Rheumatoid Arthritis: Basically, the long and the short of it is that my immune system believes the synovium fluid - the stuff that cushions the joints - is not supposed to be part of my body, so it attacks it. This leads to joint pains/lock ups, and a higher chance of getting sick from transmittable diseases; the medications to control RA cause a substantial drop in my immune system as well, so I get sick super easily. I ask that if you are ill, please stay home from events, or at least send me a warning so I can either not attend or wear a sterile mask.
I take humira and methortrexate for this, which means I rarely drink alcohol.
Fibromyalgia: Really, this is the most ambiguous disease I've run into - very few cases are the same, and treatment varies more than the HTML chart. The major issue is that I have chronic pain and a hypersensitivity to touch and temperature; I have all 18 trigger points possible, plus four additional ones along the bottom of my rib cage and an additional pair in my back.
I take savella for this, which means I have a minor elevation in my heart rate.
Polymorphous Light Eruption Syndrom: Here's the TL:DR version of what this is - the melanin in my skin explodes instead of changing colour when exposed to sunlight/UV rays. This can be fairly instantaneous if it's super bright and clear outside and I'm out there for more than 30 minutes, or it can happen after I've gone inside, just like a tan or sunburn happens. Vampire jokes are NOT appreciated - at all.
There is no treatment for this aside from avoiding sunlight and wearing sunblock and covering clothing, at least in my case.
Borderline Personality Disorder: I strongly advise reading the long version on Wikipedia. The major thing this does to me is that I essentially lake any sort of filters for my moods - they can be either inappropriate entirely, or the level of the mood can be inappropriate. I do have issues from time to time with "splitting"/idealization and devaluation, but the time frames are super long compared to what textbooks say they should be.
Technically, the savella covers the anti-depressant for this; recently, I was put on Wellbutrin and Vistril to help with several of the other problems this causes.
Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Again, I suggest reading the long version up on Wikipedia. The major issue I have from this is a super bad memory, and a dissociate disorder that makes me act like I'm totally healthy and totally sane/normal. And a bit of a major abandonment issue, that gets compounded by the borderline.
Technically, the savella covers the anti-depressant for this; recently, I was put on Wellbutrin and Vistril to help with several of the other problems this causes. However, anti-anxiety medications make the dissociative disorder worse, or will create a new facet of it - so if I appear to be doing more than I can physically take, tell me to stop and relax for a few.
I have a few other medical issues, but they're minor and rather common comparatively. I have to take priolsec and allergy meds for the rest.
- Current Location:United States, Pennsylvania, Nanticoke
- Current Mood:
contemplative
My best friend and I were in the diner, talking. As usual, it was very late and we were eating French fries with gravy. Like normal girls our age, we spent a lot of time in the diner while in college, and most of the time we spent talking about boys, music or trivial things, that seemed very important at the time. We never got serious about anything in particular and spent most of our time laughing.
As I went to take some of my medicine with a snack as I usually did, she watched me with an awkward kind of stare, instead of continuing the conversation. She then asked me out of the blue what it felt like to have Lupus and be sick. I was shocked not only because she asked the random question, but also because I assumed she knew all there was to know about Lupus. She came to doctors with me, she saw me walk with a cane, and throw up in the bathroom. She had seen me cry in pain, what else was there to know?
I started to ramble on about pills, and aches and pains, but she kept pursuing, and didn’t seem satisfied with my answers. I was a little surprised as being my roommate in college and friend for years; I thought she already knew the medical definition of Lupus. Then she looked at me with a face every sick person knows well, the face of pure curiosity about something no one healthy can truly understand. She asked what it felt like, not physically, but what it felt like to be me, to be sick.
As I tried to gain my composure, I glanced around the table for help or guidance, or at least stall for time to think. I was trying to find the right words. How do I answer a question I never was able to answer for myself? How do I explain every detail of every day being effected, and give the emotions a sick person goes through with clarity. I could have given up, cracked a joke like I usually do, and changed the subject, but I remember thinking if I don’t try to explain this, how could I ever expect her to understand. If I can’t explain this to my best friend, how could I explain my world to anyone else? I had to at least try.
