With long-term
illnesses like CFS and fibromyalgia, you have a different role as a
patient than you have with acute illnesses. With short-term illnesses,
you often can rely on a doctor to provide a solution or the illness
resolves itself. But CFS and fibromyalgia are different. There is no
medical cure for either one. Conditions that can’t be cured need to
be managed.
A manager is someone who is responsible
for making decisions. You are the expert on your condition. You know
your situation better than anyone else, and you may know more about
CFS or fibromyalgia than your doctor. Whether or not you want the
role, you are the day-to-day manager of your condition and your
decisions will have a big effect on your quality of life.
One part of managing long-term illness
is treating symptoms. Doctors can be helpful, but, with long-term
conditions, patients can do things for themselves to limit the effects
of symptoms. You’ll read a lot about how to do that in Part 3. The
patient role in long-term illness is also greater because, as
described in Chapter 1, long-term illnesses like CFS and fibromyalgia
are more than medical conditions. Your illness affects many parts of
your life, so managing it requires attention to issues like stress,
emotions, relationships and money. (See Chapters 13 to 16.)
As a self-manager, you have a number of
tasks. One responsibility is to gather information, to learn as much
as you can about your condition and treatment options for it, so that
you can make informed, intelligent decisions. You also face the
challenge of learning new skills. Third, you need help from
appropriate professionals. Since the relationships you develop with
doctors and other health care providers are crucial, it is important
to find people you trust and feel comfortable working with, and for
you to take an active role in your care.
This chapter discusses two of these
tasks: educating yourself about your illness and developing
problem-solving skills. The next chapter is devoted to building
relationships with doctors and other health care providers. Chapters 6
and 7 give practical suggestions for two other skills. Chapter 6 gives
step-by-step instructions for achieving short-term goals. Chapter 7
explains how you can use written records to improve your health.
Education
Learning
about CFS and fibromyalgia can include discussions with your doctor,
visits to libraries and bookstores, and searching the Internet. This
section discusses three additional sources of information.
Organizations
Patient
organizations such as the CFIDS
Association of America for
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and the Arthritis Foundation for
fibromyalgia are helpful resources. They offer information about CFS
and fibromyalgia. In addition, they can hook you up with local support
groups and may help you find a doctor.
The CFIDS Association is a national organization with a website
(www.cfids.org) and a quarterly magazine for patients. The
organization maintains a list of local support groups. The
Arthritis Foundation is also a national organization and sponsors
local chapters in many places in the United
States.
The national organization has an extensive website (www.arthritis.org),
offers Arthritis Today magazine and publishes many books and
pamphlets. Through the local chapters, it sponsors support groups,
classes and water exercise programs in many communities. Its classes
include the Arthritis Self-Help course, which has material on
fibromyalgia. Other
sources of information about fibromyalgia include the Fibromyalgia
Network (www.fmnetnews.com), the National Fibromyalgia Association (www.fmaware.org) and the Oregon Fibromyalgia Foundation (www.myalgia.com).
Support
Groups
Support
groups can
be a good source of information as well. They may point you to doctors
who treat CFS and fibromyalgia. Also, groups can offer models of
successful coping with illness. People who are living well with your
condition can both teach you practical strategies and offer
inspiration. Today, such support is not limited to in-person meetings.
Similar experiences are available on the Internet, through online chat
rooms and message boards.
Support groups are a mixed bag and not all are helpful. Some
are negative in tone or may be dominated by one or two people. Look
for a group that gives you a sense of belonging, encourages balanced
participation from many group members, offers you something positive
to take home, and provides models of living successfully with illness.
(For more, see the discussion on support groups and classes in Chapter
15.)
You:
Self-Observation
You
are a source of information about your illness, perhaps the most
important one. You live with your condition on a day-to-day basis and
know it intimately. Through self-observation you can learn a lot about
your body’s needs, what helps you and what makes things worse. You
have probably identified already a number of things that intensify
your symptoms. Factors often mentioned in
our groups include doing too much, poor sleep, travel, financial
problems, stressful relationships, worries about the future, food or
chemical allergies, light or sound (sensory overload), too much time
with other people, and family or other responsibilities.
You probably also have ideas of what
helps you feel better and gives you some control over your illness.
When we ask people in our groups what helps them and gives them a
sense of control, they often respond with answers like the following:
Accepting
my limits, pacing myself
Taking
regular rests each day
Getting
support from other patients
Using
medications to control symptoms
Changing
my diet
Asking
others for help
Avoiding
people and situations that trigger symptoms
Turning
inward, spirituality
Laughter
and other pleasurable activities
Practicing
relaxation and stress reduction
You can increase your sense of control by trying experiments
and noting the results. Whether you keep records as described in
Chapter 7 or have a less formal system of self-observation,
discovering links between what you do and your symptoms gives a sense
of control.
