Tag: invisible illness

  • Looking Back: 30 Years of Shame and Finally Understanding My Experience

    Looking Back: 30 Years of Shame and Finally Understanding My Experience

    I’ve lived with this illness for over 30 years, and for most of that time I was ashamed of it.

    Doctors kept telling me it was all in my head.

    They said I was depressed, anxious, or that I just didn’t want to work hard enough. They usually prescribed antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications, claiming these drugs would fix me. While the medication may have helped my emotional state somewhat, it did nothing to fix the physical symptoms.

    Thankfully, I eventually stopped letting them gaslight me into taking more and different medications.

    Every time I tried to explain how my body would completely crash after doing normal things, I was met with skepticism or pity.

    So I started doubting myself.

    I felt weak.
    I felt crazy.
    I carried a lot of shame for something I couldn’t control.

    The fatigue and exhaustion that comes with this illness is crushing.

    It’s not normal tiredness. It’s a deep, heavy exhaustion that sleep doesn’t fix. Even the smallest activities can leave me completely wiped out for days.

    My sleep tracker consistently shows that I get adequate deep sleep and REM sleep, yet I still wake up exhausted. That helped me understand something important:

    The problem isn’t simply how much I sleep.

    It’s that my dysautonomia prevents the sleep from being restorative.

    In the early years, the emotional side of it felt a lot like PMS — that same sudden emotional dysregulation, irritability, and feeling completely off — except instead of happening once a month, it could hit at any time.

    Only recently have I finally understood what’s really happening.

    What I have is dysautonomia.

    My autonomic nervous system doesn’t regulate properly anymore.

    That’s why I can suddenly feel freezing cold in a warm room. That’s why I’m much more comfortable lying down than sitting or standing. And that’s why even mild activity can make my whole system short-circuit — suddenly bringing on intense brain fog, overwhelming exhaustion, headaches, insomnia, anxiety, and sometimes depression all at once.

    ME/CFS always felt like an incomplete label to me.

    Yes, I crash after exertion.
    Yes, sleep doesn’t fix it.
    Yes, my body has never functioned the way people expect it to.

    But understanding it as dysautonomia finally explains the day-to-day reality of living in a body whose nervous system breaks down so easily.

    The only thing that actually helps is pacing — staying within my energy envelope.

    I try to live as close to the edge as I can, but carefully. Migraines and tinnitus have become warning signs for me. If I respect those early signals, I can often avoid triggering insomnia, which is far worse than a regular crash and completely throws me off balance.

    After 30 years, I’ve finally stopped blaming myself.

    That alone has been healing.

    I’m sharing this journal entry in case it gives someone else a little more language for their own experience.

    And for family members, friends, and doctors: please know that when we keep turning down invitations, or seem withdrawn, or disappear for long stretches of time, it’s not because we don’t want to be around you.

    Our energy is extremely limited.

    We have to be very careful to avoid crashes.

    Even now, I keep a little journal between doctor visits so I can clearly communicate what I’ve been experiencing. If you’re struggling to explain this illness during appointments, writing things down and bringing it with you can be incredibly helpful.

    Sometimes understanding does not cure the body.

    But it can begin to release the shame.

    And after so many years of being misunderstood, that matters.

  • Redefining ‘Exercise’ for Severe ME/CFS & PEM: The Smallest Victories Matter

    Redefining ‘Exercise’ for Severe ME/CFS & PEM: The Smallest Victories Matter


    Please honor your own energy envelope as you read. Whether a sentence… a paragraph… or even a glance at the headings, whatever feels right for you in this moment is perfect. Compassion. 🙏


    When we speak of “exercise,” what do we really mean?

    For most of the world, the word conjures images of jogging paths, yoga mats, or perhaps the thrill of surfing. But for people living with severe ME/CFS, Long COVID, or energy-limiting illnesses, those images feel alien—sometimes even harmful.

    A recent article critiquing Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) made some valid points about the dangers of pushing beyond one’s limits. But it included an example of going surfing as a form of joy-based movement. For many of us who can’t even sit up for long, that kind of suggestion doesn’t just feel out of touch—it feels quietly devastating.

    Because for us, “exercise” might mean:

    • Sitting up in bed for 60 seconds.
    • Taking a shower.
    • Getting dressed.
    • Writing a message to share with friends.
    • Fill in the blank: _______

    These are our mountains.
    These are our triumphs.
    And they deserve to be seen and celebrated.


    Why Surfing Isn’t a Helpful Example

    1. Most patients are not high-functioning.
    Many of us are bedbound, housebound, or dependent on wheelchairs. To suggest activities like surfing may not feel inspiring—it may feel shaming.

    2. PEM doesn’t care about your mindset.
    A shower can mean days in the dark. Making tea can require a week of recovery. GET fails not because we aren’t trying—but because our cells can’t keep up.

