DO IT NOW.

This weekend I found out a friend of mine passed away. He was my age, I’d known him for almost 20 years. We met in college and then we both wound up living here, in Seattle, 2,000 miles from that campus. We’ve lived in the same neighbourhood for years, but managed never to see each other except through Facebook. I adored him. You know how you have that handful of friends that don’t know each other, but you know if you put them in the same room they would appreciate one another and you could just relax and enjoy watching connections being made? He was one of those friends. I assumed it was just a matter of time before we’d see each other and we would pick up where we left off with no problems. Through Facebook and random emails, I knew what was going on in his life and vice versa. I assumed one of these days life would calm down and we’d get together for a (fake) beer and a long catch up. Then maybe it would be a regular thing. Because he was someone with whom I could be completely comfortable… I think he’d like my husband… I’d probably love his wife…

We have no mutual friends so I have no one to talk to about this. I have been reeling for days from the news of his death and I am astonished by how shocked I am that we’ll never get to have that chat. What was I thinking the past ten years? Did I think everyone would be around forever? Did I really think I could have NO life outside of my job and classes, make no time for friends, and that everyone would be waiting when I was finally available? And did I really think that, without an M.E.-intervention, I would learn to curb my workaholism and find some way to make a comfortable living while simultaneously relaxing and enjoying downtime with loved ones? Yes, I did. I thought one day I would be less busy, less exhausted, less of a hermit and I would enjoy hiking in the mountains and lazy summer BBQs in my garden and shopping at the Sunday market and playing with friends’ kids and road trips down the coast and dinner parties with laughter and music.

This is what I want you all to hear, loud and clear: DO IT NOW. There is no better time. This is it. You may wake up tomorrow with a flu that never goes away. You may wake up tomorrow and someone is missing from your life permanently. I don’t mean this to sound sad or scary; I very much mean this as a celebration of life. This is a trumpet call, an alarm bell, a shaking of the shoulders, a cold bucket of water, LASIK surgery. I want to shout it from the rooftops: Wake up! Focus! Maybe you always wanted to take dance lessons or write a book or learn how to play the piano or visit Italy with your daughter or run a marathon or tell your Dad how much you love him or tell your college roommate what a lifeline she was or meet that old friend for a beer because he was one of the good ones and those connections are few and far between… DO IT NOW.

Maybe you’ll realise that taking these steps will enrich other people’s lives, too.

Live life now.

Love life now.

We’re all really happy, buddy! Everything’s normal! Chase this sock! It’s not a ball, it can’t hurt you! Yay!

Two long, involved appointments today, plus a HUGE outpouring of energy with dogs to make things seem “happy” and “normal”. This on top of terrible sleep for the last few weeks. I know I always say that, but this has been a very long stretch of 5- to 7-hour nights (I always wake up every 20 minutes or so all night long, but usually I manage to do this for over 8 hours). So, I am going to try to really rest this weekend- I may not answer emails or phone calls or texts. I have 2 more appointments on Monday and need to not set myself backwards.

Good news: my frantic show of “fun” managed to get my dog outside in the garden, wagging his tail and prancing about for roughly two minutes until his brain said, “Hey! You’re meant to be scared!” and he scarpered back inside. But I’m smiling. Instant antidepressant (if I don’t pay dearly tomorrow) (okay, even if I do). šŸ™‚

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Toni Bernhard: 12 Tips from 12 Years Sick

Toni Bernhard wrote one of the most useful books I’ve read yet since having M.E. – and I’ve read a lot of how-to-feel/get-better books about this disease and associated illnesses. It’s called How to Be Sick: A Buddhist-Inspired Guide for the Chronically Ill and their Caregivers. I read it very quickly- in a matter of days – and then bought a copy for my mother and my therapist (in case the latter ever encountered another patient with a chronic illness – it would be a very good loaner). My sister actually wound up giving the same book to me for my birthday a few weeks ago, not knowing I already had it. She has no idea what a deeply helpful present that would have been had I not already read it. And, in fact it was a deeply wonderful gift, anyway, because it spurred me to start reading it again -revisiting some of the advice. Some of the most helpful insights are the most simple, like understanding that everyone’s bodies will break down, mine just happened a little earlier than I had been anticipating (Bernhard writes about “broken glass practice”: I will clumsily explain it as coming to see an intact glass as a broken glass that just hasn’t broken yet, so you won’t be surprised when it does. A glass will break sooner or later; that is its nature).

