Monday Magic – Inspiring Blogs for You!

Monday Magic

I have found myself reading a lot of new blogs and posts recently – many that I have found through link /meet & greet parties and others through connecting on instagram, twitter etc!  It just strikes me what talented people are out there and also some pretty fantastic writers too.  Some of your poetry has blown me away.

So this week I have some very new bloggers to introduce you to along with some well established, but new to me, sites.  I hope that some of you newbies will consider looking up the Chronic Illness Bloggers network and joining us – we are a friendly bunch who communicate mainly on our members facebook page!  Details here : How to join Chronic Illness Bloggers.

So once again, grab a cuppa, put your feet up and enjoy some great posts – please remember to comment and share if you enjoy them,

Claire x

 

http://iwendy.ca/2017/05/17/hello-world/

https://3sistersabroad.wordpress.com/

https://fibrowarroir.wordpress.com/2017/05/11/life-then-life-now/

https://courtneymmorgan.wordpress.com/2017/05/21/week-one/

https://mywalkinthewoods.wordpress.com/

http://www.multipleexperiences.org/2017/05/19/this-is-jamie-the-raw-and-uncut-version/

https://highwaytohealingblog.wordpress.com/2017/05/14/named-remarkable-traveler-by-weigh-out-wander/

https://morespoons.com/chronic-talk-episode-2-mental-health-awareness-month-mother-schizophrenia/

http://www.abreak4mommy.com/2017/04/myobuddy-massager-pro-review/

http://sweatpantsandcoffee.com/sweatpants-self-care-8-tips-to-help-you-thrive-while-living-with-constant-fatigue/

Puerto-Vallarta
Puerto Vallarta – photo taken by Kirstin Larkin, HIGHWAY TO HEALING BLOG

 

 

 

Monday Magic – Inspiring Blogs for You!

Monday MagicTime for some Monday Magic!  I hope that you have all had a great weekend – I think it was Mothers’ Day in the USA, so hope all you mums were spoilt rotten.  I was asked by Evie, the lovely Zebra Mom, to take a selfie wearing red and to post it to spread the word about Vascular Ehlers Danlos Disease.  We had a very rare moment in our house and I managed to persuade everyone to do a selfie…all 5 of us in one shot!!

vEDS selfie

I am delighted to be still be finding different blogs from the Chronic Illness Bloggers community to introduce here – please remember that just because we are chronically ill doesn’t mean that we don’t blog about other things too!  So sit back with a cuppa and enjoy exploring some great blog reads with me….

https://asmyjointsturn.wordpress.com/2017/05/14/i-preexist-therefore-i-am/

http://brainlessblogger.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/fibromyalgia-awareness-day-things-i.html

http://moonglotexas.com/2017/05/13/book-review-sweetbriar-cottage-by-denise-hunter/

http://gettingclosertomyself.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/i-lead-good-life-and-im-not-burning.html?m=1

http://zebrawrites.com/2017/05/06/edsawarenessmonth-blog-challenge/

https://snowflakesandspoons.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/myasthenia-gravis-and-pregnancy.html

http://www.stopget.org/2017/05/290/

https://findinglifessilversun.wordpress.com/2017/05/08/when-how-dan-became-my-caretaker/

https://veronicalhill18.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/setbacks-and-feeling-broken/

http://stillgotanopinion.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/the-wolf-and-black-dog.html

EDS-Awareness-Month
Picture from ZebraWrites post

 

 

Monday Magic – Inspiring Blogs for You

Good morning and welcome to another Monday Magic with some more great inspiring blog posts for you.  I have just returned from a GP appointment and my head is spinning with the various specialist appointments I have on the agenda….endocrinology this week, cardiology, rheumatology, hip x ray and then orthopaedics…..

This is without the referrals for the kids!  University College, London where I was diagnosed no longer accept direct referrals so the kids need to be referred by another consultant.  Initially this was to be a paediatrician, but the A level student has turned 18 and the paediatric department decided that they really don’t know enough about EDS to take my lovely girl on, so she has been referred to a paediatric geneticist.  We are going to try to get an appointment for my son with the same rheumatologist that I see…….I think that we just have to go with the saying “don’t hold your breath”!

