things are looking up, oh finally.
i thought i’d never see the day
when you’d smile at me
we always pull through,
oh when we try.
i’m always wrong but,
you’re never right.

I have said before that I am often more content when I am on the road, away from home, than when I am here, in this nucleus of familiarity.
What happens, though, if the road gets familiar? The road feels like home. The lostness increases yet, is no longer lostness but foundness?

honestly, can you believe,
we crossed the world while it’s asleep?
i’d never trade it in,
‘cause i’ve always wanted this and
it’s not a dream anymore,
it’s worth fighting for.

My life has recently started making a bit more sense. I have work—and more impending work—and travel plans and a slightly straighter direction for my ambition. At least in the next two months with the road/the air in my future. I can no longer linger in my distraction, yet channel that energy into creative pursuits: writing, being, creating. Creating my life.

could have given up so easily
i was a few cheap shots away
from the end of me.
taking for granted most everything
that i would have died for
just yesterday

I feel like I write about the same things all the time—and I think, to an extent, I have been for longer than I have really realized.

we age more slowly when we move quickly versus standing still.

John Green 

Writing on the problem, the frustration, the constraint of stillness—of routine, of not embracing chaos. Lostness is chaos. Movement—or lack-there-of. I’ve reiterated—recently—about lostness. The joy, specifically in the past, of being on the road—or in the air. The chaos of losing much, if not all, routine.

The chaos is beautiful.

Because there is nothing to anticipate when you are lost, beyond becoming found. Lostness is uncharted territory. Unfortunately, it is also not sustainable—or, not self-sustainable. Eventually, you become found in lostness. It’s chaos no longer welcoming. I don’t want to get to that point.

I want to keep moving. Forward. Dynamically. (I suppose static moves as well, just it doesn’t go anywhere. The current does, but the static itself does not.)

I spent the evening watching a season of Roadtrip Nation. One time, my friend Tara said her sister wanted to have the experience of living in a van. Well, an RV is kind of like a giant van [sort of. If you are creative or squint or whatever]. Since that point, I shared that desire. Because that sounds awesome.

[…] we’re just getting started.

looking up, paramore.

There is a certain chaos associated with being on the road. [And, to a different sort of chaotic vibe, in airports. And in the fact that airplanes involve people being in the sky.]

Opportunity is finding its way to me, perhaps. But I feel like I am standing still. I need to find my way to it. And the typical road maps to that aren’t working anymore. So where do I find the atypical ones? Maybe, in that confusion, in that chaos.

And I hope, to a deeper level, I can make that chaos a part of my future plans. In exploring this lostness, explore my world, too. I can dream. Maybe I’m only now realizing the truth of that statement.

I can dream.

And that can
become
something.

Things I’ve done lately:

1) Taken some pictures and forgotten to blog them. [I did a 12 of 12, even.]

St. Boniface

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Assiniboine Park Zoo

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Minneapolis/St. Paul

2) Got another job that I still can’t start because for-good-reasons-red-tape.

3) Waited.

4) Read books. I’m trying to read 75 books this year (Overdrive + library access = awesome). Currently reading The Psychopath Whisperer by Kent A. Kiehl. (And The Art of Non Conformity and I’m Only Being Honest still. And a bunch of other things. I thought I liked paper books better than eBooks but I seem to get through eBooks more quickly, whereas Jeremy Kyle above just gets to keep hanging out.

5) Went to Minneapolis.

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Saw my cousin Dean.

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Saw his team’s concrete canoe. Ate cookies and pretzels in outlet malls.

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Spent a couple nights on an air mattress in a hotel room, ‘cause that’s how we roll.

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Finally went to the cupcake place on University (I think it’s just called Cupcake.)

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Ate this cupcake at 9 AM:

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Slept in the car. Ate an unacceptable amount of junk food.

And shared this crazy massive bowl of mac & cheese with my friend Scott when we went for dinner with Heather. (Scott called it a trough. Also it dominated us.)

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6) Watched The Jeremy Kyle Show. Damn ridiculous British TV that is actually amusing. More amusing than Maury for sure.