At that moment, the spoon theory was born. I quickly grabbed every spoon on the table; hell I grabbed spoons off of the other tables. I looked at her in the eyes and said “Here you go, you have Lupus”. She looked at me slightly confused, as anyone would when they are being handed a bouquet of spoons. The cold metal spoons clanked in my hands, as I grouped them together and shoved them into her hands.
I explained that the difference in being sick and being healthy is having to make choices or to consciously think about things when the rest of the world doesn’t have to. The healthy have the luxury of a life without choices, a gift most people take for granted.
Most people start the day with unlimited amount of possibilities, and energy to do whatever they desire, especially young people. For the most part, they do not need to worry about the effects of their actions. So for my explanation, I used spoons to convey this point. I wanted something for her to actually hold, for me to then take away, since most people who get sick feel a “loss” of a life they once knew. If I was in control of taking away the spoons, then she would know what it feels like to have someone or something else, in this case Lupus, being in control.
She grabbed the spoons with excitement. She didn’t understand what I was doing, but she is always up for a good time, so I guess she thought I was cracking a joke of some kind like I usually do when talking about touchy topics. Little did she know how serious I would become?
I asked her to count her spoons. She asked why, and I explained that when you are healthy you expect to have a never-ending supply of “spoons”. But when you have to now plan your day, you need to know exactly how many “spoons” you are starting with. It doesn’t guarantee that you might not lose some along the way, but at least it helps to know where you are starting. She counted out 12 spoons. She laughed and said she wanted more. I said no, and I knew right away that this little game would work, when she looked disappointed, and we hadn’t even started yet. I’ve wanted more “spoons” for years and haven’t found a way yet to get more, why should she? I also told her to always be conscious of how many she had, and not to drop them because she can never forget she has Lupus.
I asked her to list off the tasks of her day, including the most simple. As, she rattled off daily chores, or just fun things to do; I explained how each one would cost her a spoon. When she jumped right into getting ready for work as her first task of the morning, I cut her off and took away a spoon. I practically jumped down her throat. I said ” No! You don’t just get up. You have to crack open your eyes, and then realize you are late. You didn’t sleep well the night before. You have to crawl out of bed, and then you have to make your self something to eat before you can do anything else, because if you don’t, you can’t take your medicine, and if you don’t take your medicine you might as well give up all your spoons for today and tomorrow too.” I quickly took away a spoon and she realized she hasn’t even gotten dressed yet. Showering cost her spoon, just for washing her hair and shaving her legs. Reaching high and low that early in the morning could actually cost more than one spoon, but I figured I would give her a break; I didn’t want to scare her right away. Getting dressed was worth another spoon. I stopped her and broke down every task to show her how every little detail needs to be thought about. You cannot simply just throw clothes on when you are sick. I explained that I have to see what clothes I can physically put on, if my hands hurt that day buttons are out of the question. If I have bruises that day, I need to wear long sleeves, and if I have a fever I need a sweater to stay warm and so on. If my hair is falling out I need to spend more time to look presentable, and then you need to factor in another 5 minutes for feeling badly that it took you 2 hours to do all this.
I think she was starting to understand when she theoretically didn’t even get to work, and she was left with 6 spoons. I then explained to her that she needed to choose the rest of her day wisely, since when your “spoons” are gone, they are gone. Sometimes you can borrow against tomorrow’s “spoons”, but just think how hard tomorrow will be with less “spoons”. I also needed to explain that a person who is sick always lives with the looming thought that tomorrow may be the day that a cold comes, or an infection, or any number of things that could be very dangerous. So you do not want to run low on “spoons”, because you never know when you truly will need them. I didn’t want to depress her, but I needed to be realistic, and unfortunately being prepared for the worst is part of a real day for me.
We went through the rest of the day, and she slowly learned that skipping lunch would cost her a spoon, as well as standing on a train, or even typing at her computer too long. She was forced to make choices and think about things differently. Hypothetically, she had to choose not to run errands, so that she could eat dinner that night.
When we got to the end of her pretend day, she said she was hungry. I summarized that she had to eat dinner but she only had one spoon left. If she cooked, she wouldn’t have enough energy to clean the pots. If she went out for dinner, she might be too tired to drive home safely. Then I also explained, that I didn’t even bother to add into this game, that she was so nauseous, that cooking was probably out of the question anyway. So she decided to make soup, it was easy. I then said it is only 7pm, you have the rest of the night but maybe end up with one spoon, so you can do something fun, or clean your apartment, or do chores, but you can’t do it all.
