A suitcase lies open in my hallway still. Anyone care to guess how long it will stay there? Mine is a week and a half, but who knows. Maybe Iβll get energized this afternoon and lug it to my closet, where Iβll continue wearing clothes out of it as though it were a portable dresser. Thatβs basically what it’s become. And hey, thatβs OK!
Returning home from travel has itβs perksβlike climbing into your own bed, returning to a dog a like Monty (who, if Iβm being honest, exhibited roughly 5 seconds of excitement and then acted as if Iβd never left at all). Walking into your own place of familiarity and taking a deep breath. Ah, so this is what my place smells like. Not bad! Even if youβre sad to have said goodbye to the people visited, a grand relief always seems to accompany coming home. Unexciting, mediocre, quiet, deer-less home. Whatβs tough about it is the game of catch-up youβre about to play.
As soon as I enter the front door, all the projects that have been mentally stacking up, making their way onto various to-do lists over the years seem to glow brightly, asking to be next. I feel a wave of inspiration- paint the sunroom! Organize my closet! FINISH PART 1 OF THE PETITION PROJECT. (More on that later) Paint the armoire! Return my 10,000 plastic bags to the grocery store. And these are just simple tasks, even if some are bigger, more time-consuming than others. I bought the paint for my armoire, Parisian Grey, two years ago. Itβs been perched on top of it as though it were real decoration. And none of these include the creative endeavors Iβve been dreaming of starting or working on or finishing the last few years. Theyβre just things, most of them. And yet they take years to do. Years! Again, ridiculous.
There is so much I feel I have to do. I have to finish. And ever since entering the world of advocacy, those tasks take an obvious precedence and a new urgency over the rest. But traveling means you not only βcheck outβ of your little world a while, it also means you donβt get to return to it just because youβre back living in it again. You have to recover first. I always feel a small sense of guilt when I travel, because I know it will be a hindrance to finishing the important things. I always fear a loss in momentum, so I go over my plans in my head like a song on loop before falling asleep. Until they melt and I canβt remember what Iβm even thinking about anymore. But Iβve written about plans beforeβtheyβre about as solid as jello. Anyway, the plans are a basic timeline of the things Iβll do when I get home, but that means about as much as saying βone day.β Still, you know how making a list makes you feel organized, even if you do nothing on the list? I guess itβs like that.
Because where do things lie, actually? For starters, my suitcase lies open with clothes spilling out like the innards of a science class frog. I couldnβt even be bothered to wheel the thing to my closet or bedroom. We arrived home just after midnight- Marc wheeled the suitcase to the hallway and thatβs where I laid it down, put on my pajamas, and immediately climbed into bed. From there I spent three days. Poor Monty, a boring few days for him I imagine.
I was out of juice. Is this a poor excuse for leaving a suitcase in the middle of the hallway? Sure, fine, an excuse. I donβt care what you call it, itβs simply the case that when youβre physically weak, in pain, running on empty, your priorities become very compressed. They almost become easier to sort and identify, because your options are reduced. A lot of people seem to be under the impression that more choices are a good thing. But when I stand in front of the toothpaste aisle and there are 40 different tubes to choose from, I sort of just wish there was one or two. If thereβs only two to choose from, or if one costs 5 bucks and Iβve only got $3, well then thereβs not a whole lot to think about. That kind of thing.
You know what else is on my list? Laundry. Nothing but a regular old chore that I, like my mom, happen to enjoy for some reason. (I also love ironing, if I can sitβ¦) However, the washer and dryer are at my parents house. That means walking the approximate 20 steps there and back and there and back holding a basket of heavy clothes. Darks, whites, delicates. Are you bored yet? Me too. Is laundry a hard task? Of course not! If you have the energy to do it. But when youβre playing catch-up, calculating every move as if it were dollar bills you had according to a daily stipend (or see the spoon theory) then there just isnβt enough money for tasks like this. At least in the beginning. And I was considering painting an armoire! Hah. Hah.
I realize that people with a shallow knowledge of MECFS might roll their eyes at this βpredicamentβ if either of us would even call it that. (I wouldnβt actually, Iβd call it the simple and unfortunate state of things) Yeah, laundry is a pain in the ass. So is unpacking. 20 steps to your parents? Get. Over. It. In fact sometimes I think these thoughts myself! But, they donβt really help, so I let them go. The point is, I can see why this thought pervades so many people’s minds, which is to say, I can see how much work still remains on our plate when it comes to this disease. The Post-Exertional-Malaise part of thisβthe hallmark symptom and also another name doing zero justiceβis also the part that no one sees.