Monday Magic

So I am going to sit down with a coffee and enjoy some tips, some yoga and some stories from some of my fellow chronic illness bloggers – if you look and listen really hard, you might spot yours truly in the You tube film from Invisible Girl!!

https://1nvisibl3girl.wordpress.com/2017/05/05/living-with-ehlers-danlos-syndrome-edsawarenessmonth/

https://howtogeton.wordpress.com/2017/05/07/how-to-answer-15-tricky-disability-questions/

http://www.satonmybutt.co.uk/more-flare-ups-than-good-days/

https://www.notaballerina.com/2017/05/travel-disability-chronic-illness-episode-53-thoughtful-travel-podcast.html

https://brainlesionandme.com/2017/05/07/self-care-happy-distraction/

http://www.health-hats.com/golden-rule/

https://weartearandcare.com/2017/05/02/meeting-the-neurometrix-team-and-seeing-the-quell-up-close/

http://glasshalffull.online/accessible-yoga-for-all/

http://dystonialiving.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/my-4-favorite-self-help-tools-for-pain.html

http://www.makeitbakeitfakeit.com/2017/05/my-body-my-prison-my-life-with-mecfs.html

http://upbeatliving.net/downsizing-emotional-work-tips/

http://dadhasaheadache.com/2017/03/22/shattered-dishes/

GHF_030-300x189

Monday Magic – Inspiring Blogs for You

Monday Magic

 

Happy May Day! Can’t quite believe we are already in May – or that the weather here in the south of England has been more like January than late April.  Duncan has been away with year 5 (9-10 year olds) on an activity week and has returned absolutely shattered and full of cold, and the rest of the household is supposed to be revising this bright bank holiday!  Engineering third year exams begin this week, A level English lit course work is due in tomorrow and the youngest has to finish her art portfolio and complete an art exam tomorrow.  The house is a mess!!

So what better way for me…and you…to get away from the stresses of the household than with a cuppa and some more inspiring blog posts from the CIB community.  This week I have included something about EDS awareness, as a zebra myself, and also be sure to check out #ProjChronicWisdom and #May12BlogBomb.  Enjoy!!

eds awareness

http://www.thisspooniespeaks.com/2017/04/eds-awareness-month-blog-challenge.html

http://sallyjustme.blogspot.co.uk/2017/04/may12blogbomb.html

http://chronicallyroyal.blogspot.co.uk/2017/04/what-educational-establishments-need-to.html?m=1

https://imsickandsoareyou.com/2017/05/01/where-nobody-knows-your-name/

http://www.achronicvoice.com/2017/04/29/projchronicwisdom-motivation-tips/

http://www.alihemsley.com/blog/2017/4/27/opening-up-about-mental-health

https://www.ecofluffymama.com/2017/05/medical-professionals-refuse-testing/

http://painlovehope.com/four-months-since-major-back-surgery-now/

https://smilesinthetrials.wordpress.com/2017/04/27/the-spring-standoff-is-over/

http://www.mecfsselfhelpguru.com/2017/04/how-to-be-more-effective-with-your-self-care.html

 

Claire x

 

 

 

 

 

A Chronic Comparison?

I’ve had this post roaming around my mind for a couple of weeks now, and finally put pen to paper…or rather put the finger splints on and attacked the keyboard.

Last week I took part in an on line research forum into chronic lower back pain.  Due to confidentiality clauses I can’t tell you any details, but a group of us were required to spend at least an hour each day answering a series of questions, or giving our thoughts and feelings about our conditions.  We were also encouraged to comment on each other’s posts and interact as on any forum.  The week before Duncan and I went to an EDS support group, where we were joined by about 20 others and asked to think about our coping strategies for different aspects of the illness.  The final trigger was a tv programme featuring my chronic condition, Ehlers Danlos Syndrome.ch7jwb_weaaooad

So I feel that I’ve spent a lot of time recently reflecting on my various conditions and revisiting my “journey” – don’t you just hate that expression, very X Factor or Strictly Come Dancing!  It was suggested for the forum that we plot a picture of our individual pain journeys, and I was surprised at just how long it took me to do this and how much was on it.  Of course, I needed to go back to childhood as when I looked back I cannot remember a time of being without pain, but as a child and teen I assumed that everyone else felt the same way.  file_000-9

I know that it isn’t particularly clear but this is my “map” detailing the EDS and the original back injury and subsequent chronic back pain.  Those of us drawing these maps all had very different backgrounds & experiences, and I was really inspired and moved by some of the other stories. I started to become aware that some people were being put off the idea of certain treatments (eg surgery) because of the negative experience of others.