We have seen some dramatic examples in
class. For example, one person with a severe case of CFS experimented
with the length and frequency of her rests. Instead of taking two long
rests a day, which had been her practice before taking the class, she
tried taking short rests every few hours. Using this different rest
schedule, she cut her total rest time
in half, from six hours to three, without increasing her symptoms. By
making this simple change, she added several productive hours to her
day. Other people have increased the amount of work they do by
determining when during the day they are at their best. They may get
twice as much done if they schedule their most demanding tasks for
their good time of day.
Experimentation is the key, trying
something different to see whether it helps. We call it being your own
CFS or fibromyalgia scientist, a process in which you are both a
researcher and your own research subject. Given the tremendous
variation in symptoms and severity among CFS and fibromyalgia
patients, developing an individualized approach to your illness, one
based on your unique circumstances, offers the best chance for
improvement.
Problem
Solving
Because
your illness and other parts of your life are constantly changing, you
are faced with the necessity to adapt. For example, the medications
you take for pain may become less effective or your symptoms may
worsen and you wonder whether you should quit work and go on
disability. Taking a problem-solving approach can help you respond to
your ever-changing situation. This section describes problem solving
as
a three-step process.
1) Select a Problem
The
starting point is to identify a problem that is important to you and
that you feel ready or compelled to work on now. It will usually be
something that interferes with your life, makes your life much more
difficult or prevents you from doing something that is important to
you. Here are three examples.
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For years
before becoming ill, you hosted your family’s holiday celebration.
You decorated your house and cooked all the meals. Even though you are
now ill and too much activity triggers a flare up of your symptoms,
you feel pressured to entertain your family in the same way as before.
You would like to find a way to celebrate the holidays that doesn’t
trigger a relapse.
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Doing your
weekly laundry and housecleaning tires
you out so much that you need extra rest for two days afterwards. You
feel compelled to do chores because you hate a messy house and not
having clean clothes, but you realize you can’t do your chores as
you used to, given your limited energy.
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You have gone
back to school part time, but find it difficult to study because of
cognitive problems (often called “brain fog” or “fibro fog”).
You want to do well, but find you can’t read for more than a half
hour at a time. You are worried you won’t be able to complete your
assignments on time.
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In each of these situations, you feel caught between two
unattractive solutions: trying to do things as before, but with a high
level of symptoms, or giving up something that you value. Having such
a conflict may provide the motivation to see your situation in new
ways and to look for alternatives.
2) Explore Causes and Possible
Remedies
The
second step is to think about what factors may lie behind the problem,
and then to brainstorm how you could handle the situation differently
in the future. Often, problems have multiple causes, so a combination
of solutions may be appropriate. The idea at this stage is to view
your situation in fresh ways by considering as many possibilities as
you can imagine. Here’s one way the second step might unfold in our
three examples.
Holiday Celebration:
Family customs and
expectations are in conflict with your current limits. You need help
or perhaps will have to give your former role to others. Practical
solutions to your holiday dilemma include: hosting the celebration,
but having others bring the food; hosting, but not cooking; rotating
the celebration among other relatives; and going to a restaurant for
your holiday meal.
Each solution requires that you and your
family examine and modify how the work of holiday celebrations is
handled. A solution to your holiday dilemma will probably involve
family conversations in which you will need to be assertive about your
limits and your need for help. Also, the holiday situation is symbolic
of the fact that you have changed. Both you and those around you need
to adjust.
Just as you have to take on a new
identity, other family members have to adapt as well. Both your role
in the family and their roles change. You may regret losing some
former responsibilities, and other family members may resent having
new ones. There are psychological adjustments as well. Giving up your
role as host for the holidays is just one part of a broader experience
of loss of roles that provided identity and meaning. (See Chapter 16
on coming to terms with loss.)
Household
Chores:
You
are not able to do your household chores in the way you are used to
doing them. One possible solution is to spread the chores out over
several days rather than doing everything in one day. Or, you might
still do all your chores in one day, but in small chunks, taking rest
breaks periodically. Both of these solutions are examples of pacing,
which is discussed in Chapter 10.
Another possible solution is to clean
less frequently. (One person wrote she now views dust as something
that “protects my furniture.”) As with some of the solutions for
holiday celebrations, this involves changing your ideas of what is
appropriate. Two other solutions involve getting help from others. You
might ask family members to share in the work. For example, children
could clean their own rooms and do their own laundry. Or, you could
hire a cleaning service.
A final possibility is to move to a
smaller home. If you saw housecleaning as one example of how household
responsibilities in general had become too great, you might consider
simplifying your life by moving to a home that is easier to maintain.
People in our groups have used all of these strategies.
