M.E. & FM
Manual --Main Page
Updated 97/02
9. Living With M.E. & FM
1)** Coping With M.E. & F.M.
This chapter discusses coping on a daily basis,
dealing with the problems that are a result of these
illnesses, and the frustrations of dealing with other
people. Some sections deal with life issues.
2)** References
a)** #940806-35
b)** Coping skills #93042- 2
3)** Diary for daily recording of
activities. The Daily Diary located at the back of
this manual can be photocopied and used for
whatever time frame you wish.
a)** In the columns at the top, beside
"TIME", enter each symptom: brain
function, mood, energy, sleepiness,
headache, drugs taken, stress, edginess,
nasal congestion, eye pain, muscle pain,
joint pain, sore throat, tender glands, etc.
b)** The rows below "TIME" can be
entered in any unit that displays the
information in the best possible way. Each
row could be equal to hours, days, weeks
or months. This is good for displaying to a
specialist you see once a year, exactly how
you have been doing. Record each time
frame when it occurs, don't try to put one
year of recordings down in one day.
c)** The score of each symptom is kept
under it's column across from the time it
was recorded. If a symptom is not
bothering you at all, you would rate it as
"Good" which is a "0"; if you are having
an extremely difficult time with a
symptom, it would get a "10". This allows
your doctor to see (by scanning the diary)
that the higher the number, the worse you
are doing.
d)** The blank rows to the right are to
record what you ate and any physical or
mental activity you performed during this
time. This may help discover the reason
for a flare up, like an allergy, that does not
show up until the next day.
e)** A personal medical record kit is free
from the Pharmaceutical Association of
Canada. Phone 1-800-363-0203.
4)** Children and M.E. or F.M.
Children of all ages have been diagnosed with
M.E. and F.M. There are many articles in the
"M.E. & F.M. Library Materials" on this subject.
#940901-4 #94007-1; #950401.
a)** The F.M. Network has a 60-page
booklet on young people with F.M.
available for $15.00 (95/06).
b)** Youth Campaign for CFIDS
Awareness (#940806-86 - CFIDS
Chronicle) is a project organized by and for
youth with M.E. The goal is to empower
youth through advocacy and education.
c)** Diagnosis of F.M. (#940502-3 - FM
Forum Newsletter) has a good article for
children and teenagers on dealing with a
diagnosis of F.M. The article also
includes a section on how to deal with
teachers, fellow students, and school.
d)** Children with M.E. tend to have more
abdominal and intestinal problems than
adults, as well as higher bursts of energy
levels corresponding with more severe tired
spells. (#93052 Video4 @ 2:59) (Dr.
Charles Lapp).
e)** For information on children with
M.E. call The CFIDS Association
(#1-900-896-2343). This service is
described on the last page of all CFIDS
Chronicle issues.
f)** Other than the above references, I
have read very little about treating the
illness differently in children than in adults.
5)** Support from the community .
a) Contact your local Chamber of
Commerce for a listing of all the
community groups in your area, eg
Kiwanis, Kinsmen, etc. These groups
provide a variety of support - electric
wheel-chairs, lifts, and housing.
b) Church or Club Gatherings. If you
belong to a church or a club, see whether
they may have financial help available for
you. Sometimes they will support you and
your family in other ways, such as mowing
lawns or bringing meals. You are a part of
the group, ask for support.
6)** Computers save your energy .
You can purchase older computers for under
$1,000 that are still very useful with the older
software to run them, and are quite easy to
understand (used computers can be found in the
Buy & Sell, or the classified section of the local
newspaper). This will help with regard to
composing letters and keeping yourself organized,
not to mention being of use to your children or
your spouse and friends. You can ask your
healthy spouse or friends to do work on that
computer. You might try to arrange to borrow
their services on their computer if you are not able
to get one for yourself. Most libraries now let you
have access to computers and printers for your
word-processing use, as well as Internet access.