I rarely see her emotional, so when I saw her upset I knew maybe I was getting through to her. I didn’t want my friend to be upset, but at the same time I was happy to think finally maybe someone understood me a little bit. She had tears in her eyes and asked quietly “Christine, How do you do it? Do you really do this everyday?” I explained that some days were worse then others; some days I have more spoons then most. But I can never make it go away and I can’t forget about it, I always have to think about it. I handed her a spoon I had been holding in reserve. I said simply, “I have learned to live life with an extra spoon in my pocket, in reserve. You need to always be prepared.”
Its hard, the hardest thing I ever had to learn is to slow down, and not do everything. I fight this to this day. I hate feeling left out, having to choose to stay home, or to not get things done that I want to. I wanted her to feel that frustration. I wanted her to understand, that everything everyone else does comes so easy, but for me it is one hundred little jobs in one. I need to think about the weather, my temperature that day, and the whole day’s plans before I can attack any one given thing. When other people can simply do things, I have to attack it and make a plan like I am strategizing a war. It is in that lifestyle, the difference between being sick and healthy. It is the beautiful ability to not think and just do. I miss that freedom. I miss never having to count “spoons”.
After we were emotional and talked about this for a little while longer, I sensed she was sad. Maybe she finally understood. Maybe she realized that she never could truly and honestly say she understands. But at least now she might not complain so much when I can’t go out for dinner some nights, or when I never seem to make it to her house and she always has to drive to mine. I gave her a hug when we walked out of the diner. I had the one spoon in my hand and I said “Don’t worry. I see this as a blessing. I have been forced to think about everything I do. Do you know how many spoons people waste everyday? I don’t have room for wasted time, or wasted “spoons” and I chose to spend this time with you.”
Ever since this night, I have used the spoon theory to explain my life to many people. In fact, my family and friends refer to spoons all the time. It has been a code word for what I can and cannot do. Once people understand the spoon theory they seem to understand me better, but I also think they live their life a little differently too. I think it isn’t just good for understanding Lupus, but anyone dealing with any disability or illness. Hopefully, they don’t take so much for granted or their life in general. I give a piece of myself, in every sense of the word when I do anything. It has become an inside joke. I have become famous for saying to people jokingly that they should feel special when I spend time with them, because they have one of my “spoons”.
© Christine Miserandino
- Current Mood:
indescribable
- Current Location:United States, Pennsylvania, Nanticoke
In this farewell
There's no blood
There's no alibi
'Cause I've drawn regret
From the truth
Of a thousand lies
So let mercy come
And wash away...
What I've done
I'll face myself
To cross out what I've become
Erase myself
And let go of what I've done
Put to rest
What you thought of me
While I clean this slate
With the hands
Of uncertainty
So let mercy come
And wash away...
What I've done
I'll face myself
To cross out what I've become
Erase myself
And let go of what I've done
For What I've done
I'll start again
And whatever pain may come
Today this ends
I'm forgiving what I've done
I'll face myself
To cross out what I've become
Erase myself
And let go of what I've done
What I've done
Forgiving what I've done
- Current Music:What I've Done - Linkin Park
- Current Mood:
contemplative
- Current Mood:
cranky
My first mistake was waiting to do my garb sewing till the month of Pennsic; if we'd done it sooner, the loss of three days and three sewing machines wouldn't be all that tragic like it ended up being. Mom and I determined the correction for this is going to work like this - for Yule, mom is going to buy me roughly 150 - 200 dollars worth of fabric, patterns, trims and notions and I'll be sewing at least one to three pieces of garb per month, starting in January. This should result in at least six or so outfits at minimum, which coupled with the garb I was given/bought this year will be a great base.
