Tag: patient advocacy

  • 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.

  • Finding a Good Doctor for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Personal Journey


    Finding the right doctor, who accepts insurance, when you have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) can be a daunting task. Many of us have had experiences with doctors who are dismissive, disrespectful, and ignorant about our condition. Over the years, I’ve had to fire several doctors who didn’t meet my needs, and I know I’m not alone in this struggle.

    My Experience with Kaiser

    I was with Kaiser for seven years, and the doctors I encountered were all horrible, disrespectful, and ignorant about ME/CFS. It was a challenging and frustrating time, but it taught me a valuable lesson: we have the right to fire doctors who don’t understand or respect our condition. I ended up moving to Florida, and I thank God there was no Kaiser in Florida. My search for a helpful primary care physician on straight Medicare and outside of Kaiser began.

    Finding a Good Doctor

    After a few years on straight Medicare, I am now with Humana Gold, a Medicare Advantage plan, and I’m staying with them because I finally found a very kind, compassionate, understanding, and knowledgeable osteopathic doctor in a group practice with other osteopathic doctors. He is amazing and knows more about ME/CFS than any doctor I’ve ever met. He is neither intimidated nor intimidating and provides very useful guidance, feedback, and advice, keeping me on track with all the different self-therapies (Pacing, breaking down tasks into smaller more manageable steps, Meditation, Heart Rate Variability, gentle stretches, Self-Compassion, Self-Care, setting boundaries , etc. )and a few low dosage symptom managing medications beneficial to those of us living with ME/CFS. He has admitted to learning a lot from me, I from him, and so we feel like a team, modifying, adapting, and figuring things out along the way. Occasionally, he performs osteopathic and cranio-sacral manipulation.

    What to Look for in a Doctor

    It’s incredibly frustrating when doctors dismiss your symptoms or refuse to learn about ME/CFS. For instance, a GI doctor suggesting another colonoscopy, despite already having consistent findings, while shutting down discussions about ME/CFS, exemplifies the kind of dismissive, disrespectful and disheartening behavior many of us face. This highlights the importance of finding the right doctor, even if it means firing several along the way. At a bare minimum, they should be:

    • Humble
    • Empathetic
    • Good listeners
    • Kind
    • Understanding
    • Compassionate

    Before Dr. Otto, the other best doctor I had was also an osteopath. Unfortunately for me, he left private practice to go teach in a hospital. In any case, not all osteopathic doctors are good; many are going the way of ignorance and money now too. If I ever need a new doctor, God forbid, I would only look at osteopathic doctors.

    Consider Integrative Medicine

    If I had the financial means and wasn’t limited to insurance, I would probably focus on finding an integrative medicine doctor. Integrative medicine doctors often take a holistic approach, combining conventional and alternative therapies to treat the whole person, not just the symptoms.

    Specialist Options

    It’s disheartening to find that there are very few ME/CFS specialists in the U.S. who accept insurance, but there are doctors out there who are willing to learn and help. It’s essential to find someone who acknowledges ME/CFS and treats you with the respect and care you deserve.

    In Conclusion

    Finding a good doctor for ME/CFS can be challenging, but they are out there. It may take time and perseverance, but it’s essential to find a healthcare provider who understands your condition and treats you with the respect and care you deserve. I thank God that there are still some good osteopathic doctors in the world, and that they accept Medicare.