Fatigue
It's a funny thing. And a topic that I write about from
time to time. It's always there, following me around like a shadow.
There have been a few conversations in person recently
that have made me think about writing about fatigue again. Just because I
remember what I've written about in the past and the words and emotions used,
doesn't mean that others do.
This isn't going to be a whinge or a rant. More of a reflection
I suppose as I was talking about this at Bloodwise last week, and it’s been
quietly circulating in the back of my head since. So I’m doing what I do. I write about it and put it on the internet.
I'm not upset or angry (anymore) about comments made in passing. So much of it
is said without a thought of the impact. Because normally I don't react in the
moment how I want to. Because it wouldn't be nice for the person.
I was saying to someone recently, I can’t remember when,
a week or two ago, about how I have to have, ideally, 10-12 hours’ sleep and go
start going to bed around 9pm. Their reaction – ‘lucky you! I'd love to have
that much sleep.’ No. Not really.
It's hugely restricting on my life. I don't see friends because I have
to go to bed. I can either do work in
the day so I can pay bills or socialise. I am constantly walking a very fine line
between exhausted and able to get up and do what I need to do that day, and to
not be able to.
Because I look fine, people don't realise the impact
fatigue has on me. And the emotions I feel towards it because I only have it as
it's a side effect of the chemo that I take. It's why I'm so desperate to come
off treatment. If I was cancer and chemo
free, I would be fatigue free.
Fatigue is such a hard thing to explain. People try to
sympathise and say I know how you feel. No one does really. Unless they also
have it. The heaviness of your head and body. The scratchy eyes. The way you
feel like you've been punched in the face. Or at least. How I imagine it to be;
I've never actually been punched in the face. The way you have to mentally
psyche yourself up to stand up. Get out of bed. Do whatever you need to do.
Mentally coach yourself through the day. You can do this. You can do this. Just
one more hour. Just 5 more minutes. Nearly home time. One more email. One more
research paper. One more task to do. One
more cup of coffee. A little bit of chocolate. Another mug of coffee. This is,
more often than not, what's going through my head.
I try not to think too much about how I will actually
find the energy to do what I need to do. The moment I do that. It's too
overwhelming. It's too much. I can't do it. I hate my life. The life that has
been given to me. The loss of what I used to have. The fact that I'm so fucking
restricted every day.
And I cry.
And I cry.
And I smile when people ask me how I am and say. 'I'm ok
thank you'.
I'm not really. But no one would talk to me if I said how
I actually felt when they asked me.
ReplyDeleteThe Wind Tapped Like A Tired Man, - Poem by Emily Dickinson
The wind tapped like a tired man,
And like a host, 'Come in,'
I boldly answered; entered then
My residence within
A rapid, footless guest,
To offer whom a chair
Were as impossible as hand
A sofa to the air.
No bone had he to bind him,
His speech was like the push
Of numerous humming-birds at once
From a superior bush.
His countenance a billow,
His fingers, if he pass,
Let go a music, as of tunes
Blown tremulous in glass.
He visited, still flitting;
Then, like a timid man,
Again he tapped- 't was flurriedly-
And I became alone.
Emily Dickinson