School:
Your hopes for school
are in conflict with your present abilities. One solution would be to
reduce your class load. If you are taking two courses, try one.
Another solution is to experiment with the time of day at which you
study. A person in one of our groups did that and found that she could
study longer and retain information better if she read in the
afternoon, the time of day she is mentally sharpest.
A third solution is to ask school
authorities for accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities
Act.
Several people in our groups have been successful with that strategy.
The arrangements they worked out included being allowed more time to
complete exams and more time than normal to complete a degree program.
(School-aged patients can receive additional help through Special
Education.)
Other remedies might include taking rest
breaks while studying and practicing stress reduction. Rests allow you
to recharge your batteries and can be a helpful way to get more done
than you might in a single session. Stress reduction might be helpful
if you are putting too much pressure on yourself. (For a discussion of
rest, see the Chapter 10. For relaxation techniques, see the
Chapter 13.)
3) Experiment with Solutions
The
third step is to try various solutions and evaluate the results.
Probably some potential remedies won’t work, but perhaps others will
prove helpful. Your final solution may be a combination of several
approaches. I suggest you look at your efforts as a series of
experiments. With that view, you can more easily accept
disappointments and move on to another attempt.
Here’s one way the third step could
turn out in our three examples.
Holiday
Celebration:
You talk to your husband and children about a new division of labor
for the holidays. You agree to have a less ambitious set of events
this year. Your extended family, however, is unsympathetic. They have
never believed you are really sick. You and your husband accept
hosting the family celebration for at least one more year. He and your
children agree to share cooking responsibilities. You conclude that it
may take several years to settle into a new holiday routine that all
family members will accept. You also decide that some members of your
extended family may never accept your limits. You join a support group
and find it helpful to talk to fellow patients about accepting the
loss of your old role in the family.
Household
Chores:
After talking with friends from a support group, you decide to try a
combination of strategies. You ask your children to clean their own
rooms and wash their own laundry. Also, you decide you will reduce the
amount of housecleaning you do, cleaning less thoroughly and having
your house cleaned twice a year by professionals. At the suggestion of
another patient, you decide to keep a journal to explore your thoughts
and feelings about the loss of your ability to “keep up.”
School:
You experiment with the time of day during which you study, but
don’t find any differences except that studying after
8
pm
doesn’t work for you. You try taking a ten-minute rest break
whenever your brain fog increases and find it helps your
concentration. You ask your teacher to give you more time to take a
test, but he refuses, saying he thinks that would be unfair to other
students. Rather than fighting him, you decide to do what you can in
the allotted time, but plan to visit the Student Services office to
ask about what accommodations your school offers under the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
Summary
There
are a number of principles to keep in mind while using problem
solving.
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Explore a
variety of potential solutions.
There are often several ways a problem can be solved. Looking at your
situation from a number of perspectives can help you recognize
different approaches. Some problems are solved by a combination of
strategies. Some approaches may not be successful.
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Ask what
resources are available.
In many cases, you will be able to solve your problems yourself by
brainstorming possible solutions and trying one or more of them. But,
you may sometimes want to get help, either in trying to understand
your problem or in solving it. As we saw in the first example, family
members might help with holiday celebrations. Family members might
also help with household chores; hiring help might also work. For the
educational dilemma, using legally mandated accommodations might be
useful.
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Practice
assertiveness.
Your illness will require changes in your role and in those of other
members of your family. Tasks like grocery shopping and hosting the
family holiday celebration may need to be renegotiated. You have to
adjust to the loss of roles, while others often must take on new
responsibilities.
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Make mental
and emotional adjustments.
Having a serious illness requires that you adopt new expectations for
yourself based on having new, more restrictive limits. You will
probably have to reduce your activity level and also make
psychological adjustments, accepting that the person you were before
your illness has been replaced with a new, more limited person. |
Because of the nature of CFS and fibromyalgia, it helps to have
a flexible approach to managing your illness. There is no standard
treatment for either illness, no commonly prescribed remedy. Also,
treatments that help for a time may later become ineffective. Finally,
each person’s life situation is unique and ever changing. For all
these reasons, managing CFS and fibromyalgia is individualized and
constantly evolving in response to circumstances. Problem solving
offers a flexible and practical approach to managing chronic illness.
Problem solving is one of several skills you may find helpful
in dealing with your illness. I’ll explain others in upcoming
chapters. As you develop problem solving and other skills, you can
gradually incorporate them into your daily life. This process takes
time and can be frustrating. Early attempts to try a new skill may be
clumsy, with few good results. It may be tempting to stick with old
ways. At those times, I hope you’ll remember that the likelihood
that you will improve your quality of life depends heavily on your
accepting responsibility for those things under your control and
developing habits that promote a better quality of life.