<p>At age 24 Janet Buttenwieser moved to Seattle with a r&eacute;sum&eacute; devoted to public service and fantasies of single-handedly ending poverty. But within a year she&rsquo;d developed an intestinal illness so rare she wound up in a medical journal. Janet navigated misdiagnosis multiple surgeries and life with a permanent colostomy. Like many female patients her concerns were glossed over by doctors. She was young and insecure major liabilities in her life as a patient. How would she advocate for low-income people when she couldn&rsquo;t even advocate for herself?</p><p>Janet&rsquo;s model for assertiveness was her friend Beth. She was the kind of friend who&rsquo;d accompany you to the doctor when you got dysentery in Ecuador nonchalantly translating the graphic details of your symptoms into Spanish. Throughout Janet&rsquo;s illness Beth took care of her; then she developed brain cancer and their roles reversed. Eventually Janet recovered but Beth&rsquo;s condition worsened. At the age of 38 Beth died. To cope Janet competed in endurance events becoming a triathlete with a colostomy pouch.<br />&nbsp;<br />With themes that echo Susannah Cahalan&rsquo;s <em>Brain on Fire</em> and Gail Caldwell&rsquo;s <em>Let&rsquo;s Take the Long Way Home</em> GUTS is a story of resilience for the millions of Americans who manage to thrive while living with a chronic condition as well as the many who&rsquo;ve lost a loved one at a young age.</p>
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