I have a chronic inability to accept this chronic illness. I feel like I have been deeply grieving for about a year now. The grief is suffocating. There are so many layers that it feels like you could never strong-arm your way through them to the core of peace… Or even numbness. I’d take numb exhaustion. But, instead, it’s loss of health then career then friends then mobility then independence then money then rational thought then sense of self. Each time you think you’ve dealt with one, you realise there is another one underneath. And, the whole time you are slogging through this mental morass, physical pain is torching your spine and needling you in the eyes and crushing your skull. The monster is hugging you so tightly that the room is spinning and you can’t form sentences, so you just concentrate on filling your lungs (as long as you are breathing there is more right with you than wrong with you…) and silently try to convince yourself you will live through it. And, when you do live through it, you catch your breath and think, Now, what layer was I on again? Oh yes. Grieving the loss of singing. Let me get back to trying to accept that I may not belt it out ever again – with family, in the car, definitely not at a live show.. Always a new layer you didn’t anticipate.

For me at the moment, it is grieving the loss of my happy relationship with one of my dogs. He is my best friend. He means more to me than I’d ever be able to put into words here. But the ball incident of a few weeks ago, coupled with having to be around my crying, deep breathing, gasping negative energy, seems to have triggered a constant agitated fear in my pup. It’s as if there is an imperceptible low grumble of thunder that has him permanently looking for safety – ears flattened, eyes wide, tail tucked, drooling, slinking away to the darkest closet to cower throughout the day. And that thunder is me. I am the danger. I am the storm. No matter how I try to emote calm, happy confidence when he’s around (“I’m the alpha, follow my lead. Everything is fine, I have this handled and under control.”), he hears my soul’s dark, pained rumble and, where once he was my constant companion, now he eyes me timorously if I come near with my forced chipper greeting. New layer of loss to grieve.

I really wasn’t going to write anything. I feel too dismal to justify the energy expenditure. What I really wanted to do was repost the article below written by Toni Berhard on Psychology Today and tell you that her book can help you if you’re not handling all the losses very well and/or you forget that there might be another good day ahead when you are drowning in the bad of today (and note #10 below). Thanks to Jess over at My Journey Thru ME for leading me to this article:

12 Tips from 12 Years Sick
What I have learned from 12 years of chronic illness.

Published on May 9, 2013 by Toni Bernhard, J.D. in Turning Straw Into Gold

Two years ago, I wrote ā€œ10 Tips from 10 Years Sick.ā€ Last year, I wrote ā€œ11 Tips from 11 Years Sick.ā€ This year…sigh…I’m still sick. And so it’s time for ā€œ12 Tips from 12 Years Sick.ā€ A few of them have made an appearance in different form in the earlier pieces, but that’s because some tips have a very long shelf life.

#1. Expect grieving to come and go…and come and go.

Throughout life, we experience losses that lead us to grieve, and the loss of good health is one of them. The onset of chronic pain or illness is a major life event, so it’s not surprising that it triggers the need to grieve. But as the years have gone by, I’ve changed my thinking about grief and illness.

I used to think it would be a ā€œone-time-through-the-stagesā€ of grief process (the stages usually broken down into denial, anger, sadness or even depression, and then…acceptance). I thought that once I passed through a stage, it wouldn’t return. But now I see that acceptance can give way at any moment to a new round of grieving, maybe with just one of those ā€œstagesā€ popping in for a visit, such as anger or sadness. When this happens, I’ve learned not to push the grief away in aversion because that just strengthens it. Instead, I allow it to be present, treating myself as tenderly as I can until it passes.

