Tag Archives: DailyLife

On the Importance of Pets

I have often asked myself WHY I let one beloved creature after another into my life, my home and my heart. We all know going in that the odds favour us outliving them, and each loss is so heartbreaking. Those who have never loved or been loved by an animal (makes you wonder, doesn’t it?) can’t begin to understand the extent of our emotional attachment to these precious beasts. It has been years and years, but still I mourn for my darling Beardog. People say “oh for god’s sake, he was only a DOG.” I beg to differ. He was family. He loved us. He was devoted to my children. He had a personality and a sense of humour.

And he trusted us implicitly. Never was that trust more evident than the night we lost him. I had rushed him to the vet at something like 9 p.m. As he lay there on the table, in terrible anguish (we never did find out what was wrong with him), I was torn to shreds by indecision. The vet had told me there was a slim chance we could keep him alive long enough to run the dx’tic tests which might tell us what was wrong and that if he lived long enough, we might be able to treat him. But he was perilously dehydrated and in unspeakable pain. While I debated, Bear looked up at me and as clearly as if he had spoken, I “heard” a single word: PLEASE. I turned to the vet and said “do it.” I put my forehead to Bear’s and he stared into my eyes with absolute love and trust. I could feel the vet moving around beside me. Seconds later, my Beardog heaved a great sigh and was gone. Oh lord how we howled, the kids and I. I’m crying now as I remember that terrible night. And I wonder how I ever managed to bring myself to risk my heart again with another dog.

But what’s the alternative? Deprive ourselves of the joys of their companionship? That would be like avoiding human friendship because we fear we may experience pain sometime in the future. And where else do we find such acceptance, such unconditional love? Where else will we find someone who doesn’t judge us by our looks, our race, our financial status, our social standing…our state of health? They don’t see those things, they see *us*. Not only do they give us love, they give us laughter and a reason to get up in the morning (even if sometimes it’s a mite earlier than we’d like 🙂

It’s no easy thing. We take them into our hearts and hope they will live long, happy lives. We do everything we can to ensure just that. Under the circumstances, it’s the best we can do. I know I have no alternative; I can’t imagine life without my crazy crew. I can’t imagine life without at least a couple of cats and a dog; I’d die of loneliness! Well, all that aside, for every heartbreaking story, there’s a happy one. For every tragedy, there’s a miracle. Through the dark threads of worry and grief are woven bright threads of joy, companionship, love and loyalty. I guess that’s what makes it worthwhile.

Hysterical??

It has been suggested that we “hysterically” manifest our symptoms (consciously or unconsciously) in order to gain sympathy from friends, family and the medical community, and/or a “free ride” courtesy of the government. Those not “in the know” often believe we enjoy countless perks. Almost all of us have heard, at some time or another, someone say something like “Gee, I’m tired all the time too! I wish I could just lie around all day and not have to worry about going to work or keeping up with the housework.”

I have just emerged, bloodied and somewhat bowed, from a fruitless discussion (one of many) with yet another doc. I have lost count of the discussions I’ve had…with doctors and other non-believers…about how my deepest psyche must have a reason (one I can’t or won’t recognise on a conscious level) for presenting me with these symptoms I persist in believing in. EVEN THOUGH I NOW HAVE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE that something is rotten in the state of Denmark (the kicker being that this doctor is questioning the validity of tests in general and mine in particular). I can state in emphatic terms til I feel synapses frying themselves to a crisp from the effort, that I am rapidly going broke broke broke, that I don’t get any government handouts, that I have been forced to give up all of life’s little pleasures (and I do mean all of them except, occasionally, reading…and that not of my former standard or volume…and, occasionally, a shopping expedition in which I must do as much damage as possible in as short a time as possible since I have no idea when I’ll be able to leave the house again), that I get no sympathy from anyone, that all my “friends” have disappeared (putting in an appearance only when there’s something they want from me), that I deal daily with emotionally debilitating scorn and disbelief, insults and flavour-of-the-month amateur psychoanalysis, that my children, to whom I am deeply devoted (despite my complaints) are virtually raising thmselves. I get to watch my home, upon which over the years I have lavished tender ministrations to create a comfortable and pleasing environment, virtually falling apart around me because I can’t maintain it and can’t afford to pay someone else to maintain it. I experience the deep disapproval of the staff at my childrens’ school who all too patently think I just don’t want to attend various meetings and functions. (They’d certainly never believe how long and hard I cried the year I couldn’t make it to their Christmas concert). Every time I emerge from under my rock, some happy-pants moron is there to bounce cheerfully up to me and say something like “Hey, you’re out and about! You must be better!” (No, idiot; I just happen to be able to walk today and since I’m suffering from terminal cabin fever, I’m willing to send myself into a spectacular three-week crash just to get the ^%*^ out of the house for a couple of hours.)

