Angus has slowly slipped down, yesterday (2nd April 2015) was a difficult day (his friend were off to see a film and he was desperate to go to; we talked through how we could do this; but he even needed help with getting dressed, so we kept busy with other things. This morning he seems brighter with none of the awful tummy cramps that he suffered most of yesterday. So I’m hopeful that by allowing him to find his own way of recovery, he has got himself back to his low baseline of activity. This baseline causes no extra symptoms and many rest periods of just talking to friends and watching YouTube. He wanders around trying to keep as active as ME/CFS will let him.
Listening
to others who have to control activity etc. like people with diabetes and thyroid,
they seem to understand their bodies, but can’t necessarily tell you how. This
whole controlling, because we know thing is not working for us/Angus, it feels
as if we are constantly putting a round peg in a square hole.
It
is very hard to make or talk about plans for the future, and therefore almost impossible
to stay upbeat and look forward. It is more crushing to make a plan for the
future and not be able to set a date to do it.
For
example: Just before his last setback we had planed to go and see “Home” a new
film that looks a lot of fun and one we would both enjoy. I was all set to book
tickets for its first showing. We planed to take a few of his friends and have
a pizza afterwards; this was to be his birthday treat/party. In our eyes this
was most defiantly achievable. He relapsed and we had to go to the hospital
that journey has had a long recovery attached to it. At the moment there is
very little chance of us being able to go at any point in the near future.
You
learn to cope with the setbacks, but it is very difficult to plan and therefore
very hard to look forward. I keep telling myself as long as the “here and now
is as comfortable as it can be, that’s the best…. I never do get to the end of
that sentence.
Learning
to dance in the rain x
Tilly
This year November 2016 we went to see a film for the first time in a year. His tummy cramps are part of the normal over exertion we have learnt to accept and this is slowly being recognised by the research now coming out. Soon there will be more understanding, and perhaps doctors will give our children more support and we won't have to fight so hard for the basic human needs. But for now, I'm just so grateful that with Dr Speight's understanding. His knowledge of ME, gives confidence is us and allows Angus to take control. He is in less pain than he was a year ago.
Doctor Speight's wisdom has enabled me to allow my son to tell me how to support him. This is a wonderful gift.
It is now summer 2017
Angus is learning to live within his confines of his bodies ability to produce enough energy; cognitively and physically. It is hard to watch and support when you know how much he loves to do.
The cruellest things are said by the doctors who just cannot accept this is a physical disease/condition, and wont support you or your child. When you sit in a room and they talk about keeping up with the social side of life you want to; well I am not quite sure? Put them in a suit of lead and tell them to dance the night away? take their oxygen away and tell them to keep a conversation going? Do they not understand how cruel it is? A young boy cramped in a cocoon, wanting to burst free?
I look across at his crestfallen face, one in which he thought doctors would be able to have some answers to the paradox world he lives in.
What do I say to this now young man, ill for four yeas with no answers, when he turns and asks 'When will it be over mum? When can I do anything but this" his arms fling out to the four wall of the hospital room, the only outing he will probably be able to have all summer.
He is in less pain now, but we miss the sea, we miss the cinema, the shopping, coffee out for me and a hot chocolate for him, getting to see friends and taking the dogs for a walk, sand on our toes, we miss people that we will never meet again, the talking and enjoying the freedom of movement, just popping out for fun, ice-cream, the lake, Bury in Bloom, the theatre, the atmosphere, LIFE!
So please the next time you have an ME patient in your room, take a leaf out of Dr Speights book and give a little empathy.
This year November 2016 we went to see a film for the first time in a year. His tummy cramps are part of the normal over exertion we have learnt to accept and this is slowly being recognised by the research now coming out. Soon there will be more understanding, and perhaps doctors will give our children more support and we won't have to fight so hard for the basic human needs. But for now, I'm just so grateful that with Dr Speight's understanding. His knowledge of ME, gives confidence is us and allows Angus to take control. He is in less pain than he was a year ago.
Doctor Speight's wisdom has enabled me to allow my son to tell me how to support him. This is a wonderful gift.