#2. Try not to ruminate about what others might be thinking about you.

When I first got sick, I wasted precious energy worrying about what I perceived to be other people’s opinions of why I hadn’t recovered from what appeared to be an acute viral infection. I’d lie in bed and torture myself with thoughts such as: ā€œDo they ā€˜get’ how sick I am?ā€ ā€œDo they think I’m a malingerer, just trying to get out of doing things?ā€ ā€œIf I’m at all animated when people see me, will they assume I’ve recovered and then judge me negatively for not resuming my former life?ā€

These stressful stories I kept telling myself served only to add mental suffering to the physical suffering I was already enduring. It took me many years to realize that I had to take care of myself instead of taking care of what I perceived (often erroneously) other people to be thinking about me! Finally, I’ve come to this: I know I’m sick, and that’s good enough for me.

#3. Contradictory feelings are normal.

On a retreat many years ago, Buddhist teacher Jack Kornfield referred to life as ā€œhappy-sad.ā€ Those words resonated strongly with me. I can be happy and sad at the same time—for example, sad that I’m sick, but happy that I’m able to connect with others online who understand what this life is like.

And I can be terribly disappointed but, at the same time, okay with my life. A few months ago I had to skip the 30th reunion of my law school class. I was just too sick to attend. I wanted to go badly and so was very sad about it but, oddly, at the same time I was okay with it. Yes, being sick is unpleasant, but I have a decent place to live, a caring partner, and a faithful dog to keep me company when there’s no human around; so, life is okay.

When I make room in my heart for seemingly contradictory feelings, I feel more at peace with my life. My heartfelt wish is that you’ll learn to do this too.

#4. You can be working even though you’re not in the official ā€œwork force.ā€

A version of this tip was in the ā€œ11 Years Sickā€ piece, but I’m raising it again because it resonated with so many readers. People who are bedbound or housebound tend to think of themselves as not working. I’m in or on the bed a good part of the day. But, I’m working. Writing this piece is work. Answering emails from people who’ve read my book is work. Writing my new book is work. Maybe you draw or knit or embroider (not to mention taking care of other family members): that’s work. And, of course, it’s work just to stay on top of our medical conditions—keeping abreast of the latest developments, assessing doctors, evaluating the effectiveness of treatments, keeping family and friends informed about how we’re doing. Whew!

My point is that, in the same way we’ve come to think of stay-at-home moms or dads as working people, those of us who’ve had to leave the outside-the-house workforce due to chronic pain or illness—or, as is often the case, both—are often working, even if it isn’t paid work. So, when people say to us about our lives, ā€œI wish I could lie around all day and do nothing,ā€ we know they just don’t get it.

#5. Friendships can be dramatically affected by illness.

I’ve also written about this before, but there’s no denying it: friendships and chronic health problems often don’t mix. Some of my friends have disappeared; others have stayed around, but our relationship has been changed by my illness.

Before I got sick, I loved to share the details of my life. But now those details are not so appealing: a catalogue of symptoms or a list of side-effects from a medication; the details of a doctor’s appointment. It took me several years to learn how to be a friend while sick. Now I try my best to focus on subjects other than my medical condition (some days I’m more successful than others). I’ve discovered that doing this can be a welcome respite from my illness.

As for friends who haven’t stuck around, our friendship may have faded away for any number of reasons. I’ve decided it’s about them not me. Illness may raise their own fears about health and mortality. They may not have the patience to stick with a friend who’s become so unreliable (I often have to cancel at the last moment—my friends who’ve stuck around are fine with that).

I do feel certain that those who’ve gone out of my life wish the best for me, and I wish the best for them.

#6. Take comfort in the knowledge that illness is the great equalizer.

Illness as the great equalizer continues to reveal itself to me, day after day. I see it when I read about people who share the same struggles with their health, even though their other life circumstances may differ drastically—some are financially secure while others struggle to pay the rent; some have fancy degrees, others a high school diploma; some have lots of support, others are alone. But we’re all equals when we’re in terrible pain or we’re too sick to get out of bed.

