Changes, Chronic Illness Bloggers, Chronic Pain, Contribution, Diagnosis, Honesty, Illness, Interstitial Cystitits, Pelvic Floor Dysfunction, Personal, Society, Strength, Struggling, Support, Support Groups, Support System, Thoughts, Uncategorized

Late Night Thoughts

Since being diagnosed with Interstitial CystitisEndometriosisPelvic Floor Dysfunction, Epilepsy, along with PTSD, Depression and Anxiety, I feel like most people have stopped seeing me. They seem to only see the disabled girl with chronic pain and diseases that have no cure.

When I am introduced to someone new, the words and phrases people use to describe me make me feel small. They make me feel like I am not doing enough to “make myself better.” When they talk about me, they only seem to see the endless stream of tests, doctors and surgeries. They now see me as the girl with chronic pain. And it makes me feel like I need to push myself harder, when in reality I already push myself beyond my limit every single day just to try and have a sliver of the life I once had.

My illnesses are not usually fatal, and sometimes it feels like if you are not in danger of actually dying, people don’t feel the need to use their own energy and resources to help you. This may sound harsh, but I am finding it to be more and more true. When most people hear that someone has a chronic illness they know it is most likely going to “drag on” forever. From my experience, it can be hard to get people to support you if you are going to live with your disease forever and if there is no cure.

People with chronic illness often face a lifetime of pain, exhaustion and disability. A lifetime of people telling them to get over it and they they are too depressing to be around, along with failing to meet everyone’s expectations. It is also hurtful how family and friends can’t seem to understand how we can be fine one minute and then the next we are curled up on the couch in pain.

I know for some of the best people I have ever met, those who have struggled with not having a diagnosis for years, finally having a name for their symptoms and illnesses is incredibly validating.

Once you finally have a name for what is “wrong” with you, it makes it much easier to treat, or at least manage your symptoms and pain. But along with the names of your illnesses and symptoms also comes judgment; at least it does in my life. Some people research your illness and learn at least a little about it so they can help you deal with the emotional part of it and be there for you.

But then there are those who search Google and find places that, for a one time payment can “cure” your disease — or this new medicine on the market with amazing reviews online for being natural, articles by people who have “cured themselves completely using ____,” or how thinking positive and talking about your feelings you can convince your body you don’t have an illness and can therefore “cure” yourself. But then they get upset when you don’t read all the “research” they did or do everything they think you should be doing, because the internet says it will help you.

I have lived with my illnesses for a little over a decade now. Wow. 10 years. In that time I have come across others in support groups and online forums who sometimes say they wish they had a condition people were more familiar with or took more seriously. Most chronic illnesses have no cures, only treatments, and some people just assume it will be the same thing every day, so why bother helping if it is going to be a never-ending process?

For me there are not any words on the planet to adequately explain how difficult it is to live with an illness that no one believes is real. For people to not understand how you can look fine and be smiling on the outside, but be hurting on the inside. For people to not understand how you can do a certain amount of things one day, then the next have no energy to do anything; sometimes even getting out of bed is a challenge. For people who can’t understand how you can be fine one minute then the next you are in severe pain.

Not to mention many of us have to come up with the money out of our own pocket to pay for a medication that may help a tiny bit or not at all.

We are people first. We are still human beings who have feelings. It’s hard when people have stopped seeing us as a person, but now see us as our illness or our symptoms. It is hurtful for many of us. We just want some understanding. Some support to know we are not alone. I could really use some support, as I am going through this difficult part of my life. I do everything I can to be supportive of family and friends, even if I don’t agree with their lifestyles or choices. Is it so hard to expect them to extend the same courtesy to me?

For those of us with chronic illnesses, many people come to the conclusion that we are different, and we will never be like them because we have a different life then they do. Many people assume we will never want to hang out because we hurt all the time. So they stop asking us to go out places. They stop calling.

We fight every day just to get out of bed, while many others take the little things for granted. Many people think that because life is the way it is for them, it will always stay that way. They never think of what would happen if all the things they were used to suddenly weren’t around anymore. They are used to going places all the time, feeling healthy, being able to go on long road trips, go to bars, have a “normal life,” have a relationship. Not have to worry about every minute of every day and how it will affect you and your ability to do even the simple things.

