What
is 'Yuppie Flu'?
Here is a web search answer:
"There is no virus called Yuppie
Flu. It is a name given usually to a disorder called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
Conditions usually are called a "Syndrome" when the underlying cause
of a cluster of symptoms seen similarly in multiple patients has not been identified
yet. This is the case with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. If you don't know what is
causing it, you don't know what would prevent it. So, there is currently no
prevention."
Many don't much like
the condition being called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome either because it implies
that 'tiredness, albeit severe, is the only symptom and, it isn't.
Let me break that down for you
because most can barely say it and even if they can, it just doesn't shout out
what it is. It is the proper given name to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
It is broken down into:
Myalgic is used for muscle pain
and/or tenderness. The word encephalomyelitis means inflammation
of the central nervous system, which is made up of the brain and the nerves of
the spinal cord.
I bet you are glad you had that explained to you so, let us begin.
Let me get one thing very clear here, it affects each person unique to them so
it is not right or fair to make a grouping of type for the condition. The range
will be somewhere between mild discomfort and feeling rather sleepy to severe
and/or changing pain which can be anywhere and everywhere of the body and
change daily if not hourly. That coupled with debilitating tiredness.
To my shame I can say that back in the 80's I was known to refer to Yuppie Flu
as poor middle classed buggers looking for an excuse not to work.
How things can come back to bite us!
Sleep is not helpful. By this I mean, it matters not whether or how much I
sleep I never feel better. Let me clarify that. Let me use a metaphor...
Imagine your phone battery being on 20% when you go
to bed and not putting it on charge, it remains, if you are lucky, at 20% but
might actually be 10%. When it gets to 5% or less shutting down is imminent.
That is a hopefully useful way to describe how I feel after sleeping. Every
moment of every day I have a desperate need to sleep ... running on 10%
battery. Occasionally, on some days, I might find my energy at 20% briefly and
get all excited and think that this is a really good time to catch up on all
those things my tiredness stops me doing except, like with the phone, that 20%
is only going to remain for a short while even if you don't use it ... if you
actually do use it you'll kill the battery in no time and when it's gone, it
really has gone.
How does that feel I might hear you ask
if you remain interested at all?
Its panic mode, I shake, I struggle to think, to
absorb information. Physically moving becomes very difficult or impossible. The
only safe space is in a bed. Imagine you're having a really important Skype
chat then you see the battery is about to die, what do you do? You have 10
minutes of things left to talk about yet only seconds to get your phone to a
charger!
Trouble with the analogy is it suggests there is
something which gets the battery to 100% again, there isn't at all.
It might be presumed that the energy level only
rapidly depletes when I am physically doing something, sadly not the case. Even
concentration can drain my energy to zero.
Then there are the random nonsensical pains.
We like to think if we are in pain we can think of a time where we overdid it a
bit so that's the cause and it will inevitably get better over time. With
M.E. this might be the case but, most times there is no cause and likely no
real cause of the pain, it is my nerves telling me I have pain in a part of my
body which is not actually injured. For several days now I have got a very
random shoulder/chest pain. Most of the time I feel nothing and then I feel
like I just got stabbed with swear level excruciating pain.
When I move so many muscles hurt I cannot really
narrow it down. I go to get up and it's like my brain is sending the signals
and my body is ignoring them. I eventually fight through that but I am not
stable, I can and do fall or, most likely, keep staggering until I harshly bash
into something solid. That's regular, I mean many times every day.
My physical confidence levels are at an all-time
low. Holding a cup I always feel like I am potentially going to lose my grip.
Mentally,
what is it like?
I sometimes wonder if I am going totally loopy the
things I do. Put this in context. You already know I am crazy tired all the
time so, think how you act when you are overtired. Would you say you are firing
on all cylinders or you are in autopilot mode?
It is very common for me to forget to take the
medication I have in my hand. Just one small distraction and the moment has
gone, the tablets are back on the work surface and I am elsewhere. Making a tea
for more than one person is horrible. I have to really concentrate on every
stage of it, nothing it automatic. I look at the containers and read the word
'tea' and 'sugar'. I have to choose cups carefully to represent the person I am
making for so I don't get muddled up. I have been known to forget someone, often
me. In my mind I am making this drink for 3 other people and I make 4 except,
somewhere during the process I just remember the 3. To make matters worse, I
may not even notice until ages later when I realise I am really thirsty.
