
Make a Holiday Plan and Check it Twice!
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Happy Holidays to everyone!
This is a gentle reminder of the dangers of going into the holidays without a plan, being spontaneous and letting our emotions determine our activity level rather than our understanding of our energy limits.
If we head into the Holidays with no plan and expect to "feel our way" through it safely, we will likely be in for a deathly surprise crash that could be devastating.
Routine, routine, routine. We survive most of the time by following a routine, which is a preconceived plan of our activity level and actions that we know will keep us under our energy limits and prevent us from crashing and getting worse. This is ME/CFS 101. We all learn to do this to survive.
But there is no Holiday routine for any of us.
So we need to make one. Make a plan. Think about what you are going to do this holiday season ahead of time. Make a plan that will keep you under your limits, and then stick to that plan, no matter what you feel like doing or what your heart yearns (or screams) for.
Remember how awful a severe crash is. It could make you worse for days, weeks, months, or lower your baseline long term. You could find yourself this coming summer thinking back to the extra 30 minutes you spent at Christmas dinner last winter that is now every single day keeping you from doing what you otherwise could be doing.
Don’t let this happen to you. A singular experience is not worth living less everyday for weeks, months or years. No matter how much that experience would mean to you or how it would feed your soul. You need to feed your soul everyday in the future as well, not just once. Like a plant, our souls need watering everyday, not just one bombastic rainfall and then dry, parched soil.
So don’t fall for the trap of "it’s worth it to get to experience this" or "it’s ok, I’ll get worse, but I need this", or "this will heal my heart and soul and that is important too, not just my physical health".
It’s just not that simple. We need energy and physical health to use our minds to maintain perspective, see clearly, find meaning and purpose, and to just live our lives. This is the bread and butter of living with chronic illness. We need our minds. When we lose our minds, we enter a darkness deeper than hell. And no singular experience is worth losing any of that, not a crumb. And no singular experience is worth a long term loss of experiences and activity and living whatever life you could live with that extra energy every single day.
So please, let’s all make a plan for this holiday season. Only you know what your limits are and what will be safe and not cause a crash. So only you can make that plan. But make it. And then stick to it, no matter how painful it is.
Cry, weep for the loss of life and family and tradition. But then wake up the next day able to still do as much as you could before. Rejoice in muffins the morning after Christmas with your family. There is more to this life than one holiday. So so much more. Live for all of it.
Love,
Whitney
Happy Holidays to everyone!
This is a gentle reminder of the dangers of going into the holidays without a plan, being spontaneous and letting our emotions determine our activity level rather than our understanding of our energy limits.
If we head into the Holidays with no plan and expect to "feel our way" through it safely, we will likely be in for a deathly surprise crash that could be devastating.
Routine, routine, routine. We survive most of the time by following a routine, which is a preconceived plan of our activity level and actions that we know will keep us under our energy limits and prevent us from crashing and getting worse. This is ME/CFS 101. We all learn to do this to survive.
But there is no Holiday routine for any of us.
So we need to make one. Make a plan. Think about what you are going to do this holiday season ahead of time. Make a plan that will keep you under your limits, and then stick to that plan, no matter what you feel like doing or what your heart yearns (or screams) for.
Remember how awful a severe crash is. It could make you worse for days, weeks, months, or lower your baseline long term. You could find yourself this coming summer thinking back to the extra 30 minutes you spent at Christmas dinner last winter that is now every single day keeping you from doing what you otherwise could be doing.
Don’t let this happen to you. A singular experience is not worth living less everyday for weeks, months or years. No matter how much that experience would mean to you or how it would feed your soul. You need to feed your soul everyday in the future as well, not just once. Like a plant, our souls need watering everyday, not just one bombastic rainfall and then dry, parched soil.
So don’t fall for the trap of "it’s worth it to get to experience this" or "it’s ok, I’ll get worse, but I need this", or "this will heal my heart and soul and that is important too, not just my physical health".
It’s just not that simple. We need energy and physical health to use our minds to maintain perspective, see clearly, find meaning and purpose, and to just live our lives. This is the bread and butter of living with chronic illness. We need our minds. When we lose our minds, we enter a darkness deeper than hell. And no singular experience is worth losing any of that, not a crumb. And no singular experience is worth a long term loss of experiences and activity and living whatever life you could live with that extra energy every single day.
So please, let’s all make a plan for this holiday season. Only you know what your limits are and what will be safe and not cause a crash. So only you can make that plan. But make it. And then stick to it, no matter how painful it is.
Cry, weep for the loss of life and family and tradition. But then wake up the next day able to still do as much as you could before. Rejoice in muffins the morning after Christmas with your family. There is more to this life than one holiday. So so much more. Live for all of it.
Love,
Whitney
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