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A year ago I got a clean bill of health from my doctor. My mother insisted I was hitting the age where an annual physical was mandatory, and she threatened that if I didn’t schedule a checkup, she’d cut me off from inheriting her extensive thimble collection.

I agreed. After all, I’d worked hard to lose weight – 46 pounds, to be exact – and it made sense to undergo the 500-month inspection.

The doctor checked all the right gauges, rotated the tires and told me I wasn’t dying. “You’re just skinny,” she said, before finishing with a well-intentioned lecture about getting more sleep.

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Six months later I began feeling occasional lightheadedness and had several fainting spells. I was eating well, perhaps better than at any time in my life, but I noticed I had lost a few more pounds without trying, and I was experiencing stomach pain. November, December and this January were roller-coaster months of feeling good for a few days and lousy for about the same.

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Friends and family crafted all kinds of loving barbs. “Jason, you’re paler than a ski slope.”

Or, my favorite: “Dude, you’re so white, you make Casper the Friendly Ghost look like he’s been tanning.”

Message received.

I returned to the doctor’s office on a Friday afternoon and met the physician who’d taken over for my previous doc, now working somewhere in the Midwest. I caught him up on the latest, and he was curious, cautious and concerned.

The doctor offered a theory – Crohn’s disease – before ordering several tests and saying my results and their explanations would probably be posted on my secure, online account within a week.

Two days later, during the third quarter of the Super Bowl, my phone rang.

"Hello, Mr. Wright?” The doctor’s voice was somber, subdued and serious. “Do you have a few minutes to talk about your test results?"

There are two things that go through your mind when your doctor calls you on a Sunday night, in the middle of the Super Bowl, and asks in hushed tones if you have a few minutes. First: Does my wife know where is my life insurance file is? And second: What might my best friend reveal during my eulogy?

I stood up and walked into another room. The doctor spoke slowly and methodically and apologized for calling at such an odd time. I braced myself for all sorts of possibilities, from cooties to Crohn’s to cancer.

Isn't it ironic that the five longest minutes of my life convinced me I didn't have that many minutes left?

In time, the doctor explained I was anemic and that he would put me on iron. He also said my profile resembled someone malnourished, a man who might struggle to get three healthy meals a day.

I responded that the only time I struggle to get a meal is if I keep my head bowed too long after we bless the food. It’s amazing how quickly my kids can get from “Amen!” to “I’m done, may I be excused?”

The doctor said he would refer me to one of the area’s best gastroenterologists. This digestion tract specialist would launch a camera down my throat, peek around my stomach, take a biopsy and see what sorts of treasures he might discover.

“So,” I finally asked, “what does your Scooby sense suggest they’ll find?”

He paused. “Are you familiar with celiac disease?”

“No,” I said, “but it sounds contagious.”

The doctor gave me a brief description and apologized if the timing of the call had made my heart race.

“Who? Me?”

We hung up and, naturally, I rushed to Google all I could about celiac. Because, as everyone knows, there's no better source for medical information and highly accurate self-diagnoses than the Internet.

A few days later I went in for my esophagogastroduodenoscopy and asked if they would give me the procedure for free if I could spell it.

No deal.

Given how complex the procedure is, I was astonished at how fast it unfolded. I was registered, given a fashionable bracelet, hooked up to the I.V. and conked out in less than 30 minutes. Then, just 20 minutes later, I was on my side looking at my wife.

During the muggy, mostly cloudy minutes of recovery, the doctor came in to show my wife pictures of my esophagus, stomach and intestines. I have no recollection of it, but both my wife and doctor claim that I raised my head and asked if he’d found a $100 bill down there. The doctor said if he had, he would have been obligated to keep it.

Apparently not content, I then asked if he’d found any quarters or, better yet, gummy bears. This time he offered my wife a confused look and continued with his show-and-tell of my insides.

When I was conscious enough for a coherent conversation, my wife shared the digital images and explained what should've been there and what shouldn't. The doctor had told her the biopsies would tell the real story, but that he was very confident I had celiac disease.

Celiac is an autoimmune disorder where eating gluten – a protein found in wheat, barley and rye – causes damage to the small intestine. When people with celiac eat gluten, the body ignites an immune response that attacks the intestine. This damages the walls and makes it difficult for the body to absorb nutrients.

In short, it’s not an uncommon disease, and at some point in the last six months my body decided that it was no longer a member of the wheat, barley and rye fan club.

Though there is no cure for it, it is treatable by managing a strict, gluten-free diet and, at least in my case, taking iron to help the body create red blood cells to carry oxygen along my body’s freeway.

Ten days later, the doctor called to say he’d seen no surprises in the biopsy and that his suspicions were correct – celiac. My body has been damaging itself for months, and he warned me it will take a long time for everything to heal.

It's been only a few weeks and I’ve learned how common the disease really is. In fact, I presume many will read this article and comment that they, too, have something ranging from mild gluten intolerance to classic celiac.

While adjusting to a diet void of everything I love – Lucky Charms, bread, bagels, etc. – I’ve gotten mileage out of my newfound excuse.

"Honey, could you please do the dishes?”

“I'm sorry, I have celiac disease.”

“Jason, why didn't you make the bed this morning?”

“Oh boy, I’m sorry, must've been the celiac.”

Even my kids are rolling their eyes.

In my quiet, complaining moments eating yogurt, bun-less hamburgers and salads, I reflect on the five minutes on Super Bowl Sunday night between answering the phone and the suspenseful moment the doctor put my greatest fears to rest.

What a pity I endured some anxiety. What a shame a diet change means giving up a few foods I love.

What about all the friends and family I've known whose phone calls and doctor visits ended very differently? They’ve been hit with so many tests and consultations that ended not with new diets, but with discussions of survival rates.

In fact, just in the last month, while I’ve been coping with tummy aches, two dear friends have dealt with prostate cancer.

Seriously … No more donuts? Woe is me, right?

I suspect it won’t take long to adjust to my new menu and, hopefully, my body will heal as promised. I don’t know the timing, but at least I know the whys. If you see me at your school, book signing or speaking gig and I politely decline your homemade sweet rolls, you'll know why, too.

No, I'm not dying, but I sure am skinny and I do have celiac disease.

I better get to the dishes.