
Living In Unknowns
Accessibility: Listen to this post
I have some kind of virus (or something) and have been so sick and weak for the last 7 days. It shut down my stomach again just like Covid did and I’ve barely eaten since. It’s so scary to have my ability to eat taken away when I know from experience it can be lost long term or forever. Will I get it back? Will I have to go back to tube feeding?
We know so little about the illness we live with, it is one of the worst aspects of living with ME/CFS. Living in unknowns.
What are my symptoms coming from?
How long will they last?
What treatment will work best for them?
What treatments will make me worse?
Will anything help?
Why am I getting worse?
Why am I getting better?
Will I get government assistance?
Will that assistance be taken away?
Will my medications be covered?
How will I pay for food, housing and basic needs if I loose government assistance?
What happens to me if something happens to the people who take care of me?
There are endless unknowns.
Every time we crash we face an unknown downturn in our health. We always hope or maybe count on the best, but we truly don't know what will happen each time. A close friend of mine was stable for a couple years through countless crashes, and then one day, a crash made her go from moderate to extremely severe in a period of a couple weeks and she has been stuck there for 6 months now and has no idea how to get out.
I don't know what is happening to me right now, or if it is in fact even a virus. I don't know if my stomach will recover like it did after Covid, I don't know if there will be other new symptoms that persist and for how long or if they will be long term now. I don't know if my baseline will be lower. I don't know anything. That is ME/CFS. We live with world champion symptoms with no idea what is causing them or what will happen with those symptoms or what our future holds. We hold onto hope but are often crushed by this harsh, unrelenting illness.
Living in the face of unknowns is actually a profound experience. It is much more in tune with the reality of the world we live in; Which is full of unknowns. Most healthy people live in a fantasy world of certainties; That they will live forever, never become disabled or chronically sick, get married and live happily ever after, make a lot of money (for no apparent reason), live in a big house, be happy and prosporous and often famous too. But what percentage of people get all of that? The contrast between what most healthy people think they know their lives will be like vs what they turn out to be would make for a stark graph.
So in some ways, once again, living with ME/CFS teaches us profound truths about the nature of this world, of reality, of the veil of our desires. We just need to be free to apply these experiences to a life out in the world.
But the only way out of this nightmare is real treatments and a cure.
Until then we keep taking one breath at a time, hold on, and lean against each other when we need to. Like a great architechtural masterpiece of ME/CFS patient strength.
Love,
Whitney
PS. I’m eating bits of chocolate so there’s hope 😊 But I’m able to eat about half as much as before this uhhh…."virus", and Covid reduced my capacity to eat by half as well. So I’m hopeful but worried….
PSS. This piece, like all my writing, is not really about me, it is about something we all face. We all face these unknowns and must live with them. Please send wishes and prayers to patients like my friend who need them more than I do. 💙
I have some kind of virus (or something) and have been so sick and weak for the last 7 days. It shut down my stomach again just like Covid did and I’ve barely eaten since. It’s so scary to have my ability to eat taken away when I know from experience it can be lost long term or forever. Will I get it back? Will I have to go back to tube feeding?
We know so little about the illness we live with, it is one of the worst aspects of living with ME/CFS. Living in unknowns.
What are my symptoms coming from?
How long will they last?
What treatment will work best for them?
What treatments will make me worse?
Will anything help?
Why am I getting worse?
Why am I getting better?
Will I get government assistance?
Will that assistance be taken away?
Will my medications be covered?
How will I pay for food, housing and basic needs if I loose government assistance?
What happens to me if something happens to the people who take care of me?
There are endless unknowns.
Every time we crash we face an unknown downturn in our health. We always hope or maybe count on the best, but we truly don't know what will happen each time. A close friend of mine was stable for a couple years through countless crashes, and then one day, a crash made her go from moderate to extremely severe in a period of a couple weeks and she has been stuck there for 6 months now and has no idea how to get out.
I don't know what is happening to me right now, or if it is in fact even a virus. I don't know if my stomach will recover like it did after Covid, I don't know if there will be other new symptoms that persist and for how long or if they will be long term now. I don't know if my baseline will be lower. I don't know anything. That is ME/CFS. We live with world champion symptoms with no idea what is causing them or what will happen with those symptoms or what our future holds. We hold onto hope but are often crushed by this harsh, unrelenting illness.
Living in the face of unknowns is actually a profound experience. It is much more in tune with the reality of the world we live in; Which is full of unknowns. Most healthy people live in a fantasy world of certainties; That they will live forever, never become disabled or chronically sick, get married and live happily ever after, make a lot of money (for no apparent reason), live in a big house, be happy and prosporous and often famous too. But what percentage of people get all of that? The contrast between what most healthy people think they know their lives will be like vs what they turn out to be would make for a stark graph.
So in some ways, once again, living with ME/CFS teaches us profound truths about the nature of this world, of reality, of the veil of our desires. We just need to be free to apply these experiences to a life out in the world.
But the only way out of this nightmare is real treatments and a cure.
Until then we keep taking one breath at a time, hold on, and lean against each other when we need to. Like a great architechtural masterpiece of ME/CFS patient strength.
Love,
Whitney
PS. I’m eating bits of chocolate so there’s hope 😊 But I’m able to eat about half as much as before this uhhh…."virus", and Covid reduced my capacity to eat by half as well. So I’m hopeful but worried….
PSS. This piece, like all my writing, is not really about me, it is about something we all face. We all face these unknowns and must live with them. Please send wishes and prayers to patients like my friend who need them more than I do. 💙
Subscribe
to get my newest blog post sent to your email address. Only blog posts, nothing else. Unsubscribe anytime.
more info
What Is ME/CFS?
My Story
ME/CFS Resources
Useful Documents and Graphics
Donate to ME/CFS research
My Photography Print Store
support my advocacy work by buying one of my fine art prints
My Story
ME/CFS Resources
Useful Documents and Graphics
Donate to ME/CFS research
My Photography Print Store
support my advocacy work by buying one of my fine art prints
















