Or did I read you wrong and get the wrong idea from your carefully crafted post that I should not have read anything more into.
Unfortunately, you seem to have made a number of inferences which do not reflect my views. If that was my fault for expressing myself badly, I apologise.
If you want someone to start understanding YOUR disease experience, get your book published.
I hope that posting on this forum helps us all to understand each other’s experiences. As it happens, my book was published in 2003. Since then I’ve written a number of articles and letters about ME, including those published in The Times, Nature and The Lancet this year – all of which have been discussed on S4ME.
He is allowed his disease experience and he doesn't have to frame his disease experience exactly how you experience it.
I agree.
And you want everyone to call it ME but you don't want them saying anything that isn't severe ME.
Not true. I am not at all attached to the ME label (see:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/micha...hnthejack-on-twitter.3464/page-102#post-87766) and I would never seek to silence anybody, regardless of how their views or experiences may differ from mine. Similarly, I hope that your post was not intended to silence me.
MS patients all understand one another
I don't have enough knowledge to know if that's true or not, but I suspect things may have been very different when women with MS were being diagnosed with "female hysteria".
And I would not want to have to express your disease experience.
Nor should you have to, but I hope you would agreed that we all have a duty to be mindful of how our words and actions may impact upon others.
I think a lot of modestly and severely impacted patients are in denial that the mildly impacted exist and have a different disease experience yet he has the same disease.
I can't speak for anyone else, but please be assured that I am in no way sceptical or unsympathetic towards people who are mildly affected, and I apologise if my comment implied such feelings. This forum has greatly helped my appreciation and understanding of those who are affected in different ways to me, and I fully concur with those who have suggested that “mild” is a inappropriate and misleading description of the level of suffering and disability that many people endure.
However, that does not detract from the fact that it has been a frequent source of frustration and concern to me that so often people seem to misunderstand how I am based on what they have read or heard about or from others. Again, that is not to try to silence anyone or to invalidate anybody else’s experience. It is merely to acknowledge that people with the same diagnosis can be affected differently, and that it is important for us all to try to acknowledge and understand those differences.
And here you have a widely published writer that could be writing about ME/CFS and who got a whole lot exactly right and you have "issues" with how he expressed himself in a couple of lines.
In addition to the uncertainties I expressed in my post, there was much that I agreed with in Dr Kahn-Harris’s article. I would be surprised and concerned if he was upset or offended by anything I have written. There has been a small number of occasions when I have been quite deeply hurt by hostile comments I have read in response to things I have written (not on here) and I would hate to be guilty of any such insensitivity myself.
Btw,
@Robert 1973 not saying that you shut him down - I think you were very polite and open and I'm glad that you reached out as you did!
Thank you!
Noone was saying that this author should be silenced, or had no right to express his views.
Absolutely.
it is unhelpful to think of my illness as merely an extension of what a healthy person experiences, as though there were a continuum of experience. There is not.
On further reflection, I’m not sure that we know enough to know if this is true or not. It may be that there is a continuum, and that the point where the illness is defined is a point on that line (as with type 2 diabetes).
I question those who say there is no proof that there are people who refuse to accept that there are skeptics who don't believe in denialism.
I question those who question those who say there is no proof that there are people who refuse to accept that there are skeptics who don't believe in denialism, but I will defend to the death your right to question them!