I realize Iβve written about this before, and it’s not my intention to be redundant, but itβs not as if this is a publicly, well-understood or moot point. Itβs one of the biggest features of MECFS that people have the hardest time making sense out of. That includes people withΒ the condition!Β Both are understandable. Unless you live with someone who has this, you donβt truly witness the price attached to attempting to live in the real world a whileβwhich if youβre moderately functional, or can play that way at least a little while, youβre always going to try. The soul needs what the soul needs. But the body pays a price.
This doesnβt even mention that you could be one of the hundreds of thousands, or more likely millions of people who return from some normal life event and pay a price in the form of a crash; weak, heavy, dizzy, pain, brain-slow-as-sapβand they do live with people who see it. Does this mean they believe it? No, it does not. In possibly more cases than its’ opposite, the sick person is assumed a malingerer, lazy, aloof, or hysterical. (Ah, if only I had the energy to be hysterical. Wait Iβm hilarious, I take that back) I canβt imagine the crushing doubt from people I love, stacked on top of a crash Iβm earnestly trying to climb out of. And the fastest way to regain your strength is honest-to-goodness rest. And guess what laziness looks like? You see the problemo there. In this way, Iβve been extraordinarily lucky. It doesnβt mean people βout thereβ always smell what Iβm cooking, but how could I care? Iβm hardly out there. The people closest to me are helpful, supportive, encouraging and compassionate. You know, the things you crave when youβre sick. Imagine being eight months pregnant and no one believing you. On top of it theyβre suggesting lots of herbs and yoghurt or something. Wouldnβt that be weird? YES IT WOULD.
Anyway, Iβm writing about this not because I face it in my own family, but because Iβve become so aware of the staggering amount of people who do. The emails I get and the stories left on the petition page are crushing, heartbreaking and keep me up at night sometimes. Iβve got insomnia anyway so, what gives? This isnβt about me, itβs about doubt, and the incredible amount of damage it has done to people’s lives. Vulnerable people who need help and encouragement, where theyβre getting skepticism, judgment, and advice. This is why we have to get it right. And like 40 other reasons, but you feel me.
The nice part about the suitcase in my hallway is that I laundered the clothes before I came home, so they smell like Colorado! With a touch of Southwest Airline Zest. The advocacy has to come before the painting and the laundry and the bath I really would like to give Monty because heβs beginning to smell like a dog. I donβt have the energy for all of it at once, but I can do a little at a time. People have emailed to tell me the petition is a waste of time and wonβt do any good. They might be right, but even if they are, itβs a little too easy to shout from the sidelines, isnβt it? Also, is that maybe a waste of time? We can at least say, if youβre not trying, your chance of changing anything at all is zero. And I sincerely donβt believe that. Maybe this project wonβt work, but I donβt think it will hurt. So, Iβm going to keep trying. If it doesnβt work, Iβll try something else.

Unfortunately, it takes a very long time to scratch out all the personal information on over 300 prescription bottles. And since Iβm sending the 2500 pages to Mr. Collins in this box with these βpacking peanutsβ, the process is taking longer than I thought. At least I can scratch out info on a bottle even from bed. I promise Iβm working on it, and will deliver on what I said Iβd do, which is to attempt a genuine disruption. Emails are a little too easy to delete. Tweets are easy to ignore, if they’re read at all. It doesn’t mean we stop those things, but I’m trying to think outside the box. Hardy har. This, I’m hoping, will take a moment of consideration before itβs thrown in a dumpster or lit on fire. Either one. That’s the hope, and at least when you’re trying, there is some hope to hang onto.
There are so many of us in the M.E. world looking for something to grab onto, particularly through those dark times of despair. I’m hoping to add at least one hand that will reach back when they are searching for a way out. We’re going to get there, so hang on.
Health, Happiness, and Catching Up
P.S. The petition has been gaining signatures and is now over 48,000. My reliable calculator says we have only 1,643 before reaching 50,000. I say we make that happen! If you haven’t yet, please sign and/or share the petition. Every name, story, comment helps. Thank you, all of you.

Iβm lying in bed at 4:30 a.m., reading your story and crying, Mary. Thank you for making all of us feel less alone in this disease. I have been in bed for three days, in unbelievable pain, after vacuuming my 700 sq ft condo on Saturday. It feels so good to be living in a clean house…and sooo bad to be living in a broken body. Always choices, right? XoXo
*soft hugs to a fellow SEC football π girlfan, from π©βπ UGA #godawgs
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Terrie! I’m sorry to hear you’re crashed, to happy to know any of this has resonated with someone and you feel less alone. It’s hard to remember when in you’re in the grips of what this disease is capable of doing to us. That was written well, a little brain fog today, but thank you for reading and for sharing. It helps me too, knowing none of us are truly alone in this struggle, and that so many are proactively fighting for change. Up to us to hang in there in the meantime. If you can, I can. Also, TIGERS ALL THE WAY! Hah, football starting soon…something happy to look forward to. Rest rest rest…and thanks for reading.
-Mary (and Monty(
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