Celebrating Success
I recently received a “good news” email from Nadine Saubers. In 2005 Nadine was involved in creating and marketing two albums of Christmas Songs for dog and cat lovers – and developed the Pet Laughs web-site for them. She has just heard that two of the songs from Celebrate Catmas! and Celebrate Dogmas! have been chosen by Disney to be on the Disney compilation Christmas CD this year! As she says in her email “We’ve been working on getting an endorsement from someone with clout for a couple of years and for our purposes Disney is about as good as we can get!” And I have to agree – this is success to celebrate.
Nadine lives in California, and although we have never met, we have been in contact via internet for a few years now. Nadine had completed treatment for HepC in January 2005 but was left filling very ill and depleted after the treatment. She struggled with extreme fatigue, hypoglycaemia – just to name two things I recall her coping with. By Christmas 2006 she was beginning to feel better and had set up a website called Nadine Art, featuring a poster for Hepatitis C Awareness
By the summer of 2007 Nadine had just finished a book called “The Everything First Aid Book” when she was asked signed up to write and have published a book on fatigue – “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Fighting Fatigue”.
Earlier this year she initiated a company called Use It Again Sam, reusable shopping bags she has designed and had made from nylon Ripstop (the same fabric used to make parachutes).
Along the way, Nadine also runs a life-coaching business and is a research assistant. She has provided services for an author and has worked on several documentaries for NHK, the Japanese Broadcasting Company. She also maintains the websites listed above and Nadine Saubers Virtual Assistant
While Nadine has chalked up an impressive list of achievements by anyone’s standards, I am just so struck how different, how positive this Nadine is compared to the one I first encountered. How much she has grown on her journey from illness to wellness. And I suspect she would say the experience of having had HepC has been a great influence in these changes.
I have encountered lots of people on my own journey with HepC, in the virtual and real world. A number of them moved away from the HepC world completely once they completed treatment and achieved PCR. And a lot remain in or hover on the edge of the HepC world still – and not just those who relapsed or were non-responders.
Many people find post- treatment symptoms like brain-fog and fatigue make the return to normality a slow and arduous journey. It is hard to stop thinking and behaving like a patient. I know. It was a struggle for me to overcome. I finally became determined to move back to what I called my “working life”, normality, not seeing myself as a patient or ex-patient. However, I see many people hanging on, seemingly unable to let go of this HepC illness.
So the point of writing about Nadine today is not just to say nice things about her. It is also to point out the possibilities and prospects of life after HepC. There are lots of places where we can hear chapter and verse of how awful it is to go through the experience of HepC and we can see how sour it has made some people. Time for other perspectives. We also need to hear about and celebrate the successes too, to flag up that there is also hope within this HepC world.
Carol, as ever the source of good ideas, has pointed out to me it would be useful and interesting to contact people who have now moved on from the HepC world and to ask them how HepC has changed their lives. So I will be writing more about other people’s experience of life after HepC and how it has impacted on them. And maybe experimenting with different media at the same time.

Like Carol and I on our recent visit to Spain, these cats seem more interested in soaking up the Spanish sunshine than anything else going on around them.
April 1st, 2008 at 2:21 pm
Wow Ron, thanks for the great write up and making me sound so good “on paper.” The truth is that I’m just trying my best to put my life back together after years of illness. But I do hope that people can see through my experience that no matter how bad it gets and how far you have to go it can be done (even if you are in bed for years like I was). I’m still on the journey and have a ways to go but moving forward is the best feeling.
I agree that the HCV experience can and does break people. Don’t ever stop dreaming no matter how bad it gets!
April 15th, 2008 at 1:37 am
Hi Ron!
Nice to see your “new” blog, and nice photos too.
Thanks to you and a few others I found a lot of info on the web when I was first diagnosed with hep C. Now I have made it halfway through treatment, and I have started to dream about a life without constant illness. It was so refreshing to come here and see that life can be good again!
CC
April 15th, 2008 at 8:45 pm
Hi CC
Yah, I finally reached the point of realising I was hanging on to HepC and it was time to let it go - it is a gradual process. I am fortunate that I can let it go. There are lots who must continue to live it. There are also lots who still hang to it even when they could let it go.
So it is important for people still on their journeys to know there is also life without HepC.
Wishing you well in your treatment - and life beyond
Ron
July 12th, 2008 at 1:56 pm
Ron,
Thankyou so much. I found your Hepc blog just days before starting treament. Interestingly enough I have just stumbled across you again the eve of my last shot!
Again you are an inspiration. I can’t wait to get my life back.
All the best to you and thanks again.
You made a difference to my journey
Michele
July 13th, 2008 at 11:18 am
Hi Michele
Congratulations on achieving the treatment journey - wishing you well for a successful outcome.
Let me know how you find the recovery journey over the next few months.
Wishing you well
Ron