7)** Clinics for Overall Dealing Of Your
Illness. There are a number of clinics devoted to
helping you deal with all the aspects of M.E. &
F.M. These clinics give you a realistic approach
to dealing with the illnesses, helping in such areas
as drugs, vitamins, family, coping skills,
psychological problems, etc.
a)** Arthritis Centre on West 10th,
Vancouver, B.C.;
b)** Lion's Gate Hospital, Vancouver,
B.C. (Fee of $185) (Phone #988- 3131)
#94018-2;
c)** Okanagan - Kelowna or Penticton;
d)** White Rock Peace Arch Hospital
(#531-5512); Mr. Trottman runs the clinic,
and deals with overall management of your
condition;
e)** Holy Family (Vancouver) #93038-2
f)** St. Paul's Hospital (Vancouver)
g)** GF Strong (Vancouver)
8)** Credit Rating . When people
suddenly have a serious illness, they can have
financial difficulties. As a result, sometimes your
credit rating will be damaged. The Credit Bureau
(1-800-565-5390) will mail you a copy of your
credit bureau report, the same information that is
given to any authorized business or bank. You
have the right to have things added or deleted from
your credit file (eg good things may not have been
recorded - a well-paying job of yours or your
spouse should be inserted now to ensure the best
possible information).
9)** Employment during your illness
and recovery. (#92056 Video3 @ 4:10)
a)** Illness in remission. If you are feeling
quite a bit better, do not say you are cured;
rather say your illness is in remission
(similar to cancer or M.S.)
b)** If you are starting to feel better,
remember that you have cut way back on
the activities you were normally doing
before you became ill. If you return to the
same lifestyle as before, you may find you
are unable to carry out your duties. This is
especially important for people who try to
go back to work too soon. {PO}{I feel that
anyone with this illness, even when they
feel partially "cured", should spend at least
a year doing various physical and mental
activities in preparation for returning to
work. You then avoid the common
occurrence of "I tried to go back to work,
but after 2 or 3 weeks, I just couldn't
handle it."}
c)** Going back to work. Plan your
strategy for deciding what job and what
amount of work you can do per week. You
have drastically reduced your lifestyle, as
well as the responsibilities of mental or
physical activities while you were ill; you
may be shocked to realize when you go
back to your former job that you are unable
to cope with the same responsibilities as
before.
d)** Know your rights with regards to
short and long-term disability benefits
(when you first get sick, or when you go
back to work), if you are unable to carry
out your responsibilities any more.
e)** It is better to go on short or long-term
disability benefits, then to continue pushing
yourself to go to work, ruin your health,
and get fired from your job because of
poor performance, and then left to feel like
a failure.
f)** After a diagnosis of M.E. or F.M. has
been made, inform your employer that you
have an illness, and that you require special
consideration in order to carry out your job
duties ("just like cancer"). This makes it
more difficult for an employer to terminate
your employment by stating that you were
a poor performer, rather than the illness
being the cause.
g)** Things that may be flexible are:
(1)** working hours - maybe go
part-time;
(2)** extended deadlines;
(3)** more frequent breaks;
(4)** doing work at home, or
having a connection with a
computer at home.
h)** Let your co-workers know what is
going on - hand out pamphlets, so that they
know this is a legitimate illness and they
become aware of how disabled you are.
i)** Don't quit your job because of your
illness. {PO}{From what I have
encountered in the support groups, NEVER
quit your job if you are too ill. Instead, go
on short or long-term disability, if you
have the option. Ask your employer to
change the preceding options if you are not
able to go on disability insurance. Keep
your pride and let them terminate you. If it
goes to a legal case, it looks much better
that you "wanted" to work but the
"uncaring" company fired you.}
j)** Starting Your Own Business. If you
are semi-recovered but may not be able to
go back to work fulltime, or you may have
an employer who will not give you the
flexibility you need, you do have options.
If you are on GAIN or UIC, they will
extend your benefits for one year to assist
you and get your own business (or home
business) started.
10) Family and Friends. You may have
difficulty dealing with family and friends,
convincing them that you have a disability.
Information in the "M.E. & F.M. Library
Materials" will help you deal with this problem.
a) Separate bed or bedrooms. Remember it
is hard on the spouse that doesn't have this
illness. It is even worse if they have to
cope with very little sleep themselves.
b) For those who do not believe in the
magnitude of this illness, have them call
M.E.B.C. and listen to the list of 37
support groups in B.C. They might then
realize how many others there are with this
illness.
c)** Relationships - how to help.
#941004-4 (Grade A).
d)** Fence sitters. You will notice three
types of friends:
(1)** The greatest friends to have,
(but the smallest group) are those
who believe you, support you, and
offer help.
(2)** Those who don't believe you,
and who verbally say they don't
believe you. This is probably the
2nd largest group.
(3)** The largest group are the
fence sitters. These people will say
"Yes, we believe you", but their
actions tell you that they may not.
These friends gradually drift away.
