MISSED CLASSES DUE TO MEDICAL APPOINTMENTS

The first time I went to Jaja, the school clinic, amidst a flare-up, throbbing lower abdomen, back ache, and a whole body collapsing on itself, I expected help. But I was told to get Felvin, the popular menstrual cramp drug, as it was just normal cramps. 

That phrase – it is just cramps – has followed me for most of my life. I was 13 when I was first diagnosed with endometriosis, a condition where tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside it. What started as something I had to be wary of while on my period grew to become one that haunted me even when I wasn’t bleeding. 

I am a 300-level Civil and Environmental Engineering student at the University of Ibadan. I am the social director of my department. I used to be a basketball player, but I stopped because I’m easily fatigued. I like design and visual arts. 

Living with endometriosis is awful. I absolutely hate it. Endometriosis affects my feeding, weight, skin, and mood. For the mood, it is not just hormonal mood swings. It deeply affects how I feel every day. Even after a huge success, I often feel unmotivated. 

I have missed classes almost throughout my stay in school because my medical appointments coincide with days of classes, and because of flare-ups. Even for classes I am able to attend, the chairs are too hard. I missed a Physics test in 100 level because of a medical appointment. I notified the lecturer in charge, but I didn’t hear back. Since then, I have tried not to miss another. 

My relationship with people has been okay. Most people don’t know about my health. The ones who do express empathy. Others have been indifferent; they don’t help, but they don’t worsen it. I’ve never asked the university for help. But I wish they would provide ramps for people with wheelchairs in all buildings, and softer chairs for students. We spend over two hours in class; it’s the least they could do.


As narrated by: Odiaka Ngozi (Ibadan, Nigeria).


This snippet is published as part of the series, Beyond What You See.


Discover more from Chronycles

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Published by

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *