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Balancing Hope and Acceptance
June 4, 2003
When will I stop thinking of my pre-illness life as “normal”?
I guess that would be the sign of true acceptance. But I’m not sure I want to
be that accepting! I don’t want to
forget “the old me” (what I still think of as the real me).
It’s a constant internal struggle. If I truly accept this
illness as part of me, does that mean I give up all hope of recovery? Yet, if I
refuse to accept my new limitations, then I am sentencing myself to continue
relapsing.
I wrote that entry in my journal a little over a year after
becoming ill with ME/CFS, shortly after being diagnosed. I was struggling to
accept this “new normal” and to come to terms with the possibility of never
recovering. Now, 14 years into living with chronic illness, I am happy in my
post-illness life, though balancing acceptance and hope is still an ongoing
goal.
As I wrote in that journal entry, there seems to be a
dichotomy between the two. Does accepting your current situation mean you are
giving up hope of ever getting better? Does continuing to strive to improve
your condition mean you will keep relapsing? It’s difficult at first, but
acceptance and hope can co-exist
peacefully. Here’s how:
Let go of the past.
A big part of acceptance for me was giving up my ideas of
who I was based on what I could do. I had always seen myself as a strong, fit,
independent person, so living with physical limitations was difficult. I had
also enjoyed a satisfying professional career in engineering and identified
myself as a leader. Although I had voluntarily left my career before becoming
sick in order to spend more time with my family, I always intended to return to
it after a couple of years. I missed my professional life and that sense of
being capable and self-sufficient. It took me some time (and professional
counseling) to let go of that identity and recognize I was still OK without it.
I also struggled with my identity as a mother. I used to
spend a lot of active time with my family – hiking, playing soccer with the
kids, and taking care of the house with my toddler son by my side, cleaning,
playing, and running errands together. Those first few years after becoming
sick, I felt horribly guilty that I couldn’t be the mother I wanted to be. I
finally realized, though, that it didn’t matter to my kids – they loved me just
as much reading with them, watching videos together, or playing quiet games.
They loved me because I was their mother and I gave them love, not because of
what I could or could not do.
Remember, you are not defined by what you do. You are still
the same person inside, even if you are no longer working or involved in other
things that used to be linked to your identity. Allow yourself to mourn those
lost identities or opportunities, to see the essence of yourself without them,
and then move on.
Live for today &
focus on the positive.
Gradually, I began to create a new life for myself. When my
youngest started school, I resumed what I had started after leaving my job –
freelance writing. I don’t make much money and my energy/time is limited, but
it’s work that I love, and I can contribute a small amount to our finances.
Most importantly, it’s work I can do on my laptop from the couch!
I focused on things that I love that I could still do with
chronic illness, like reading, blogging about books, being outdoors, and
watching TV and movies with my family. I started a Joy Journal to help myself
focus on the good things in my life.
You can do the same. Focus on things that give you pleasure
that fit within your new life, perhaps even finding a new interest, like
knitting or reading classics. Teach yourself to recognize small joys in your
life and to feel grateful for what you have. Start a journal to record daily
joys or gratitude or share them on social media (use #GratefulToday). Connect
with other people online or in real life with a similar positive focus.
Don’t fight against
your body.
In the early days, my condition was very up and down which
made acceptance harder. Some days I felt good and returned to normal
activities, only to feel horribly sick again and unable to get off the couch
for days or weeks. Just learning about post-exertional malaise (aka exercise
intolerance) helped. I began to record my activity level each day, making note
of what caused a “crash” and what I could tolerate. As I learned what my limits were, I had fewer
bad days and more OK days.
Try to live within your limits as much as you can. Keep
simple records of how you feel and your activity level each day to figure out
what makes you worse and what you can tolerate. Listen to your body and rest as
much as you need to.
Feed hope.
The other side of the coin, hope, came more easily to me
since I am naturally an optimistic person. I did go through some dark years of
despair in the beginning, though, especially after both of our sons also got
ME/CFS. I saw a wonderful psychologist who specialized in chronic illness; she
helped me tremendously with both acceptance and hope. And I read a
life-changing book called The Anatomy of
Hope by Dr. Jerome Groopman that I recommend to anyone living with chronic
illness. It defines what real hope is and helps you understand how to hold onto
it, even in the face of frightening odds.
I put my scientific background to use and read all the
research on ME/CFS that I could find. Research has come a long way since the
early days of my illness, and every new study that comes out – focusing on
physiological aspects of immune dysfunction, infections, genetics, and more –
gives me hope that we are getting closer to some real answers for patients.
I also searched relentlessly for treatments to help my sons
and I, often based on those research studies. We have discovered that although
nothing helps a lot, there are a lot of treatments that each help a little…and
those add up to considerable improvement over time. Each improvement, no matter
how small, further feeds that sense of hope.
You can feed hope, too. Read research summaries, visit blogs
and websites like this one to stay up-to-date on the latest news, and look at
each new piece of information about your illness as another step closer to a
cure or at least effective treatments. Keep trying new treatments (which often
requires some trial and error and a lot of patience!). Just better understanding
your illness can lead to improvements in your quality of life.
Accepting – even loving – your life as it is today isn’t
giving up. It’s making the best of today, while holding onto hope of an even
better future.
I felt many of these same emotions as you both shortly after diagnosis and now that I just celebrated my 14th anniversary of my RA diagnosis on April 7th. It took me a long time to get back to acceptance but now I can say I'm thriving in spite of chronic illness. Thanks for sharing with Small Victories Sunday Linkup. Pinning to our linkup board and hope you found some great posts to visit this week!
ReplyDeleteOh, my gosh, Tanya - my 14-year anniversary of getting sick was March 1 this year - I didn't realize you and I got sick at the same time! Another thing we have in common. I feel like I am thriving too - but sometimes the emotions can hit you when you don't expect it.
DeleteSue
These are the steps of the healing process I had the most difficult with. Yesterday I wrote an article for another site, and she asked for me to write about my life before diagnosis compared to my life now. I wrote that before illness I was "normal" and now, while I may not be "normal", it's better to live my life with my illness. It's a big struggle. Going from a strong, independent person who could fulfill all requests to a strong, independent person who cannot fill all requests was a lot harder than I care to admit.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your article at Chronic Friday Linkup! I pinned this to the linkup board.
Sorry that you have struggled with these things, too, though I'm glad you could relate to my post. It's a new normal now, isn't it?
DeleteWhenever I come across someone who is struggling with their old life & what they could do, I also remind them that what you do isn’t who you are. Our identity is so wrapped up in what we do. It’s usually the first question someone asks you when they meet you for the first time, “what do you do?”.
ReplyDeleteWho we are is so much deeper than our qualifications or our job title. It’s who we are at our very core and not even sickness can take that away.
Acceptance is also not linear. On 3 occasions my ME/CFS has improved only for a few weeks later for it to deteriorate again. This last time was the hardest to accept. Being back in my bedroom 24/7 was extremely challenging to the extent I had a mental health crisis. Fortunately I recovered within 6 months but I still have sad days on occasion.
Chronic illness is hard to navigate even if you can still do most things. My good friend has type 1 diabetes and can still run. Something we used to do together. But she still has to monitor her condition very carefully and I know it gets her down on occasion.
So all of us in the chronically ill community suffer, but it is trying to find a way where you can still be who you are at the root core that will give you hope to carry on.
We are ALL significant no matter what our ‘new normal’ may be. We just need to believe it!
Much love 💗
That is all beautifully put, Fiona! Thank you for sharing your story and the encouragement & support.
ReplyDeleteSue