{PO}{I believe this category to be
the most dangerous. They are the
ones who you don't really know
what they think or will do. For
these types of people, I believe the
direct approach is the best. A direct
question to their face - "Do you
believe I have an illness, yes or
no?" If the answer is yes, then a
statement could follow: "This is
how I would expect to be treated by
you."}
e)** A good video to watch is the David
Suzuki video tape "The Nature of Things"
(#92002 Video1 @ 0:0). This program was
the most popular and requested show in the
25 year history of David Suzuki and "The
Nature of Things".
f)** You will have great difficulty
convincing some people with regard to the
seriousness of your illness; and you should
not make it your life's ambition. Do what
you can, then drop it. There is no point in
staying with friends or family if they
ridicule you - don't associate with them.
{PO} {"Sticks and stones may break my
bones but words can kill me". It's called
suicide. The rate is high for M.E. & F.M.
patients.}
g)** Be convincing. If you have a
diagnosis of M.E. or F.M., and have been
thoroughly tested for other illnesses, take
the diagnosis seriously. Be convincing
when telling others what's wrong with you
- don't sit on the fence - others will only
magnify your disbelief.
h)** Family members can help. Try to get
your family members to help out in various
ways - your children can wash the dishes or
cut the lawn. {PO}{If your children were
living on a farm, everyone would say it is
great character building if they have chores
to do; I think the same goes if you live on a
farm or in the city}.
i)** There are summer camps available at
low fees provided by Community Services,
church groups, and sports organizations (eg
Soccer schools); these will allow your
children to have a fun time and give you
relief during the summer season.
11)** Meal preparation. Many people
find they spend more time thinking about meal
preparations, than on the actual preparations.
a)** Make a list of all meals that you can
think of, and divide them into categories -
eg hamburger, roasts, BBQ, quick, and
long-time preparation.
b)** Using this list, plan a 2-week menu,
making it flexible for when your spouse or
children can help out.
c)** Organize a 2-week grocery list so that
you can avoid wasting energy by having to
go shopping so often.
d)** Make large quantities of bigger meals
and then freeze them (uncooked, like
lasagna) to be used at a later time. A good
example is spaghetti sauce - it freezes well
and you can use it for spaghetti/lasagna/
pasta/chili.
e)Kids can help while you supervise, sitting
in a chair.
f)Make use of tinned, frozen, and ready-to-
eat meals. These can be nutritious, cheap
and save you energy.
12) Plan, pace and prioritize yourself
a) Keep a three-ring binder for organizing
what must be done, with sections such as
"Doctors - Questions, Information, Drugs
Taken; U.I.C.; Insurance; Canada Pension"
b)** Pharmacies have plastic dispensers
that hold your daily pill requirement in
separate compartments for a week's period
of time. You can put all your pills out for
an entire week and see at a glance whether
you have taken them correctly.
c)** When dealing with people (eg UIC,
doctors, CPP) write in your three-ring
binder the person's name, phone number,
summarize what has happened, so that
(because of your bad memory) you will not
forget when you are asked about it later. A
special point is drugs - people tend to have
taken various drugs but do not remember
what effects these had, or the strengths of
the drugs taken. You can get a
computerized list of all the drugs you have
been prescribed over the previous two
years from your pharmacist, which may
help your doctor in treatment.
d)** Invest in a Daily Planner
(computerized would be great).
e)** Organize what has to be done during
the day, week, month, or year. Try to
avoid wasting energy. If you have a
computer, keep a running list of jobs that
need to be done (around the house, etc).
Put a priority number beside them and then
sort that list. This way you don't have to
keep rewriting it, you know what priorities
should be next and you don't have to
remember them.
f)** Pace yourself. Divide up work time
and rest time into intervals, e.g. do l0
minutes of work and 50 minutes of laying
down, or l0 minutes of work and 2 hours
of laying down. Avoid doing too much all
at once, since then you get exhausted and
don't get anything accomplished. Avoid
rushing to do many things if you do get a
spurt of energy, because you will only pay
for it later. Many M.E. & F.M. patients
say they will take a rest, or stop what they
are doing, at the first sign of tiredness.
However, they usually find that their limit
was in reality much earlier than what they
thought, and they suffer because they over-
extended themselves.
(1)** Plan ways to conserve your
energy. Scooters can be rented to
go to the PNE; most malls now
have them available for shopping
convenience; a walking cane might
also improve your balance.
(2)** Cruise Control. Most M.E.
patients have difficulty driving.
One way to cut down the stress of
driving is to have a cruise control
installed ($145 installed at Canadian
Tire or Sears).
g)** Magic Cure. Don't spend a life-time
searching for the magic cure or cause.