My name is Karley and I live with chronic illness. I am a person first and foremost. I have a name, and I am more than my symptoms. I refuse to let my illness control my life and how people see me. I am doing the very best that I can with what I’ve got

Fun, Honesty, Inspiration, Personal, Poetry, Strength, Support

Silence…

The silence drones on,
Getting louder and louder.
Cover your ears.
Turn down the silence,
Turn up the noise.
Anything to drown out
The blasting static of silence.

The yelling, screaming, hurting
Is better than silence.
I’d rather be hurting inside
Than not feeling anything at all.
Noise reminds me I
Can still feel emotions;
Silence reminds me I’m alone.

Silence is the enemy,
Music is my friend.
The words i sing out loud,
The music i hear,
Are the feelings I never
Knew to express until
Someone else put the jumbled mess into words.

Turn up the music
Get lost in the words.
Push out the silence,
Pull in the feelings
I buried deep in
The corners of my heart
Here we go. Goodbye silence, hello emotion.

Blessed, Changes, Chronic Illness Bloggers, Chronic Pain, Contribution, Contributor, Grief, Moving On, Personal, Random, Rant, Strength, Struggling, Support, Support Groups, Support System, Thoughts

Stronger

I’m going to do something I haven’t in quite a while. I’m going to be vulnerable. I’m going to say something I’ve wanted to say for over a year.

🎵You’re alive, you survived, it’s a sign
And the proof is in your pulse
Brighter stars only shine in the dark
You are stronger than you know🎵

This hits right in my soul, given the last 539 days. But I know I can do this. Because I’m still here. When my heart gave out that day, and I flatlined, I came back. I fought like HELL to come back.

No, I’m not over it. No, I’m not okay. Far from it. But day by day, I’m getting there. Day by day #IGetALittleBitStronger

The lyrics are from a song by Citizen Soldier called Still Breathing. One of my favorite Artists lately. They have yet to write a song that I don’t relate to or love.

https://youtu.be/JFAs8GKyZJE

I’m so beyond grateful for the amazing but small, support system I have. I love you all and I can’t thank you guys enough ❤😘

Changes, Chronic Illness Bloggers, Chronic Pain, Contribution, Contributor, Honesty, Illness, Inspiration, Personal, Self Care, Strength, Struggling, Support, Support Groups, Support System

I Know…

I know you’re frustrated. I know you’re having a hard time believing things are going to get better. I know you want the pain to stop, you want the questions to stop, you want the self-doubt to stop. But you need to hold on a little longer.

You need to get through the day. Even if you don’t leave the house, even if you don’t shower, even if you don’t brush your teeth, at least make it through the day. Other people might think you’re lazy for cooping yourself up inside for hours on end, but you know better than them. You know you’re strong for making it through the day at all.

Some days aren’t meant to be productive. Some days aren’t meant to be jam-packed with activities. Some days are simply meant to be lived.

You need to live through today, even if you’re doing it from inside your bedroom.

You need to live through today, even if you don’t have the energy to move from your bed.

You need to live through today, even when you feel like you aren’t living at all.

No, you can’t lock yourself away in a cage forever, but today is not forever. Today is all you need to worry about right now. Get through today and the rest will come later.

That doesn’t mean you have permission to procrastinate. If you can muster up the courage to call a therapist, do it. If you can muster up the energy to return texts, do it. If you can muster up the strength to leave your house and get through the day, as usual, do it.

Your feelings are valid. Your mental health matters. Asking for help is a step toward the healing process, it’s a step toward feeling okay again.

But on the days when you don’t feel okay enough to function, as usual, don’t be too hard on yourself. Don’t call yourself a failure. Don’t assume there’s something wrong with you.

Thousands of people experience the same things you’ve been experiencing. You wouldn’t want them to give up on themselves so you shouldn’t give up on yourself either.

Keep going. Keep breathing. Keep living.

You might feel like you’re never going to stop making mistakes. You might feel like everyone you love is going to leave you eventually. You might feel like you have nothing to offer this world. But those are fears, they aren’t facts.