7) Hope I have done more than this. :]

The Tour de Good Things was a way i could summate the crazy journey I took to culminate August and begin September—both on an extremely high note. It has been nearly impossible to come down from the high that begun prior to Medicine X 2014 at Stanford University [disclosure], especially since the journey encompassed 7,227 kilometres (or about that). The last Thursday in August, I got into a car with a 60L hiking backpack of necessities and a drawstring backpack of medications, my only “prepared” travel document being my passport, and left home for 12 days. I arrived back into Winnipeg by plane last Monday after a red eye flight via Minneapolis—my initial destination.

There are many posts in here waiting to be written, and a video to come. But as many, many others have summated, the power, the magic, the amazing of Medicine X is in the people: This is a theme that would cover the entirety of the Tour de Good Things.

Minneapolis.

This kid (my cousin, Dean) headed down to University of Minnesota to start becoming an engineer of the probably civil variety, not the train variety [though, train engineers are probably also very civil]. So thanks to him I got a really long ride to the airport.

I also had grilled cheese and an awesome conversation on the parallels of asthma and T1 diabetes with these lovelies, Scott and Heather.

SFO. All over the East Bay. Santa Cruz. Davis.

My awesome aunt, Linda, and my grandma dropped me off at MSP after a 4.5 day drive to the airport […okay, the airport truly is only 8 hours from home. Not that that’s close.] and a four hour flight, I hit ground at SFO and was swept up into my “Cali-bestie” Steve’s truck, where (after picking up pizza), I FINALLY got to meet his long time partner and now husband, Doug (finally. On my third visit to the Bay Area—third time’s the charm, right? Doug is, of course, to a tee of how Steve describes him, and a total sweetheart just like Steve). We headed to Santa Cruz the next day, and San Jose where I finally got to meet his mom, Claire, his sister Sheree, and Sheree’s husband, Dan, who had us over for lunch on Monday.

The next day we headed over to Davis to get Steve’s new bass set up by a cool dude named Harrison.

San Francisco.

Steve drove me out to SF on Wednesday [because he is the best] to ensure I made my connection with my friend Carly (whom I met at MedX in 2012!) at the Twitter building. Carly’s friend Samantha was [at the time] working for Twitter, and had invited Carly for lunch—and opened up the invitation to any of Carly’s friends who wanted to come, too, which was beyond awesome :). (Samantha on the left, Carly—our link!—in the middle :].) Thanks, ladies!

Carly and I made a brief stop in Japantown after lunch and our tour around Twitter with Samantha, and then headed for Palo Alto. Not long after arriving, we had a spontaneous MedX ePatient gathering by the pool—meeting, and reuniting, with a lot of kickass ePatients—friends.

Carly and I (left, of course), [fellow Canadian!] Annette, Liza, Meredith, Dee, Marie (from Ireland!) and Michael (from England!) at the Sheraton. (Thanks to the Sheraton team member who ran out to take this shot for us!)

The next day, the fun really got started when Dr. Larry Chu [the beyond awesome MedX Conference Director!] introduced us to the Selfie Stick [here’s a professional picture (source) of Leslie, Emily, Karen, Rachel [TEAM CANADA!], myself, and Nikki selfie-ing with a selfie-stick on pre-conference workshop day!]

Of course, Ryan had to give it a go once we hit MedX full-stride—he had to make himself short for me so that a) I could adequately put my arm around his shoulders, and b) because he is too tall and was blocking the world medicine :).

No selfie stick for Brett and I, though (…everybody is SO TALL). He yelled “Oh hey, it’s Kerri!” in the corner right by the selfie station, and then we hugged, and I was like “okay we need to selfie so we don’t forget!” :]

We don’t always selfie in front of the selfie wall—sometimes we selfie in front of the gold badge door. Not only was Devon, below, a hit among the crowd at MedX, I was super excited to find another lunger on the scene [I mean, asthmatics DO hide everywhere, but… they hide].

Devon spoke on a panel about “the non-smartphone patient”, and has COPD. And, though he seemed adamantly against it before I showed him everybody tweeting his quotes, I did get him signed up on Twitter!

My super sweet roomie, Karen, and behind us, her poster presentation on the metaphorical dance that is chronic illness. Karen is a sport psychologist from Mexico and is generally amazing, so we never had a shortage of fun things to talk about :).

