• Welcome to Phoenix Rising!

    Created in 2008, Phoenix Rising is the largest and oldest forum dedicated to furthering the understanding of, and finding treatments for, complex chronic illnesses such as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), fibromyalgia, long COVID, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), and allied diseases.

    To become a member, simply click the Register button at the top right.

The Subverting of the ME/CFS Mind

View the Post on the Blog

The Subverting of the ME/CFS Mind
by Jody Smith


Of all the things ME/CFS is responsible for causing in our brains, this may be one of the biggest. Before I was lambasted by ME/CFS, I was an idealistic and trusting sort, loyal to a fault. I tried to see the best in people, tried to give the benefit of the doubt.

My soft malleable center has been pretty well kicked out of me over these many years of sickness. Along with the illness, there came a new world view, if you will. Because as the sickness settled in for a long stay, the people in my life gradually disappeared out the back door, never to return. And the Canadian government that prides itself on its humane safety net has let me down at every turn.

The fact that I am one among countless chronically ill people in my country, and the fact that there are countless more around the globe equally abandoned by their governments, only entrenches my shift from trust to cynicism.

When you know that your government will do nothing for you, and when you know that many of the people you knew don't care whether you eat or starve, whether you have a roof over your head or you don't ... These pellets of hard truth left some pretty serious dents in my psyche as I was bombarded with them for years.

Even if I were to regain my health completely one day, with an income big enough and dependable enough to protect me from panic and sleepless nights, I am irrevocably changed. I will never see things the same again. And I don't want to.

My son Jesse was a lot like me before he became ill at age 16. For the first few years of his illness, basic survival was predominantly his focus ... if focus is a word you can use in connection with someone severely ill with ME/CFS.

As his health improved somewhat, and his brain started working again somewhat, he also began to take a new and unpleasant look around. He also did not much like what he was seeing.

Way to go, powers that be. You have allowed thousands upon thousands of loyal citizens to see beyond your public relations, you have let it slip that they have no value to you. And they'll never offer up their unquestioning loyalty again. Not to you.

It's a common story, unfortunately. Solid citizen gets sick, no longer can carry their own weight, no longer can meet their financial obligations. The assumption for many people — and I was one of them — is that there is some type of intervention in place to keep them from plummeting to destruction.

But the safety net of welfare or disability pensions wasn't there for me, or my family. And as the past connections in my life disappeared, and I was no longer able to see or talk to or work with old friends and family ... well, there's hardly anybody to even witness the decline that follows.

The loneliness can be excruciating, and I am saying this as a person with family members living with me. I can't imagine what it's like for those who must live alone. The realization of being entirely dispensable and not worthy of concern, or taking a look in on, causes a shrinking effect within and there is no one there to counteract it.

So when you don't have enough money to pay your bills or buy your food, there is also no one there to be horrified for you, to be outraged or to sound an alarm on your behalf. If all you can do is drape yourself over your bed unable to lift a hand, then exactly nothing is going to happen. Period.

And the slow, inexorable, devastating ruinous cascade is set in motion. You cannot protect yourself and nobody is there to notice or to do it for you.

Nobody knows that you have lost so much weight you've now developed new medical problems. Nobody knows you can't sleep and that this insomnia is heightened by an exquisite terror of what tomorrow will bring and how you will be able to survive it.

Neighbors may be passing by your house every day, going about their own business, unaware of or uninterested in the fact that you are losing the battle for survival.

You are unable to call out to them and after a while you may begin to believe what everything around you is shoving in your face — that you really don't have a right to the time, attention and ministrations of other busy normal people anyway. You have no currency with this world.

Our daily touch stones are fury and terror. Time does not make them easier to swallow. This is a slice of life that will change you from the marrow on out.

I have been very lucky. I have had some people clamber over the barriers to come get me. It's still been unbelievably hard but it seems that the worst of the worst is behind me.

But there are so many who are sick with ME/CFS that are still bound and gagged in this twilight horror of a life. And they are very often without help of any kind from the people around them who could make a difference if they gave it any thought.

These fragile ones are often without assistance from the government that pretends to value its citizens and yet kicks its most vulnerable and helpless squarely in the teeth every day with no hope for anything better in the future.

Good work, governments of nations, if your goal was to create people who distrust you. They are multiplying daily, perhaps one day you will even actually see them.



Phoenix Rising is a registered 501 c.(3) non profit. We support ME/CFS and NEID patients through rigorous reporting, reliable information, effective advocacy and the provision of online services which empower patients and help them to cope with their isolation.

There are many ways you can help Phoenix Rising to continue its work. If you feel able to offer your time and talent, we could really use some more authors, proof-readers, fundraisers, technicians etc. and we'd love to expand our Board of Directors.

And don't forget: you can always support our efforts at no cost to yourself as you shop online! To find out more, visit Phoenix Rising’s Donate page by clicking the button below.



View the Post on the Blog
 
Last edited by a moderator:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/06/22/1218031/-Presented-Without-Comment
What is worse is how our country the usa deals with veterans who risked their lives for the country who came down with similar diseases. There was a very touching suicide note here.

I have read this before. Some of the commentary is interesting too. That this can happen at all is a real problem. Medicine by political ideology stuffs up everywhere I see it, though to be fair I probably see it only where it stuffs up.
 
Amen!! Jody - I was never a big reader before I became ill. It might seem odd, but I find it refreshing to read a lot of the fitness magazines just to remind myself what my body used to be capable of and possibly again someday.

