Hip
Senior Member
- Messages
- 18,152
I am the opposite of what most people are saying here.
Before I got ME/CFS, I was neat and tidy, and always organized with my things — there was a logical system to my neatness, with certain draws, cupboards or shelves allocated to storing specific types or categories of item (which always meant I could find things quickly).
But after getting ME/CFS, I found my mind's ability to create logical schemes for organizing and storing items just vanished. So now everything is mixed up. My desk is chaotic combination of vitamin jars, various drug that I am trying (or drugs I was trying but forget about, and now they are buried under scraps of paper), paper notes that I make to myself, flash drives, pens and pencils, flashlights, you name it. It's hard to find things on my desk.
This sort of mess would have really bothered me before I got ill, and I would have immediately organized everything neatly; but now with ME/CFS, my mind does not even see the mess in front of me. It is as if I am too brain fogged to notice mess. Or perhaps it is because my own mind and thoughts have themselves become a chaotic mess (whereas previously I was a clear thinker), and my messy environment simply reflects my messy mind.
Before I got ME/CFS, I was neat and tidy, and always organized with my things — there was a logical system to my neatness, with certain draws, cupboards or shelves allocated to storing specific types or categories of item (which always meant I could find things quickly).
But after getting ME/CFS, I found my mind's ability to create logical schemes for organizing and storing items just vanished. So now everything is mixed up. My desk is chaotic combination of vitamin jars, various drug that I am trying (or drugs I was trying but forget about, and now they are buried under scraps of paper), paper notes that I make to myself, flash drives, pens and pencils, flashlights, you name it. It's hard to find things on my desk.
This sort of mess would have really bothered me before I got ill, and I would have immediately organized everything neatly; but now with ME/CFS, my mind does not even see the mess in front of me. It is as if I am too brain fogged to notice mess. Or perhaps it is because my own mind and thoughts have themselves become a chaotic mess (whereas previously I was a clear thinker), and my messy environment simply reflects my messy mind.