And on the subject of roommates, my 2012 roomie, Kim, and I—clearly in the club, and not at a medical conference. #ClubMedX

And, Miss Zoe Chu. While puppy, and not people, she lovingly made MedX granola for me and we had selfie times, so she clearly belongs on this list :].

Joe from Eli Lilly’s Team of Good People and Awesomeness (aka Lilly Clinical Open Innovation) and I—we look less like a painting in person. Probably. 🙂

And, Jerry from Eli Lilly, who was in the elevator on Thursday morning before Partnering for Health when a bunch of ePatients yelled my name and hugged me as I got on the elevator. Except we didn’t know we were supposed to know each other yet, and then he sat down beside me at Partnering for Health and identified us as the people from the elevator and said he was wondering if we were Medicine X people. Because I am all class, I was like “Yeah, we were the people yelling and hugging in the elevator—did you feel left out?! Do you need a hug!?”—he accepted this crazy Canadian’s hug, so we are clearly meant to be friends. Also, he’s awesome. And broke into a presentation during Partnering for Health when all the patients were very confused on Twitter.

Alan, Britt, Leslie, myself and Julie (Photo grabbed from Britt via Facebook!)

Sarah—one of the awesome ePatient advisors—with her CANADIAN SCARF, Rachel and I, after the closing ceremony of Medicine X.

And below, Britt (on the ePatient advisory team), Marvin—who is super sweet and I didn’t get to connect with nearly enough! :)—Rachel and I. 

And, my own ePatient advisor and friend from 2012, Chris (he’s laughing about attempting to hug me with the giant hiking backpack on)—just before Joe (below!), Marie and I headed to the airport (where I almost lost my phone and Joe totally provided an amazing Joe-hug to alleviate my stress, and told me how I could get the Delta people to bring it to me to avoid having to go back through security, since I’d left it at the check-in kiosk). 

These people—and ALL the people I met and interacted with at MedX

(I can’t even source those photos anymore :])

—are not the entirety of the story of Medicine X: but they are the part that matters most. As are the people that preceded my arrival for Medicine X to my own part of the journey, and the people who engaged in #MedX via Twitter: WE belong here.

(Photo of photo cred to Joe Riffe)

And here isn’t always a place: often, it’s a state.

And I love each and every one of you, and I hope our stories continue to connect in a way that makes a difference: Remember to not lose sight of where you were—where we were—hold on to that feeling.

We’ll change the world together.

This is a Story from California, but it’s not going to become part of the Stories from California. Asthma is the reason I went to California, asthma was a big part of the story in California, but I want California to remain about more than asthma. I want it to remain to be about the stories, the change and the people.  In the asthma story of the last four and a half years, it’s a significant event, but I wish with everything in me that I hadn’t had to deal with it in CA.

I’m still coming off of my post-California high two weeks later, which may have intensified after I started feeling better. As I am hopefully on the tail end of the recovery exactly two weeks after staring the prednisone, here’s the story of what the heck happened with my lungs in Cali.

It’s been a couple years since we sorted my inhalers out and finally found a really good balance of medications that keep my asthma in pretty decent control. I take three or four inhalers a day but am overall taking less medication than when I was taking less inhalers, can usually turn things around with a nebulizer treatment or two if my lungs get rough, and am really generally pretty good at predicting where my asthma’s going and how to spin it back on track rapidly. Viral infections, like in the majority of people with asthma, are by far my worst trigger, and I’m lucky in that I don’t deal with much in the way of associated allergies–my triggers are primarily intrinsic, meaning either things going on within my own body trigger it [like exercise or hormonal changes], or my symptoms are triggered by non-allergen things like chemicals, humidity and cold. Infections, as noted above, are also intrinsic triggers.

My first flight was pretty rough on the breathing. I attributed it to being in a cabin full of fragrance-y people [I’m pretty sensitive to fragrances] and a couple dogs [I am apparently mildly allergic to dogs, but I refuse to acknowledge this]. At 38,000 feet, one does not really have a ton of option to get away from what is around them, so I sufficed with being happy that i had a one-seat buffer between myself and my row-neighbour, turned towards the window, and used my inhaler a few times throughout the flight.