Instead, try to find some help for your
symptoms; get on with living your life, as
it now has changed.
(1)** Avoid going overboard by
thinking the carpets, or milk, or
yeast, or allergies is the entire cause
of your problems, or that mega-
doses of something will cure you.
Almost all of the cases I have seen
of people trying this, they end up
frustrating themselves or spending a
lot of money to look for a cure that
doesn't exist.
h)** Invest in a reclining chair; you can try
to claim it on your income tax return as a
medical expense (necessity). You can also
try to deduct the fees for a fitness club.
"Fitness program, recommended by a
doctor". This has been done successfully.
i)** If you have problems with reading,
you can get books on cassette tape
(including the Bible) from the library,
watch T.V. with a remote controller and a
VCR - that way you can tape the evening
shows that you like, and watch during the
day when viewing selection might be
poorer.
j)** Reduce and plan your workload. Look
for items that you can be creative with (eg
instead of doing the dishes after every
meal, pile the dirty dishes in a basket
below the sink, then when your kids get
back from school, have them to do the
day's dishes at that time).
k)** Yellow pages. If you are purchasing a
particular item, but don't know which store
carries it, don't wear yourself out by
walking around to the various stores. Use
your phone to find out prices, availability,
and whether or not the items can be
delivered to your home. Your pharmacy
can also prepare a refill to your
prescription ahead of time with a phone
call, so that you don't have to wait around
for the 20 minutes for them to fill it.
l)** Consumer Reports Magazine reviews
many major consumer purchases. The
magazine is usually available in the library.
They have an annual guidebook that
summarizes the previous year's research,
classifying what to look for and what each
individual product's strengths and
weaknesses are (eg air cleaners, water
filters, air conditioners, cars, tires, etc.)
You might try to look through this before
you walk around in various stores. The
magazine also has a full-page listing of
1-800 numbers for brand-name companies.
13)** Phone Equipment. You can buy a
good-quality speaker phone for under $50 at
London Drugs, or headsets and microphone so that
you don't have to hold onto a heavy handset when
you speak on the phone.
14)** Pregnancy. #93006-12
a)Before getting pregnant, wait till the
symptoms subside to at least a tolerable
level. Dealing with a newborn is stressful
enough for mother and baby.
15)** The Resource Phone Line for
B.C. Handicapped is #1-800-742-1820 - they
may give you further ideas.
16)** School. Many grade schools,
colleges & universities have special programs for
students with disabilities. UBC has a package of
specific programs for disabled people.
a)** There may be a discounted rate for
tuition fees.
b)** You can have special things done for
you, such as tape recording of notes,
changing times for an exam, recording of
classes that you were not able to attend,
etc. Ask the school what they will do for
you as a disabled person. You are disabled
- get the proper education as a disabled
person.
c)** You might be assigned a person for
note taking during class.
d)** Especially for grade school, you (or
your child) can get a special time set aside
to write exams by yourself (themselves),
which might be less stressful.
e)** They may allow you the use of a
computer.
17)** Suicide . No one dies from AIDS,
they die from complications from AIDS
(pneumonia, etc.) When they die, we say they
passed away because of AIDS. Some of the
symptoms of M.E. are confusion, physical and
mental depression, and extreme fatigue. These
symptoms make living with the illness very
difficult. A study that was done showed there is a
six-times higher rate of suicide for M.E. than the
general population. {PO}{I feel the figures are
similar in "F.M. only" patients, although I have
not read any studies to show this} There are many
people that have passed away from complications
of M.E. or F.M. It was found that the majority
of patients who did commit suicide, did so because
of the heavy doses of anti-depressants and
tranquillizers taken at the same time. Avoid this
combination.
a)**Living Through Loss Society, through
the United Way Agency, helps counselling
for individuals and groups, has referral
services and a reference library, will
provide speakers and design workshops.
Phone #873-5013.
b)** If you feel suicidal, please contact one
of the Crisis Centres at:
Delta - #273-8701
Langley - #530-5385
Lower Mainland - #437-3445
Port Coquitlam - #931-5996
Surrey - #588-0188
Vancouver - #733-4111/ #879-9251
North Shore Counselling #926-9495
18)** Things To Do.
a)** Bird Feeder. Feed can be purchased
at a bulk store; different feed attracts
different birds.
b)** Helping out your local support group
or M.E.B.C.
c)** Light gardening.
d)** Light reading.
e)** Books on cassettes.
f)** Check your local cablevision "Public
Service Announcements", or the local
newspaper "Public Service Announcement"
section for ads on things to do, or attend,
or for assistance (eg the Crisis Line, or a
special speaker put on by another
organization).