I would be ecstatic… I would be eternally grateful… I would give even unto half my (remaining) kingdom… if someone, somewhere, could, with a few sessions of psychoanalysis, lead me back to the life I had 13 years ago. For eleven years I struggled with this frigging disease before it literally turned my world upside down two-and-a-bit years ago. For eleven years I had myself convinced that I could ignore what was happening to me, that I could use force of will to keep going, that I could use “mind over matter” to halt or reverse the slow decline to the almost total helplessness in which I now find myself. I treated myself more cruelly than anyone has since because I honestly believed I could overcome what was happening to me if I just tried hard enough.

Yesterday I reported to the above-mentioned doctor that I’ve had waking temperatures of as low as 94.9. The response, the exact wording of which I of course can’t remember, essentially implied that either I was lying or that my imagination was running amok, because if I had really registered such a low temp, I’d have been in a state of hypothermia. Well DUH! And is this cause for concern? Nope. It’s cause for dismissal of me as being exceptionally creative in my attempts to gain unwarranted medical attention (i.e. in this learned individual’s unsupported opinion, I had attained new heights of hypchondria and/or hysteria).

Right now I am fighting for sufficient evidence to put together a case for disability benefits of some kind (preferably before I lose my home and the welfare comes to take my children away because some zealous soul has reported that I’m “neglecting” them), and quite frankly I don’t care what they want to call it as long as some doctor somewhere recognizes and is willing to put in writing that I’m disabled. Frankly, I’d as soon not receive a formal and documented dx of CFIDS because even with a doctor’s “seal of approval” I would still have to deal with much of the same bilge as I am now, and we all know that a dx of CFIDS does not necessarily a case for disability make.

Oh yeah! I get sooooo much out of persisting, in the face of so much “evidence” to the contrary, in believing that I have a physiological and not psychological disorder!

OK, vent-fest over 🙂

[Ed note: since this writing, the writer has received an official diagnosis of CFIDS and is in the process of applying for disability. If you are applying for disability please do check the SSDI website and do your homework as the rules for ME/CFS have changed since this was written,]

Broken Hearted

Broken hearted…
how many times?
Broken hearted…
how many ways?
Broken hearted…
how many days
and weeks and months
and years must I be
so broken hearted?
How can I live
with all of my life
just falling apart?
I ask you–
how can my heart
endure all the pain;
put up with the reign
of terror
illness
brings?

I struggle and strive.
Do you know that I’ve
worked hard to survive!

Yet all, dear old friend,
in the end, I derive
is your scorn and abuse
since I’m of no use
to you
any more.

I’m sore.
And I’m sick.
And I’m scared.
And I’m scarred.

And I look at the loss
of my life-work—my doing,
the meaning,
My Meaning,
cascading,
like lightning,
like drizzle here,
down all around me,
just falling, careening
crash, down ’round my feet.
In defeat,
here I stand by myself.

Far long gone
all the victories
that I had long savored.
So well, how they flavored
my life as I knew it,
my life as I knew it–then.

I look in the mirror.
A shadow of self.

I look in the mirror.
Two eyes that can see
others turning away,
never sure what to say;
how they flee, run away
or just never come near.

And the fear
looms so large
overhead,
full of dread,
nothing said,
not a whisper
but only a darkening cloud.

Every day, feeling harder,
the way, feeling harder.

And how to endure
to endure
to endure
to endure
to endure?

I reach out,
no one there.
I beseech.
Do I dare
fall to knees,
risk the fool
even more?
How they stare
or ignore.

Can I bear?

Broken heart
in my hands.
Broken heart
on my sleeve.
Broken heart
in my eyes,
in my voice,
in my breath.

To be well,
my great Quest.
To be well,
your For-Granted.
T’be well, my return
to the start of the line
if I ever can make it back
there once again.

If I only can get
myself well once again
and begin my life
over again. If I can.