By the time I got to YVR, I was good to go, made a speedy jaunt through the airport, cleared customs and security, and found my gate with time to spare.  Then, too much time to spare because my flight got delayed an hour and a half because of fog at SFO.  I figured at this point that a combination of the plane environment and stress had triggered the flaring on the first flight, grabbed some Cinnabon, and eventually found myself in San Francisco feeling pretty good aside from the occasional [normal for me] coughing. All good.

Of course, it would have been too simple if things resolved there. It would have been too simple if the crazy flare would have happened when I was hanging out with Steve who would have been all over rocking his Respiratory Therapy skills on my respiratory situation [which he did an excellent job of doing by phone, however–so.happy I had him around, oh my goodness]. And it would have been too simple if I’d actually prepared properly for something to arise while I was in California. I brought my nebulizer and five vials of Ventolin because usually all it takes is one or two to kick anything I’ve got going on [I can neb every four hours if I’m sick, so realistically I should have packed more meds but really, I was convinced I’d be fine. Wrong.], and I forgot to bring the power cable to charge the neb compressor battery–a mistake I won’t make again any time soon. I hadn’t brought my peak flow meter, so I was flying on only how I perceived I was feeling/responding to the meds.  All the nights I was in California I slept off and on, totalling four or five hours a night because of how I was feeling and using my inhaler anywhere from two to five times a night. When I start having nocturnal symptoms and actually waking up because of my asthma is when I know I’m in a bit of trouble.

[Here’s the one where I give asthma The Finger again on Friday in Palo Alto . . . Yes, hi Mom. Just warning you.  There’s a similar picture from Saturday morning].

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On Friday morning, I finally woke up for real after several useless inhaler hits, and did a Ventolin/Atrovent breathing treatment. Boom, open lungs [thanks Steve!], good enough to walk to Stanford with Kim. Six hours later though, when the treatment wore off, the inhaler wasn’t cutting it again. I busted out everything in the arsenal in my backpack and even braved some Ventolin through the spacer [there is nothing better than being surrounded by a group of ePatients, by the way] and while it took the edge off, it wasn’t killing the cough or the tightness. My neb was back at the hotel and not exactly an option, and because of the lack of power cord I was wanting to [as I usually do] neb sparingly, which probably could not have been stupider seeing as my lungs were feeling worse than they have in the last two and a half years.  By afternoon snack/break time [snacks are plentiful at Medicine-X] I’d talked with Steve and Morgan [another respiratory therapist] and threw back 50 milligrams of prednisone. Thank God that my medical team spans beyond my official medical people. [I also begrudgingly took the shuttle back to the hotel knowing the walk would not be a smart idea.]

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As I’ve said before, prednisone is not something I like in the least. I fight it with everything in me, but at the point where I am three thousand kilometers from home, having the worst asthma exacerbation I’ve had in two and a half years [the last time I needed prednisone] and knowing I need to fly [and preferably be comfortable in the process] in two days, it was only with minor hesitance that I started taking the drug. My thought was I’d start at 50 mg, and instead of doing a straight-shot of 40 milligrams for 5 days like my prescription said [confessions, confessions], I’d start at 50 and rapidly taper off by 10 mg a day.

As stated in a previous post, having not taken prednisone in two and a half years [it was shortly after my nineteenth birthday when I brewed a respiratory infection for two weeks and didn’t realize–read: paying attention to my body fail], and that prednisone is notorious for crappy side effects, I had little idea of what I was getting myself into and what the steroids were going to do to my body. Whether it was starting off at 50 mg, the fact that I hadn’t taken it in 2.5 years or what I have no idea, but while my asthma turned around pretty significantly in 24 hours, the side effects hit me hard. On Saturday I was somewhat of a starving, thirsty, tearful mess because of the prednisone. But . . . I could breathe. In those moments, it felt worth it to be eating nearly everything in sight, worth it to be waking up to drink water [and thus go to the bathroom], and even worth it to be tearing up at every.freaking.thing. [By 72 hours later, I didn’t quite have the same feelings that breathing was worth it–maybe deep down.]