The little voice in the back of your head is a good liar. It’s good at convincing you your worst fears are true but you have to remember you are in charge of your own identity. Your worst moments don’t define you. Your baggage doesn’t define you. Your insecurities don’t have to hold you back forever.
No, you might not have the energy to do much more than eating breakfast today, but that’s a start. That’s a small stepping stone and with enough time, even the smallest stepping stones will lead you to someplace beautiful.

You are strong for making it through yesterday, so don’t you dare give up on yourself, because you can make it through today too.

Advice, Chronic Pain, Contribution, Diagnosis, Emotional Shaming, Emotional Support, Honesty, Illness, Inspiration

100 Ways to Show Up for People with a Chronic Illness

So, I didn’t write this post, (KUDOS to anyone who know the reason I chose the picture I did for this post) it was originally written by Maggie Levantovskaya but I decided to post when I realized how great it was.

I just wanted to put my little bit in here; feel free to keep scrolling if you want 🤣 A few days ago, someone…I really cared for told me I am just using the wheelchair for attention, and I didn’t really need it. I did everything in my power to NOT let it get to me. But honestly, it did get to me. Then I remembered that she’s not a part of my life anymore, she hasn’t seen everything I went through, everything I’m CURRENTLY going through. So I’m doing my best to let it go. ANYWAY, here’s the article you came to read

Forty percent of Americans live with at least one chronic disease, and a third of us live with multiple chronic conditions. If you don’t have a chronic illness yourself, you likely interact with people who do.

I’ve lived with lupus and other chronic conditions for over a decade, at times keeping my health problems hidden for fear of being discriminated against or misunderstood. In that time, I’ve learned a lot about how people treat chronically ill folks. For instance: I’ve had a therapist tell me, “You can never be too rich or too thin,” when I lost weight as a result of gastrointestinal problems; and a co-worker complain, “I know she’s sick, but it sometimes feels like she’s just using it as an excuse to be flaky,” about someone with an incurable disease. But I’ve also had co-workers pick me up from emergency rooms late at night and offer to make me meals when I was living thousands of miles from my partner.

Having a supportive network is crucial when you have a chronic illness. But hearing problematic assumptions or intrusive questions is hurtful and exhausting, especially when they come from friends, partners, colleagues, teachers, and well-meaning strangers. So, here’s a list of suggestions for how to be a better ally to people with chronic illness, based on my experiences and conversations with friends who have other diagnoses, including Verena Hutter, who blogs about Crohn’s. The list is by no means exhaustive, but it’s a place to begin if you want to be better about checking your health privilege, if you have it, and supporting those who don’t.

1. Able-bodiedness and health are privileges. Recognize that.

2. In other words: Just because you have the physical capacity to do something or live a certain lifestyle doesn’t mean everyone does, so don’t expect them to.

3. Read up on different chronic illnesses, especially those affecting people close to you. Educating friends and family about your condition can be exhausting and annoying when information is readily available. Also, having a chronic illness can make you feel like an alien. Having close ones who know what’s up can be a real comfort.

4. Google is definitely your friend, but make sure that you are checking your sources. There are many scam websites and fad diet books that spread false information to take advantage of people with chronic illness.

5. But don’t start acting like you are an expert by trying to educate someone about their condition. They may talk to their doctor more than you do to your BFF.

6. Don’t ever question the legitimacy or severity of someone’s illness. Comments like, “I heard that was psychological,” or, “Everyone seems to have an autoimmune disease nowadays,” are extremely insulting. Sit down.

7. Know that not having a diagnosis does not mean someone is faking it. Many chronic illnesses take years to pin down and some symptoms never add up to a neat diagnosis. That doesn’t mean that the person experiencing them is not suffering.

8. Keep in mind that even doctors and researchers don’t have it all figured out when it comes to chronic illness. That doesn’t mean certain illnesses aren’t real, just that they are not yet classified. All medical conditions weren’t defined at some point—think about it.

9. Just as a rule: Believe people with chronic illnesses! I can assure you that they are not exaggerating. And they are definitely not using their illness to get out of commitments or get attention. If anything, they are probably minimizing what they are going through, especially if they are a woman.

10. Never tell someone with a chronic illness that they look “tired” or “sick” as a way of affirming them. That’s not the kind of affirmation we need, thanks.

