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NHS IAPT Medically Unexplained Symptoms/Functional Symptoms Postive Practice Guide

cmt12

Senior Member
Messages
166
This reads like a Just So story to me, only not quite so diverting. It doesn't resonate with me at all because my own experience of falling ill and how I responded was so different. But I'm curious. Is there any pwMe or pwCFS out there who recognises this pattern in themselves?
I have noticed the high achievement personality trait is common but it's just another case of mixing up correlation with causation.
 

A.B.

Senior Member
Messages
3,780
What a load of psychiarrhea.

They simply can't admit that human knowledge is limited, and that health problems exist which are not yet understood.

The idea that somatisation is the cause of health problems is modern superstition. Like any superstition, its purpose is to "explain" what is not understood. And like most superstitions, it evokes metaphysical powers.
 

Scarecrow

Revolting Peasant
Messages
1,904
Location
Scotland
@Leopardtail and @cmt12. I agree with both of you about the high achievement part. It's the only bit of the model that potentially applies to me: I was far too young to be a high achiever but to this day I'm very hard on myself. I think it's this trait that makes us reject any attempt to label us with a primary depressive disorder. We KNOW that isn't the problem.

To some extent my personality type was involved but not as they describe. For me, the push came before the crash, i.e. there had been no prior 'acute illness or injury' that I was aware of. I've read so many other people relate a similar experience. I was pretty good at not overdoing it afterwards but at the same time I've never had any of the alleged fear of exercise that they are so fond of citing. If White, Chalder et al. are correct, then I should not be ill. I'm their model patient. Indeed you could almost say I pioneered GET before they did.

So what I was really getting at was not the personality type but rather how you responded to your predicament. Does the rest of the description apply, as well as the supposed 'predisposition'. I'm trying to get a feel for how commonly this model applies to people.

Is it rare or is there some truth in it?
 

Snowdrop

Rebel without a biscuit
Messages
2,933
The 'high achievement' type could in fact have a cultural aspect to it.
At this place in this time certain cultures are increasingly achievement oriented maybe?
It seems to me that this is not true of all cultures some of whom still value relationships (for example) above achievement.
 

cmt12

Senior Member
Messages
166
I mean I'm going to view this through my current understanding, so to me the desire to constantly achieve comes from an insatiable insecurity which results from a continuous stress response. As you become more symptomatic, you feel more insecure so you push yourself harder to achieve which results in more stress. This was true for me, yes, and I've noticed it a lot in others.
 
Messages
13,774
This reads like a Just So story to me

That's what I often end up thinking with biopsychosocial stuff. Comforting stories that help people avoid acknowledging their own ignorance.

Personally, I'm not hard on myself over achievements, and while I prefer to do things well to poorly, was generally thought of as being less hard working than most. I think that maybe I've become more 'achievement oriented' recently, on realising how much quackery there is around CFS - if things are this bad, I really can't just sit back and leave it to others to sort out (which would be my natural preference).

I think that the prejudices around CFS make it harder for people to say 'I'm not that bothered - I just like lazing around' than if they were healthy. When one is sick, there does seem to be more pressure for one to also (pretend to) be virtuous.
 
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Scarecrow

Revolting Peasant
Messages
1,904
Location
Scotland
I mean I'm going to view this through my current understanding, so to me the desire to constantly achieve comes from an insatiable insecurity which results from a continuous stress response. As you become more symptomatic, you feel more insecure so you push yourself harder to achieve which results in more stress. This was true for me, yes, and I've noticed it a lot in others.
I think that I follow what you are saying but it doesn't seem to correspond with their argument. You are describing the archetypical vicious cycle, which makes perfect sense; they are proposing an altogether different chain of events.
 

cmt12

Senior Member
Messages
166
I think that I follow what you are saying but it doesn't seem to correspond with their argument. You are describing the archetypical vicious cycle, which makes perfect sense; they are proposing an altogether different chain of events.
Yeah I'm saying I think their theory is wrong in that they are proposing a common symptom (type A personality) as a cause.
 

Scarecrow

Revolting Peasant
Messages
1,904
Location
Scotland
I was and still am achievement oriented, and I have had to respect the illness and learn my new limits.......
It took me a while but I finally understand your points. In the meantime, I managed to repeat some of the same points. Must have sunk in at a subliminal level? Drifting in and out of fog tonight.
 

chipmunk1

Senior Member
Messages
765
I have noticed the high achievement personality trait is common but it's just another case of mixing up correlation with causation.

yes and other psych docs "see" anxious avoidant personalities or just lazy people.

More likely if you keep looking for problematic personality types you will find them in any group of people. if you keep looking long enough you will see all kinds of pattern emerge. (the psychobabblers do this all day long so they see a lot of patterns we can't see :) )

There are other explanations why type A personalities could be more common. Many people would just give up and accept their "just depression" diagnosis and keep dying. Others might be more informed willing to question and willing to fight the system.

In the fifties psychoanalysts believed autism was caused by the "refrigerator mother" (cold distant mother). The reason was that many of the mothers they saw left the child raising to their nannies making the analysts believe the distant mother caused the autistic behaviour of the child. It turned out that they had studied a self selected group and confused correlation with causation. Mostly rich people could afford an analyst back then and many of them had nannies who would look after the child. Poor families had autistic children too, no nannies but they could not afford to see an analyst.

For example, evidence suggests that predisposed people may be highly achievement orientated, basing their self-esteem and the respect from others on their abilities to live up to certain high standards.

which describes about 50% of the people living in a highly competitive western society.
 
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Snowdrop

Rebel without a biscuit
Messages
2,933
There's also the issue of what came first. For example, I was gregarious then I got ME and I withdrew socially.
The psychobabblers only acknowledge the present state 'social withdrawal'. They begin their analysis from a faulty premise.
 

Leopardtail

Senior Member
Messages
1,151
Location
England
PEM is caused by over-exertion, over-exertion worsens ME in general. These peopler have failed to realise that they may see more over-acheivers simnply because that group will worsen the ME they were born with.