So, running on four- or five-hours of sleep at a busy conference with crazy asthma going on is not a recommended activity. I had a bunch of really beautiful people around me to help me through it emotionally. I honestly have no idea how I’d have gotten through the experience without them being there for me, especially having Carly there who knew first-hand how the prednisone side-effects go down made me feel so much better about the asthma/steroid stupidness.

Sunday after some craziness, steroid-induced hysteria and miscommunications, Steve got me back to the airport and I was feeling okay without a breathing treatment in me since I was responding to the inhalers again, so I figured I was on the up. I took 35 milligrams of prednisone in Vancouver airport with an iced coffee.

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I’m unsure iced coffee is a recommended prednisone vehicle, but whatever. Like I said, you do what you have to do to keep healthy when all the situations surrounding being healthy are so not there.  Is it obvious how exhausted I am at this point?

In Vancouver, my flight got delayed an hour and a half [this feels like the way there, I know]. My lungs were starting to act up again, I was tired, I hadn’t done a breathing treatment all day, and I had an exam to write the next day, and I just wanted to get home. At some point during the four-and-a-half hours I spent in Vancouver International Airport, I found myself in the entirely non-awesome situation of doing a breathing treatment in the bathroom.  Both prednisone and bathroom nebbing are pretty strong testaments to how shitty I was breathing, because really, usually I hesitate to use my inhalers in the bathroom, never mind the neb. I don’t think I truly realized how sick I was until a couple days after I was home.  With a neb treatment deep in my lungs, I felt a bit more human and ineffectively worked at some Darwin and had friendly conversation with Woman from Prince George and Man Going to Calgary who were also stuck in the airport since WestJet’s flight map system was down. I was also realizing that writing an exam the next morning was going to be bleak if I still couldn’t breathe properly and was still effed up from the prednisone. I wasn’t exactly giving my lungs a chance to get better aside from pushing them full of medicine, because I really had little choice at that point.

I tried to get some sleep on the flight home, but essentially ended up listening to Matthew Good the whole time and spacing out the window. Prednisone is a giant catch-22 in which you’re exhausted from whatever you’re taking it for, yet it keeps you wired [don’t blame the iced coffee, that stuff has no effect on me. See also: delicious.] and makes it hard to get any sort of legitimate rest so that your body can recover. What fun. Odette by Matthew Good got me through yet another long span of hours of asthma:

I look tired but I, I feel wired and my body hums like it’s coming undone.

By the time my flight landed at home at 12:30 AM, I was so burned out. All I wanted to do was go to bed, and at that point I couldn’t even predict how I’d feel the next day. If the steroids and the asthma weren’t in the picture, things would have looked very different. I’d have spent more time studying because I’d have been able to focus my energy on the exams ahead and not simply making it home.

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By 8:30 the next morning, I was an exhausted heap in the doctor’s office getting a quick assessment, told to keep doing what I was doing and taper off the steroids gradually down to 5 or 10 milligrams [which I had every intention of doing anyways]. My emotions were almost more screwed up than my lungs at this point [thank you prednisone for both], and I found myself somewhat tearfully accepting the instructions to go get a doctors’ note so I could go home and recover and not go to school and write an exam.  Monday I bumped back up to 40 mg of prednisone because I was feeling worse than I had on Sunday thanks to the crazy travel day, then tore it down for the rest of the week eager to get off of the shit.

At this point, it seemed like an unfair toss-up. I could not breathe well and feel like shit and function, or I could breathe well and feel like shit from the prednisone and not function. Breathing, obviously, won out, and with a lot of snacks and patience towards myself and the emotional side effects [read: randomly tearing up in social psychology, the cafeteria and the university bathroom? Yeah, did that.]. I had intended to to be at work last Tuesday, I was back this past Tuesday. I am now those statistics about missed work days due to asthma. In the last three years prior to this, I had missed two days of work because of asthma [or, being sick in general, made worse by the asthma]. This in part was due to the asthma, in part due to the steroid side-effects, and in part that prednisone screws up your immunity so catching anything would not be a good scene. I had intention to show up to anatomy lab on Wednesday and ended up sleeping through it at home. I then planned to go to anatomy lab on Thursday but I got the time wrong and showed up as lab was ending, not starting so I missed making-up the quiz because I was sleeping on the floor of the university.  I think after waking up from my 45-minute nap for the second day in a row on Thursday was when i really realized how sick I must have been and how much of a beating my body was getting from this crazy exacerbation.