Many of the travel articles and interview articles of many of the people that you probably will not see interviewed anymore help take my pain and sick feeling away. Occasionally, there will be an article that is science related that may touch base on our plight for a cure or just some relief.

Read a recent article about 4 college graduates that adopted wild Mustangs and recruited experienced guides and trail riders. They are going to ride from Arizona to Montana on Public Land through the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone. They are also wanting to bring attention to the approx. 47,000 Mustangs just corralled in pens so they will not graze on grass land used for private cattle ranchers and the approx. 37,000 still roaming free. Going on a trip like that just occupies my mind for a long time.

http://houston.culturemap.com/news/travel/01-16-13-modern-adventurers-four-texas-am-grads-set-out-to-ride-wild-mustangs-3000-miles-to-canada/

Recently read a wonderfully written article and interview about Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones which was a period in which I grew up in and it brought back memories of times when I could enjoy myself.

The pain that hurts the most was not being able to be a critical part of my children's life and not being able to save my marriage.

So, yes it really hurts to be all alone to a horrid disease that for the most part is shunned by the medical community and I really believe many of them are afraid of tackling the vast amount of research that will be needed to cure many of the diseases with unknown etiologies.

At some point the socialized medical programs in the world will have to address research very had instead of just treating symptoms to feed big pharma.
 
So many responses to this article ! I have been reading them all, so sorry to know about all the bad experiences, fascinated by the different trains of thoughts and ways of handling things.

I normally try to respond to everyone who speaks directly to me, but there are so many I am overwhelmed.

There are some wonderful writers in this community, so expressive and articulate. You should all be writing articles.:)
 
the article you wrote, jody, is great. and the comments are even more powerful. so sad to read it all. i think of myself, of course, because i can relate to much of it, and also my bedridden friends who are often on the verge of either death or suicide due to this disease. and i think of my friend who did in fact take his own life after 17 yrs with me/cfs. (rest in peace, sweet patrick. i'm thinking of you right now.)
 
the article you wrote, jody, is great. and the comments are even more powerful. so sad to read it all. i think of myself, of course, because i can relate to much of it, and also my bedridden friends who are often on the verge of either death or suicide due to this disease. and i think of my friend who did in fact take his own life after 17 yrs with me/cfs. (rest in peace, sweet patrick. i'm thinking of you right now.)
 
Wayne, thanks.

"I read once, and have come to believe, that the consequences of holding onto “justifiable” anger are no different than holding onto unjustifiable anger. The body, mind, emotions, etc. are pretty much affected similarly, and not in a good way.

Speaking for myself only, I’ve realized that holding onto any kind of anger is akin to “an expensive luxury”. It may make me feel better temporarily, and perhaps even give me a sense of recovering a power lost, but I’ve generally found these to be fleeting experiences. Even more importantly for myself, I’ve come to a firm belief that if thinking of somebody causes me to become angry, and/or disturbed in any manner, then I’m in a sense giving them control over my life. This is the very last thing I want to do, especially since some of these kinds of people have the profile of an “energy parasite”, who often, whether consciously or unconscsiously, try to feed off of others’ anger."

I agree entirely. Some say that we need anger, even if it is for others before we will take action but I don't know about this. As you say, our bodies don't know if the anger is righteous or not (nor whether laughter is real of forced). For me the solution must be spiritual.
 
Thanks, Jody for an excellent article which must have been painful to write.

Like you I have become more politically aware since becoming ill, and I am horrified by the attack on humane values that is going on in all Western societies at the moment.

To be sick is not a crime, so why the attempt to portray the sick as hateful. In a capitalist society to be economically inactive is to be despised and unwanted. These attitudes have arisen before and always led to politically driven crimes against the citizen.

I am concerned by the current attempt in Britain to change the stance of the Royal College of Medical practitioners on euthanasia. In societies where the disabled and sick are despised this is a very dangerous stance. http://pjsaunders.blogspot.co.uk/2012/11/rcgp-chairman-glare-gerada-moves-to-gag.html
Claire Gerada and Fiona Godlee? familiar names!
 
Amen!! Jody - I was never a big reader before I became ill. It might seem odd, but I find it refreshing to read a lot of the fitness magazines just to remind myself what my body used to be capable of and possibly again someday.

Many of the travel articles and interview articles of many of the people that you probably will not see interviewed anymore help take my pain and sick feeling away. Occasionally, there will be an article that is science related that may touch base on our plight for a cure or just some relief.

Read a recent article about 4 college graduates that adopted wild Mustangs and recruited experienced guides and trail riders. They are going to ride from Arizona to Montana on Public Land through the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone. They are also wanting to bring attention to the approx. 47,000 Mustangs just corralled in pens so they will not graze on grass land used for private cattle ranchers and the approx. 37,000 still roaming free. Going on a trip like that just occupies my mind for a long time.

http://houston.culturemap.com/news/...t-to-ride-wild-mustangs-3000-miles-to-canada/

Recently read a wonderfully written article and interview about Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones which was a


period in which I grew up in and it brought back memories of times when I could enjoy myself.
August----
Sometimes leaving a marriage saves you!!!!!

San Diego #1

The pain that hurts the most was not being able to be a critical part of my children's life and not being able to save my marriage.

So, yes it really hurts to be all alone to a horrid disease that for the most part is shunned by the medical community and I really believe many of them are afraid of tackling the vast amount of research that will be needed to cure many of the diseases with unknown etiologies.

At some point the socialized medical programs in the world will have to address research very had instead of just treating symptoms to feed big pharma.