usedtobeperkytina
Senior Member
- Messages
- 1,479
- Location
- Clay, Alabama
I have decided to go into the closet.
I was editor and publisher of local newspaper. I got sick and had to do much of my work from home, from the bed. I got some better, but this past summer I was out for a day (four hours) and then home the next, out for four hours, home the next.
When I realized so many people were not diagnosed who have CFS and the doctor's ignorance, I decided to speak out publicly on it. I didn't do it in the newspaper, I did it on a blog / discussion board that I ran for the newspaper. And some people I had regular contact with, government sources and advertisers knew.
Then I closed the paper. I applied for a job that was only 30 hours a week. I thought I could handle it. I didn't get the job. And all who interviewed me knew I had CFS. I don't know if that was a factor in my not getting the job.
Then XMRV is announced. I continued to post on the new local community forum about the announcement. I volunteer four hours a week at the library, and they know I have CFS. I told them of the announcement.
My employer now, another newspaper (I only work for them five hours a week) knows.
All of this I thought might help people who are having problems become aware and possibly get a right diagnosis and a better treatment. I was trying to make people more aware, more informed, maybe they have a friend and hearing me say what it is like, they realize their friend may have it. I was in a position to bring awareness to the local community.
I went to my in-laws the weekend before Thanksgiving. We told them about XMRV, while sitting around the dinner table. My husband told them he thinks he may have it also. My husband's niece asked, "Is it contagious." (Her face was less than ten inches from mine.) I explained to her that the type of virus it is means it is likely transmitted similar to HIV, sex, mother to child in nursing, etc. But I told her the outbreaks and cluster of cases provides some evidence that it may be more easily transmissible than that. My husband's other niece, said, "Yeah, but you don't know if those people in those clusters were sharing utensils, or what." I said true.
Now, I now think it very insensitive for me to be hugging on my relatives, breathing in their face and then say, "I likely have a virus that gave me a chronic disabling disease.... Pass the mashed potatoes please."
I am reading Osler's Web. I took it to the library to have it renewed. I got into a conversation with the librarian about what it is about. And then it hit me, I might want to get a part time job at the library if one becomes open next year and I make some improvement. I don't need to be talking about having some virus that they don't know how it is transmitted. Working in a library means working with the public. They won't hire me if they think I will infect everyone who walks in the door.
In a practical view though, I feel anyone I have regular contact with would already have XMRV if they were going to get it from me. But that reality may not change perception and fear.
If this virus was like HIV, I would have no problem being open about it. But I suspect that it is more easily transmitted than that. Not everyone who gets the virus gets sick. But I think it is being passed on more easily than through blood, sex and mother to child. In Osler's Web, there is much evidence of this. The immune system abnormalities were seen in other family members, even though they did not get CFS.
So, at some point, this will become well-known. And there I have been telling everyone I have CFS. If this scenario works out the way I see, then my telling everyone I know that I have CFS will work against me, even if I get better, more better that is. I might would not be able to get any job that has contact with the public.
So I am going into the closet. I will not be talking to non-CFSers (except my hubby and parents and sisters). No more advocacy from me.
Tina
I was editor and publisher of local newspaper. I got sick and had to do much of my work from home, from the bed. I got some better, but this past summer I was out for a day (four hours) and then home the next, out for four hours, home the next.
When I realized so many people were not diagnosed who have CFS and the doctor's ignorance, I decided to speak out publicly on it. I didn't do it in the newspaper, I did it on a blog / discussion board that I ran for the newspaper. And some people I had regular contact with, government sources and advertisers knew.
Then I closed the paper. I applied for a job that was only 30 hours a week. I thought I could handle it. I didn't get the job. And all who interviewed me knew I had CFS. I don't know if that was a factor in my not getting the job.
Then XMRV is announced. I continued to post on the new local community forum about the announcement. I volunteer four hours a week at the library, and they know I have CFS. I told them of the announcement.
My employer now, another newspaper (I only work for them five hours a week) knows.
All of this I thought might help people who are having problems become aware and possibly get a right diagnosis and a better treatment. I was trying to make people more aware, more informed, maybe they have a friend and hearing me say what it is like, they realize their friend may have it. I was in a position to bring awareness to the local community.
I went to my in-laws the weekend before Thanksgiving. We told them about XMRV, while sitting around the dinner table. My husband told them he thinks he may have it also. My husband's niece asked, "Is it contagious." (Her face was less than ten inches from mine.) I explained to her that the type of virus it is means it is likely transmitted similar to HIV, sex, mother to child in nursing, etc. But I told her the outbreaks and cluster of cases provides some evidence that it may be more easily transmissible than that. My husband's other niece, said, "Yeah, but you don't know if those people in those clusters were sharing utensils, or what." I said true.
Now, I now think it very insensitive for me to be hugging on my relatives, breathing in their face and then say, "I likely have a virus that gave me a chronic disabling disease.... Pass the mashed potatoes please."
I am reading Osler's Web. I took it to the library to have it renewed. I got into a conversation with the librarian about what it is about. And then it hit me, I might want to get a part time job at the library if one becomes open next year and I make some improvement. I don't need to be talking about having some virus that they don't know how it is transmitted. Working in a library means working with the public. They won't hire me if they think I will infect everyone who walks in the door.
In a practical view though, I feel anyone I have regular contact with would already have XMRV if they were going to get it from me. But that reality may not change perception and fear.
If this virus was like HIV, I would have no problem being open about it. But I suspect that it is more easily transmitted than that. Not everyone who gets the virus gets sick. But I think it is being passed on more easily than through blood, sex and mother to child. In Osler's Web, there is much evidence of this. The immune system abnormalities were seen in other family members, even though they did not get CFS.
So, at some point, this will become well-known. And there I have been telling everyone I have CFS. If this scenario works out the way I see, then my telling everyone I know that I have CFS will work against me, even if I get better, more better that is. I might would not be able to get any job that has contact with the public.
So I am going into the closet. I will not be talking to non-CFSers (except my hubby and parents and sisters). No more advocacy from me.
Tina