    3. Joy comes from adaptation, not performance.
    Recovery may—or may not—be possible. But living meaningfully within this illness is. A breath of fresh air, a ray of light through the curtain—these are sacred moments.


    A More Gentle Framework: What Is Possible?

    1. “Bedercise”: Movement Within the Envelope

    • Gentle arm lifts (or just muscle engagement)
    • Ankle rolls for circulation
    • Breathwork as internal movement
    • Stretching fingers, wiggling toes

    Each of these is valid. Each of these is enough.

    2. Celebrating Non-Physical Victories

    • Listening to a few minutes of an audiobook
    • Looking out the window
    • Enjoying the scent of tea or essential oil
    • Smiling, even once

    3. The 50% Rule
    If you think you can do something—do half.
    If you could clean the counter, just rinse a spoon.
    This helps avoid crashes and still creates a feeling of self-direction.

    4. Redefining Progress
    Progress may mean staying stable.
    It may mean one less crash this month.
    Or sitting up for 30 seconds longer.
    These are wins, even when invisible.


    A Call for More Inclusive Stories

    If we want real awareness, we must include severe ME/CFS patients—not just those well enough to surf or work part-time.

    Your struggle matters.
    Your body is not broken—it is navigating a broken system.
    Your stillness is not failure.
    It is wisdom in motion.


    Rest Is a Practice—A Sacred One

    For those with ME/CFS and other energy-limiting conditions, rest is not absence. It is presence. It is the heart of the path.

    In Dzogchen, as taught by Namkhai Norbu, rest is a return to the natural state—effortless, luminous, whole. In Ramana Maharshi’s Self-Inquiry, resting in the question “Who am I?” leads us not into striving, but into the stillness beneath all identity. In Samatha meditation, taught by the Buddha, rest is calm abiding—shamatha—the ability to remain at ease without grasping.

    When you lie in stillness,
    when you breathe quietly through exhaustion,
    when you choose not to push—

    You are exercising.

    You are aligning with ancient lineages that saw rest not as a failure of effort,
    but as the purest exercise of wisdom.

    So if all you did today was rest,
    you did something holy.

    🙏🕊🙏


    For those interested, here is the article that inspired my post. But, Surfing! Haha! 😆 Surfing the internet, maybe. The author clearly doesn’t consider people living with moderate or severe ME/CFS in his/her writing of their article. 🤔

    SOURCE LINK: Why Graded Exercise Fails for PEM (And What Actually Works)

  • The Myth of the Hogtied Healer

    The Myth of the Hogtied Healer

    There once was a healer whose light burned quietly, steadily. They moved with tenderness, practicing wisdom, speaking softly, honoring boundaries—resting when they needed, even offering compassion to themselves.

    But still… the flame within them began to dim.
    Not for lack of care.
    Not for lack of knowing.
    It simply dimmed, as if called downward by something no hand could touch.

    For God, watching with ancient eyes, whispered among His friends:
    “This one must be stopped—not for punishment, but for protection. There is another kind of healing they must learn—one that cannot be found in doing.”

    And so, with threads unseen, He bound the healer in stillness.
    No more running.
    No more reaching.
    No more doing.

    It wasn’t rope, but illness.
    It wasn’t cruelty, but consecration.
    And the name of the rope was Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.

    At first, the healer fought—kicking, bargaining, crying to be untied.
    But ME doesn’t bargain.
    It doesn’t shout.
    It sits like a stone in the lap of your soul and says:
    “You will rest now. You will learn the medicine of stillness.”

    And so began the long apprenticeship—
    Not in temples, but in beds.
    Not in motion, but in surrender.
    Not in speech, but in silence.


    Friends,
    We are all walking this path of unexpected healing together—
    Not by choice, but by calling.

    As Dr. Richard Alpert used to say,

    “We are all just walking each other home.”

    🙏🕊🙏

  • It’s One Thing to Understand Pacing in Theory and Another to Embody It in Daily Life

    It’s One Thing to Understand Pacing in Theory and Another to Embody It in Daily Life

    “Resting in the space I worked so hard to create—learning, once again, that pacing is not just theory but a daily practice.”

    A Note on Pacing:
    Before you begin, take a moment to check in with yourself. How much energy do you have for reading today? Maybe just a sentence or two. Maybe a paragraph. Maybe the whole piece. However much you take in, let it be enough. This article, like life with myalgic encephalomyelitis, is not meant to be rushed.


    Pacing is a word we hear often in the world of ME, spoken like a compass meant to guide us. We read about it, talk about it, explain it to others. But then comes the quiet, complicated work of living it.

    To truly embody pacing is not just to believe in rest but to yield to it before collapse. It is the difference between knowing water quenches thirst and actually drinking, between understanding a path on a map and walking it, step by deliberate step.

