HEALTH & FITNESS
Local Outdoor Athlete Ravaged by COVID Symptoms Maintains Hopeful Outlook By Sarah Hauge LUCY LARSEN, 45, is an active person. Her work as a nurse in Spokane has meant many years of 12-hour shifts, and sheâs always kept busy with her dogs, her husband, friends, and a plethora of outdoor and fitness-related activities: cycling; skiing; long, brisk hikes; lifting weights five days a week. All of that came to a screeching halt in November when Larsen contracted COVID19. She was ravaged by symptoms. âI thought I was going to die three times,â she says. âI told my husband and taught him how to do CPR.â Thankfully, that wasnât necessary, though life has been far from normal ever since. Her husband became âthe cook, the cleaner, the shopper,â she says. âIt took me six weeks to drive, six weeks to leave the house.â At one point, âit took me an hour and a half or two hours to eat breakfast,â Larsen says. âAn hour to get up the stairs.â More than six months later, the acute phase has passed but many of her symptoms have not gone away. Larsen is a âlong-hauler,â someone who is still experiencing symptoms weeks or even months after the first onset of COVID-19. Sheâs far from alone. The exact numbers of
those who have âlong Covidâ are hard to pinpoint; one recent survey in the UK (ons. gov.uk) shows that 13.7% of participants continued to experience symptoms 5 or more weeks after the assumed time of infection. Larsen, a native Australian, knows many others in Spokane and around the world who are also long haulers. âOne of my best friendsâsheâs an athleteâshe is six weeks ahead of me.â Larsen suffers from POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome) and dysautonomiaâan issue with the regulation of the blood flow that can affect heart rate, blood pressure, and cause brain fog, among other symptoms. Since November sheâs dealt with inflammation, anxiety, balance problems, hair loss, an impaired sense of smell and taste, and relentless fatigue. Sheâs had to focus on taking care of herselfâswitching units and going part time in her career as a nurse so she can work shorter shifts, cutting out formerly favorite foods that are known to increase inflammation, and easing way, way back on the activities she loves. Rather than the 5-miles-per-hour hikes she used to do, sheâs slowly worked her way
up to walking one mile a day. Sheâs done one, one-mile bike ride. âMy mountain bike and my road bike have been sitting in the garage looking at me, just looking. Iâve had to come up with ways to cope.â The key to remaining optimistic, she says, is focusing on how far sheâs come, not how far she has to go. âI donât want sympathy. I donât need it,â she says. âIâve realized itâs more about connection, friendship, generosity.â Her husband has been âamazing.â Friends have brought her dinner. Sheâs also made vital connections through the Survivor Corps group on Facebook. Larsen has realized that with long-haul COVIDâas those whoâve suffered from chronic illness and injury have long knownâ it can be very difficult to communicate to others what youâre going through. There are no quick fixes. Sometimes people donât understand, or they expect friends or family to snap out of their ailments and go back to normal. âPeople who donât believe youâŚthat is detrimentally insulting,â she says. âItâs important to connect with people who get you, but who arenât going to drain you,â she says. Itâs also important to accept your own bodyâs relationship with its illness.
âA very good person told me, âdonât try to dominate COVID, accommodate COVID.â Iâm living with this and Iâm coming at peace with this. Thatâs very important. Iâm fighting.â Larsen hopes that a couple of years out from her positive COVID diagnosis sheâll be back to her normal level of health and fitness, but she knows itâs going to take many small steps along the way. Sheâs trying to embrace that. Growing up, Larsenâs mom always told her to stop and smell the roses. âIt took me 45 years on this earth to do so. Slow down. Donât rush. I am learning, and it takes a whole attitude adjustment, but slow it down.â Recovery is happening at its own pace. In the meantime, Larsen is doing her best to lean on her community and accept things as they come. âSet healthy boundaries and take care of yourself,â Larsen advises anyone else going through a similar struggle. âYou have one life.â// Sarah Hauge is a writer and editor who lives in Spokane with her husband and children. She wrote about walking and running every street of Spokane in the last issue of Out There.
JULY-AUGUST 2021 / OUTTHEREOUTDOORS.COM
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