The Dress

I woke up aching all over, especially my legs and back. I thought about the dress I needed for Paul’s wedding. Mother of the groom, I had to have something nice to wear. I had to force myself up, take a bath, because I knew the warm water would help. My left ear was ringing. I got in the tub and it felt good to lie there. My jaws hurt all the way up to my eyes. I’d been clenching my teeth in my sleep, I knew. I remembered a dream. I was at Claire’s house and she and her husband and another couple were standing there with Jim, looking at something. I remember trying to smile. But I had to take a chair and sit while they stood. I was uncomfortable having to do this, but I couldn’t stand up anymore. I tried to look normal, but felt I was making a spectacle of myself. I woke up suddenly. My heart was pounding, anxiety gripped me and I was soaked with sweat. I couldn’t get back to sleep for hours. Now, as I dried myself, I looked in the mirror. I was so pale. Never been pale like this before. No wonder. I don’t get out much, don’t work in the garden anymore, and only take short walks now. My face in the mirror looked old, bags under my eyes, deep circles. I’ve lost weight. But everyone tells me I look just fine. How could that be? It’s a year now that I’ve had CFS.

Talking to Ann on the phone, I told her I dreaded having to go shopping, that I just didn’t have the energy for it.

“I’ll take you,” she said.

“Really? That’s great. But you’re sure it’s not too much trouble?” My heart started to pound, adrenaline doing it’s rapid heartbeat number on me. Once it starts, it won’t stop for hours.

“Not at all,” she said cheerfully. “I’ll take you. Let’s set a time. Paul’s wedding is on the 17th, right?”

“Yes, it is.” Such a good friend. “Where should we go?”

“Well, it depends on how much you want to spend.”

“No more than $200. I’ll have to buy shoes, too.” And, I thought, I want to give Paul and Annie a couple of thousand dollars to get the things they needed. “Are you sure it’s not too much trouble for you?”

“Oh, Eva! I’ll be happy to do it. What kind of dress are you looking for?”

“Something simple, maybe silk. I was thinking of gray silk, to go with my hair.” Maybe I should dye my hair. I know she thinks I should. And she probably would tell me to cut it, if I asked her. I’m sure she thinks it looks witchy. Long, gray hair is kind of witchy, and now that I look so awful…..

We arranged a date for the following Thursday. I would drive down to her place, about twenty minutes from here and then she’d drive us around to the discount stores on Rte. 4. When I hung up the phone, I felt so relieved. At least she’d be with me to help look. Jim would have gone with me, but he hates shopping. Ann loves it.

Then I went for a walk–alone, because I had just had a fight with Jim. Over nothing. I can’t even remember why I got so angry. The Hudson was calm, gray, with a silver splash of the rising sun on it. I’m sad. I feel cut off, useless. Jim has to do most of the housework that I did before. We almost never go out with people anymore. I can’t count on being up for it. Sometimes I think, I’m afraid I’m going to die of this. People don’t die of CFS they say, but I’m afraid that I’m going to get something because of the CFS, that it has weakened me so much that my system will fail and I’ll become susceptible to some lurking condition within me. Cancer, say.

I met two people on my way back to the car. A jogger with his German shepherd and an older man. I said hello to the older man. Again, I thought about getting a dog. Our dog died two years ago and I’d like to get another one. Jim is afraid that it will all be on him, that he’ll have to jump up and go out first thing with the dog. It’s true, I’m not reliable now. I never know how I’ll be. But I’d like a dog. I think a dog would make me go out every day, even when I’m not quite feeling up to it. Maybe it would be good for me. A dog’s eagerness, that positive way they have, the way they greet the day and every chance to go out, it might be an up for me. As I walked, I could feel my right hip grinding in its socket. It hurt.

Two days before we were to meet, Ann called me. “I found three dresses for you.”

“Oh, Ann! You did? Where? What do they look like?” My heartbeat increased. I should get used to this, I thought, but I can’t. Any excitement, good or bad, is exhausting.

“Well, I went to Loehmann’s, to Daffy’s and The Engle Shop. I asked them to hold the dresses for us till we get there on Thursday at about 10:30. Is that all right?”

“That’s wonderful! You’re terrific! How did you do that?” They probably won’t be right. Maybe I’ll buy a dress even if it isn’t just right. I don’t know….