The second glaring mistake was not really packing for potentially cold weather. I brought a very thin blanket I usually use when I go to Lancaster, thinking that if it kept me warm in Jackie or Vince's place, it'd be fine for Pennsic. Dear lord, I was so very wrong. I ended up having to borrow a blanket or a cloak several nights, and one super cold night I ended up curling up in someone's small tent and small bedding nest. There were a couple of times I borrowed Evil Dan's cloak while we were schmoozing, because it was just that bloody cold and I was in very summery clothing. So I'll be making my own polar fleece and faux fur cloak for next year, along with a faux fur blanket for my bed whilst also taking one of those microfiber blankets with me. Oh, and a sleeping bag or two, just in case.
My third mistake was corrected early on during Peace week. I brought a pair of sandals that I thought would work fine because walking around at home with them was comfy and all that. I was SO SO wrong there. Teg took me with her over to Son of Sandlar when she went to purchase her boots, and Sandlar had me try on a pair of their slip on shoes. They were very comfy, and even though he typically can't hold things for people, he held them for me for three hours so I could scrape together the cash for them; Arwen was awesome enough to give me an advance for them, then work the time off during the rest of the war. Taking those shoes, which I will also use in Mundania, along with the combat boots I brought for breakdown day, so I should avoid this next year.
The rest of the changes aren't really due to mistakes, more so due to personal preferences and things that just seemed to work better for me.
Instead of an air mattress, I want to get one of those no-frame, folding love seat/couch things like the chair Glenn has, and keep it folded out as a Japanese style floor bed. Sleeping directly on the ground doesn't work well for me (as I found out the night I nested with Dan for warmth), but the air mattress wasn't all that comfortable either, likely because I usually sleep on a futon and more than a twin size. The love seat/couch thing will give me roughly the size of a twin and a half to a full size, and will likely be more like a futon since it's a mattress on the ground.
I'm planning on getting two different lanterns for next year - one propane based one for outside of the tent/wandering and one battery powered one for in the tent itself. Flashlights are alright, and I'll likely take a small LED one like Dan had, but the multi-directional light the lanterns give is better for lighting up a tent, I think.
Oddly enough, the green/black motley umbrella was a hit. I had one person try to steal it, cus they thought someone had just set it down and left it when I was actually turtling with it, while another asked me if I had made it myself. Next year though, I'm putting squishy balls on the tips of the frame - one tried to peg Arwen in the eye, but she had on glasses so it deflected; that would have been bad otherwise. I figure alternating black and green Styrofoam balls would work to avoid such problems. I may also get a motley back drape for it - the jury is still out on that.
Next year, I'll be going down on the first Sunday, so I'm there for when Arwen opens on Monday, then stay through last Saturday afternoon for break down. I may end up getting combat pay on both ends of the week, but I'm good even if I don't. I will be writing up my schedule of hours as soon as I have the class listings though, and I'm going to be a tad bit more selective about my classes next year.
I think that largely covers it. Once I'm readjusted to life in Mundania, I've gotta start the overhaul of Arwen's website and figure out how to convert a guest book into a "cookbook".
Miss everyone already! *hugs the lot of her Pennsic peoples*
- Current Mood:
contemplative
- Current Music:Rift combat music
- Current Location:United States, Pennsylvania, Wilkes Barre
Then I went back to bed, and as I was trying to fall asleep, I suddenly had this massive burst of missing her. Out of no where, mostly; a smaller burst happened during the four minute rest at the end of Rachel Brice's yoga cooldown. For several weeks prior, she'd been the furthest thing from my mind, thanks to a protection collar Val made for me - it's really helped, a lot.
But this sudden crash really sucks. I've basically only had like, three hours of sleep, if I'm lucky...which has made me too tired to try doing yoga this morning. *sighs*
Sadly, she'd likely just trivialize things like she did a month ago, and not really understand what exactly is going on with me, like a month ago. Hopefully it will just go away again soon.
- Current Mood:
depressed
- Current Location:United States, Pennsylvania, Nanticoke
There's a distinct absence in my life now. It's formed a deep hole of the metaphorical sort, one that's lined with Harry Potter style snapshots that move around in continuous loops; the bad times are stark black and white with grey hues while the good are faded colour with water stains streaking through them. Many of the good times line the upper part of this emptiness, while many of the bad line the bottom, each interspersed at random with the other type and more balanced in the middle.
