Thank you all for the feedback. Though I am impressed and encouraged by the passion of your responses, nothing that has been said here has really swayed me significantly. I've made the decision to keep going with the walk. I have no intention to argue with any of you. I believe there is some validity to the point being made - expressed most eloquently (and constructively) by
Mark - that the media's interpretation and construction of my walk may be counter-productive in that it may promote the narrative that sufferers must simply work harder, 'stop being so lazy,' etc. Not enough validity to change my mind, for several reasons that I won't go in to (my apologies), but validity nonetheless;
and so I'm wondering, in my dealings with the media, if you have any suggestions as to how I should present myself, what points I should make, etc.? My Mission Statement is not something that I will be handing out to people - it will be on my site and is simply a description of my walk and the motivations behind it.
Digression re: 'Fighting vs. Fighting Through Something:' When I was a freshman in High School, I dropped out of school because of the symptoms I was experiencing. I was bed-ridden for most of that year, and partially bed-ridden for the next. I was diagnosed at the Cleveland Clinic that second year. I tried fighting through it, ignoring it, exercising like a healthy person; it made things worse. I tried a lot of things. I began to write, I began to write all the time; about myself, life, books, people, music. I didn't want to understand and live my life solely in relation to my status as a sick person. Writing was an internal act of defiance, of fighting - I knew that it would not make me healthy. That's not why I did it. I did it because I wanted to choose to live my life - to the fullest extent that I could - independent of my idea of myself as a 'sick person.' This attitude has kept me sane. In many personal ways, this walk is like writing was for me. I couldn't have walked in the past, but I can now, and I will.
Another thing:
justinreilly, I hear what you're saying with respect to use of ME/CFS or ME vs. just CFS. CFS is an insulting, ridiculous name. It is also - in the US - the most commonly used term to refer to this disease. I don't like that, but I can't change the fact of it overnight. Think of the NAACP. I'll be referring to the walk as the Walk Across Michigan for CFS, but will try to make sure that I refer to the disease in all my other content as ME/CFS.