Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Turning Pain into a Smile




Kate Carlton is unique because she lives in pain everyday but is always a light in the world. Runtime 2:36


A Sophomore Journalism student has surgery to relieve pain from her everyday life. 

Kate Carlton is a helpful and inviting person despite having a disorder that causes her pain every day.

            Carlton is a sophomore broadcast and electronic media major in the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication. She is hoping to one day work for National Public Radio as a producer. Carlton is also a member of the Delta Gamma sorority and finds new ways every day to help and lift up her sisters spirits.

            In April 2011, Carlton was diagnosed with having symptoms of a disorder called Endometriosis. 

            Endometriosis is a female health disorder where cells from the lining of the uterus grow on the outside of other parts of the body, such as on the fallopian tubes or ovaries. This disorder causes chronic pain for the person as well as irregular bleeding and possible infertility. This disorder is believed to occur in girls who start their periods at a young age, in women who have a period that lasts for more than seven days, women who have a closed hymen, as well as women who have never had children.
            Even though doctors know the symptoms of endometriosis, they have not discovered what officially causes the disorder.

            “The weird thing about endometriosis is the doctors don’t really know much about it. Like they don’t know what causes it or when it sets in,” Carlton said. “They just know it happens and they can’t even tell you it’s endometriosis until you have surgery.”

            Since endometriosis usually occurs in women from ages 25 to 35, it is very rare that a women Carlton’s age, 19, would have been diagnosed with the disorder.

            Before surgery, Carlton woke up everyday with extreme pain in her lower back and abdomen. She would take 12 to 15 different pills a day to relieve the pain as well as stick to a limited dairy and gluten free diet.

            Although the pills numb the pain, a bump in the road while driving or even a playful poke from a friend would cause Carlton pain.

            Rachel Games, a junior elementary teaching major and Carlton’s roommate, says that Carlton does not complain about the pain she feels.
           
            “ She still remains really positive and doesn’t complain ever,” Games said. “Even when she’s in a lot of pain she doesn’t whine about it or let you know she’s hurting because she is trying to stay so positive.”
           
            One of Carlton’s jobs in the Delta Gamma house is parking attendant. This position requires the attendant to ticket and tow cars that do not have a Delta Gamma parking pass. Carlton says that she has been yelled at multiple times for towing cars but is not offended by the comments made towards her because it is her job. Before this year the parking attendant job did not exist, it is a position Carlton created to relieve stress off of her friend Hayley Hood, the Delta Gamma house manager, who was overwhelmed by they job.

            “I don’t really mind being yelled at if it is to help my friend be less overwhelmed,” Carlton said.

            Carlton’s family, roommate, and boyfriend were the only people who knew about Carlton’s disorder and her recent surgery. Carlton says she tries not to draw attention to her pain because she doesn’t want people to feel sorry for her.

Although Carlton dealt with the pain the disorder caused, when she discovered that one of the symptoms of endometriosis was infertility, she was distraught.

            “One of the best parts about being a women is having kids and when I found out there was a chance that I couldn’t have one of my own, I mourned the loss of my children,” Carlton said.
           
            Carlton and her long time boyfriend, Corbin Greer, discussed that they would adopt if they found out she could not have children of her own. Carlton also said that they planned to possibly use a surrogate if they decided they wanted a child biologically related to them.

Through the pain and struggles Carlton has gone through this year, she still remains a happy and warm person. After her surgery, instead of staying in a hotel with her mom so she could heal, she decided to come back to campus to hear about her friends Spring Break trips.

            Carlton says that she loves people and does not see the point in being in a bad mood just because she is in pain. She says that her faith in God has gotten her through many of the hard times and kept her thinking positively.
           
            “ I think she’s so strong. I mean the past year has been terrible for her and she would never tell you that,” Corbin Greer, Carlton’s boyfriend, said. “She’s in terrible pain but she would never say anything because it’s her business.”

            Carlton is hoping that after her surgery she can start working out and riding horses again. She plans on taking yoga classes at the Huston Huffman Center and returning to the sport she played in high school, barrel-racing. 

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