Genevieve Gorder has learned to live with not one, but two autoimmune diseases.
The formerDesign Starjudge, 44, got candid about her struggles with both Lyme disease and Hashimoto’s disease on theMade Visiblepodcast, and revealed she’s come a long way since her initial diagnoses.
“I was dying inside, and I had no idea what was going on,” she told the podcast. “They call Lyme the great masquerader, and it shows up in a variety of different ways that can present themselves as a variety of diseases… They go through the deck of scary words, and you are petrified.”
Symptoms at first included a constantly burning throat, one watering eye, and a tongue that felt burnt, though soon Gorder says she felt her nerves being to “spark.”
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That is, until eight years later, when she was diagnosed with Hashimoto’s.
“I lost weight. I was looking great. I felt so good … I’m my skinniest and toughest and most athletic of all time, what is this? Then boom, here’s another autoimmune,” she recalled. “It’s terribly emotional and really scary because there aren’t enough definitive answers as to what do I do next, how do I handle this, how do I get better?”
For guidance, she looked to formerReal Housewives of Beverly HillsstarYolanda Hadid, who published a memoir,Believe Me, on herbattle with Lyme disease, and whosedaughter Gigi Hadid has Hashimoto’s.

“Where was she going to get all of her information? The people with all the money, where do they go?” Gorder remembered thinking. “Then, instead of going to Switzerland, [I read] the book about that particular center and [saw] how the were handling the same diseases and [took] what I needed.”
Despite the problem-solving attitude, theTrading Spacesalum says her diagnoses were emotionally painful, and that while she tends “to live in the light and refuse to step into a cave,” she tends to shut down amid pain.
The star’s Lyme disease has been dormant for the last eight years, though she’s switched up her diet to include no gluten and less sugar in order to “protect” her body.
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“When I exercise, I feel the best,” she said. “I have to always be a little bit more stringent on that than most people because of my buddies that are partying inside of me.”
She especially enjoys trampoline classes, yoga classes and tennis, which she says has had an “incredible impact” on her mood and spirit.
At the end of the day, though, Gorder says the most important lesson she took with her from her medical woes was the importance of a good break.
Hashimoto’s, meanwhile, is a condition in which the immune system attacks the thyroid, causing symptoms of fatigue, sluggishness, depression and memory lapses, according to theMayo Clinic.
source: people.com