If you’re suffering from Endometriosis or experiencing symptoms, always seek medical advice from your doctor for diagnosis and treatment options.
I had the dream job. Girls all over Australia would kill to have my position. I’d just earned my first internship at Mamamia and best of all I was getting to work with my cousin Mia [Freedman], who I’d always looked up to. I felt so grown up, so motivated and I loved working in an office full of smart, sassy women.
A couple of weeks later, all of that was about to change. I had a specialist appointment and I was completely unprepared for what he was about to tell me. “I think you have endometriosis. It’s quite a common disease but it can affect your fertility. I’d like to book you in for surgery.”
Surgery? What for? I’d never even heard of endometriosis. “Go home and Google it,” he told me. I wish he hadn’t.
It turns out the chronic UTIs and pelvic pain, the excruciating period pain, the nausea, the random bleeding, the crippling fatigue and the horrendous digestive disorders I’d learned to live with over the years were all linked together.
When I came out of the appointment I was confused and still in shock that I’d walked in for a routine check-up and walked out with a date scheduled for surgery. Still, my doctor told me it would be minor day surgery and I’d only need a few days off work.
The surgery lasted four hours and I was in hospital for four days. I didn’t go back to work for two weeks and even then, it was way too soon. The level of pain and illness I’d learned to cope with before the surgery was nothing compared to what it was like afterwards.