11. It’s more than OK to tell someone with a chronic illness that they look good. Who doesn’t like to hear that? But don’t say, “But you look so great!” when someone is telling you they don’t feel well. It’s invalidating.

12. Saying “But you look healthy!” is even worse, obviously.

13. Also, please don’t compliment someone with a chronic illness on weight gained or lost as a result of symptoms or treatments.

14. In general, don’t assume that you know whether or not someone is well or healthy based on the way they look. Many people have chronic illnesses with symptoms you can’t see.

15. Know that just because you’ve seen someone with a chronic illness be active or take on many projects, that doesn’t mean that they were not experiencing symptoms at that time or that they can constantly keep up that level of activity.

16. Don’t say things like, “But you were fine just the other day!” With some chronic illnesses, there are periods of remission and flares. For others, that distinction isn’t clear and symptoms can fluctuate within short periods of time.

17. Don’t demand constant updates about someone’s health, even if you’re coming from a place of concern. Diagnosis and treatment often take a long time and constant questions can add stress.

18. Avoid asking someone with a chronic illness whether they plan on having kids. For some, it’s an extremely sensitive issue. There are illnesses that make it difficult or even impossible to have children.

19. In that vein, never, ever ask someone with an illness, “What if you were to pass on your disease to your kid?” We can make our own reproductive decisions, thank you very much.

20. In general, avoid questions about how chronic illness affects people’s sex lives and relationships. It’s invasive.

21. If you are close to someone with a chronic illness, don’t speak about their symptoms in front of them unless you are invited to. Let them do the talking and decide how much they want to share. Plus, you may not actually know what they’re going through.

22. When someone tells you about their symptoms, just listen.

23. Don’t tell that person, “You’re going to be OK, I know it!” To some people, that can make it feel like you don’t take their well-founded fears about their future seriously. Better to say: “I’m here for you if you need me. Let me know what I can do.”

24. Similarly, resist the urge to suggest thinking positive thoughts or saying that being optimistic is important for recovery. Can we please have feelings?

25. Remember, people with chronic physical illness are at higher risk for depression. So, it’s especially important not to dismiss their emotional responses.

26. This is a big one: Do not try to cure people with chronic illness. Thanks for caring, but unsolicited advice is just that—unsolicited.

27. Listen: Exercise is not the blanket solution to all health problems! Stop promoting it as such. And know that many exercise environments aren’t safe or welcoming to people with chronic illness. Teachers and trainers sometimes push their students in ways that lead to injuries or shame them for not being able to keep up with the rest of the class.

28. But exercise is an important means of symptom management for people. If you see someone with a chronic illness exercising, don’t assume they’re all better.

29. Never shame someone with a chronic illness for taking medications. Being critical of “big pharma” is OK, but there is nothing more annoying than being asked, “Aren’t you worried what all these chemicals are doing to you?” about medications that keep you alive.

30. Never, ever suggest to someone with a chronic illness that they should get off their meds and heal themselves with a diet, crystals, or supplements instead. That can be extremely dangerous.

31. Do not poo poo “western medicine.”

32. Do not poo poo “alternative medicine.”

33. Know that different kinds of treatments work for different people and just stay out of it.

34. Avoid advising someone with a chronic illness on which medical professionals they should be seeing. It may be tempting to say, “You have to go see [some rockstar doctor] at Stanford” but be mindful that not all health plans cover visits to random specialists. First, find out if someone has affordable health coverage. Some people with chronic illness are struggling with co-pays. Plus, you shouldn’t assume that HMO doctors or doctors outside of major cities are incompetent.

35. Banish the words “Have you tried…?” Yes, yes we have. Just assume that we’ve tried everything, from conventional drugs to parsley tea.

36. Trust us: Weed is not a cure-all for everyone and everything. We wish.

37. People with chronic illness sometimes have dietary restrictions. Make note of those that affect the people in your network. If a friend comes over to your house, don’t say things like, “I know you said you couldn’t eat tomatoes, but you must try this caprese salad!” We’re not playing.

38. If you make a commitment to accommodate someone with a chronic illness, make sure to find out what they need. Don’t say you can put up a friend with arthritis, for instance, and then only offer them a saggy couch.

