“You could be doing more.”

“Is the pain really THAT bad? I’m sure you could get out of bed if you really tried.”

“Why aren’t you going to that party/dinner/event? Everyone thinks you’re lazy and antisocial.”

“Do you really need to stay home from work? You’re being lazy. Force yourself to go in.”

“Do you really need to go to the hospital? It’s not that bad - just push through.”

“See? The ER doctor didn’t even help you. It was stupid of you to go in. There’s nothing wrong. Just try harder.”

This used to be my harmful inner monologue.

I’m sure all of us with chronic illness have said similar things to ourselves.

It’s incredibly hard to adapt to becoming disabled - and we often gaslight ourselves and push our bodies to their breaking point.

We run from reality.

It’s understandable - no one WANTS to be chronically ill. We didn’t grow up hoping to spend our lives stuck in bed dealing with unrelenting pain & fatigue.

Chronic illness can and does strike out of nowhere - catching you off guard and forever altering the course of your life.

Of course that’s a difficult thing to accept.

Often we have doctors, friends and family downplaying our situation - telling us to “just try harder” or that “other people have it worse”.

Who in the chronic illness community hasn’t heard “have you tried yoga?” Or “just be glad you don’t have X condition”?

The reality is people have a difficult time facing chronic illness. This doesn’t just apply to patients. Those who love us can struggle to accept it as well.

Watching someone lose their health is hard. Knowing there’s no hope of improvement? It scares people.

We understand acute illness. You get sick or injured, you rest and then you get better. Things go “back to normal”.

We also understand terminal illness. We are able to process a condition that will gradually get worse and then take your life. /6
Where we struggle is with chronic illness. Existing in the grey. People HATE the grey.

They find it hard to imagine that you could become sick with something that will completely ruin your quality of life - but won’t kill you.

They can’t imagine that the suffering could continue for months, years and even decades.

So they deny it. They minimize it. They tell us to try harder, think positive & play through the pain.

We internalize those messages - and before you know it - you’re doubting yourself.

I did this for years. Constantly telling myself it wasn’t really “that bad”. I just needed to try harder, exercise more, avoid the hospital, think positive etc etc.

It didn’t work. You can’t “try harder” your way out of chronic illness. It doesn’t work that way.

Society is already so cruel to people with disabilities - we don’t need to be cruel to ourselves.

It took me a long time to realize this. To let go of the blame and accept that I WAS severely ill. It wasn’t my fault, I hadn’t done anything wrong.

It was time to put the “coulds” and the “shoulds” to bed and find a way to move into a place of kindness and acceptance.

It was time to stop running from my illnesses. To stop trying to figure out every single flare. To stop putting myself down.

It didn’t come easy. In fact I still struggle every day.

But I’m putting in the effort. The amazing thing is the more effort I put into letting go - the happier I am.

Instead of wasting energy on blame - I’m finding ways to adapt & accommodate my diseases.

I’m managing to carve out moments of peace and calm - which when you’re chronically ill can be incredible rare.

Our bodies are unreliable - constantly throwing us curve balls, flares and setbacks.

We NEED the calm wherever we can find it.

Which brings me to my third and final article in my series on living with MCAS - Learning to Let Go.

I hope this article helps other people find their own path to acceptance, accommodation and peace:

https://www.disabledginger.com/p/learning-to-let-go-how-to-accept



I maaay have put this off for a little too long :not_like_this:

I'm a disabled poc trans woman who's trying to get a bunch of daily basics again (toothpaste, soap, shampoo, conditioner, t.p., laundry detergent, etc) and the costs have stacked up to where I need them all really soon but can't get most of them :cinna_sweat:

Can you please help me try to raise $300, please? :frog_blush:
(0/300)

[Venmo] https://www.venmo.com/u/OctaviaConAmore
[Cashapp] https://cash.app/$octaviaconamore
[Ko-fi] https://ko-fi.com/octaviaconamore (this one gives me the least out of the three)

@mutualaid

Welp.

In response to my question about vaccine availability for Kiwis, NZ Ministry of Health publicly stated that Pfizer hadn't applied to Medsafe for updated booster approval, but this was not true. Records show Pfizer applied in June.

Adding the chain of Eric Crampton's responses to my questions about NZ vaccine access (Chief Economist at the NZ Initiative). He explains how to apply pressure.

For those interested, I asked Ministry of Health - Manatū Hauora about updated covid vaccine access for New Zealand. This is MIH's response.

Medical exemptions are NOT the answer to mask bans. They’re discriminatory, ableist & leave far too many people behind.

These bans represent a return to ugly laws & fuel the dangerous narrative that “only the vulnerable” need to worry about covid

People are quick to say mask bans aren’t something to worry about because there’s a medical exemption in place. They ignore the fact that an exemption puts undue burden on disabled people to prove they’re “sick enough” to legally wear a mask.

They force us to obtain a doctor’s note that we may be unable to get - and they disregard the stress of being stopped & questioned by a police officer. Not to mention the fact that marginalized individuals & POC will be disproportionately impacted & harassed.

Medical exemptions assume that we exist in a vacuum - with no friends, family or loved ones caring for us. What good is it if WE can mask when the people we rely on for support (and share air with) can’t? Covid is airborne - we need those closest to us to mask to keep up safe

Putting all those issues aside - we’re left with a GLARING omission in the mask ban debate - one which I suspect is intentional.

By instituting medical exemptions - a clear message is being sent that “only the vulnerable” need to worry about covid.

This harmful & incorrect “othering” has been a problem from day one of the pandemic. The assumption that you have to already be sick or disabled to be at risk for COVID complications. That if you’re healthy - there’s absolutely no reason to mask.

There are 400 million people currently battling Long Covid. Millions have lost their lives. Countless folks have been orphaned, widowed and lost loved ones. Even more have had their health ripped away from them & their entire lives upended by this virus. They may never recover.

To act as though people shouldn’t try and prevent Covid infection unless they’re already sick is absurd. Everyone should have the legal RIGHT to keep themselves and their communities safe from Covid. Everyone should be allowed to wear a mask.

Please push back against mask bans. If you stopped masking - now is a great time to start again. The more we show people they’re a medical device and nothing to be scared of - the harder it’ll be to put ugly laws in place. Don’t wait until you’re disabled to care.

We can make a difference. We can mask in solidarity. We can carry spare masks and hand them out. We can thank people for masking. We can call & email legislators & tell them we won’t travel anywhere with a mask ban. We CAN stop these bans from spreading.

I encourage everyone to read my article to learn more about why disabled people & mask advocates are fighting these bans. Enough is enough - we know Covid is dangerous & we know masks stop the spread. We can’t allow them to be made illegal. We must stop the cycle of harm.

https://www.disabledginger.com/p/nassau-county-ny-makes-masking-illegal

COVID isn’t over and I don’t know what it’s gonna take to convince people but we have to keep trying.