My ME story has no clear start date, as I am one of the few
where it seems to have developed slowly over time though, with hindsight, it is
likely to have begun sometime during my early teens. Diagnosis was 30 years
later, but with a noticeable increase in symptoms in the last decade. This has
been complicated by also having Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD), which
provided the perfect cover story for the ME, hiding its symptoms amongst the
symptoms of the GAD. Only when the GAD had been controlled for a couple of
years did the penny drop; ‘maybe this
fatigue and pain and brain fog is something else’?
My ME is ‘mild’; I still work full-time, but I have had to
change jobs to achieve this. I used to be a college lecturer and departmental
manager with a strict regime of hours and a backlog of work to be done at home,
but now I work 9-5, 5 days per week in a role where I have reasonable control
over my pace of work. On good days I can even do some housework, but generally
I can’t and I have to rely on my husband to do all the chores, with weekends
reserved for spending time together in the mornings and me sleeping/resting in
the afternoon. Bed time is always 9pm.
The continuous aches and pains are the most irritating
physical aspect of the condition for me, but I am finding the psychological
aspects, the need to accept that past ambitions will have to be shelved,
potentially indefinitely, actually the hardest thing to cope with. On a good
day, I could take on the world; I can get up, eat breakfast, shower, brush my
teeth, tidy the kitchen and be at work early with a cup of tea in my hand
before 9am. On a bad day I get up, eat, go back to bed, get up, brush my teeth
(sitting down, as standing is too painful), get dressed, sit down again then
get to work sometime between 9 and 9:30. These are the days when I realise that
ambition is something for the fit and healthy, and that I will happily settle for
employed.
Life is not all doom and gloom though, and I am not as
miserable as I sound. My life is much quieter than many peoples’, but it is
happy. I am genuinely grateful for my ‘mild’ ME, because it is not ‘moderate’
or ‘severe’. For those of you out there who are not as fortunate as me, I am
truly astounded by your bravery. Hopefully the future will be brighter for all
of us, especially with awareness of invisible illnesses increasing, and I look
forward to a time when being fatigued is understood to be a bit more than
‘overly tired’.
Mark
Go Mark! I think you cope amazingly well. Much love x
ReplyDelete