A few things I noticed when I was pacing and resting a lot was that my brain fog increased considerably and my sleep was much worse.
Interesting as Im the opposite with both those two things. The more rest the better I can sleep and the less brain fog I have.
cmt12 said:
Pacing is a natural reaction to our symptoms, so it's counterintuitive and difficult to avoid doing especially because we are constantly reminded that stress exacerbates symptoms. The key, I've found, is to adopt a mindset of resolve, resilience and confidence and not worry about 'crashes' at all.
Wow, Id be in hospital all the time if I did that!!, I end up there too often now when I over do being on my feet too much etc. (You should try standing when your BP has ditched to ZERO or is up to near 200 due to the autonomic dysfunction of ME.. it can get very dangerous!!) I don't think you have the same illness I do. In my case its nothing at all to do with resolve or resilience.
Ive had my optic discs swell due to the orthostatic hypertension some of us get with this disease when standing which puts me at risk of blindness.. hospital dr very worried about my kidneys as my blood test showed they were starting to show damage during one of my collapses due to the low blood volume I get. If some of us don't pace well, we could end up dead.
Pacing is more then a "natural reaction", for most ME patients (or all?) it is essential and in fact the pacing we do at times is anything but "natural" as we are having to cut back far more then what we really want to do so we don't end up in hospital or bedbound.
If just a "mindset of resolve, resilience and confidence" gets you through without making your whole condition worst, I don't think you could have ME." CFS but not ME. Here's a question I have cause Im curious. Do you think you fit into the new SEID definition? (I have serious concern over that definition being too vaguish and Im suspecting that you will say yes).
Gingergrrl said:
I had an episode tonight where my HR went into the 160's (this used to occur in my sleep but I was fully awake for this one.) When I get severe autonomic issues like this, I really am not sure if any amount of pacing would make any difference.
It is also incredibly difficult to just rest when you have a family and commitments. But I rest every single day and use a wheelchair every time we go out. Sometimes I feel if I rested anymore I would be bed bound which would make me feel more depressed and more excluded from the tiny amount that I do now.
Gingergrrl.. There are some symptoms of this which pacing doesn't help (well at least for me) Aggressive rest therapy doesn't fix my autonomic dysfunctions..eg IBS and the BP stuff which kicks in very fast (eg my BP can ditch to 0 or ditch to near 200 in abound 1 minute of being on my feet (though I can avoid a POTS collapse by not staying upright too long so pacing in a way with that). Also
unless the whole ME is improving at baseline level with more rest, it also doesn't help FM, MCS or the food intollerances.
So if autonomic dysfunction is your worst symptom causing issues, you may not notice improvements as much then someone who hasn't got this as their top ME symptoms..
Pacing though in my case really stops the immune kind of flare and all the symptoms that causes.. fever, sore throat, headache, fatigue, cough etc. It's like it stops the virus??? thingy activating and hence making my ME worst through that (which of cause long term "may" help the autonomic system? if it was under attack of something but it wouldn't be noticeable it helping that short term)