39. Showing sympathy is really important but please don’t suggest you “know what it’s like.” Getting stomach aches all the time is not the same as having Crohn’s, and being “low energy” is not the same as having Narcolepsy. It’s just not.

40. Do not shame someone with a chronic illness for needing what you consider too much sleep or for going to bed early.

41. Do not assume that someone can handle manual tasks. “Pizza and beer for helping me move my apartment this weekend!” may sound like fun to one friend but like a nightmare to someone with chronic pain.

42. Avoid putting your friends in a position of having to excuse themselves and remind you—once again—why they can’t help you. It can make someone feel like you haven’t been listening.

43. If someone with a chronic illness has to cancel last minute, cut them some slack instead of considering them a flake. Symptoms can flare up at any moment.

44. Ask your friends with chronic illness how you can help them. Cooking meals, giving rides, or accompanying on doctors’ appointments, can mean the world to those who need the help. This may be especially true for people living alone.

45. Urban and rural areas hold various challenges for someone with a chronic illness. Cities can be hectic to navigate for those who are tired, in pain, and sensitive to noise. Rural areas can be hard to get around for those who don’t have accessible transportation. They are also isolating. Be mindful of this and reach out to offer support if you can.

46. But please no illness-related gifts, unless you are certain that the recipient wants them! Hearing “I got you this massager for your chronic back pain!” can make someone feel like you only think of them as being sick.

47. Don’t assume that people with chronic illness can’t ever hang out! Include them, but if they can’t make your event, offer them alternatives like watching a movie or having a face-time session.

48. Support and respect people who take care of those with chronic illness. Care-taking is a legitimate and important job that often goes under-acknowledged.

49. Assume that you work, go to school, or otherwise interact with people who have chronic illness and act accordingly. Having at least one chronic illness is statistically normal in the US.

50. When scheduling work meetings and socials, ask your co-workers about accommodations. Get to know who, for example, can’t handle noisy rooms or being outside. Find out who needs guaranteed seating because they can’t stand for long periods of time.

51. Give people who can’t make in-person meetings alternative ways to get information and participate rather than excluding them.

52. When scheduling meetings, avoid assuming that unusual times are fair game. For some people with chronic illness, symptoms are worst in the mornings, for others in the evenings.

53. This should be a rule in general, but don’t plan work events solely centered around alcohol consumption!

54. Avoid accidentally disclosing someone’s diagnosis. Just because someone confides in you, doesn’t mean that they are out at work. It’s always better to double check.

55. When you have to accommodate someone with a chronic illness, do not act like you’re being put out—no groaning, moaning, or haggling with someone who is asking for accessibility, please.

56. Remember that a request for accommodations is not an invitation to pose countless questions about the illness. Google when you get home.

57. Seeing someone take medication, adjust their insulin pump, or use a cane is also not a good reason to bombard them with questions. And definitely don’t stare.

58. Don’t underestimate co-workers with chronic illness. Many of them are doing their jobs excellently, even when in pain.

59. But don’t assume that “treating them the same” is the way to go. It’s better to ask. The person with the chronic illness knows best what they are capable of in a given moment.

60. If you are in a managerial position, show that accessibility is a priority. Rather than waiting for employees to come to you with a doctor’s note, open the conversation by asking what they need to thrive in their positions.

61. In general, try to make it easy for people to get accommodations. Those with chronic illness should not be the ones always initiating the “Sorry to bother you, but” conversation.

62. Whether or not you’re in charge of a team, be wary of worshipping at the altar of productivity. We should all be less focused on productivity as a measure of success or competence—it’s ableist.

63. Teachers: Include the voices of people with chronic illness in your classes. Disability Studies courses are not the only spaces where students should learn to think critically about illness.

64. Make a real effort to not single out students who need accommodations. Don’t let that note from the disabilities office be the last word on how you give access. Talk to your students face-to-face and find out what they need beyond the most basic accommodations.

65. Few things are as demoralizing as hearing a teacher say, “Sure, I’ll accommodate you, so long as you know that you won’t get ‘extra time’ in the real world.” Don’t be that teacher! If you are, you clearly haven’t heard of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Also, you don’t actually care about your students.