I’m also reminded of illness as an equalizer whenever I’m in a waiting room. My health care provider serves the indigent in several counties. I share the waiting room with the homeless and the affluent. People graciously give up their chairs to others in need. People admire each other’s children. They engage in friendly small talk. We know we’re in this together.

#7. The internet is a rich and multi-dimensional resource.

Imagine how isolated people used to be when they became mostly housebound. We are so fortunate to have the internet. It allows us to connect with others—even to make close and cherished friends with people who live all over the world. The internet also helps us become our own experts on our chronic condition. And it offers educational possibilities, many without costing a penny—from Ted Talks, to Coursera (www.coursera.org) and Open Culture (www.openculture.com) where you can take university-level courses for free, to The Khan Academy (www.khanacademy.org) where you can take lessons on almost any subject for free.

#8. Don’t be swayed by others people’s advice if your heart, mind, and body are telling you not to follow it.

People have lots of advice for me regarding my health—from the reasonable to the absurd. Like most of us, I was raised to please others and so I used to feel an obligation to follow their advice just to please them. In retrospect, that’s quite amazing: I’d follow someone else’s advice just to please them even if my mind and body were telling me it wasn’t a good idea. Finally, I’ve reached the point where I don’t care if someone thinks I I’m foolish not to follow his or her advice. After 12 years, I trust my own judgment. That said, note #9.

#9. Don’t ignore new symptoms by assuming they’re related to your current diagnosis.

People can have a diagnosed chronic condition and still develop a new condition that requires a different treatment. Because the symptoms of chronic illness can be so varied, there’s a tendency to assume that anything new is related to the old. Please don’t make that assumption. I’ve heard too many tales of people overlooking symptoms that turned out to be a new condition. So don’t get complacent.

#10. Don’t get hooked into believing you always have to ā€œthink positively.ā€

This is known as the ā€œtyranny of positive thinking.ā€ Are we never supposed to get blue or frustrated or disappointed over our health problems? That would be holding ourselves to an impossible standard. Although the mind and the body are interconnected, I do not believe that ā€œthinking positivelyā€ or visualizing that we’re 100% healthy can cure disease, even though I’ve received dozens of private emails telling me otherwise.

As for those ā€œI’m-not-feeling-positiveā€ moods, people in excellent health get blue and frustrated and disappointed, so of course we do too. Our ā€œnot-feeling-positiveā€ moods can be particularly intense though, because they often center around the frustration and hopelessness we feel about our medical condition. One of my triggers for a down and out mood is a day when I wake up feeling just plain weary of being sick.

At least moods, like the weather, blow in and blow out. They arise in the mind, stay awhile, and then pass. I’ve learned not to try and force them away because that almost always intensifies them. Instead, I like to disarm their sting by greeting them with friendliness, even though they’re uninvited guests. I’ll say something like, ā€œI know you, blues. Come to visit again, have you?ā€ Then I just wait them out, like I wait out a rainstorm—perhaps by cuddling with my dog or making my favorite hot drink or watching a movie on TV (or all three at once!).

#11. Try to do a thing or two each day that you find fulfilling or that simply brings you joy.

Think of a couple of things that are fulfilling or joyful for you to do and try to engage in those activities just a bit each day. It may take time to develop this habit. Many of us have a tendency to look after ourselves last. If that’s your tendency, it may help to make a list in the evening of your plans for the next day, making sure the list includes an activity or two that brings you fulfillment or joy so it’s part of your agenda for the day ahead. And on days you don’t get to those activities (maybe you were in too much pain or maybe unexpected obligations arose), forgive yourself…and start again by making a new list that very evening.

#12. Look for ways to help others.

