If you could go back and relive any part of your life what would you do differently and why?

"The best I could do is the best I could do" comes to mind when attempting to answer the question posed. Hindsight is always 20-20, and I can't imagine anyone not wanting to do something over again if given the opportunity, but we know we cannot go back in time; therefore, what's the use in crying over spilt milk.

If I must, however, I would say that I would like to go back in time to when I was about 14 years old and not have thyroid disease. Not having that disease would have changed my life considerably, I believe. Grave's disease made me hyperthyroid, and I started losing weight--down to 99 pounds--as well as having no energy. My heart rate was 140 sitting still. I could not hold a pencil steady in school or concentrate. It took nine months for doctors to get my thyroid regulated and heart beat down to about 60 beats per minute before they could operate on me and remove the two small grapefruit-sized glands. The surgery took place at Norfolk General Hospital in Norfolk, Virginia, in February 1967. Dr. Charles Davis was the surgeon. Then I was home for several weeks and returned to school with doctor's orders to nap every afternoon in Nurse McBride's infirmary and not to participate in gym. Finally, by the end of the 10th grade, I started making much better grades.

Thyroid disease is such an insidious disease, it slips up on you without your realizing it--particularly when you're only 13-15 years old. By the time I underwent treatment, surgery, and continued treatment, the foundation of my high school years had passed. I did not apply myself, mainly because I couldn't!

So if I could do it all over again, I would have not had thyroid disease, would have applied myself in school, and perhaps furthered my education by attending a four-year institution of higher learning after graduation from high school.

All that said, knowing what I know now, I probably would not have made it through math in college because I have self-diagnosed myself with dyscalculia, a learning disability not discovered until about the time I graduated from high school in 1970. Math has always been my bugaboo! After learning about dyscalculia, I now know why. My best grades in school were in English, typing, shorthand, and bookkeeping, and I carried those skills to their ultimate by becoming a court reporter.

My husband, who graduated with a bachelor's degree from Guilford College in Guilford, NC, in 1968, always told me that I made much more money as a court reporter than I ever would have made as a college graduate, so that helped me not feel too badly about not graduating from a four-year college.

I attended Princess Anne Business College after graduation from high school, graduing with honors, and then worked for a year or two as a secretary. Later, I returned to school to learn court reporting and graduated again after about two years of study. During the early 1990s I enrolled in the University of Alabama External Degree Program through the National Court Reporters Association, and there I took all the writing courses and one science course and had an 4.0 average when I went on hiatus due to a 10,000-page backlog of transcript pages at work in federal court. I never returned to complete the degree.

The rest of my education has been self-taught. So I truly have no regrets but that I would like to have been healthier to see if I could have done better in school. Maybe; maybe not. I'm just happy to be here, and I appreciate what good fortune I have had and the hard knocks I have had to deal with, all of which have made me into the person that I am today. I just hope my journey continues for some time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Comments 8

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Annie Payne (website) on Wednesday, 30 November 2011 23:19

Wonderful story Diane about your battle with hyperthyroidism as a teenager. I have suffered with the opposite condition, hypothyroidism and have taken a dose of thyroid every day since I was 22.

Wonderful story Diane about your battle with hyperthyroidism as a teenager. I have suffered with the opposite condition, hypothyroidism and have taken a dose of thyroid every day since I was 22.
Diane Mason Gray on Friday, 06 January 2012 04:02

Well, I certainly have "hypo" now since they removed my thyroid. So I've fought the battle since 1967 and taken pills ever since I was 15.

Well, I certainly have "hypo" now since they removed my thyroid. So I've fought the battle since 1967 and taken pills ever since I was 15.
Golden V. Adams Jr. (website) on Thursday, 01 December 2011 03:12

I've heard it said that some things (like illness), if they don't kill us make us stronger. Your story shows your tenacity with life! Great story showing your work ethic and other values, Diane.

I've heard it said that some things (like illness), if they don't kill us make us stronger. Your story shows your tenacity with life! Great story showing your work ethic and other values, Diane.
Patricia White (website) on Thursday, 01 December 2011 14:50

Knowing now what you overcame as a teenager gives me that much more appreciation for who you are today. You are not afraid to tackle challenges, and I do admire that.

Knowing now what you overcame as a teenager gives me that much more appreciation for who you are today. You are not afraid to tackle challenges, and I do admire that.
Susan Darbro (website) on Thursday, 01 December 2011 18:45

Amen to all the above! (And I love "dyscalculia." Now I have a highfalootin' name for my lack of math skills. Thanks.)

Amen to all the above! (And I love "dyscalculia." Now I have a highfalootin' name for my lack of math skills. Thanks.)
Diane Mason Gray (website) on Friday, 06 January 2012 04:01

Look up dyscalculia on the Internet. It wasn't a diagnosis until 1970, the year I graduated high school! You just might have the same thing.

Look up dyscalculia on the Internet. It wasn't a diagnosis until 1970, the year I graduated high school! You just might have the same thing.
Dick Pellek (website) on Thursday, 05 January 2012 14:24

With great reluctance, I wrote a longish chronicle in my 2010 memoirs about learning for life. My embarrassment at having a second-class brain shows in the text, but the lesson was that we must all strive to do our best, whatever that best is. This is the ideal forum for sharing encouragement; and I'm delighted to have the opportunity to contribute what I have in the way of the journeyman's way achievement.

With great reluctance, I wrote a longish chronicle in my 2010 memoirs about learning for life. My embarrassment at having a second-class brain shows in the text, but the lesson was that we must all strive to do our best, whatever that best is. This is the ideal forum for sharing encouragement; and I'm delighted to have the opportunity to contribute what I have in the way of the journeyman's way achievement.
Sue Hill (website) on Sunday, 24 January 2016 05:58

I enjoyed your story so much, Diane! I wasn't diagnosed with hypothyroidism until the year 2000, and have struggled with my weight since I was 12 years old. If I had known then what I know now, who knows what I could have done. I'm not sure being on thyroid medication would have been the best choice, as it has contributed the my congestive heart failure in a big way. Since I've been on the meds for over 20 years, I've got some damage going on. But, it works out okay. I just take my fluid pills and try to watch my weight. Anyhow I wish the best for both of you! Keep writing!!

I enjoyed your story so much, Diane! I wasn't diagnosed with hypothyroidism until the year 2000, and have struggled with my weight since I was 12 years old. If I had known then what I know now, who knows what I could have done. I'm not sure being on thyroid medication would have been the best choice, as it has contributed the my congestive heart failure in a big way. Since I've been on the meds for over 20 years, I've got some damage going on. But, it works out okay. I just take my fluid pills and try to watch my weight. Anyhow I wish the best for both of you! Keep writing!!