I've paid a small fortune and none of it has helped. In fact I developed a phobia to m.e thoughts and still can't get it out of my head that thoughts about m.e are causing the m.e. and if only I could stop thinking, I would recover. I am in such a stressed out state about it all and get such bad anxiety every time an m.e pops up, its just making me feel so ill.
That sounds a bit like brainwashing.
Of course, there's nothing wrong with positive thinking, and all the books I have ever read on the subject of positive thinking advise that you should focus your mind on the outcome you want, and picture yourself, in your own mind, in the way you want to become. And I think this is good advice.
However, at the same time, we don't want to become blind to the obstacles we face.
Along the road to better health are certain obstacles, and in our case, these obstacles are the various ME/CFS symptoms that you have to tackle and try to ameliorate in order to obtain better health. Such symptoms include fatigue, brain fog, sound sensitivity, anxiety, post-exertional malaise, etc. Many of these individual symptoms can be ameliorated with the right treatments.
So for anyone to advise you that you need to ignore ME/CFS symptoms is like advising a driver that they should not pay any attention to the obstacles (pedestrians, etc) in the road. Ignoring the obstacles in your way is a recipe for disaster.
Oh and Justy I forgot to add I have candida and leaky gut and I know that can cause anxiety so that won't be helping me. X
If you have anxiety symptoms,
this thread might be of interest. The treatments listed in that thread have worked for many ME/CFS patients on this forum with anxiety symptoms.
Is anxiety is significant symptom for you?
I'm still struggling with it not being all in my head although I do want to believe you all so much. The trouble is I find it so hard to believe as I went from bed bound to walking miles each day within two weeks of mickel therapy. The therapist came to my home and I could barely get downstairs. She told me this was all about childhood trauma and I had PTSD. I felt like a massive load was taken off my shoulders and the difference was amazing. I painted the whole of the front of my house and went on holiday walking in the Peak District. I wasn't worried about m.e anymore. But then I suffered some stress in my life and went slowly downhill again much to the frustration of the therapist.
I wonder if it was not so much the specifics of the Mickel Therapy that helped you, but rather the fact that you believed it would help, and thus this took a lot of burden off your mind, and thereby lowered your stress levels. It seems as if your health is very sensitive to stress, so perhaps lowered stress levels may have lead to an improvement in your ME/CFS.
If so, then you might want to focus on finding ways to reduce stress.
P.s. She also said that my head being wired with non stop thoughts and flashing lights when I close my eyes has nothing at all to do with m.e and I need more time with the physchologist.
Non-stop thoughts, which are normally termed
racing thoughts, aren't a part of ME/CFS, but they can occur in anxiety disorder (which you may have), hyperthyroidism, bipolar disorder, and other conditions.
The supplement choline bitartrate can calm racing thoughts.