Just after Christmas I nagged someone to contact his MP about a welfare issue—he hadn't done so because he assumed, as a Conservative, they'd be unsympathetic. They turned out to be really helpful, and got it sorted quite quickly. The cynic in me wondered whether they too were worried about...
Yes, it pretty much IS most of mine, since symptom levels are to a large extent determined by how much PEM hangover there is.
Symptoms never go away, but then again, nor does PEM. It's hard to decide whether to call it cause or effect, as simply being alive will result in PEM-triggering energy...
Interesting—though I guess that will include existing claimants whose circumstances change.
Which probably means more like 2030 in real life. At least one, and potentially two, governments away.
I know it sounds terrifying, but ... there WILL be spaces in the guidelines that allow ways around some of this stuff, and welfare advisors WILL find them.
I'm not saying it won't be shitty, and that some of the most vulnerable people will suffer. It goes without saying, and yes, it's...
Yes, I was trying to work part-time freelance, but had to stop to recover from relapses. If there was more than 13 weeks since your last claim, you had to make a new one. I was advised by the local council always to apply for both C-ESA and I-ESA, and when I made that final claim, DWP said I...
I got my mail saying they'd been successful yesterday too (sample sent October). I wondered if there's sometimes a lag between the samples actually being analysed and batches of email going out. Anyway, it's good to know I can now tick it off my stuff-that's-not-yet-resolved list!
I'm a bit unclear about this too. I'd been on C-ESA, but at the next claim was switched to income-related ESA. This was based on one tax year, the only year out of 38 when I didn't make full NI contributions through full-time work. It's still the basis of my award now.
(I'm not complaining, by...
I've often wondered whether this is connected to theories about endothelial issues and blood supply. If muscle fibres had been operating rather short on oxygen-rich blood and then the supply came back on line once they were at rest, it might feel like this. A sort of reperfusion injury, but in...
If our bodies are following an evolutionary pathway that triggers biochemical processes to steer behaviour, I suppose it makes sense that attempts to ignore the symptoms result in the response doubling down? Infectious disease can wipe out a large proportion of a population, so a strong drive to...
I like it when people follow up the slightly bonkers stuff, despite knowing their peers will probably think it's slightly bonkers. This is how hard problems sometimes get solved.
Of course, charities' names entering into common parlance will explain a lot, as well as the transition from occasional conversations about the young relatives who died from it, to the ongoing presence of a disease somewhere in most people's lives. I hadn't thought about that.
Apologies, I've...
Yes, I think so. If an adult was talking about it rather than just referring to it, they'd often call it sugar diabetes.
I'm not sure what drove the change, but I think the usage may be a generational thing. Those who called it sugar were my parents' age and above, so born in the 1920s/30s or...
I wonder whether, once something of the underlying pathology is known—and has gained enough scientific acceptance—many patients will be so concerned about it. Once the bogeyman's dead, attention and campaigning will be turned towards what can be done to improve lives and prevent illness.
It'll...
Could you not fit internal solid panel shutters, the modern version of Victorian shutters? If they're fastened to the plaster, they might not cut across the listing order, since they're easily removable and are no more visible from outside than a set of curtains. I'd love to have them in my main...
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