The support group was a night out for us the previous week, and we even managed a meal before.  It is good meeting with others in similar positions and it is always great to welcome new people who attend, particularly as we are a very new group. We were able to come away with some advice for dealing with extremely anxious teens – there is a lot of literature out there now that recognises a direct link between anxiety  and EDS.  I must admit though, that I do feel a little conflicted sometimes in these group situations – the support on offer can be fantastic, but it can also be tricky taking on board a line of treatment/therapy that someone else swears by that either hasn’t or may not work for you.  When another person has gone on, for instance, a special diet and all their symptoms have gone into remission giving them a new lease of life…..I used to see this when I was working in palliative care and patients would wonder if  they hadn’t tried hard enough with a particular diet or vitamin regime, that it was their own fault that they hadn’t halted their illness when this had cured Mr X.

I wonder if it is just human nature to compare ourselves to others, in sickness and in health as the saying goes. But just how infuriating is it when some well meaning person tells you about the wonderful remedy that Auntie Ethel has just used with great success for her back pain/migraines/or even a serious illness cure?  Do you not want to scream out “Do you really think that I haven’t tried?” because I know that I do!  But of course I don’t…..

When these comparisons happen, be it ourselves or others making them,  I wonder if there can be a thin line between support and competition.  I do realise that this probably sounds awful as no one who is chronically ill wants to compete with anyone else over symptoms.  But with some of the multi system syndromes that we spoonies have, no two people will ever present in the same way and the list of ailments we have can be endless.  I have been reading facebook posts only this evening from frustrated people who find that their own families don’t believe their diagnosis because “cousin Freddy has that and he is much worse”.  I think that we all know that there are still medics out there who call into question the legitimacy of some syndromes and the severity of patient symptoms.

Just because a certain operation helped me doesn’t mean that it will help you;  just because you have found a particular drug fantastic doesn’t mean it will help me; just because my health regime allows me to walk for miles every day doesn’t mean that it will get you out of your wheelchair (it doesn’t BTW – I use my chair more and more!).  My back & leg pain and the treatment that I have had to undergo to find any relief is very different to the chronic EDS pain that I also suffer.  The only people who have really understood the former have been my group on the scs pain programme and those in neuromodualtion groups.  Yet whilst some people who have fantastic success with the stimulators have had a new lease of life,  I have actually deteriorated physically despite the stimulator being a success.

My deterioration is down to my EDS, escalation of POTS and an increase in my EDS pain.  Ironically the requirement to wean myself off the opiates in order to have the stimulator to reduce one type of pain, resulted in an increase in the other!  Many people who have had back problems would be amazed that even with the metal screws fusing my spine and the electrodes to control the pain, I can still hold a pretty good downwards facing dog yoga pose.  But of course my zebra friends know that this is actually down to being bendy and that sometimes being able to get into those strange positions is, for us, more dangerous than beneficial.

I am probably my own worst enemy when it comes to making comparisons and always feeling that I have little to complain about.  This happened when I watched the BBC DIY SOS which featured 18 year old Antonia who has Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and had been hospitalised for 3 years. 15831613-large The programme was great for highlighting EDS and this amazing young lady – I watched it twice and cried each time.  Of course I turned to my lovely teen girl and said “I feel guilty for making a fuss!” and whilst her brothers would probably have agreed with me, my lovely girl (now suffering her own dislocations, hand pain, anxiety, etc) told me off for thinking that way telling me “It is all relative”.  Out of the mouths of babes….

So what am I trying to say?  We are all individuals.  We will all experience a common cold differently (think man flu!!).  So for the many debilitating chronic syndromes out there, no two sufferers will experience the same symptoms, the same reactions to therapies or the same psychological impact as another.  I must allow myself to live with my condition in the best way that I can and for you to do the same – and somewhere along the way we can support each other and hope that the healthy world will do the same without expectation or judgement.

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A Chronic Comparison pin