66. Doctors: Don’t shame your patients or minimize their experiences if a symptom doesn’t qualify as “serious” to you.

67. Women are more vulnerable to illnesses that come with chronic pain and are regularly under-treated for pain. Black patients are routinely under-treated for pain. If you’re a doctor, let that inform how you give care.

68. Therapists: Why are you sometimes giving unsolicited medical advice? Hearing “Have you tried…?” or “This could be psychological…” from you is especially frustrating and counter-productive.

69. Also to therapists: Do not expect your patients to educate you about their illnesses. This takes up valuable therapy time. Remember, people with chronic illness have to juggle many different medical appointments and it’s often not easy for them to make time for therapy.

70. Business owners: Being ADA compliant is the least you can do. Take additional steps to be less hostile to people with disabilities. To you, hard, minimalist stools and flat benches may seem like the height of cool, but to people with chronic pain, they are hell.

71. Bathrooms, bathrooms, bathrooms. If you are a business, clearly mark your bathrooms and do not turn away people who are not customers. No one should have to beg for a bathroom key or disclose that they are having a medical emergency.

72. Call out television shows and movies for using chronic illnesses as stupid plot devices or for comic relief. When you see a show like House treat lupus as a punchline, or movies like The Theory of Everything use illness and disability as Oscar bait, tweet at the producers and actors.

73. Support television shows and movies that tell chronic illness stories responsibly and hire actors with illnesses and disabilities, like RJ Mitte on Breaking Bad and Gaten Matarazzo on Stranger Things.

74. Support cultural institutions that make their art and events accessible via livestream or online. Not everyone can always enjoy art in person.

75. Follow social media accounts that raise awareness about chronic illness and disability, like Keah Brown’s, Esmé Weijun Wang’s, Michele Lent Hirsch’s, and Porochista Khakpour’s.

76. Also, these women have published or forthcoming books on chronic illness. Buy them!

77. Celebrating health is OK. Using language that suggests that lives with illness and disability are less worth living is not. Know that living “a full life” means different things to different people.

78. Be wary of participating in wellness and fitness movements that promote ableist culture by getting their participants to push beyond their “breaking point” and shaming them for failing.

79. If you belong to a fitness community, work on making it more inclusive to people with diseases and disabilities. Ask if your gym or yoga studio makes accommodations or offers special classes. The only yoga class I’ve been able to regularly attend since being diagnosed gave people with injuries and disabilities the option of working on a separate routine, with equal attention from the instructor.

80. Living with a chronic illness is expensive. This can’t be understated. Even people who have health insurance have additional financial burdens that can be astronomical. So keep that in mind when inviting people out for expensive dinners or trips.

81. Advocate for universal health care! Remember that thing I said about having a chronic illness being expensive? This would help.

82. Advocate for paid medical leave for all at national, state, and local levels. FMLA only requires that someone be allowed to take off twelve weeks without pay and not lose their job. This is not enough time for many people to go through the process of diagnosis and stabilize through treatment. And people in the gig economy have no safety net at all.

83. Show up in whatever way you can, but never guilt-trip people whose health issues prevent them from doing the kind of activism that’s accessible to you. In our pussy hat, protest-selfie moment, there’s a tendency to idealize in-person activism. Resist the urge.

84. If you have a chronic illness, support people with other chronic illness and disabilities. Work on building a wider coalition.

85. Be intersectional in your allyship and advocacy. Race, class, gender, geographical location, education level, and other factors are predictors of health. It should come as no surprise that “minorities experience earlier onset of illness, greater severity of disease, and poorer survival.”

86. Research for some chronic illnesses is woefully underfunded. When donating money or time, find out which causes are especially in need of support.

87. And get to know illnesses that disproportionately affect minorities. For example, 90% of patients with lupus are women and the disease is two to three times more prevalent among women of color. Women of color are also more likely to experience serious complications as a result of the disease.

88. Rather than thinking in terms of how people fail to function in our world, think about how our world fails to serve them. A lot of disabilities are disabilities because of a lack of accommodation, as opposed to lack of ability. For instance, someone who has chronic pain in the morning can still do the job, just not in the morning; and someone in a wheelchair can’t access a building only because there is no ramp. I know, take a moment.