Things turned around, but not as rapidly as I anticipated to be fully better–as I write this over a week later, I’m still not fully better.  Sunday I went to the driving range. I am not a golfer, I do not claim to be a golfer, and I think I have never set foot on a driving range before. The first few rounds of balls went fine, but after about ten shots I was getting short of breath just hitting four or five balls over the edge and needing to take a break. Definitely not normal for me and not expected.  Steve and Morgan told me that it was likely I’d have some rebounding following the steroids, and Steve reminded me it might be awhile before I could exert myself without getting short of breath [he is always right, I don’t know why I doubted him this time] and things could take longer than anticipated to fully get back to my normal. Still, getting out legitimately for the first time since coming home [read: the only place I’ve been other than the indoor driving range in the last week has been the airport, the doctor, and school] was awesome.  Because the prednisone is such a powerful anti-inflammatory and is still having an effect on me, the inhalers are working extremely well at this point, so I hope that things stay like this for awhile.  I’m not even close to being able to work out again, but I’m hoping I can start working up to it by the end of next week.  I had to reschedule two exams and a lab quiz, so I’ve now dealt with the insanity that is truly mixing the asthma thing with the school thing–usually I am pretty good at making them non-interactive, save for the time I had a slight respiratory situation in Teaching Games for Understanding.

There’s no moral to this story. I learned that I always need to prepare for the worst and hope for the best [the hard way], I learned that even when I think things are going to be fine that asthma, or any other chronic disease, can still be extremely unpredictable even when I think I am in good control. I learned that as much as I hate the prednisone, and as much as I hate it even more now, sometimes it is a necessary evil. I learned that just because I usually only need a couple nebs to turn something around doesn’t mean that is always the case, especially going somewhere I haven’t been before and being three thousand kilometers away from home and my asthma care team. I learned that as much as I hate them sometimes, the nebulizer and the prednisone are powerful tools in my arsenal–underscoring the importance of bringing them with me when I travel. I’ve carried prednisone when I travel for a couple years, but it’s never been necessary but I am so, so thankful I had it or else I would have been completely miserable.

And I learned that, including my friends and even my instructors and profs at school (two of whom who simply rescheduled my tests/quizzes without even looking at my doctors note) I have, as I’ve said before, a bunch of really awesome people in my life who will stand by me through the good and bad. Special thanks to Kim for being awesome, supportive and making me feel totally normal through it all, to Carly for sharing in the understanding of being “‘roided out”, to Morgan for her advice, my boss for being amazingly understanding about the whole thing [and turning the tides and basically telling me I needed to not come in last Friday] . . .  and finally, to Epic Steve for being my personal respiratory therapist while in California–I have no idea what I would have done without him checking in with me throughout the days I was at Stanford, helping me figure out what to do next, and sticking with me through the whole crazy experience.

And asthma or not . . . I wouldn’t trade that, wouldn’t trade those beautiful people, for the world.

I’m currently at 39,854 feet elevation, flying above the most Northern part of California at 504 miles per hour. It will take a series of blog posts to get down my full thoughts on the experience of this weekend in Palo Alto, California for the Medicine-X conference at Stanford University. There are so many stories, experiences and connections to touch on, and while they have all been amazing, the first thing I need to do is introduce my friend Steve, aka a million different nicknames but mostly the (famous :]) Breathin’ Stephen.

Steve and I have been friends through the world of blogging since pretty early on in my asthma journey. He hates when I say it [but I’ll say it anyway :)], but he’s one of my biggest inspirations, and quite honestly, my hero. He often describes us as “The Ultimate Odd Couple”, which could not be closer to the truth; however, there is this ridiculous bond that somehow ended up forming between us in the last three years–Ultimate Odd Couple or not, we totally click, and that just solidified in California.

