’t go bond with them whenever they go to malls, parks, parties or even in grace
or break period. I felt isolated.
I’m not motivated to go to school anymore, I hate how people
stare at me every time they see what I have on my back and on my neck. I hate
the feeling of sitting alone at the back on our Physical Education class. I
hate how my family treated me so special. I’m not special. I’m just a girl
having aluminium and iron steels. I can do things as what normal people can do.
I’m not disabled. I’m not paralyzed. I’m normal. The way people treat me
different makes me feel that I’m not belong them.
That experience of mine created a vision to me that I have
to prove myself worthy as a person to them.
I stopped on the middle of preliminary not to rebel but I
just woke up one day changing all of my plans, wanted to get out from the fear
that other people created in me. I want to face them with my chin and middle
finger up, with my iron steel bars and shout, “HEY! I’M BETTER THAN YOU NORMAL
PEOPLE!”
But how? How can I prove that I’m far better than anyone
else? Still I’m on the process of proving it to them. On the process of making
myself worthy.
2 years passed, lessons and mistakes learned, perspectives,
changed in a way that I have to prove myself for my own and not for anyone
else. There’s always a reason why did this happened to me. And for the others
who have the same condition like me. I would love to end this saying, “WE’RE
SPECIAL. GOD MADE US SPECIAL.”
Grabe girl!
TumugonBurahinnaiyak ako dito!! naalala ko pa nung mg kaklase pa tyo! haha!
your such a strong women! i'm proud of you ateng!! haha!!!
:)