“It wasn’t so hard. I just went in and told them what you’re looking for and that it’s for your son’s wedding. Then I told them you were sick, that you have Chronic Fatigue, and that they should hold them for you, that we’ll be there Thursday morning.”

“That’s incredible, Ann! You’re wonderful! What do the dresses look like?” If one of them is halfway acceptable, I should buy it, even if it isn’t just right. I can’t really do this alone and I can’t be fussy.

The day before we were to meet, I got my period. I’m 53 and going through menopause this year. My period comes in strange ways, either a flood with huge clots, or a stain. My cramps are worse than they’ve ever been. I have night sweats. Since CFS could cause this, I don’t know which it is.

Thursday morning, we were in her car.

“Where would you like to go first?” she asked.

“Tell me which dress you think would be best for me.”

“I’m not sure, but the one at Daffy’s is almost what you described. But you know The Engle Shop is closer, so maybe we should start there.”

“No, let’s go to Daffy’s.”

The dress was unbelievable. It was a beautiful, soft green silk crepe, sewn and draped to look like a wraparound dress, with a deep V and squarish shoulder pads. I put it on and it was perfect. A very 40’s look, a movie dress, it looked like it needed a long cigarette holder and long hair to look out from under on one side, the other swept back.

Business-like and friendly as usual, Ann looked me over and said, “It needs some alterations. I’ll call my tailor right now and make an appointment. Maybe he’ll be able to see us right away.”

She was taking care of me. A good friend, she always, always asks how I’m feeling. And I’m always afraid to say. People don’t call me as often, because they have to ask how I am. I used to say ok, and switch the topic to them. But I can’t do this anymore. It makes me feel too cut off.

I relaxed a little. As I looked at myself in the mirror, I marveled at the dress. It fit me so well, just needed the hem taken up a bit and perhaps the sleeves shortened. How did Ann find this? I actually looked good, even beautiful, I had to admit, with my long gray hair, my coloring, and the way it flattered my figure. As I undressed, smiling, Ann reappeared.

“He’ll take us in an hour.”

“Fantastic, Ann! I don’t know how you did this. It’s just amazing. I’m not sure I could do it for you.”

She smiled. “I’m glad the dress fits. It does look good on you. Since we have some time, do you want to look around?”

I pulled on my slacks. “Yes, let’s do that,” I said, with the enthusiasm of such an easy success.

I started to go through the racks, feeling the soft silks and fine woolens. My left ear was ringing, as usual. I stopped taking aspirin for the joint pains because I thought it was the cause of the loud ringing. It wasn’t. Suddenly, a wave of exhaustion hit. I knew I had to sit down, couldn’t stand up any more. The exhaustion was like an enveloping shroud, a sensation of being dragged down. I’d better get home soon, I thought. Once this starts, it ends with me on the couch, asleep under the heavy quilt. “And then, aren’t you rested when you wake up?” asked the husband of a friend, looking at me doubtfully as if I were inventing symptoms. “No, I’m not,” I said, “It’s that I have to sleep, but it isn’t refreshing.” And just once I’d like to read a novel. For the past year, I haven’t read a book. It was only 11AM and I was tired, bone tired. My eyes ached and watered. My joints ached. My thighs tingled.

I looked around. Where was Ann? There, two aisles away, she was looking through coats. I walked over to her, feeling the numbing lethargy grow. “Ann, I’m really tired. I’ll just pay for this and maybe we could go sit in the car,” I said, thinking guiltily, I’m sure she wanted to look around.

“Fine,” she answered with a smile, “Let’s do that. Maybe he’ll be ready if we get there a little early. We’ll just drive on over there.”

The wait was only ten minutes. Frank, the tailor, fitted the dress, put a dart in the back and raised the hem slightly and shortened the sleeves. As he chalked the dress and pinned it, I stood on a little, wooden platform, turning when he told me to. Twice, I thought I was going to fall, to collapse on the floor. I focused on a spot of the wall and clenched my fists, which seemed to help the dizziness. I didn’t fall. Ann sat and watched. The dress looked even better when he was done with the pinning.

A little later, we were sitting across from each other at Ann’s kitchen table.

“You look tired.”

“I am. I should get myself together and go home to rest. Ann, I can’t tell you what a miracle all this is for me. I couldn’t have done it alone. You’re fantastic!”

She smiled. “I was glad to be able to help out. Now, what kind of shoes do you want?”

