Great quotes from Ed Yong and those he interviewed.
"
PEM is the annihilation of possibility."
Brilliant, and you could the same about ME, especially severe ME.
Daria Oller, on being told she is depressed and unmotivated. She is part of a
support group of 1,500 endurance athletes with long COVID who are well used to running, swimming, and biking through pain and tiredness.
“Why would we all just stop?”
"Pacing is more challenging than it sounds," says Yong, quoting Julia Moore Vogel, “
It’s impossible not to overdo it, because life is life,”
Alexis Misko on the 'fight your illness' insults. “
It takes so much self-control and strength to do less, to be less, to shrink your life down to one or two small things from which you try to extract joy in order to survive.”
This paragra provides an interesting perspective on why fatigue is so readily dismissed as a symptom:
Historian Emily K. Abel in
An Intimate History of Fatigue,
many studies of everyday fatigue at the turn of the 20th century focused on the weariness of manual laborers, and were done to find ways to make those workers more productive. During this period, fatigue was recast from a physiological limit that employers must work around into a psychological failure that individuals must work against. “P
resent-day society stigmatizes those who don’t Push through; keep at it; show grit,” Dujardin said, and for the sin of subverting those norms, long-haulers “are not just disbelieved but treated openly with contempt.” F
atigue is “profoundly anti-capitalistic,” Jaime Seltzer... told me.