A Post-Colonoscopy Reflection

By Mara Shapiro from the United States

Featured photo by Scott Webb from Pexels.


Colonoscopies and endoscopies or “scopes” as I like to refer to them, quickly become a part of our lives as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. Everyone and their doctors’ are different, but most of us will get scoped every year or two for the rest of our lives. For pediatric and young adult patients with IBD, that can be a daunting realization. Even though they aren’t a major surgical procedure, the prep is torture, and it is still a day or two we need to spend away from school or work at the hospital and then recovering. It’s a lot. Scopes can become a huge source of stress and anxiety, they certainly are for me.

I just got my yearly scopes and it was definitely an experience I won’t forget. Between chugging Suprep at 4 am, wearing a diaper for the drive to the hospital, and then going into an adrenal crisis at home following anesthesia, this was an experience for the books. Like with other recent parts of my chronic illness journey, I’ve been trying to be more mindful of all these difficult experiences and what I can learn about myself and about life as a result. Here are some of my reflections from my latest scopes and from where my Crohn’s disease is at in general. I hope these reflections can spark some new insights for you as well.

I am stronger than I think.

For me, chronic illness is a constant reminder that I can do hard things. I can do hard things that previously terrified me. Not only can I do these hard things, but I can excel and come out the other end a stronger and more confident person. I try to go into big appointments, procedures (big or small), and flare-ups with the mindset that I am stronger than I think and know that I have what it takes to make it through. This is how I try to be positive and optimistic. I’m not perfect! I oftentimes struggle with negative self-talk and we are all entitled to feel bad for ourselves on occasion, but the difference is knowing deep down that YOU CAN DO THIS and returning to a similar positive mantra especially when things are tough. I went into these scopes with the mantra that “I am stronger than I think” and “I can do hard things” and I survived and I’m proud of myself for getting through them with such a positive mindset.

It’s all about the mindset.

Over the past year, I have really focused a lot of my energy on my mindset and the narratives I am telling myself about what’s going on around me. I have found that being in control of my mindset, and how I feel and view what’s happening, has allowed me to create a much healthier relationship with my chronic illness(es). For example, I went into these procedures with the mindset that: This is going to be hard, I’m going to hate it, but I can do it because I can do hard things. I need to do this for my present and future health. This mindset that I am suffering for a few days for information that will help my doctors and I better control my IBD was very humbling for me and gave me that extra motivation to chug that last gulp of Suprep.

I know my body best.

In addition to having Crohn’s I also have Addison’s disease, a form of adrenal insufficiency where my adrenal glands don’t produce any cortisol (our body's natural stress hormone needed for most of our bodily function). Since January 2022 I have been on a cortisol pump which allows me to get a 24/7 continuous subcutaneously infusion of cortisol in a way that closely mimics the circadian rhythm pattern of a healthy person’s cortisol cycle. This treatment has been life-saving and given me my life back in remarkable ways that are hard to express. Having surgery or anytime my body is under intense periods of physical stress can be dangerous because my body does not naturally increase cortisol production in response to stress the same way a healthy person does. I need to manually try to guess how much extra cortisol I need and also increase my dose for a few days or longer. This was my first time going under anesthesia since having Addison’s disease. Long story short, the anesthesia team did not follow the protocol my endocrinologist wrote out and I ended up going into an adrenal crisis within an hour or two of returning home after the procedure. I am very thankful for my intuition and my dad’s help - we were able to quickly increase my cortisol pump rate and within a few hours, I stabilized. Thankful is the only way to describe how I feel, as this situation could have easily ended differently. Especially after this incident, I always know that I know my body best.

Remission is not a cure.

Thankful is also how I feel that my scopes showed no signs of active disease. Stelara is continuing to work wonders for my Crohn’s disease. However, even though I am in “endoscopic remission”, I am still not symptom-free and there’s a common misconception that being in remission means you’re cured and good as new. I hope in time I will become one of those patients who forget they have IBD, but for now, even though my ileal ulcers have begun to heal, I still have just as many bad days as good ones.

I have Crohn’s but it doesn’t have me.

This one is a bit cheesy but throughout the course of these procedures, I realized that I am in control of my disease. By in control, I mean that I have the power to decide how much my disease impacts my life regardless of how much power and control it tries to take from me. Even on the days when I’m in a lot of pain and not sure how I’ll be able to get more than a few feet from the bathroom, I am still in control of how I let that affect me. My disease is not my entire identity nor my self-worth, it is just a part of me. I have Crohn’s and it’s a huge part of who I am and how I interact with the world, but it is not my entire world. There’s a lot of strength to be found in being able to reclaim some of the power and control that this disease has previously had over me.