We talked about shoes for a few minutes and she said she’d see if she could find some in the neighborhood. “I’ll call you and we could get together again next Thursday. He said he’ll have the dress ready for you then.”

“Great! I can’t tell you how much I appreciate all this. You’re going to so much trouble.”

“I’m glad to do it. You’ve helped me, too, when I needed it.” On the way home, feeling like I was wrapped in cotton batting, that the drive was unreal, waves of shivers passed through me. When this happens, and it often does, it’s a sign to me that I’ve overdone it, gone over the limit. But how can I get anything done at all unless I push a little, I thought angrily. I remembered the times I helped Ann – when her mother was in the nursing home and we moved her things there, when she and her mother had a consultation with the doctor and Ann wanted me there to hear what the doctor said. She was very upset and afraid she wouldn’t be able to ask the right questions. I was there for her then. And she had just done the same for me. But how could she have picked out such a perfect dress? I knew I couldn’t have done that for her.

The dress was a big hit. Everyone at the wedding complimented me on it, said how well I looked, a little tired, but well. My son Paul loved it. And despite my exhaustion throughout the entire wedding, I felt good about the way I looked. I had to rest the whole day before and that morning so that I’d have some energy for the evening wedding. Then at three o’clock, I bathed and dressed. The dress was wonderful. I put it on and forgot about it. A rare thing to have a dress like that. Not once did I have to check myself in the mirror.

A Day in the Life of a PWC

8AM – The gate down to the Hudson was closed, which happens every time it snows. We had to take the steep upper road, if we were going to go for a walk at all. Despite the CFS, I make myself take a short walk every morning. It’s a chance for Nikki to run and for me to get a little exercise. And it’s essential for me. Even when I’m feeling stiff, achy and awful, I feel a little better if I walk for ten minutes. But uphill?? Since I got CFS, Jim and I had only walked on flat ground, flat paths, even walks, no climbing. We started.

After the first few steps, I felt like I had coals in my calves. My heart was pounding and so was my head. I could feel my pulse all over my body. I stopped, panting. Jim stopped, too, when he realized I wasn’t right behind him. The uphill path is beautiful. It curves up the Palisades, the cliffs which overhang the Hudson. It winds upward through woods which cling to the sides of the Palisades.

“I have to stop for a little,” I gasped.

“You ok?” he asked, with a worried look.

“Not really. Let me just stay here for a few minutes and you go on with Nikki.” I couldn’t look at him. I looked away.

“I’ll wait with you,” he said, as he walked towards me.

“No!” I said, too loudly. Trying to control my voice, I added, “You go on and I’ll just wait here. Nikki’s almost at the top. You go catch up with her,” I said, trying to smile, but not being able to.

How can I do this to him? He was concerned and always very supportive. I didn’t want to look at him. His conciliatory behavior towards me was real. He felt badly for me that I was so impaired in everything I tried to do. And that’s how it’s been for the past three years. I can never predict what I can do or what will set me off. My feelings…Well, it’s a little like having PMS all the time. I mean, ALL the time. At least I know what this is due to. I read that in PWCs (People With CFS) the blood flow to the brain decreases with exertion. Normally, blood flow increases to the brain. Not with CFS. If blood flow to the brain decreases, a natural concommitant is irritation, headaches, and probably other things I haven’t yet identified in me.

It’s very rough to be with someone when you’ve got this disease.

Very rough. It’s rough to be alone, though, too. Probably worse. Jim couldn’t be more understanding about what I go through. He knows that I wasn’t like this before. We used to hike for two and three hours at a time and it was exhilarating.

Jim walked on up the path towards the top. I turned around and went back down to the car. Tears leaked out of my eyes and ran down my cheeks. It was cold out and I shivered. I wiped my face with my gloved hand. Sitting inside the car on the driver’s side, I started to weep. I can still drive, I thought, but just for short periods. No more than half an hour. I know some people with CFS who take plane trips. I can’t imagine that at all. Not with CFS.

I cried, I moaned aloud. I was alone. No one would hear me. I felt sorry for myself. That’s not so bad, is it?? No, I’d given myself permission to feel sorry for myself.

I listened to the radio until he came back with Nikki. As we pulled out of the parking area, he put his hand on my thigh and it felt warm and loving. I felt a surge of anger. Why?? I don’t know. Perhaps it’s because I can’t do the things I used to, the things I want to. Perhaps it’s because I’m so dependent on him for most things.