    ME exists on a spectrum. Some reading this are bedridden, as I once was, for whom pacing looks like shifting slightly in bed, drinking water in small sips, or turning down the brightness of a screen. Others may have the energy to sit up, to fold a blanket, to wash a single dish. And for some, on a better day, pacing might mean pausing between errands or choosing not to add one more thing to an already full day.

    Today, I wake with the weight of PEM pressing down, the kind of fatigue that makes even stillness feel like too much. Considering how I feel, I know I should probably just stay in bed all day and do nothing. However, I am giving myself these next three days to recuperate while including a few small tasks around the house. So rather than staying in bed indefinitely, my plan is to get up every now and then, do a little something—without overdoing it—and then return to bed. This is how I imagine my day unfolding, and how I imagine the next three days unfolding.

    But today is different from other days of PEM. Because today, I am resting in a home I have created. A home I moved into just weeks ago—an exhausting, overwhelming feat that took everything I had to give. Packing, unpacking, pushing my body past its limits to carve out a space of refuge. And now, for the first time, I get to use it. I get to experience the space I have fought to create.

    And so, I stand.

    Not to conquer, not to override, but to move in a way that does not break me. I wipe the stove instead of the sink, because that is where my hand reaches first. I rest between tasks—not as surrender, but as part of the rhythm. I remind myself: small movements, long pauses, no urgency.

    I lay down between tasks, not because I want to, but because I need to. And in doing so, I begin to feel the quiet power of pacing—not as a limitation, but as a lifeline.

    And then, something unexpected: gratitude. Gratitude for having built a space where I can rest. Gratitude for the fact that I no longer have to push every moment of the day. Gratitude that my version of pacing today involves getting up every now and then, rather than going into complete sensory deprivation. I have been in those places before, where even the smallest light or sound was too much. And while PEM still drags at my limbs, I can move. That alone is something to honor.

    Pacing is not just a strategy; it is a conversation with the body, a practice of trust.

    I want to do more, of course. The mind races ahead of what my body allows. But I am learning—again and again—that healing is not found in force. That to rest is not to fail. That pacing is not about withholding movement but about weaving it together with stillness in a way that lets life unfold without collapse.

    And so, after the stove, I stop. I fold a blanket, but slowly, already thinking of the bed that waits. I let myself arrive at rest before I am shattered. This is the lesson I know in theory but must practice in flesh.

    To pace is not to do nothing; it is to do with awareness. To listen. To trust.

    And to begin again, as many times as it takes.

    Whether beginning again means practicing acceptance and self-compassion in the face of complete immobility and overwhelm, shifting thoughts away from frustration, shame, and darkness—or whether it means considering, with gratitude, the possibility of standing, washing a dish, or even the luxury of taking a bath.

    Living with myalgic encephalomyelitis is a spectrum. One that can change from moment to moment, one day to the next, or even year by year. This year, I am grateful for a greater capacity than the year before. But today, my capacity is fragile, and I must return to deep rest in order to honor the rhythm, the harmony, the cycle of change that ME demands of me each day.

    My heart goes out to all of us living this.

    Living with this.

    Mysterious. Unrelenting. Yet still, we live.

    To those reading this from bed, unable to move—your experience is seen, honored, and valid. To those who, like me, are navigating the in-between, finding ways to weave movement into rest—your effort is enough. To those who today feel a little more capacity than yesterday—may you hold it with gentleness.

    You are not alone. We are a community, bound not just by struggle, but by resilience. By the courage it takes to listen to our bodies when the world urges us not to. By the strength it takes to rest when everything in us longs to do more.

    And so, together, we continue.

    We pace.

    We rest.

    We begin again.

    🙏🕊🙏


  • The Art of Pacing: How to Live Gently with Chronic Illness and Protect Your Energy

    A gentle exploration of how pacing can help you find balance and protect your well-being while living with chronic illness—along with thoughtful tools and guidance for those seeking support on this journey.

    Pacing is the quiet art of learning to live gently within the rhythms of your body, an act of surrender not to defeat, but to wisdom. It asks you to listen closely, with reverence, to the invisible boundaries your energy sets each day—boundaries that shift like tides, at times quietly receding, at times closing in. For those living with post-viral ME/CFS or long COVID, pacing is not about building stamina or pushing through; it is a way of navigating the unpredictable waters of illness, steering not toward exhaustion but toward balance.

    Think of your energy as a delicate thread stretched between moments. Some threads are finer than others, fraying at the edges after only the smallest tug. On certain days, your energy is enough to string together simple acts—getting out of bed, speaking a few words, tending to a meal. On others, even holding a thought in your mind feels like a weight too great to bear. There is no map for how far your thread will extend each day, and so the practice of pacing requires patience: learning when to weave activity into that thread and when to set it down altogether.

