I got FUCKING MOTIVATED and started doing everything I could to make myself better. I read into the power of the mind for healing, and started visualizing golden strands rebuilding in my hip, making it strong and stable. I took more vitamins. I ate more protein. I religiously did my PT every single morning at Whetstone, and tried to be as honest as possible during my appointments with Brad. I drank shit tons of water, and got myself a (SICK) used mountain bike (Judy 3.0). I swam a mile with only my arms, and wore my running shoes all the time. I foam rolled (not too much!) and listened to my body. I started seeing Ginna Ellis (Boulder Acusport) for acupuncture, and at my first appointment, she asked me a bunch of questions, including “did you ever fall down?” There was that question again, which I’d been asked by several other doctors and PTs. “Nope!” I answered confidently (and then she stuck me with a ton of glorious needles). That night when I got home I told Alex, “Man, everyone keeps asking me if I ‘ever fell down’...but I didn’t, right? I can’t remember falling….” Alex shook his head at me, “Dude, how do you not remember. You took the hardest fall I’ve ever seen you take on Day 1 of the backpacking trip. Remember? Right on your face, with the fully loaded pack?” Whoops. I mentioned it to Ginna at my next appointment, and then didn’t think much else of it.
Finally, in early April, things seemed to have turned a corner. Brad had crushed it. My hip wasn’t achy all the time. I was sleeping better, testing better at PT. One Friday morning, Brad told me he thought I was ready to try a small run test over the weekend. As Alex and I drove away, I was quiet and shaky. I couldn’t believe I could try to run. I was so excited but so nervous. I didn’t feel 100%, and because the injury had been caused (or at least exacerbated) by me running and skiing when I wasn’t 100%, I was scared to try again. But also: unbelievably excited. That Saturday morning, I took some tentative jogging strides and immediately felt my spirits lift. My hip didn’t feel 100%-- BUT...it happened. My heart was STOKED. My appointment with the doctor in Boulder was approaching the following week, and I wasn’t sure that I should go. But then again, I wasn’t 100%, and I had gone 5 months without running. “Worst thing that happens,” I told myself, “is that he tells you you’re fine and a hypochondriac.”
Unfortunately, somehow, my brain hadn’t examined ALL of the worst case scenarios. “Well, first things first, you do have a labral tear,” Dr Mazzola told me that sunny April morning in his Boulder office. “But I’m also not convinced that that’s what you’re dealing with.” I couldn’t believe it. After all of that, I had indeed fucked up my labrum at some point. “Did you ever fall down?” he asked me, and I told him triumphantly that YES I had fallen down, but it was back at the end of last August. “Interesting,” he replied.
I can’t remember exactly how long the appointment was, but it was the best doctor’s appointment I’ve ever had in my life. Up until that point, I really felt like my PTs were the only ones who had seemed to care about figuring out what was going on and how to get me better. This doctor obviously cared. He went through a long series of physical tests. He found the same thing Brad had found, with my hips tilted forward and my left slightly more forward than my right. After running through tests and beginning to look at things with the ultrasound, he had found that my SI joint ligaments were damaged and unlocking in oppositional directions, my glute medius still was exhibiting tendinopathy, and my rec fem was looking GOOD (which was surprising, since I was still having some pain in the front of my hip). He tested my psoas, which he said wasn’t firing at all. “Maybe you have a back injury...let’s look at it with the ultrasound…” he mused as I flipped onto my stomach. “A back injury?” I asked. “Yeah, sometimes when you have a back injury, your nervous system can shut down function to certain areas,” the other doctor in the room told me. “Oh man,” Mazzola said, running over my spine with the ultrasound. “Well, avulsion fracture of L1 vertebra.” Dr. Mazzola then “tested” his theory by numbing my back, then re-testing my iliopsoas. Boom. Worked totally fine. Medical miracle.
Sure enough, it had all (likely) started with that fall on our backpacking trip, and then had progressed to being tendinitis (and then tendinopathy) of my rectus femoris and glute medius, SI ligament strains, and a labral tear because half of my hip flexors had stopped working, and meanwhile I was putting in 50-60 mile weeks of running when we got back from our honeymoon and didn’t stop, despite pain and weakness and sleepless nights, until mid-December.