Much to my own surprise, I didn’t get all teary on him at the airport on Thursday like I thought I would when we finally found each other in the International Arrivals area [I was only there like four minutes, Steve, I swear. Calling you was easier than being confused–your airport is confusing :).]  From the airport, Steve took me on a whirlwind tour of San Francisco [my flight was delayed an hour and a half from Vancouver because of the fog in SF, so we didn’t get to see as much as we had hoped to].

First stop was Twin Peaks.

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I need to come back to SF when there is less fog, but the view was still amazing. [And no, we did not plan to coordinate our shorts, we just kind of matched because we are amazing.]

Check out this view:

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[Photo Credit to Steve]

This one’s my favourite:

Twin Peaks with Steve

[Photo Credit to Steve. Or the garbage can or whatever we used to balance the camera on ;). He’s the one who set up this shot though.]

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Giant Pride flag! LOVE.

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I swear we’re on the Golden Gate Bridge, even though I didn’t even really actually see it. That fog is intense.

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[Photo credit to Steve]

Look at that fog!

yellow submarine house

Having a native San Franciscian as your tour guide means you get to become aware of things like the Yellow Submarine House.

It’s by Ocean Beach :].

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Kerri Pose on the beach

[Photo Credit to Steve]

Steve gets a true Kerri Pose on the beach!

Steve and Kerri on the beach

After the beach [where Steve made fun of me for running away from the water, I might add. Dude. I didn’t want to get my awesome shoes wet!)], we grabbed some pizza in Steve’s old neigbourhood [the dudes in there know him, it is unreal and the pizza was awesome :)] and made the journey to my hotel in Palo Alto. [Oh, and he brought me the GOOD KIND of animal cookies!! 🙂 They are awesome!] Unlike what we expected though, the story didn’t end there.

Sidebar explanation. Because, it makes the story make more sense but needs to be a sidebar so as not to detract form all the goodness above.

The unfortunate part is that I got kind of sick in California. I had a bit of a rough time breathing on my first flight on Thursday, but nothing I couldn’t deal with [utilizing entirely too many puffs of the inhaler, but, you do what you have to when you’re at 38,000 feet]. I was good on the second flight and thought it was just some weird short-lived, perfume and/or stress induced thing. First solo trip = stressful, yo.  By “kind of sick“, however, I mean that whether whatever it was that triggered the flight mini-flare persisted or something else triggered me in Palo Alto or prior to getting there, I’ll never know, but I essentially ended up having the worst asthma exacerbation I’ve had in the last two and a half years while in California. Cruddy timing, lungs. With a little help from my friends, I am usually pretty good at staying on top of things and getting back to baseline pretty quickly [and, being away from home made me deal with it more quickly]. If I’m going to, for whatever reason, get sick in a state I’ve never been to before, California was an okay place to have it happen. Steve is a Respiratory Therapist [and, though I was able to dissuade him, was more than willing to make the trek back to Palo Alto to bring me anything I needed (for instance, like the freaking nebulizer power cord I forgot at home) and has stupid crazy severe asthma (is that a good medical descriptor? Badassmatic, yo).  He actually brought me nebulizer meds at the airport because I wasn’t sure if mine would be apprehended at security for being not labeled (they weren’t)]. I always carry prednisone with me when I travel and I’ve never needed to break into it before, but I was extremely thankful to have the steroids with me.