Along the very bottom the fogs of sorrow drift, floating upward and fading into the mists of sadness before nearly dispersing in the light above the hole. Sometimes, this is a consistent progression, other times it is more sporadic and unpredictable. Certain things remain the same though - the bottom is always depression and is always quite dark, with the memories glowing eerily as the loop, providing the only light there.
In that vulnerable time between sleeping and waking, my brain begins to work, creating images and sounds like a movie. Mostly, they're hopes and occasionally they're memories. At first, these hopes played smoothly, their sound was distinct, their colours were vibrant and alive; they all lead to about the same thing, even though the paths there weren't always the same. For the past week, they're becoming more and more disjointed, like badly edited film or some super frakked up cinematography style, with the kind of bad voice editing that a lot of Asian import movies have - the kind where the sounds don't quite line up right with the words, and sometimes don't entirely at all. Now they stop short, or get interrupted, with this really androgynous voice saying something along the lines of "this will never happen, stop hoping it will", forcing my eyes to open and typically having to squint because there's sunlight slipping through the curtains.
These have always made me not want to get up out of bed, to retreat back into the dead sleep I've been having for most of the past six months, but it usually only added half an hour onto whatever time it took my screwed up body to start being capable of extensive movement while now they add hours. And ever time I start waking up again, I get another broken movie and another lecture from the androgynous voice. I can only talk myself into getting up within an hour or two on the days I have a lot of homework, because I absolutely have to get up or there will be trouble with school.
So I'll claw may way out of bed, and start clawing my way up out of the hole so that I can function, shredding pictures as I do so but they're always perfect and whole again just after. I then spend the day filling the whole with activities so that it's less noticeable, and so that it doesn't come up in conversation. Some days I fill it enough to barely stumble while other days I can't seem to fill it up past the middle of the mists; regardless of how full it gets, it always gets emptier and emptier as the day goes by. Sometimes, it empties rapidly and I find myself falling into the bottom of the emptiness while other times it just causes a sink hole, usually when I see something that causes the impulse to share it with the one that's gone for the latter and often after any kind of encounter with the missing person for the former; that always makes the filling fragile and fine like quicksand.
I'd like to lie and say there are days when I don't notice the hole at all, but there aren't. No matter how full I fill it, that emptiness is still always there below the surface, and I always know it will become empty and unavoidable again. If it's really full, I can ignore it and nearly forget about it for a while, but not entirely - the ghost is still there, even if you pretend it isn't. Those are the days when it's easier to act like there's nothing wrong, and that the hole isn't there, and those are the days that people likely buy the act without question. But it's just a masque.
For a while, I had a different masque, one that I thought would work to help wait things out, until they got better. Then I wore another masque to try and be what she wanted me to be, but it was just so exhausting and so emotionally draining that I couldn't wear that masque for long; fibromyalgia reacts to those sorts of things, so I was quite literally running myself into the ground mentally and physically, just to make someone else happy and have them be there. There was no way I could keep doing that, and expect to have any spoons for anything else that I need to do day in and day out, let alone spare spoons for when something out of the blue or rare happened.
So now I wear this masque, a flimsy thing made out of thin paper machet, that droops off the stem it's tied to; the same stem that I can only hold up for so long, before I have to put it down because my arm hurts. I usually only pick up the masque if I'm going somewhere, or talking to people online extensively, but it's a lot easier to pick up and put down a masque online as long as there's no web camera involved. And the masque doesn't hide the hole, the emptiness from myself, just from the people around me.
By the end of the day, the hole is empty again. There's more fog than mist, and the only reason the bottom is visible at all is because of the way the moving memory pictures glow, and even that is severely distorted from the top. I rarely see it in this state from the top, since I usually slide down further and further the less full the hole gets. By the end of the day, as it reaches the time when I should go to sleep, I'm back down in the bottom of the hole again, watching the phantoms move absently, waiting for the insomnia they cause to leave. As I slip back into sleep, but still close to being awake, the broken films of hope begin to play again in their disjointed and chaotic fashion, and that annoyingly androgynous voice lectures me again.
I wake up to this. I go to sleep with this.
And in between, it's just a different game of masquerade.
- Current Location:United States, Pennsylvania, Nanticoke
- Current Mood:
tired
- Current Music:Haunted - Love & Rockets
Comments
I had forgotten completely about that until this post.…