19)** Vacation Plans. Trip cancellation
insurance and extra medical insurance is available
when travelling out of B.C. or Canada. Take a
doctor's letter with you to the airport, to prove
that you have a disability and that you are eligible
for a disability discount.
a)** Most airports provide extensive help
for disabled people; instead of walking
(literally) miles to or from your departure
gate, most airports will, when given notice,
pick you and your spouse up at the front
gate, load your luggage, drive you in a cart
to your gate, unload your luggage, give
you premium first loading onto the plane,
allow you to unload last, and provide you
the same service out of the airport. This
makes a trip much more enjoyable, since
you will not suffer because you walked too
much, and lose 2-4 days of your holiday
recuperating.
20)** Finances-how to get through
the tough times: You can always ask, but
take a positive approach; people are generally kind
and compassionate. Look through the "Disability
Benefits" chapter and apply for ones that you are
eligible for.
a)** Delaying pay-back:
(1)** Mortgage - ask the bank if
you can postpone a payment, spread
the missed one over several months,
or add the missed onto the end of
your mortgage;
(2)** Payments - car, furniture - ask
for a postponement;
(3)** Rent - ask if it can be
delayed;
(4)** Take a cash advance or put
purchases on your charge card,
rather than use up your cash. This
allows you a month and a half to
save up the money, before the
payment is due. The credit limit
can be raised by $500 every 6
months, with a call to the 1-800
number for the card. Simply state
you want a higher limit; if you go
through the local branch they will
ask you to fill out an application.
(5)** 2nd mortgage;
(6)** Pawn shop;
(7)** ICBC now allows payment of
your car insurance through monthly
installments, so you can eliminate a
big payment. They also have a
payment plan (95/08). You could
cancel your prepaid insurance, get a
refund, then go on payments. A
more cost-effective alternative is to
take your yearly insurance cost,
divide by twelve months, then have
your bank automatically transfer
this amount into an interest-bearing
savings account each pay period. At
the end of the year, you have your
insurance cost paid without severe
financial hardship. People have
trouble saving - this method works
without you remembering or feeling
the loss of these funds.
b)** Ways to get help that won't leave you
in a financial bind later, and may not have
to be paid back.
(1)**Church or societies may help
you out;
(2)** Cut costs - eg cancel movie
channel;
(3)** Cancel insurance on your
second car. ICBC will send a
refund in about one month.
(4)** Some agencies make a
distinction between separation or
divorce. They group married and
separated family incomes together
as one, and divorced incomes
separately. I believe they think that
as a separated couple, there is the
possibility you may reconcile.
{PO}{Be cautious in the grey areas.
This may mean it would be
financially beneficial to quickly get
the divorce, then think about
reconciliation. This is just how
screwy the government works
sometimes.}
(5)** Income tax RRSP money
back. {PO}{On February 28, take a
cash advance on your charge card,
and buy your limit for an RRSP.
On June 2nd, cash the RRSP in,
withdraw the money in sections of
$2,000 every week; the bank will
withhold 10% for taxes. You pay
back the cash advance, fill in your
previous year's income tax return
claiming your RRSP contribution.
When you get your Income Tax
cheque, you will receive (net) 20%
- 40% of your RRSP limit in cash
and you never pay that back. Next
year, you do exactly the same thing.
Your new RRSP cancels the
previous one. It works - and it is
legal. Starting the 1995 taxation
year you must leave the RRSP in
for at least three months, and the
banks have been asked if they see
large withdrawals within the year,
to withhold 20%, so make smaller
ones. Before you use this option,
check to see if there is a service
charge for any RRSP withdrawals.}
c)** Tighten your Belt Now. Don't rely
on your disability insurance for continuing
more that 2 - 3 years. You insurance will
probably only pay you 60% - 70% of your
regular salary. Most people (90%) lose
their benefits after 3 years. {PO}{Don't
rely for CPP benefits to continue - I feel
that the way the government is working,
M.E. and F.M. patients will be one of the
first to be "shuffled off" to save money.}
d)** To Avoid the tough times.
(1)** Start planning now. Have
your bank automatically transfer
$25 per pay cheque into a savings
account. You will not notice that
the money is gone, and you will not
have to remember to transfer the
money yourself.
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End of Chapter
M.E. & FM Manual --Main
Page
Updated 97/02