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Accepting

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14 years 3 months ago #18962 by mtbailey
Accepting was created by mtbailey
I'm beginning to accept ITP and everything that goes along with it.
I am a 3 sport high school athlete and was told that I can't play sports right now.
Lacrosse is my main sport and I am a goalie and luckily enough they said it is safe to play lacrosse because I have a helmet on therefore lessening the risks of hitting my head and having internal bleeding. I can't play field hockey and they told me today that they don't think I will be able to play volleyball. ITP causes changes of lifestyle but I don't want it to start changing me. I decided that I am not going to let it define me. A bit of advice for the teens being newly diagnosed.
It gets easier. Right now it may not seem like it will but trust me. It will. If you keep a positive attitude about things it can make whatever situation your navigating better.
I'm wondering if there are any other athletes who had similar issues within the first month/ish of diagnosis?

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14 years 2 months ago #19581 by Bro123
Replied by Bro123 on topic Re: Accepting
Im in the same position! softball was my life and then once i was diagnosed it changed everything. i go to my team's tournaments and watch but its so hard not to play. right now my count is at 20 which is alot better than before the ivig.

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14 years 2 months ago - 14 years 2 months ago #19993 by froken93
Replied by froken93 on topic Re: Accepting
Code:
I'm never going to accept my ITP. Off course I'm doing things to make it better and to be safe (like enough sleep, more careful at the gym and a healthy diet), but I won't accept that I have it. I'm going to continue to try to solve this mystery. The answears are in my body ;)

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14 years 2 months ago #19995 by tgurin12
Replied by tgurin12 on topic Re: Accepting
I am not a teen, but I want to tell you not to give up what you love because of ITP! I am an avid horseback rider. For two months my platelets were below 20 so I couldn't ride and ended up losing my lesson slot at the prestigious stable I was taking lessons at. However, now that the NPlate is working, the stable tries to fit me in wherever they can. Some weeks I ride, some weeks, I don't. Treasure the time that you are doing what you love when your platelets are high enough. (I know that this sounds like such a stupid adult thing to say, but you'll find that the happier you'll be in life and the less upset you'll be when you can't participate in your sport.)

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