@
SOC How long did it take you to train yourself? I'm a few months in, yet still can't get the hang of it. On really good days I stay well below my estimated AT, on really bad crash days my HR climbs very rapidly and I can't do much of anything but hit the bed. And the remainder of days are somewhere in between, but I can't yet predict.
Is this due to my POTS not being adequately treated? Or is this just par for the ME/CFS course?
If I had to guess, I'd say it likely is your POTS, but it's just a guess. I think it's a big help to get the OI under control. Are you checking your morning pulse pressure to see that you are staying sufficiently hydrated? If my morning pulse pressure is low, my day usually doesn't go well and I can't do what I do on my routine days. Fortunately, those days are very rare now because I'm very careful about staying on my OI protocol.
I don't have all the variability now that we've done a lot of work on the viruses and got the OI under control. Early on I had many days where all I could do was stay in bed. If you're still in the early days of fighting pathogens, you may have to rest more than you are.
It's possible you are still doing more than your body can handle
routinely. What I can do, and what I can do
routinely are two different beasts. For example, I can do a little shopping in a storefront shop without PEMing myself, but I can't do that every day.
My self-training not to go over my AT took 3-6 months. Learning what I could do routinely took a lot longer. I started with practically nothing since I was bedbound, and started adding in necessary daily activities one or two at a time -- dressing, making an easy meal. I'd stay with that for a couple of weeks and if I didn't have a bad day, I'd add in another necessary activity, wait a couple weeks... you get the picture. Eventually I got a picture of what my routine day should look like. Then I could add irregular activities here and there, making sure none of them took me over my AT.
My routine sometimes annoys my hubby because I can't afford to be flexible in many areas. For example, I've learned I can do one load of laundry a day a little at a time. If I try to do several loads in one day, then I can't do other things in my routine -- I've used too much energy I guess. I've learned that I can't reliably cook a meal at dinnertime, but I can reliably do it in parts earlier in the day and warm it up at dinner time. Sometimes, maybe even a lot of the time, I can cook at dinnertime, but I can't do it
reliably, so I backed off to a way I
can do it reliably. That way it's not a guessing game every day whether I'm going to be able to do this or that.
If I keep my routine down to what I
know I can do reliably, life goes smoothly and I have some extra resources to do extras when I feel up to it. If I try to do everything I
can do every day, I eventually wear myself down and have bad days.