9AM -As we ate breakfast, I felt irritated with him. Everything he did seemed to be an affront. I try to control feelings like these, but they come anyway. The worst thing is for me to say something, to give voice to these feelings, irritations. I hated watching the way he cut up the eggs with his fork, the way he added paprika to them, the way he sopped up the remainders with his rye toast. I know better, but knowing better doesn’t seem to stop it.

The wave of exhaustion which had hit me on the path, seemed to be subsiding a little. I was still tired, very tired, but my dark, bleak mood was lifting.

“What do you have to do today?” I asked, as brightly as I could. Of course he knows when I’m feeling critical, angry and about to explode. This is normal behavior for me now, with CFS. I live on some kind of nervous edge, as if everything is too much, as if I were about to fly apart, like some spring-wound mechanism on the fritz.

Scapegoating, he calls it. It’s not. It’s just that he’s there. When he was away in California to see his family a few weeks ago, I would explode, too. I didn’t hit the dog.

“Well,” he started slowly, so slowly, thinking about what he was going to do first, thinking of the words, “I’ve got to go shopping at the A&P. Then I’m going to work on that sign job for the realty agency…..What do you have to do?”

I thought of the friends I might call and the cleaning I should do.

Dinner would have to be pizza again. “I have a lot waiting to be done. I keep making a list and transferring the items to the next list. It’s been going on for days…”

“I know. It must be so frustrating. How are you feeling now?”

“Exhausted, but a little better,” I said, as I put the dishes in the dishwasher. He sat and watched as I cleaned up the breakfast table. At least I can do this, and efficiently, quickly, too. A year ago, I couldn’t. I didn’t have the strength.

Noon – The computer was on and I was trying to read. It was about noon when I heard Jim downstairs. I should go down and help him put away the groceries, I thought, as I turned off the computer. I had gotten two letters written, but hadn’t paid the bills yet. Leave it!

When I came downstairs to the kitchen, he was eating a cookie, one of the big, oatmeal kind he likes. The bags were on the table, on the floor, on the counter. I suddenly felt overwhelmed, and sat down at the table. Jim sat down across from me, eating his second oatmeal cookie. I’m not going to cry, I thought. Why should I cry? He had already put the ice cream, the milk and yogurt in the refrigerator. I know it’s not about that. It’s just that I used to do these things alone, no help, unless I asked for it. I’d go shopping early, not like he does, which seems like it’s anytime. And I’d put it all away, one, two, three. I got up and put the rest away, folded up the bags, felt a fury rising in my chest, like an explosion about to happen.

2:30PM – Mid-afternoon and the article I was trying to read made no sense to me anymore. I had to keep rereading. If I read in short spurts, it works for a while. I have to sit up at my desk and take breaks by playing a computer game, called Pipe Dream. You connect pipes before the white band comes to destroy them all. You win if you connect all of them, in whatever pattern, trying to get as many points as possible, before the white stuff flows through them. They have to connect. If they don’t, the white stuff wins. Idiotic time killer. But it works for me. I’ve been reading a lot lately, doing it just like this. Two minutes of reading, two minutes of Pipe Dream. The kitty jumped up on my lap, and started purring loudly. She’s so sweet. She puts her paw on my face to ask me to talk to her. Then she lies down on my lap, curling up to fit me and purring. I cuddled her and talked baby talk to her, with her head in the crook of my arm, my nose almost against hers. Finally, I put her down. I was so tired. I had to lie down.

3PM – Oprah’s guest, talking about having been abused as a child, having recovered the memory through therapy. Switching channels, Phil has four men who call themselves God’s gift to women. I opt for that, turning the sound down as low as I could still hear it. I’m just drifting now, the words from the TV combining with some dream that I won’t remember later. The phone rings. I pick it up, my neck twisting as I do so. I hear Jim saying, “She’s taking a nap now.” My friend Claire’s voice saying, “Oh, just tell her I called. How are you doing?” I carefully hang up, not having the strength to say hello, how are you.

Not everything has to do with CFS, though it does permeate my life. Some of the problems are ones that I’d have even without it. Also, there are times when I feel almost like normal, when I enjoy a few minutes without remembering that I have CFS. Those are few, though.