It’s not unusual for us to turn our focus inward to our sick and pain-filled bodies. This is understandable and, at times, very skillful because we want to do everything we can to find the most beneficial treatments and maximize our functionality. But turning our attention away from our health concerns and reaching out to others can relieve some of the mental anguish that accompanies focusing exclusively on our ailing bodies.

Some of you are familiar with the writings of Pema Chƶdrƶn. Many years ago, I listened to a cassette tape of one of her talks (those words ā€œcassette tapeā€ tell you how long ago it was!). She was discussing one of the ā€œslogansā€ that are part of a well-known teaching in Tibetan Buddhism called the Seven Points of Mind Training. This is the slogan: ā€œGive up all hope of fruition.ā€ I have my own interpretation of what that means: ā€œGive up striving for enlightenmentā€ or something along those lines. But here are the very words Pema spoke to interpret the slogan:

Give up all hope of fruition.

Give up all hope.

Give up.

Give.

I’ve never forgotten her words. I certainly had no idea that this was the direction she was going in with that slogan! But that simple word ā€œGiveā€ takes me out of my self-focused thinkingā€”ā€œHow can I get enlightened; How can I find unlimited peaceā€ā€”and turns my attention to others. And when I do that, I feel better. My body may still be sick, but life now has purpose for me. Giving can take the simplest form: a short email to someone or a supportive comment on Facebook.

It doesn’t take much to brighten another person’s day.

Ā© 2013 Toni Bernhard http://www.tonibernhard.com

Milo’s Law: If It Can Go Wrong, It Will Go Wrong.

When I wake up in the morning, I usually spend a while in bed “gathering my strength”. I cuddle with my dogs and check emails on my phone or just lie there, coming into consciousness. It seems to change the way my day unfolds if I take the time to do this. I also try to have a long, slow morning before appointments: have my tea, my supplements, sit in front of my light box, have breakfast, gear up for a shower… This is all to emphasise yesterday’s difficulty of getting up at 8am and leaving the house at 9am to be at an appointment by 9:40am. I am a different person now that I have ME and, just as I couldn’t crash on somebody’s couch overnight or sit in a car for a road trip, I can’t get up and leave the house in an hour without great difficulty. That sort of morning rush takes a giant toll on my body.

But I had to yesterday. I felt okay getting out of bed and taking a shower and then, after being upright for about 20 minutes, I hit a wall. My heart rate was over 115 bpm and wouldn’t calm down. I was shaking so much, I checked my blood sugar to make sure it hadn’t dropped too low. I sat down for a half hour before getting dressed and my whole body sweat the entire time.

We were going to stop and get my prescriptions on the way to my appointment with my GP since we had left 40 minutes for a 20 minute drive, but we heard on the radio that there had been an accident on the highway and it was wreaking havoc, so we decided to head straight for the clinic. We took the back roads ~ avoided the highway ~ and apparently the rest of the city did, too. Nothing was moving. I called the clinic at 9:30am and told them I might be a little late. I called again at 9:50am and told them we were still sitting in the same spot on the road and now I was already 10 minutes late. They told me to come in anyway ~ everyone was running behind because of the traffic. I called my physical therapist, with whom I had an appointment after my GP at 11am, and asked him if he happened to have any open slots later in the day. He made some phone calls, then called me back and said his 1pm patient will swap with me. Wow, who goes to that sort of trouble? Brilliant.

We got to the clinic finally at 10:10am ~ the 20 minute drive took an hour and 10 minutes ~ and my doctor wouldn’t see me. I was too late. I said, “I can stay here and wait until noon if there is a chance she can fit me in… Isn’t everyone else late, too? … My husband took the day off work… it’s really difficult for me to get here…” I wanted to have a meltdown, but I was too tired. The answer was no; I’d have to reschedule. I even asked, “Does she know it’s me?” as if I’m some spoiled rock star (“Do you know who I AM??”), but I thought she would understand what is involved to get me here and find a way to make it happen. But maybe she doesn’t know how difficult getting to the appointment is… Like I said, I haven’t seen her in 6.5 months and I’ve changed.

