A Day of Tilting with Spoons – Part 1: The Night

My life is full of many wonderful things, but the one constant for me right now is the pain. It’s with me every second of every day: morning, noon, and night. It’s even there as I sleep. It’s almost impossible to wrap my head around everything I go through with this illness. So I decided to do a blog series on a day in the life of a Fibro Warrior. Come join me.

Image ID: Text box that reads: “My favorite part of chronic illness is waking up every day, feeling like absolute shit, mustering every ounce of strength from deep within my soul just to get out of bed, and then being expected to act like a fully functional and capable human being.”

Throughout the night, I fight the same battle over and over again. Every time I toss or turn, jolts of electricity sizzle through my bones until I have to stifle a cry. Other times, the pain gnaws through my dreams like acid bubbling away at paint, warping dreams into nightmares until my body rouses slowly back to reality.

Breathe in.

In the darkness, there is only me and the pain. And it looms over me as I curl into my blankets, trying desperately to hide from it, trying to find sleep again.

Breathe out.

I curl my fingers and toes, flex tendons and muscles, test each joint to see where the pain might be lurking. I find it in different ways and at different spots every time.

Turn. Shudder. Wince. Breathe. Innnnnn.

Artist: Lena Rea Title: “Spineless” Photo ID: Artistic rendering of chronic pain featuring the back view of a human figure. The body has several cracks and wounds and the legs seem to be only bone. The person hugs their body with their arms. Artist Web Site.

I grit my teeth against a flood of bile as the nausea simmers to the surface. Ripples of dull aches radiate out from my hip this time. I gently pull my leg over my pillow.

Shuddering breath out. Bitten lip. Keep. Breathing!

The air whistles through my nose as I try to keep quiet. Beads of sweat stand out on my forehead as the nausea builds. My heart pounds. The pain dials up and I twist my hips until I feel something pop.

Breathe in.

Tears pool on the bridge of my nose and on my pillow. As I sink into the bed, the pain recedes. I found a sweet spot. For now. My heart rate begins to settle.

Breathe out.

Darkness closes in around me, hiding the pain for another minute? Hour? Maybe even two? Even as I slip back under, I know the pain will be back.

As the morning light creeps in and I know that this wake up is the final one, I squeeze my eyes shut against the encroaching dawn. I’m not ready for this battle. I’m never ready these days. The pain steals the deepest part of my sleep, never allowing me to slip into full REM sleep, the restorative kind of sleep. That’s why every morning I wake up just as tired as I was the night before.

I fight the monster all night long. While the dreamers of the world rest their heads to recharge, I wrest solitary moments of peace from the jaws of the pain. But those moments never add up to the amount of rest I need to tackle my day. I lay my head on the pillow at night with a spoon deficit that I know I’ll never make up. Despite lying in bed longer than the average adult, I start my day feeling just a tired as I did when I closed my eyes the night before.

Image ID: Text that read: “Me: I can do this tomorrow when I have more spoons. The spoons I have tomorrow:” Image depicts multiple broken spoons, both plastic and metal.

Next up, it’s time to pick up a spoon and begin tilting for the day.

Guess Who’s Back…

Shady’s back, but so am I?

So … yeah. I kind of disappeared there. For a couple of years.

I am sorry about that. Just after I started this blog, my mom became very ill. She passed away in March of 2022 and frankly, I haven’t been the same since.

Photo ID: Picture of my family out celebrating when my mom was pronounced cancer-free in 2014. From left: me, my daughter, my dad, my son, and my mom.

I haven’t really written much since I wrote her eulogy in April of 2022. It wasn’t for lack of wanting to. Writing is an insanely important outlet for me. I just had no inspiration. No drive to create. The well was empty and I didn’t know for how long that might last.

Fast forward to the present.

I’m currently on vacation with my whole family. I am adoring the family time with our “older kids.” My husband and I share 4 kids. We have a 22 year old, an 18 year old, and two 15 year olds. They are very independent, but it is just amazing having them all around us for a full week. So far, we are having a blast.

But while here, the itch came back.

The one that whispers, “maybe you should write that down.”

Photo ID: Image is a sheet of paper with a partial coffee stain on the bottom left corner. The text reads: “There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.” ~Maya Angelou

So I started writing and realized I was writing a blog post. But not just one. I was starting a series and I knew I needed to see this one out.

Starting tomorrow, I’ll be posting the first in a several part series about what a day in the life of a chronic pain patient actually looks like.

This all started as a homework assignment from my therapist. I’ve been a long time all star in the Impostor Syndrome Club. So being part of the Invisible Illness Club brings out the Imposter Syndrome in me. Hard. She told me to write down what my day to day experience is like so I can have concrete proof of my symptoms and I can stop gaslighting my damn self.