Yesterday, Jim took a lunch break. He works at home and eats lunch sometime around 1PM. I heard the sound of his guitar. That’s rare. I listened for a few minutes. It sounded very good, very soothing. He was just doodling on it. I had stuff to finish at my desk, and it was almost time for my nap. Three PM is the outside limit for me on that. But 1:30 PM or not, work waiting for me to finish, I went downstairs to the sun porch, where he sat on the couch, playing his guitar. “Sounds wonderful,” I said, with a smile.

“Yeah?” he said, a bit doubtfully, because he’s always frustrated by not being able to play as he’d like.

“Yeah,” I said. “I don’t want to interrupt. Just play.”

He played a bit, sounding like the Carter Family tape we’d heard in the car that morning. Then, he stopped, suddenly shy of me, shy from hearing what he hears as inadequate playing. “Is it in tune?”

“It sounds out a little. Why don’t you tune it to the piano?”

“I can’t hear whether the note is higher or lower. I can’t match them. It’s useless.”

“Just tune the strings to each other,” I told him.

“I can’t. I just can’t hear the differences.”

“I’ll help,” I said and he began to tune the strings to each other, waiting for me to say whether they were in tune, whether to turn the key up or down.

He got it in tune and asked, “Doesn’t this make you want to play?”

“Yeah, I’d like to, but once I start….I have to tune mine, too, you know. And it won’t be in tune with yours. And I’m so tired. You play.”

He played some more. Some blues riffs which sounded good. I did feel like playing and finally got up to get my guitar and tune it. I played a few tunes and sang.

“Don’t you want to tune yours to mine?”

“I can’t,” he said.

“Oh, come on,” I said, “I’ll help.”

We played together, I sang, he sang a bit, and it went on for half an hour. I was exhausted. I put my guitar away, told him I loved to hear him play, to please continue, that I was sorry I interrupted him, and that I’d love to hear it from upstairs. I’ve always loved to play the guitar and sing. I’ve done it since I was about twelve or so. Perhaps, in another lifetime, I’ll be a folk singer. Wish I could have my old life back. I’d settle for that.

5:00 PM – When I woke up an hour later, Phil’s program was over and the news was on. I ached all over, didn’t feel refreshed, but knew I’d be better than I was earlier once I got up and moved around a bit. I dozed off again. When I finally got myself up, it was 5:15. I could see the light in Jim’s studio. He was still working. He works in a converted garage, a little house with two rooms, a bathroom, a kitchen sink and a comfortable, upholstered chair and a couple of straight-backed, wooden chairs. He’d be over by 6, I knew. If dinner wasn’t waiting, he’d make it. Or ask me if I wanted something brought in.

I thought about going down and making pasta and some salad, a light meal, which would be ok with him. He doesn’t make as much of a fuss as I do about what we eat for dinner. When I was sicker, I needed to have a more formal meal. Without it, my days seemed to meld into night and sleep and the next day without any markers. But now, though I like to have a good meal, it doesn’t matter as much. Probably it’s because I’m cooking again now, once in a while. He cooked for most of the first two years that I had CFS. I like my cooking better than his, I must admit. Tonight it would have to be pizza, which it was.

I sometimes am not fit to live with.

Jim is the kind of person who’s most often lost in his thoughts. Since I’ve often made a fuss about this, he’s tried very hard to be there when we sit across from each other at mealtime. I can almost see when his mind starts to wander, though. And then my voice feels as though it loses sense. Meaning is gone if the listener isn’t listening. And I have few listeners and people I can listen to. Since the CFS, I have had a hard time keeping appointments in the evening or even afternoon. I see so few people. It’s all on Jim then.

7PM – Watching McNeil/Lehrer with Jim. We’re both half-sitting up on the bed. Sometimes it’s good to watch. We start to talk about whatever we’re watching. Sometimes, even, I can feel the old enthusiasm for ideas take hold of me. This always makes me feel alive and I can talk for a while. But then, I lose my train of thought at times.

I’m lying on my side, facing away from Jim. He pulls up my sweater and the silk undershirt and starts stroking my back.

“Scratch,” I say, feeling the warmth of his hand and the itchy places all over my back.

