Showing posts with label feelings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feelings. Show all posts

Friday, 1 April 2016

Being My Own Cheerleader

I know the title sounds cheesy, but that exact phrase was what sparked the idea for this post really, so I'm stuck with it!

Before your imagination starts running wild, no I have not joined a group that wears short skirts and waves pompoms in the air while chanting slogans for football teams!

The word cheerleader applies to chronic illness in my mind as a way to describe supporting yourself.  To cheer yourself on and be a strength that you can draw on when you need it most.
In the 2 and a bit years since my Endometriosis diagnosis, I have ended up with an unusual kind of team on my side, which is made up of immediate family, a few close friends, doctors, other medical practitioners etc. 

But although I have my 'team' around me, I have learnt that you can't survive the day to day chronic illness life by solely relying on your team mates.  Sometimes they get tired, burnt out or just let you down when you least expect it. 

So, although the team is an important part of your support network, a lot of the strength and will to carry on has to come from within. 

It has to come from you.

Believe me, some days it feels almost impossible to carry on, and you feel like there is absolutely nothing left in the tank.  This feeling of being down and hopeless can last anything from a few hours to many days in a row.  It's so important to let yourself have some down time, because it is exhausting being your own cheerleader and always willing yourself to carry on.  Don't let your brain tell you that you are weak for shedding a few tears, or having a day where you just need some time alone to process things.  It's completely natural, because let's face it, no one can be happy and brave all of the time!

But it is also important to reboot.  To use that inner strength and courage to bring yourself out of a dark patch.  To see the light again and bring that positivity that lies inside all of us to the surface, even if it feels like it is buried deep within you.

Today may be a bad day, a hard day, an impossible day...

But tomorrow is a whole lot of new, a clean slate full of possibilities.  So dig out that inner cheerleader and help yourself through whatever is going on in life right now.  Once you see the light again and realise that what you do have is precious, you will feel more positive and the burden that you carry every day will feel a little bit lighter.


Sunday, 20 March 2016

How Do I Take Care of my GP?

This is a question I thought I would never have to ask myself!  Mind you, there are a lot of things I thought I would never have to endure or even think about, and a lot of those things have happened anyway, so I guess this weird thought should come as no surprise...

I have an ongoing issue with General Practitioners.  It sounds terrible to say, but I've been through a couple of different ones since my diagnosis just over two years ago, although I have been with the same one for over a year now.

The issue is that, for the first little while, they seem really caring, helpful and proactive in helping me with all of my 'complex' health issues.  They suggest things to try, and do their best to help me cope and obtain treatments or diagnostic procedures to try and figure things out.

But after a while, they seem to tire of me and become flippant, frustrated and not so helpful.  There are no more things to suggest (unless I suggest options myself and ask their opinion), and no more medications or interventions to try.  They start to tease me when I arrive with new symptoms, or when I dare to ask questions or share how I'm feeling in the hope of finding a little compassion, sympathy or support.

This quote from a blog post of a chronic illness patient really brought it home for me...

Once you reach a certain number of diagnoses, it's like they check out.  I can feel it.  When they see me coming, they begin to put off a vibe of annoyance and distrust.  It's heartbreaking.  I need them.  I need to be given a fair shot.  But they don't want to deal with me.  I'm too complicated.
To look at it from a GP's point of view, I can understand their frustration to a point.  I understand that it hurts them to know that they can't 'fix' me, and that they might even send me away following my appointment without being able to do anything directly to help with whatever I am dealing with at that time.  Here is a good blog post about working with chronic illness patients that has been written by a Doctor -

http://more-distractible.org/musings/2010/07/14/a-letter-to-patients-with-chronic-disease

But I'm not just there for a new prescription or in the hope that there is some new 'magic bullet' that will fix all of my problems.  I'm not that naive.  Being on the chronic illness road for over 2 years means that I have learnt a lot of things, including that there is no cure (and there won't be one in the near future either) for any of the health conditions that I am dealing with.

Sometimes I just want them to reach over, hold my hand and tell me 'That really is no fun, and I'm here for you.  How about we do some blood tests to see what your so and so levels are like?'  Or perhaps suggest what topics are most important for me to discuss with my Specialist next time I see her?