It was never clearer just how much I’ve changed than when I was walking back to the car in the disabled lot (ie: not far). The parking lot is on an incline. I’ve been going to this clinic for years and I could have NEVER told you this lot was not flat as a pancake because it never registered before. Because it never needed to. Yesterday, the tarmac reared up in front of me like some CGI ground wave in a movie about an earthquake. My vision tunneled ~ honestly, it was like a Hitchcock camera trick ~ all I saw was black parking lot climbing straight upwards in front of me. I had to stop constantly as I walked to the car. It blew me away. I never could have told you there was any slope there. My muscles, my heart, my lungs… they simply don’t work anymore.

To complicate things further, I called my PT back and said, “Actually, I canmake my 11am appointment now, but your other patient is probably already on his way, but if it’s any hardship at all for him, I can swap back, but no need to call me back, I’ll just come at 1pm…” Mutter mutter… Bashful, embarrassed, crawl-into-a-hole voice…

So my husband and I went home again and I lay perfectly still with my eyes closed, deep breathing my frustration away until 12:40pm when it was time to leave again. I rescheduled the appointment for tomorrow week (for all my American readers, that means a week from tomorrow. I really miss being able to use that shorthand (shortspeak?): “Friday week” is so much less cumbersome than “a week from Friday”).

I also spent another two hours on the phone with my insurance company. Being ill is a full-time job.

Gratitude for the day: Thank you to the FIVE people who texted and messaged to wish me luck at the appointment-that-never-happened. You write a post about an upcoming follow up with your GP, not knowing who will read it, and then, suddenly, a friend that you haven’t seen in a year and a friend in a different country and a parent and a sibling and an online CFS blog buddy all send you notes to say good luck and/or how’d it go? You know who you are: THANK YOU. Every day, every time, it helps.

Heart Center.

I have an appointment with my GP tomorrow. It’s at 9:30am, which is about 2 hours earlier than I usually schedule appointments so that I am a functioning human being. I don’t even know if it’s worth it to see her. I basically made the appointment because I haven’t seen her in 6.5 months. I am a different person now. Last time I saw her, I stillĀ didn’t quite understand how the medical system works. I still sort of thought that doctors would search and help and communicate and dig until they figured out what was wrong with a patient. I still didn’t realise how specialists operate. Even after the first infectious disease doctor said, “You don’t have an active infection” and then, in no uncertain terms, gave me a permanent goodbye. Even after the second infectious disease doctor said, “You have chronic fatigue syndrome and, from here on out, you should work on treating the symptoms.” In other words,Ā See ya! Even when the chronic fatigue expert spent ten minutes with me after I waited 8 months for an appointment and sent me on my way with directions to exercise read a book about pain, and try Cymbalta. It wasn’t until my second visit to the rheumatologist, that it finally clicked. He had treated me so well at my first appointment. I will never forget he said, “There is something wrong with you. It is not your job to figure it out, it’s ours.” It felt validating and I almost wept. Someone would finally take the burden of this search off my shoulders and figure out why I felt like I’m dying… But that’s not the way it works. When I went to see him again a year later, the first thing he said was, ā€œWhy are you here? Chronic fatigue syndrome is an infectious disease.ā€Ā Ah. Click. Finally I see. Dr. House is only on a tv show, stupid! Specialists spend 15 minutes max listening to your story, run the standard tests, and you’re done. If the tests are negative, you will never hear from them again. And, even if the tests are positive ~ like the time they found two toxic goiters on my thyroid and had to kill the whole lot with radioiodine and I had to figure out from a pamphlet and a bunch of inquiries that were shuffled from one person to anotherĀ how to get my synthetic hormones and whether I should have follow-up visits with someone ~ sometimes you won’t hear from them then, either.