It is now summer 2017
Angus is learning to live within his confines of his bodies ability to produce enough energy; cognitively and physically. It is hard to watch and support when you know how much he loves to do.
The cruellest things are said by the doctors who just cannot accept this is a physical disease/condition, and wont support you or your child. When you sit in a room and they talk about keeping up with the social side of life you want to; well I am not quite sure? Put them in a suit of lead and tell them to dance the night away? take their oxygen away and tell them to keep a conversation going? Do they not understand how cruel it is? A young boy cramped in a cocoon, wanting to burst free?
I look across at his crestfallen face, one in which he thought doctors would be able to have some answers to the paradox world he lives in.
What do I say to this now young man, ill for four yeas with no answers, when he turns and asks 'When will it be over mum? When can I do anything but this" his arms fling out to the four wall of the hospital room, the only outing he will probably be able to have all summer.
He is in less pain now, but we miss the sea, we miss the cinema, the shopping, coffee out for me and a hot chocolate for him, getting to see friends and taking the dogs for a walk, sand on our toes, we miss people that we will never meet again, the talking and enjoying the freedom of movement, just popping out for fun, ice-cream, the lake, Bury in Bloom, the theatre, the atmosphere, LIFE!
So please the next time you have an ME patient in your room, take a leaf out of Dr Speights book and give a little empathy.
It is now 2018 and nothing much has changed. We
haven’t been to see a film this year and it’s now the 6th July.
He was 13 this year and we took him for a
weekend away so that he may have an experience of riding a quad bike. It took a
lot of planning and what I term as training to get him in a fit state to travel,
and then partake in the event.
I explain in this video https://youtu.be/DNNeE6rhTm0
After that weekend he stopped talking to his
friends. I am not entirely sure why. He heard a conversation when his friends
thought he wasn’t listening, where they explained that they only talked to him because
their mum’s make them. That he was faking his illness due to being able to go out
and riding a quad bike, so he was not ill.
I would like to say this is just children
talking, but sadly it is how society is made to think. If you are sick you have
to show it either with the treatment you are having or being in hospital. Chronic long-term conditions never get the
publicity, they are hidden and used as a pawn in the game of politics. The
undeserving sick is the way my son is seen.
Most Social Workers, Attendance Officers and
teachers are there to stop the bullying, but when it comes to hidden illnesses;
where you don’t die, they are just as bad. They are now actively looking for
Fabricating and Inducing Illness, though there is no evidence to support that
every mother with a child who has a complex illness suffers from FII. No
records of wrong accusations are kept by anyone and no support given, and
records wiped of the falsehoods. Who cares as long as it is not you right? No
smoke without fire. Reading some court reports the lack of understanding is
sickening. Some senior judges have questioned the increase. However they can
only act on information they are given by the research and the medical
profession.
So, when
I was questioned about this birthday event that also celebrated our 25th
wedding anniversary, I was not surprised. The fact that my son works harder
than anyone just to sit up and take part in a conversation, is dismissed out of
hand. Neither is his condition understood due to politics and empire building.
Foster homes are littered with children like my
son, as Fabricating and Inducing Illness becomes big business and another
empire to belittle the battles having a child with any form of illness, chronic
condition or disability, and no one knows, because the mothers like me and
their families are not heard or believed. We are silenced by constraints put on
us by Governments with no accountability of wrong doing, we are easy targets.
Taking away from us is lightening the burden on society?
This is not a new problem, I have met mothers
who have been under this pressure for decades and as they become older, they
worry about their now adult children becoming victim of the political landscape.
Those who strive to make Metal Illness untreatable and unresearched unless it
is in their field, makes every illness a mental priority with no support, just
blame and guilt changing people’s reality through differing disorders, that a logically
approach would spell out the human condition and difference.
How is it that in the year 2018 we are going
back to Tarot Card reading as a way to diagnose conditions. Mix this with science,
to make it believable and sell it to the public as a treatment and then only
offer that treatment if you pay privately. These types of trials and treatments
have been ripped apart for decades. Why then are they still around, I can think
of 101 reasons none of which are ethical.
We read books and watch films in the comfort
that they are nonfiction, but very often those books are based on observations
and I for one feel very much like the Handmaids Tale