My new science teacher for this year just sent us an email. CF is a part of the curriculum for this year, so she sent us a heads up. I know that for some of you, this would not be a big deal, but for me, it is. I don't talk about CF with my friends. What if I started crying or something when she talked about the life expectancy? CF is hard to deal with. Having CF talked about like it is just another disease and the people who have it are victims defined by the disease really bothers me. I mean, I don't know if that's how it will be talked about, but if it was talked about like that, then I would definatly have to offer everything I have to say about the disease: all the new treatments, day-to-day life, and, most importantly, NOT letting the disease define me. I am more than just a statistic. But I couldn't say any of those things without people suspecting something, and I'm not sure if I'm ready for them to know I have CF, and me saying those things about CF would lead to awkward questions and I don't want to lie, or tell the truth.
But on the other hand, I would kind of like to learn about CF from a scientific point of view (genes, proteins, etc). And I kind of might maybe want other people to know I have the disease, and this would be the perfect time to bring it up. But I don't know...the harm in telling my friends is this: CF is a huge part of my life, and it is so hard to deal with sometimes. My friends would never understand. Also I don't want every hospital stay to turn into a huge extravaganza, and even though I could tell them not to make a big deal out of hospital stays it still would turn into a big deal anyway...you know?
So, in this hugely long message (lol) I guess what I'm asking is:
1.Should I tell my teacher I don't want to learn about CF in school? She'd probably say yes, it isn't a huge topic.
2.Should I offer everything I know about CF when (if) we learn about it and then tell my friends I have CF, even though I'm not sure if I'm ready? Or offer everything I know and lie? Or...IDk, any other suggestions.
3.Is it really such a big deal to learn about CF in school? I know I'm making a big deal out of something so small. Is it awkward or anything?
4. Anything else that relates to this message, idk if I forgot anything lol
I'd love any advice, thanks a lot!! <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
But on the other hand, I would kind of like to learn about CF from a scientific point of view (genes, proteins, etc). And I kind of might maybe want other people to know I have the disease, and this would be the perfect time to bring it up. But I don't know...the harm in telling my friends is this: CF is a huge part of my life, and it is so hard to deal with sometimes. My friends would never understand. Also I don't want every hospital stay to turn into a huge extravaganza, and even though I could tell them not to make a big deal out of hospital stays it still would turn into a big deal anyway...you know?
So, in this hugely long message (lol) I guess what I'm asking is:
1.Should I tell my teacher I don't want to learn about CF in school? She'd probably say yes, it isn't a huge topic.
2.Should I offer everything I know about CF when (if) we learn about it and then tell my friends I have CF, even though I'm not sure if I'm ready? Or offer everything I know and lie? Or...IDk, any other suggestions.
3.Is it really such a big deal to learn about CF in school? I know I'm making a big deal out of something so small. Is it awkward or anything?
4. Anything else that relates to this message, idk if I forgot anything lol
I'd love any advice, thanks a lot!! <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">