I was trying to maintain 'normal' sleep patterns,
bed before midnight, up by 9am ... doesn't work. One of the symptoms I also get
is insomnia, I either sleep or I don't. How I feel has nothing to
do with it. Even if I sleep right away I am awake again maybe 2am and am
hurting too much to sleep again so need to take some medication for the pain.
It's often then 5am before I return to bed able to try again. I sleep then
(probably) ... until gone midday! Sometimes, I just randomly wake up at 8am or
that sort of time, it isn't consistent. Forcing myself to get up doesn't work.
Back to our phone analogy, the battery is still dead. I am not going to
function. I can go through the motions and often do but I am not really in
charge of my mind and body. Often I will wake up again an hour or so later with
my legs dangling out the bed having gone to sleep again during my attempt to
get up. I really won't risk driving feeling like that. Sometimes I have done,
it has been unavoidable and it is just one of the scariest things ever. I will avoid
that situation whenever I can. My plan is to switch much of the driving onto
Dennis once he has a licence.
With careful pacing I can rest for some days doing
near nothing then be able to drive a distance. I will always plan into that a
sleep the other end as a precaution. After making that effort I then get
stabbed in my back as I become incapable of anything for a couple days
afterwards.
If I go to a social event it is so difficult to
remain awake no matter how much I am enjoying it. Even going to the cinema I
have often slept through some really good films. I don't even realise it is
happening. My eyes hurt with the strain of keeping them open and then they are
closed and I sleep.
Right now is around 1am, I am mega tired. I got up
today at 11:30 I think it was and forced myself to stay awake. I forgot to have
lunch. I had a friend over and was just struggling so much not to let him see
how very tired I was ... I even got him to make drinks so I could at least shut
my eyes for a while.
Body temperature fluctuations ... I imagine many women going through or who
have been through the menopause understand how horrible it is. I assume it
is what I am experiencing except that there is no male equivalent to the
menopause. At 5°C I can still go out in shorts and t-shirt. That or I am
freezing with my jumper and coat on. At normal house temperature of around 20°C
I'm sweating, physically getting Prince Andrew soaked sweating (that might
be too topical for you). There is nothing consistent about this either. I am
sitting here, the room is 21°C and I'm sweating from the waist upward and my
legs and feet are feeling a chill whilst simultaneously feeling hot!
That's an overview of the M.E. so, call my a
Yuppie!
As if this was not bad enough I have Urticaria,
a skin condition. It means any pressure on my skin will likely become a hive
which is a raised and very itchy experience. Alternatively, whole areas of skin
become inflamed. I have learned not to touch it because it makes it worse. My
head, if I don't get my hair cut really short like I need to do now, has spots
all over it which makes me feel like I have fleas! (I don't). This is caused by
the pressure of my hair sitting on my head, how crazy is that?!
On top of this I have Allergic Rhinitis which
is a more internal respiratory problem. Symptoms can vary loads. I
may just randomly sneeze a few times, feel like I have a bad cold, struggle to
breath or have flu like symptoms or any combination. Thankfully it isn't
triggered by nature so flowers and pollen are fine; it is just about most other
chemicals with perfume being way near the top of the list. I went through loads
of tests and sure enough, the cough I have had (which also keeps me awake) for
over a year is rhinitis related, I am coughing because of, most likely, perfume
within the home. I am not going to tell the household to stop doing what makes
them happy, some consideration would be nice such as not in the same room but
everyone is entitled to their own way of living and if that means I have this
cough then that is how it is. Cheap paint fumes are way up there which is why
it looks like I am a lazy bastard who always leaves anyone else to do the
decorating. I want the change; I don't want the associated illness and have
been known to move out for the duration of the decorating.
Invisible illnesses like this are so easy to dismiss, so easy to
say, yeah, I feel like that sometimes and belittle the condition ... people say
"so, you just feel a bit tired then?"
They give well-meaning advice like getting plenty
of exercise not realising that moving about makes these things so much
worse. Doctors blame it on anxiety or depression because I
admit I feel those things. Even though I tell them that it is my health
problems causing the anxiety and depression they still smugly insist I am just
muddled because I am depressed! Honestly, if you had what I have, you'd
eventually have some really shit feeling down days too!