I had a yearly check-up with my GP 9 days before I was hit by ME. I distinctly remember saying to her that day, “My biggest problem is my neck” ~ meaning the degenerative disc problems in my cervical spine that have plagued me since my early 30s. We talked a lot about my job. I was having difficulty sitting at a desk all day after years of being on my feet. She thought, because of the stress involved, that it might not be the job for me. I remember her saying exactly that: “Are you sure this is the right job for you?” I shrugged and thought, Maybe not. But I still love it. In some ways, I think that sentiment has coloured the treatment I received once I came down with ME. I think a lot of us (my doctor, my boss, my family, and I) thought my problem was caused by job-related stress and lack of sleep.

That is another way I am a different person now than when I saw her 6+ months ago. Now, my awareness of my body and physical sensations are extremely fine-tuned. It is laughable to me (and tragically sad) that, in my confusion during that first year, I was almost persuaded that my sickness could have been caused by 1) bowel problems, 2) vasovagal reactions, 3) stress and anxiety, 4) my pain killers, 5) my birth control pills. When you are scared and in foreign territory, you want to latch on to ANY explanation that is said in a rational way from an expert authority. I suddenly understand how false confessions are coerced out of murder suspects. Maybe you’re right, Dr. E, maybe it’s just IBS. Phew!Ā Even though I had had my share of health problems in my life, I was completely naive about how this medical journey would unfold itself. It is tragically sad and not so laughable that I didn’t trust myself 100%. I was SO SICK. My bowels? Stress? No, not this. Sleeping normally, then swimming in sweat. Running a little cold, then incapacitated by bone-wracking chills. Steady, then dizzy. Confident, then fearful. Strong, then shaky, then weak. Memory like a steel trap, then uncertainty about all details. Aches in my neck, then deep body-wide pain. Occasional headache, then 24-hours-a-day migraine for months. Able to bound up and down stairs, then legs not working. Energy, then none. Working, then housebound. Well… then sick. Don’t doubt yourselves, ever.

So, why am I even going back to my GP? I want to talk about my application for disability. She has known me for years and she should know that, even though I mostly saw her when I had chest infections, I have always been an upbeat, energetic person and ME caused an abrupt and permanent change. I must stay unemotional. The day last year that a few tears dropped in her office sealed my fate as someone that needed therapy and an antidepressant. My chart note says “Stress reaction, emotional.” I did what she said and started seeing a therapist, but 15 months of weekly visits later and nothing has changed. Nothing except I’ve spent 50 minutes each week crying about how I don’t know how to accept this new life and I don’t know how to stay hopeful and calm when my symptoms flare. Which is always.

I’ve cried more in the last year than I have in the 39 years before. I get overwhelmed sometimes with the surety that my husband will reach a breaking point and leave me. Or that I will somehow have to find the strength to leave him so he can have a life and I can be freed from the unrelenting guilt that I carry. The other night, my husband said, “I’m not going anywhere. I love you deeply.” I sobbed: “But you didn’t fall in love with this.” I spat out the word “this”. I said it with a grimace of distaste, as if I were talking about a maggot-infested, rabid rat that was sitting on my chest. And I actually flinched at the knowledge that the revulsion was about myself. I try to stop my brain from doing this. I try to remind myself that I still have value, even sick. But it’s hard now that I have very little interaction with the outside world. I can tell myself a thousand times that I am not the disease and my selfĀ is not sick ~ my core is still the same ~ but I don’t really believe it. I sure feel sick at the core. Or, at least, that there are many, many layers of sick surrounding that central self, which is still the me I know and love. But, if those layers rule the body, who really cares what’s in the center? If it can’t express itself or figure out a way to thrive, what’s the point? How do I enrich the world when I rarely laugh, can’t talk for more than an hour each day, have nothing interesting to say…? And how oh how do I find joy in my own life when everything I enjoy takes energy that I simply don’t have? I have to find joyful activities that can be done lying down with my eyes closed, day after day?

Anyway, my husband pointed to my heart and said, “I fell in love with what’s in there and that hasn’t changed.”

I thought, Yeah, it has. But, I admit, I felt another renewed resolve to fight. If not for myself, then for my husband and the person with whom he fell in love.

sarah and dave 5