    It begins with noticing. As the morning unfolds, ask yourself: How does your body feel today? What whispers does it send about the tasks ahead—are your limbs heavy, your mind clouded? Or does the day offer a rare clarity, a lightness in your chest? This gentle inquiry is the starting point of pacing, the first invitation to move in harmony with yourself. If you learn to honor your limits before they are breached, you begin to discover that rest, too, is a form of action—an act of preservation, of quiet resistance to the demands of doing.

    There will be moments when you falter. Some days, buoyed by the hope of feeling better, you may do too much, only to find yourself crashed in bed the next morning, as though your body is reminding you: even good days must be tended with care. And yet, these moments are not failures but teachers, guiding you back to the path of gentleness. The gift of pacing is not in perfection but in the willingness to adjust, again and again, to the ebb and flow of your energy. It teaches that every step back into rest is not a retreat but a recalibration—a way of finding your balance anew.

    In practice, pacing asks that you break life into smaller pieces. No task need be completed all at once; no activity is so urgent that it cannot be paused. It may mean spreading chores across hours or days, resting between each small effort. You might find that simply sitting still before you are exhausted—what some call “micro-rests”—becomes a way to protect your energy, much like tending a fragile flame so it does not burn too fast.

    It also teaches the value of saying no, of drawing boundaries not out of reluctance but out of care for yourself. The world may ask more of you than you can give, but your worth is not measured by what you accomplish. Pacing offers you the grace to step back when needed, to protect the little energy you have, and to understand that in rest there is healing, even if that healing is slow and subtle.

    Through this practice, you begin to understand that your life with chronic illness is not a race to reclaim the old ways of being, but an invitation to live differently—deliberately, thoughtfully, and with compassion for yourself. Some days will still carry setbacks, and your thread may feel thin and worn, but you learn to trust that even in these moments, you are practicing something essential: the art of living well within your limits.

    If this way of being resonates with you, I invite you to explore pacing as a tool for navigating life with long COVID, post-viral ME/CFS, or any chronic illness. It is not a cure, but a guide—a way to live with care, softness, and respect for the boundaries your body sets.

    And if you are looking for a gentle companion in this journey—someone to offer guidance on pacing, energy conservation, and emotional support—I invite you to try out this free GPT assistant. This tool provides thoughtful advice, helps you manage the challenges of chronic illness, and offers a steady, compassionate voice tailored to your unique needs.

    Link to GPT Model:

    https://chatgpt.com/g/g-YSGKIl3IT-post-viral-me-cfs-support-guide

    🙏🕊️🙏

  • Poem: A Beacon of Hope: Compassion for Those with ME/CFS

    To all those who walk the path of ME/CFS,
    I extend my heartfelt understanding and compassion.
    In the depths of this invisible struggle, you are not alone.

    I see your relentless battle, your courage in the face of uncertainty.
    Each day brings a new set of challenges, and yet you persist.
    You navigate a labyrinth of symptoms, limitations, and unanswered questions,
    But through it all, your spirit remains unyielding.

    I know the longing for a life unrestrained,
    To run, to jump, to embrace the world with boundless energy.
    But please remember, your worth is not defined by your productivity.
    You are inherently valuable, simply by being.

    In the moments when fatigue engulfs you,
    When pain steals your breath,
    Find solace in the knowledge that you are seen, heard, and understood.
    Your struggle is valid, your emotions are valid.

    May you find comfort in the gentle embrace of self-compassion.
    Be kind to yourself, as you would to a dear friend.
    Listen to your body’s whispers and honor its need for rest.
    You are not lazy, you are replenishing your strength.

    Together, let us release the weight of guilt and judgment,
    Replacing them with a tender acceptance of our limitations.
    In this shared journey, let us find solidarity and support,
    Empowering one another through compassion and empathy.

    Remember, you are more than your illness.
    Your spirit shines bright, resilient and unbreakable.
    Even amidst the darkest days, you possess an inner light,
    A beacon of hope that guides you through the shadows.

    Though the road may be long and treacherous,
    Hold onto the flicker of hope that resides within your heart.
    Embrace the moments of reprieve, however fleeting.
    Celebrate the victories, no matter how small.

    For you are a warrior, embodying strength and grace,
    Navigating a path that only a select few can truly comprehend.
    May you find peace in the knowledge that you are loved,
    And that your presence in this world is immeasurably significant.

    Together, let us forge ahead, hand in hand,
    Supporting one another as we rise above the challenges.
    Know that you are not alone on this journey,
    And that, together, we can overcome, endure, and thrive.

    With unwavering compassion and understanding,
    A fellow traveler on the path of ME/CFS

    🙏🕊️🙏