james7a
Thank you so much for sharing your story. And I admire your tenacity and bravery for continuing to post and respond through some of the petty politics and jealousies of this thread.
My individual belief is that MY illness is my body giving up after too many physical AND psychological stressors, over a lifetime. I think it's important to allow people their own reality with their own illness. Because, whilst we have symptoms in common, we have different ways of dealing with this horrible, horrible illness.
I don't know what the final trigger was which brought on my illness: anaemia, hashimotos, tick bites, childbirth, my father's stroke, the breakdown of relationships, pushing myself too hard, all of those things, any number of other stressors, or a particular combination of anything unknown, but my body blew a fuse. My only hope of any type of recovery is to attend to the circuit board, checking each and every fuse, whether or not that was the one that was blown in the first place. My feeling is that my approach is working, very, very slowly. Two steps forward, one step back.
Like you, I share your confusion with the right name for this illness. I call my illness CFS/ME because that was the diagnosis I was given by the NHS clinic here in the UK. And, yes, some of the help they gave me wasn't helpful, but some of it was.
I've found other help in other places. The most helpful thing I have found is in acceptance. Slowing my mind, the small joys of feeling my feet on the grass and the sun on my face.
Now, after, nearly 3 years, I try not to dismiss as bullshit things I don't want to hear, a rather unfortunate theme of this thread and this forum. For me, there's usually something to be learned even in the most unhelpful places. From the doctor who dismissed by query about about hypothyroidism with 'maybe you should spend less time on the internet' to the endocrinologist who said he could only get me to optimal health ( He was incredibly patronising, but he did find and treat vitamin deficiencies nobody else had bothered with).
I don't and won't dismiss the psychological aspects of any illness. I don't and won't dismiss the physical aspects of any illness. In refusing to even explore a psychological aspect of any kind this community is doing its members a huge disservice.
Good for you James. And all the very, very best for the future.