Peter T
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
29 years post onset
In the past remissions have been associated with attempts to return to what I perceived as normal activity levels, then during relapses being forced to disentangle myself from additional commitments I had taken on. Though it is not possible to be certain of the direction of causality, the biggest lesson I failed to learn early enough was to ensure my commitments were well within my energy limits and were such that they could be rapidly withdrawn from with any relapse.
- initial glandular fever (confirmed active EBV infection), symptoms continued unchanged, on to ME/CFS diagnosis some six months later (GP preferred term CFS because he regarded that as etiologically neutral, though different GPs, Consultants and Researchers have used variously ME, CFS and ME/CFS).
- oscillated between mild and moderate, for some three years, when I went half time at work
- over four years steadily improved till the point I believed myself recovered, took on holiday let business in addition to part time job
- 22 years ago got the Millennium Bug, bad dose of influenza over Millennium new year (virus not formally identified), major relapse and was largely bed bound for two years, forced to take ill health retirement in 2001 from part time job
- some improvement over several years moving back from severe to moderate
- oscillated between moderate and mild for some ten years, with relapses potentially exertion related, with a more marked relapse back to severe some twelve years ago, when forced to give up holiday let business
- oscillated between severe and moderate for several years gradually improving to mild, when I took on two properties requiring renovation.
- eight plus years ago gradually deteriorated to very severe over six months
- associated with increased personal support, now oscillate between severe and very severe, though increasing stabilising at severe, and am now able to spend several hours a day out of bed, if able to avoid over exertion
In the past remissions have been associated with attempts to return to what I perceived as normal activity levels, then during relapses being forced to disentangle myself from additional commitments I had taken on. Though it is not possible to be certain of the direction of causality, the biggest lesson I failed to learn early enough was to ensure my commitments were well within my energy limits and were such that they could be rapidly withdrawn from with any relapse.