89. This may seem obvious, but no one deserves to be ill. No one deserves to be in pain. No one deserves to be without healthcare. Not because of their occupation. Not because of their diet.

90. Actively resist language that puts blame on people who suffer. Hearing, “It’s no surprise she has digestive problems, she doesn’t eat ‘clean,’” or, “If he had taken better care of himself, his symptoms wouldn’t have been triggered by all that stress,” is judgey and unfounded.

91. Resist language that divides people into simplistic binaries like healthy and ill, able and disabled. When you say, “I’m all for the ACA, but it sucks that I have to pay so much for health insurance when I’m perfectly healthy,” you’re basically othering ill people and ignoring the fact that most of us were deemed healthy until suddenly we weren’t.

93. Don’t just avoid all conversations about chronic illness. Pretending that someone with a chronic illness does not have it does them no favors. Instead, ask people with chronic illness how they are doing and let them steer the conversation. Again, tell them you are ready to support them in the way that they need.

94. Be prepared to hear what they have to say even if it’s painful and disturbing to you. People with chronic illness should not have to sugar-coat their experiences. Don’t expect them to comfort you. It’s not about you.

95. Avoid ableist language. Hearing words like “sick,” “crazy,” and “lame” used pejoratively can hurt people with longstanding symptoms.

96. Learn whether the people in your network like inspirational talk. Not everyone with a chronic disease wants to be called a “heroine,” “warrior,” or even a “survivor” when they are just trying to live their everyday lives.

97. In general, do not romanticize illness. It is scary, exhausting, and financially draining.

98. Be prepared to make mistakes and get called out. People are not always going to be patient or generous toward you. They are not always going to be down for a “teachable moment.”

99. Remember, living with a chronic illness is tiring, tiring, tiring.

100. Don’t get defensive. Do better. And know that your efforts are appreciated.

Uncategorized

Surviving

In about 45 minutes I will officially be 28 and another year older. Yet, I’m struggling. The last year has been the hardest of my life. But, with the help of a few close friends, I finally feel like I CAN get through this.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m far from ‘fixed’. I’m still not okay. But I wake up every morning fighting like hell to move forward from that hell.

Its not easy. Its not instant. It takes time, but most importantly, patience. Trust in yourself. Your trauma may make you feel like you will never make it through, but trust me, you will.

It hurts like hell right now. I know. But you’re not alone. I promise. Please don’t be afraid to reach out.

You never know who may be touched by you 💛 by your story. You matter. No matter what your brain may be telling you.

Blessed, Changes, Chronic Illness Bloggers, Contribution, Contributor, Emotional Support, Moving On, Personal, Quotes, Self Care, Strength, Struggling, Support, Support Groups, Support System, Thoughts

Welcoming Changes

Today, for the first time in over a year, I woke up HAPPY. In a great mood and even had less pain than normal.

I feel more like myself then I have in over a year and I can’t tell you how amazing it feels 🥰

Maybe its because I’ve had so many rough days, but to me, it feels ‘weird’ to feel like this.

Honestly, I’ve spent the last year struggling and wondering if I would ever be okay. Little things would trigger me and I’d be right back there…in the hell I went through. Don’t get me wrong, I know I’m not suddenly ‘better’, its not perfect days from here on out.

But this gives me hope for better days ahead.

Tonight with my workers we went to a small craft fair type thing in my tiny town and even though I shouldn’t have spent the money, I saw these and couldn’t resist. She showed me how to do the piece all by myself, it was really simple but fun. And I bought a smaller one that is a magnet for your fridge as a kit and am going to do it later tonight. It comes with everything you need. Then, of course 😂, I saw the elephant keychain and had to have it. My Grandparents went on a mission to Thailand years ago and got to ride and elephant and my Grandma loved them, she collected mini elephant statuses and other small things.

The saying immediately made me think about how everything has gone and how I probably have become a little TOO ‘comfortable’ in staying to myself and how I don’t want to be like that anymore. How I may have to take life one day, or one hour at a time, and that’s okay.

I know this isn’t over, there are probably plenty of rough days ahead, life isn’t ‘fixed’ or ‘perfect’, but for the first time in a long time, I feel like I’m strong enough to handle it.

Just breathe. I got this.