As a linguist, I want to find the words to measure chronic illness

southwestforests

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As a linguist, I want to find the words to measure chronic illness
Written by M Corvi – August 1, 2025

https://thesicktimes.org/2025/08/01...to-find-the-words-to-measure-chronic-illness/

If you also have a complex chronic illness, you’re probably familiar with this experience. These conditions and diseases create a massive linguistic gap that can be difficult for patients to bridge — and even more difficult for medical providers because they don’t experience what we do every day in our bodies.

So what words can I, a linguist and a patient with sensations perceivable only to me, use to fully capture these mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS) and postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) sensations to my providers?

And, more generally, how can we measure our unsettling internal realities if we can’t even name them? How do you effectively measure something like pain, cognitive dysfunction, or feelings of noodliness when so much of medical measurement is reliant on readily observable phenomena — or, stuff that usually has really precise words?

In these moments when I am overwhelmed by this gap, I remind myself that immaterial to others doesn’t mean unreal — and that, after all, people have words to explain immaterial concepts like gods and quantum physics. The words for these unseeable sensations in my body must exist somewhere, and it’s up to patients and healthcare providers to work together to either find or invent them.
 

Rufous McKinney

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Great post!

This is a huge part of our Dilemma. The lack of words to describe what we feel, a lack of precision.

And at the same time, physicians and others make assumptions without asking the right questions. Or any questions.

And how will this ever work, with the "10 minute Doctor Consultation"? Earlier I was reading doctors resent that they have to "correct" lame thinking obtained on the internet, by humans who are seeking help, and receive very little. Shame on us for "seeking information". Shame on the internet for claiming it was established and created by scientists, so they could share and access information. now ALL PAYWALLED.

Or click baited.
 

Rufous McKinney

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has anyone ever told you your red blood cells are deformed? Probably not.

They will tell us we have Lots of oxygen there, at the finger tip. Isn't that funny? Nobody looks to see if you can use the oxygen, flowing past.

What they will tell you is "you're fine". A misnomer. "We could not detect anything wrong with this one measurement we took"...that is more accurate. Nobody BTW: tells me I am fine, they've got more finesse than that. They'll insult your intelligence in a more clever manner.

I generally love my doctor, I can't see any more, plus he will retire very soon. But when I called about my husband's medications, and this odd "smell" that was happening, my doctor told me my husband needs to brush his teeth. Well, he has no teeth. Invalidated, the door slams shut.

Doctors are really good at slamming the door shut. Which course do they teach that skill in?
 

I am sick

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291
As a linguist, I want to find the words to measure chronic illness
Written by M Corvi – August 1, 2025

https://thesicktimes.org/2025/08/01...to-find-the-words-to-measure-chronic-illness/
My results when trying to use different terminolgy for fatigue was trans scribbed straight to depression by several Dr's.
So I just stick with chronic fatigue then its labled as Sad depression !
The word Chronic Fatigue seems to be way over used for other medical conditions
 
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