Imagine you are going on your merry way in the metaphorical
walk of life when suddenly, on a day like any other, you are hit by a
truck. KABOOM! You lay bruised, shocked,
and cursing your bad luck until you feel you are able to slowly start to
picking yourself up off the road, and just as you have reached your feet and
dusted yourself off…KABOOM! Again. Wtf? You ask yourself. Did that really just
happen? You take extra care of yourself this time, have a GOOD look for trucks
before getting to your feet again, and, sure that it's clear, you gingerly
start to limp along. After a while, you lose the limp, relish the feeling of
your feet moving smoothly under you and, satisfied, decide to attempt picking
up the pace a little. You start into a trot, and you're thinking you've left
all things truck in the past, when KABOOM! F-bomb. You are kidding me. Again?
Is this some kind of sick joke? Your head is spinning this time. 'Bad things
happen in threes', you console yourself as you pick up the pieces one last
time. But it won't be the last time. In fact, these are just the first of countless
hit-and-runs that you will endure and which will eventually become the norm in
your life.
Before I lose you or confuse you...let me explain that this
little narrative is a simple metaphor for what it was like to live with Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome in the early days. As is the story for so many others, my
first collision with the 'truck' was random and sudden and appeared to be some
sort of virus. My second, third, and fourth 'collisions' came in rapid
succession as I tried to resume normal activity 'post-virus.' At this time, I
had no name or explanation for what was happening to me so I saw a few doctors
and had a few tests which confirmed that all was 'well'. We settled on the notion
that my body was just taking its time recovering from a virus so I waited. I
waited and waited for good health to resume. From time to time I would try to
resume 'normal activity' but then the fifth truck came and mowed me down.
KABOOM! Then the sixth. Then the tenth. And the fourteenth. KABOOM! KABOOM!
KABOOM! And at some point, I just accepted that I was just an unlucky person
who happens to get hit by trucks.
The name Chronic Fatigue Syndrome can be misleading. The
word ‘chronic’ seems to imply that the disease is somehow steady or unmoving,
and the word ‘fatigue’, one that any layperson can relate to, doesn’t quite
cover the scope, severity or range of symptoms any sufferer might experience.
It is for this reason that I choose the image of getting hit by a truck. An
episode of the illness, known as a relapse, is often dramatic, begins with a
discernable trigger, and is followed by a slow uncertain road to recovery. The
‘chronic’ part is not untrue—the trucks keep coming—it’s just that one learns to
avoid them from time to time.
Aside from the obvious annoyance of getting hit by trucks
all the time, this illness has some other not-so-awesome side-effects…
For one, there's the implications from well-meaning friends
that over the years one must have gotten used to getting hit by trucks.
Well, let me the record straight...the 39th time you get hit by a
truck, the injuries are no less painful nor the recovery any less grueling than
the first time. In fact, the repeated impacts drain your psyche as you lose
hope of ever being a person who will walk the road of life without fear of
imminent disaster. Which brings me to…
The paranoia... Imagine, if you will, how gingerly
and strategically you might plan your moves or the paranoid thoughts that would
plague your mind if you lived in perpetual fear of being hit by a truck—a
paranoia that is only made worse when you start to notice patterns in your
illness. You notice, for example, that the trucks will almost always get you
when you happen to be out at night or perhaps when you do some gardening or
have a stressful day at work. You start to fear and avoid these activities as you
obsess about every little effort, weighing up the risks and wondering if this
will be the one to inflict the wrath of your illness.
Then there's the sadness... As one comes to accept their
fate as a person who gets hit by trucks, there is certainly a period of
mourning for all the things this type of illness steals from you. For me, the
most notable of these were physical exercise, the capacity to work at much of
anything, and that wonderful time of day known as ‘evening.’ Though I am
certainly luckier than some, I still miss the person I was (and could have been)
before the trucks.
And how could I ever forget anxiety's running
dialogue in my head...how long will the recovery take this time? Will I ever
work again? How will I ever X, Y, and Z if I keep getting hit by trucks all the
time? Will the trucks ever just leave me alone? Will there I ever enjoy my kids
like I used to? And on and on and on...
These are just some of the things that one just comes to accept
in a life fated with this strange calamity, but acceptance is a funny thing…So often, it is seen to be a final step
on a long psychological/spiritual journey, as if one as reached some sort of
ending, but, I’ve learned that acceptance is a very active process that happens
over and over again each day I wake up and still have this illness. Acceptance
does not mean I will stop getting hit by trucks, just that I am less surprised when
it happens and ever-willing to keep getting up.
No comments:
Post a Comment