Anyways, Steve was all over taking care of me from two hours away, checking in by phone several times and just generally being awesome–my personal Respiratory Therapist! For those wanting the details on the whole asthma situation, I managed to turn the worst of it around with a fair amount of Ventolin/Atrovent [both in the inhalers and in the nebs Steve gave me] and by starting prednisone. With the prednisone, since I hadn’t been on it in 2.5 years [go me!] I really had absolutely no idea how it was going to affect my body. Which, happened to be completely different than it has the last two times. Because I was concerned about flying home with my lungs all tight and uncomfortable, after some discussion, I threw back 50 mg splitting the dose in two on Friday, 40 mg Saturday, 35 mg Sunday, and so on. Whether it was starting 10 mg higher than I did last time or just the fact that I haven’t been on it in forever, while it turned my breathing around rapidly within about 24 hours [aka no longer coughing awkwardly through the Asthmapolis discussion], I ended up getting the stupid emotional side-effects of the medication and honestly just kept tearing up/fighting back tears at the most random intervals. [Honestly, somebody said something nice or unexpected or whatever to me, I was in tears, it was ridiculous.  It also made me super hungry–Medicine X was a good place to be on prednisone because there are healthy snacks every hour and a half and thus, unlike the last time I was on prednisone, I had no “I just drank a slurpee and ate a Reese’s chocolate bar and that does not mix well with pred tummy” feelings ;)]. Between some sleeplessness, whether breathing or steroid-induced, the prednisone-induced thirst and the needing-to-eat-all-the-effing-time thing, yeah, the pred sucks, but the effect it had on my breathing was so worth it. As I was writing this on Sunday, I’m not perfect yet, but so much better than I was, was correct, but yesterday’s flight adventure gave me a little backslide [regardless: so much better than I would have been had I not taken the prednisone]. I am freaking tired between the busy schedule, the craziness of the trip and the screwing up of my sleep pattern induced by the steroids [and now, after seeing the doctor, I am off school/work until Thursday and doing some gradual prednisone taper crap. Not what I expected to say the least.]

///End non-Steve related digression :].///

—–

This [Sunday] morning was the ultimate in seeing Steve’s compassion in action, though. We’ve covered I’m not good with prednisone [I don’t think anybody really is], but I’m also not good with not having concrete plans–the combination of them was not good. This morning, the intent was my friend Katie was going to pick me up from the hotel and take me to the airport via Rancho San Antonio for a walk [walk would have been no bueno anyways]. Long story short, miscommunications happened due to some unforeseen circumstances, and I basically freaked out when I couldn’t get a hold of her this morning [see also: um, going to blame the prednisone]. My friend Christina had also offered to drive me to the airport, but apparently prednisone + miscommunication = hysterics. I was so stressed out this morning which prompted me to send Steve a message in some fashion I can’t remember. After some back-and-forth for about an hour where I hadn’t resolved anything with either of my rides, and without any hesitation, Steve got in the car and came back to Palo Alto to take me to the airport [Read: bestest friend ever]. In this time, Katie got a hold of me, and we just ended up meeting at the hotel for a bit which Steve joined us for. Long story short, I am extremely appreciative and thankful for Steve’s willingness to be there for me when I am in stress/prednisone-induced tears on the phone freaking out at 6:30 AM. I honestly cannot say thank you enough. [In all his humility, he is probably going to tell me to take all these nice things down–not a chance, buddy, you are awesome.]  Really, these stories only scratch the surface of his awesomeness.

driving through northern california

Driving through northern california

He and I made the drive to the airport, where we hung out and had coffee [read: Steve had coffee. I had Vitamin Water. Prednisone tummy is evil and while I feel hungry, sometimes it’s like a few bites/sips into something and I am just done with it.  Fortunately and unfortunately, Steve is all-too-familiar with the prednisone shit, so if I am going to be a bit of a steroid-induced mess around anybody, he’s my guy and put up with me well] for a bit before he sent me off through security to my flight.

Airport with SteveSteve's blue eyes!

I like Steve’s expression in this one, the picture makes me laugh. PhotoBooth caught him off-guard, apparently. Hmm, apparently that was the theme of the weekend ;). See how blue his eyes are?

Airport with Steve

Yeah, I have the cool friends who will do ridiculous airport photoshoots with me. Actually, I think it was his idea to take more pictures.

Airport with Steve :]

Anyways, Steve . . . you are everything awesome I expected you to be and more. I’ve said it about four hundred times, but I really cannot thank you enough for your friendship, for putting up with me and my crazy messages super early in the morning interrupting your bass practicing [and checking in on me and my goofy lungs over the weekend], and your willingness to go out of your way to help me–not just today but countless times in the last three years. Today was just the ultimate show of that, and while you probably just want me to shut up now, I’ll just say it one more time: I can’t even express how much I am thankful and how much I appreciate your friendship because words can’t do it justice.  I’m so excited that I finally got to meet you and see your beautiful state! :]  Oh, and I promise next time I’m in California I will 1) be able to spend more time with you and 2) hopefully not be sick.

For the rest of you . . . the above [and more] are why I call him Epic Steve.