It isn't all about pulling out your prescription pad and giving us more medications.  It's about compassion, and that is what I think is most lacking a lot of the time at my appointments.  It is just a small thing to reach out to a patient and let them know that you acknowledge what they're going through is tough and that you are here to support them, but it can make all the difference to someone who is travelling a long road through chronic illness.

I often feel left adrift and on my own between appointments with the Specialist who is managing my health conditions, so support from my GP is paramount on a day to day basis to help us get through.

So to my GP, as well as trying to take care of myself, I will try to take care of you so that you don't get burnt out and dread seeing my name on your patient list.  But the effort goes both ways, so please try to take care of me too, and support me when I need it most.

Thank you.


Monday, 18 January 2016

Losing Control

I cried this morning.  I'm not ashamed to admit it, because it's perfectly healthy to express your emotions.  To those girls out there who bottle things up and keep everything on the inside until it becomes utterly overwhelming, know that it's not weak to cry if you need to, no matter the circumstances.

Anyway, onto today's post..

Today I just wanted to be normal.  To have a normal amount of energy and stamina, and just be able to go out into the world and do things like everyone else can.  Today was a day that I mourned the loss of my old life, and reflected on the new and different, but still good life that I live today.

Living with a chronic illness not only changes how you live and the things you're able to do, but also to an extent it changes who you are.  For me, in the beginning all of this change and uncertainty it was very difficult to take in and adjust to. I would like to say that I have gotten better at accepting change in my life, and the constantly shifting landscape of my health, but some days I definitely still feel like a fish out of water!  I've been reflecting on change and control of life over the last couple of days, so I thought I would write a few of my thoughts here...

Let's all face the facts here - we all crave control in our lives.  Control of what we do, where we go, what we wear and what we say and how we act towards others are just some of the things that we get to decide on each day.  A lot of these decisions we don't even consciously register in our minds, because they are made in a split second by the pre-frontal cortex in our brain.  Having control of different facets of our lives makes us comfortable in the knowledge that we are in the driver's seat, and helps us to 'live in our comfort zone'.  Everyone likes to feel like they're in their 'comfort zone', am I right?

Comfort is therefore the complete opposite of fear.  Fear generally rears it's head when we are facing change, or coming to terms with something, for example a new job, house move or the start of a course of study at Uni.  In all of these 'new things', there is an element of loss of control on our part, because we are jumping into something new and unknown that we haven't done before.  So the feeling of loss of control and fear of the unknown come together, and pretty much make us freak out!

You may be asking 'What the heck does all this rambling about control have to do with chronic illness?'  Well, in a way the same principles of loss of control and fear apply to chronic illness in the same way that they do in most people's everyday lives.

Thinking back to before my Endometriosis diagnosis, I had a job that I loved and was forming a 'plan' in my mind about what I was going to do next regarding Uni etc.  All of this came crashing down around my ears as I got more and more unwell, had to leave my job and became this creature floating around in pain all of the time!  Getting the diagnosis helped for sure, because then I knew that it wasn't all in my head and that I was being taken more seriously now that I had a medical 'label' so to speak.  

But to be honest, my feelings of fear and loss of control only worsened, because now I had this new, scary diagnosis and I really had no idea what I was going to do.  So, similar to what you may experience in an everyday sense, I was basically plucked out of my life by one of those metal cranes like in a toy vending machine, and plonked into this whole new medical world which I had no idea how to navigate!

Over the past 2 years I have adjusted and it has become easier to live this new and different life of mine, but still, the goalposts are constantly shifting and there is always one thing or another to deal with.  I'm definitely not some shiny, brave chronic illness person who feels no fear and has a magic wand to solve all her problems!  Some days it all just seems like too much to cope with, but mostly I work through the fear and just break down into steps how I am going to cope with or manage what is happening to me in that particular day or moment.

An important part of coping with this is to have a support network around you, so that you know you have someone to talk to if you need to.  I'm incredibly lucky to have a supportive family, a few close friends I can confide in, and my Endo Angels support group who are always here to support me and lend a listening ear.

Comment below and let me know if you too have feelings of fear and loss of control in your life.  If you do, know that everyone does no matter what their situation, and it's perfectly normal!  It's just about finding some coping strategies that help you to work through whatever you may be going through.

Gee, this post feels like I'm totally rambling!!  But, it's what has been on my mind lately, so I thought I would come here and share...