Why do even experts know so little?
Because there is so little
research done on it. Because of the Yuppie Flu label it has for years been
dismissed as laziness and excuses. There is no known
proven cause and certainly no cure as yet. It is just easier to treat symptoms.
Indeed, what else can be done? If doctors still believe it is 'all in the head'
(which in many ways, it is), they treat it like a mental illness and
recommend Cognitive Behavioural Therapy [CBT] (effectively
acknowledging with help how I am living my life all wrong) and graduated
exercise [GE] which, as I mentioned before, actually makes
it considerably worse, there are no remedial benefits for me in that albeit
there is a clear health benefit which seems totally pointless if I cannot get
out of bed for long enough!
Most counties in the UK do not
have a specialist in this at all. The closest one to me is around 50 miles away
and they specialise in CBT and GE! Even they are
apparently not updated enough to recognise that this is no longer recognised
nationally as an effective treatment so, what damn hope do we have?
Financial Support
It is very debilitating but ...
because it is so little understood and has so much associated prejudice it is
nigh on impossible in the UK to get disability benefits for
it. I am already on a hiding to nothing when I cannot supply any
corroborating evidence to support my claim other than my GP who still
insists on calling it CFS, at least one step up to Yuppie Flu. She says that is
all she is obliged to do, confirm my diagnosis.
I used to have a consultant for my
skin; he left the county and was not replaced. I get no treatment for my
rhinitis from a specialist; it was diagnosed when I was 20.
Did I mention, it also affects my
already crap hearing. It is like I cannot focus on what is being said. Everyone
else follows it but I am just baffled. I can hear it; I just cannot focus on
it. Imagine you can hear it is Bohemian Rhapsody but you can't make out
the words or even whether or not it is Queen or Panic at the Disco! Trust me, I
feel pretty stupid!
I know I have written about this
before but, I just think it helps to explain why I don't get out much these
days, why I am not apparently making an effort to visit some really amazing
friends that I have. It is because I really am not sure I am comfortable with
arriving, having a tea then asking to borrow a bed for a few hours with
everyone I know, just a tiny select few. It also hopefully explains why the
notion of paid employment it not a viable option. Interaction with people is
one of the most energy zapping things I can do and when I get to the end of
that 10% battery life I can and often do sound like an idiot. In many ways I
can see the funny side but ... it isn't funny, not really.
"There is no virus called Yuppie Flu. It is a name given usually to a disorder called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Conditions usually are called a "Syndrome" when the underlying cause of a cluster of symptoms seen similarly in multiple patients has not been identified yet. This is the case with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. If you don't know what is causing it, you don't know what would prevent it. So, there is currently no prevention."
Many don't much like the condition being called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome either because it implies that 'tiredness, albeit severe, is the only symptom and, it isn't.
Let me break that down for you because most can barely say it and even if they can, it just doesn't shout out what it is. It is the proper given name to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. It is broken down into:
Myalgic is used for muscle pain and/or tenderness. The word encephalomyelitis means inflammation of the central nervous system, which is made up of the brain and the nerves of the spinal cord.
I bet you are glad you had that explained to you so, let us begin.
Let me get one thing very clear here, it affects each person unique to them so it is not right or fair to make a grouping of type for the condition. The range will be somewhere between mild discomfort and feeling rather sleepy to severe and/or changing pain which can be anywhere and everywhere of the body and change daily if not hourly. That coupled with debilitating tiredness.
To my shame I can say that back in the 80's I was known to refer to Yuppie Flu as poor middle classed buggers looking for an excuse not to work.
Sleep is not helpful. By this I mean, it matters not whether or how much I sleep I never feel better. Let me clarify that. Let me use a metaphor...
That is a hopefully useful way to describe how I feel after sleeping. Every moment of every day I have a desperate need to sleep ... running on 10% battery. Occasionally, on some days, I might find my energy at 20% briefly and get all excited and think that this is a really good time to catch up on all those things my tiredness stops me doing except, like with the phone, that 20% is only going to remain for a short while even if you don't use it ... if you actually do use it you'll kill the battery in no time and when it's gone, it really has gone.
Financial Support
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