He scratches. There’s a really bad itch right in the middle of my back, on one side of my spine. I couldn’t possibly reach it, I know. There was a time when I could have done so fairly easily. Twenty-five years of yoga makes you very flexible. Ever since I got CFS, I haven’t been able to do yoga. I’ve tried, again and again. It took two years of trying every so often before I read that diaphragmatic breathing is not what we PWCs can do, that our breathing is rather shallow. No wonder I can’t do yoga. I thought it was my lack of concentration which prevented me from doing it. It wasn’t. And this made more sense. There are times, a few minutes here and there, when I can concentrate. Even then, I couldn’t do the yoga. Diaphragmatic breathing is essential to all the yoga movements. Take a deep breath in and release it slowly as you begin the movement. I can’t take a deep breath in. It catches, it’s forced, it just doesn’t happen.

Jim is stroking my back again, his hand pulling at the waist of my jeans. I open the snap and loosen my pants. His hand slips down to cross the top of my behind. I’m feeling it, feeling like having him stroke me between my legs. I take my pants off, Jim helping by pulling on the legs. Then, I’m naked below my waist with my socks on still. My sweater and undershirt are pulled up over my breasts. I turn over towards him and he holds me, arms wrapped around me, one hand sliding down over my ass.

He’s hard as he gets on top of me. I raise my legs to open them for him. I can feel the burning in my legs from the exertion, but I want him. He enters me.

Suddenly, I’m exhausted. I have to lower my legs. He accomodates me by putting his legs on the outside of mine, still inside me. His weight, even though he’s resting on his elbows, is too much for me. I feel I will suffocate. I push at his chest. He knows I’m not pushing him away, knows that this happens often now. He gets off and I roll on my side, away from him. He enters again, from the back. It’s fine, though I’m now very tired. Problem is that when I’m so tired, the feeling can fade, desire can leave. It does.

8:30PM- Time for me to get online again, to sign on to America Online. The story of my involvement with AOL would take a lot of writing, a chapter all by itself. To make it very short, my son Tom gave me the software to America Online and a modem, which connects the computer to the telephone. When Tom first hooked it up for me, I tried to find a CFS support group online. There was nothing. A year and a half later, after many tries to get one started, another PWC and I finally had our first session of the group. We had a handful of people then and now our mailing list is up to about one-hundred people. I also started The Women’s Room, named after Marilyn French’s book, and it’s been running for almost three years now. Last June, CNN online asked me to run a women’s issues conference, which I’ve been doing ever since. Tonight, our topic is called Mirror, Mirror:What Do Women See? I’ve done this one before, about self-image versus desired image. I could probably do it once a month, since we all think too much about how we look. The conference runs from 9PM to 10:45 PM.

11PM – I finally signed off. Very good session. Lots of participation, with some men there, too. But now I’m wound up. The sessions take a lot of concentration. Sometimes it’s hard to follow the discussion if many people are typing at once. Why I can do this, and not other things, I have no idea. This is tiring to me, but not as exhausting as a face-to-face conversation or even talking on the phone for an hour or two. I can do it and, right now, it’s about the only identity I feel is mine. I can’t imagine what I’d feel like without doing these conferences. They take quite a bit of reading beforehand, in addition to writing back and forth via Email with guests who are scheduled for particular subjects. It lends a focus to my life, this online work, a sense of doing something good, something possibly even vital. Certainly, for me it is life-saving to have some involvement in the world.

The disadvantage is that I can’t slow down fast enough, can’t unwind quickly. I never could, even before I got CFS. But now, with the adrenaline coursing through me, I have to play Pipe Dream again. To finish a whole game takes about forty minutes. I sit and play and think about what was said in the discussion online. I’m finally unwinding, and pick up the book on dogs I was reading.

I lost the game on the sixth of the nineteen levels. Damn! I won’t start another one.

It’s now 11:30. Time for bed.

11:45 PM – Jim is curled up, facing away from the TV, which is still on. He leaves it on for me, knowing that I may watch for a while. As I slip into bed, I turn the sound down even further. He turns towards me, making a comfortable sleep sound.

“How did it go?” he asks.

“Fine. Really good tonight. Lots of people and a good discussion.”

He’s snoring. He didn’t hear me. Or did he? He turns away again and I stroke his back. He murmurs appreciatively. The cat jumps on the bed and kneads the blanket. With my left hand, I stroke her. Jim is fast asleep. I am not. My eyes feel sore, they hurt. I watch Unsolved Mysteries. Robert Stack’s voice makes me sleepy, always. I put in my night guard to prevent a sore jaw in the morning, take my glasses off, and turn off the TV.