But as I thought about what to write, I realized that it might help someone else to read this. Maybe you’re part of both of those clubs too and you need to read concrete proof. Maybe you love someone with invisible illness. Maybe you just want to be a more understanding human.

Whatever the reason, I do hope you enjoy. I’m gonna try to bring the funny with the honesty, but there’s probably going to be a healthy dose of harsh reality in these posts.

An Invisibility Cloak of Shame

I think we’ve all, at some point in time, thought about how cool it would be to be invisible. I know as a kid I used to imagine having that super power. I was a huge dork in grade school: frizzy hair, thick glasses, played the violin… I always felt like I stuck out like a sore thumb. Looking back, probably very few people noticed me the way I felt like they did. But I remember thinking how wonderful it would be to be able to disappear from time to time.

Invisibility means anonymity. It means the ability to do things without fear of judgement or discovery. It means a free pass to observe and act in ways we might not otherwise be able to. Think of the way that invisibility is portrayed in popular culture: those who are invisible can spy on others or sneak into places they otherwise wouldn’t be able to. It’s fun and a little dangerous.

But there’s another side of invisibility that is both dark and isolating. It’s a side that many Spoonies, myself included, know all too well. When you suffer in silence, the pain and other symptoms of your illness hidden from everyone around you, invisibility feels like a curse.

Like many people with Fibromyalgia, it took years to get a real diagnosis. I dealt with pain, depression, and a myriad of other symptoms separately, not knowing that the real culprit behind all of them was Fibromyalgia. I fell into the trap that a lot of women fall into: the medical field doesn’t like to believe women in pain. We’re told to lose weight and that will solve all of our issues. When we do lose weight, we’re told we’re faking. Or exaggerating. It takes years of searching for a doctor who will take us seriously. And even then, it’s often very difficult to get that Fibromyalgia diagnosis. Very little is known about Fibro, there is no cure, and it is invisible. All of those factors make the medical field very resistant to give that diagnosis. Doctors like to heal. And there is no real healing when it comes to chronic illness. There’s no great success, only coming to terms with it and managing what you can.

That type of invisibility is all too common. Many people with dangerous illnesses have died waiting for doctors to take them seriously. Fibro doesn’t kill, but there are hundreds of illnesses that can and do kill people while doctors wait for them to “lose a little weight” before they do any tests. This type of invisibility is literally killing people, women and people of color more than others. These are serious issues that need to be addressed. But the invisibility trap doesn’t stop with a diagnosis.

When I got the diagnosis, after years of waiting and not knowing, it felt like a relief. It has a name. I assumed that, now that I had a name to put with my all of my symptoms, people would believe me. That doctors would believe me. That friends and family would show compassion. Sadly, that’s an over-simplification and not always the case.

Fibro warriors and other Spoonies who have illnesses that leave no trace talk about having “invisible illnesses.” What we mean is that we could be in the worst pain of our life, with gut-wrenching aches and sharp, stabbing pain all over our body, and you wouldn’t see a trace on our body. There aren’t any bruises to point to, no swollen, red joints to massage. There’s not a single physical sign that shows the world, “ah, yes… there’s a reason she’s in pain.”

We live in a world that requires proof. And in many cases, looking for proof of something is important and justified. But that mindset leaves those of us with invisible illnesses trying desperately to prove to those around us that our symptoms are real. We wear our invisibility like a cloak of shame. On one hand, we want to show that we are strong and capable. But on the other, we want desperately for those around us to believe us that what we experience on a daily basis is very, very real.

I’ve been told on a number of occasions that the pain I experience on a daily basis is all in my head. And that very well may be the case. My own brain might be the cause of this gnawing pain that disrupts so much of my life. But that doesn’t make it any less real or debilitating. And the fact that it is constant and unyielding doesn’t make it easier to deal with. You don’t “get used to” living in a body that is never at peace. The pain can be tolerable and it can be intolerable. But is always with you. And it always affects you.

There’s a lot to unpack when it comes to living with and accepting the invisibility of my condition. There’s my own desire to appear strong in the face of adversity. There’s my resistance to asking for help. And there is also this desperate desire to feel seen and heard. Every time someone says “you can’t be in pain all the time,” it feels like a little blow. When I open up enough to tell someone that yes, this pain is constant and unrelenting, it takes a lot of courage and trust. And to have those symptoms diminished feels a little like a betrayal. I understand that it’s because people don’t want to believe someone they care for could be in that much pain all the time. I understand it is their own coping mechanisms. But it still feels shitty all the same.

If you’re out there wearing your own invisibility cloak, give yourself permission to release the shame of it. Own your pain. Own your symptoms. Own the strength it takes to face each day, knowing that the pain will never go away. And don’t let anyone tell you that your experience isn’t valid because they can’t see it. I see you, and you are one glorious warrior. Stand strong. I believe in you.

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