I am concern and confused, actually both. As of now I am able to work 50 hours a week without any help. I can get up at 5 am and go to bed at 8 pm, in between I require one to three hours of nap. However, I can physically work. My cognitive is not so good.
Does this place my CFS in less sever category than many on this forum?
Will my functional ability decrease as I age?
The more I spend my time on this forum the more I learn how sever CFS has effected you in all way.
Deep down I also know that if I was to get ride of my light headed and was given my concentration back I would feel normal. But that is far from bleep. I might win a lottery before my body is able to get ride of light headed.
Should I be concern for the future to come?
I think the moderate and somewhat severe patients are the ones on the forums. The mild ones (like you; I know a disease like this is never mild but it's comparative) are generally out trying to work and don't have energy to talk online. The very severe ones can't use a computer much or at all.
Some people do get worse but that seems to be the minority. A different minority improve somewhat. Many people have a fluctuating condition that overall neither improves nor worsens.
It is true that some of us (who are moderate/severe) have found that when we pushed ourselves to keep working or going to school when this seemed too difficult but we wanted to do it anyway, we ended up getting worse and we blame it on working "too hard" for our conditions.
Light-headedness and concentration sound like that could be from orthostatic intolerance, which could be treatable. See if you can get a referral to a specialist who can figure out what type you have.
So I was thinking today should I approach each symptoms by taking meds specific to those symptoms. For example, if I have headaches then take Topamax, if I feel fatigue then take Nuvigil. I'm not sure if this is a good idea too.
Topiramate (Topamax) cannot be taken on an as-needed basis: it needs to be tapered up to an effective dose and then taken regularly with no missed or late doses (missing a dose can put one at risk for a seizure, even if one didn't have seizures previously), and to stop taking it safely, would need to be tapered back down.
There is some advice in the Primers about specific medications: both of these appear there. Links toward the bottom of this page:
http://naame.org/about-mecfs/
a video presentation here:
At this point I have no choice to work. I need to pay bills.. I might hold up on the idea of going to school. I just thought my life would have been different. I wanted to do something in life. To be honest with you, my family thinks I'm lazy...My wife yesterday told me that I am the most laziest person she has ever met. That really made me feel like crap.
Stuff like that makes me feel like I need to push my self and become something of my self, but I just can't...My body just wont.
What do I do? I don't have a supportive family.
I'm sorry. This is unfortunately far too common. Some of us are working hard to improve the way the disease is studied and understood (and perceived), and to get funding. There was a time when multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, etc., was thought of in similar ways. We seem to be stuck here for the moment, but good things are happening and the point is coming when everything will change, and people will know it's a real and a serious disease, just like Lupus or whatever.