Midwestern Mom vs. Food

Myra loves to cook, but Crohn’s has turned food into her nemesis. The Tippi Team offers this mom and recent retiree a few tips and tricks she can use both in and outside of the kitchen.

Midwestern Mom vs. Food

Myra loves to cook, but Crohn’s has turned food into her nemesis. The Tippi Team offers this mom and recent retiree a few tips and tricks she can use both in and outside of the kitchen.
Medically Reviewed

In the 20 years that Myra Gorman has been living with Crohn’s disease, she’s never once been in remission.

Despite trying nearly 20 medications since her diagnosis, the 60-year-old from Chicago still experiences six to eight flares a year. “I’ve had a couple different surgeries,” says Myra. “I’ve been hospitalized a lot.”

That’s especially hard on Myra’s two adult children, whom she tries to guard from the worst of her disease. “But when I’m in the hospital, my kids are there 24/7,” she says. “They see me in my weakest state.”

Having my family and friends here when I'm cooking is my favorite thing. But I couldn't care less if I'm eating it or not.

To try to control her Crohn’s disease, Myra has drastically changed her diet. She’s eliminated foods she knows irritate her stomach — and sometimes avoids eating altogether. “When my daughter got married, I didn’t eat all day, because I wanted to make sure that I was going to be perfect for her wedding,” says Myra.

It’s ironic that food is her nemesis, says Myra, because she volunteers at a food pantry and loves to cook and bake. “Having my family and friends here when I’m cooking is my favorite thing,” she says. “But I couldn’t care less if I’m eating it or not.”

Myra is hoping the Tippi Team can help her regain her love of food and find ways to fit healthy eating into her busy lifestyle, which also includes working at a pottery studio and traveling the world.

In fact, traveling is something she hopes to do more of now that’s she retired after 27 years working for a municipality. “Once I retired, I got the travel bug in me,” she says, “and I figured I’d better do it while I’m still healthy.”

Watch the episode to see if the Tippi Team can give Myra the food advice she needs to make friend of foe, along with tips that help keep Crohn’s from getting in the way of doing the things she loves.

Tips for Myra

The Tippi Team — a gastroenterologist, therapist, chef, and patient advocate — share these tips to help Myra live better with Crohn's disease.