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Too Positive?

lilwatchergirl | 12:21 UK time, Friday, 19 October 2007

I think I may have persuaded my friends to feel too positive about disability.

This week I am in a STROP. I'm not happy. I am frustrated and grumpy, I keep losing my temper, and all I want to do is hide under the duvet for a very long time. The Girl has been running around hiding all the breakables in the house, as I have a tendency to THROW THINGS WHILE SHOUTING OBSCENITIES when I'm feeling like this. The source of all this is impairment-related, but it's not pain, fatigue or poor mental health that's set off this anger management problem - it's a diagnosis. Or, more specifically, the implications of said diagnosis.

It turns out - after about two years of trying to find out exactly what's wrong with me - that's it's a genetic disorder that I had suspected (but was still hoping I didn't have). I've been trying to persuade the doctors to look for something like this since my condition went haywire a couple of years ago. And long before that, my mother was taking a very small lilwatchergirl to every GP and consultant she could find, in the hope that they could tell her what was wrong with me. Her conversations with them, from what I'm told, went a bit like this...

Mother: She's clever and talkative, but she doesn't walk or even crawl yet, at two years old.
Doctor 1: You are neurotic and over-anxious. Go away.

Some months later...
Mother: She still can't walk or put weight on her feet. Something is wrong.
Doctor 2: She has some joint problems. It's nothing serious.
Mother: It seems to be quite serious.
Doctor 2: You are neurotic and over-anxious. Go away.

Some years later...
Mother: She can't write or use her hands properly.
Doctor 3: She'll be fine.
Mother: Her teachers are worried.
Doctor 3: You are neurotic and over-anxious. Go away.

Which makes it quite interesting that, over the past couple of years (and in occasional incidents at other times before that), my own conversations with doctors have turned out something like this...

Me: I am in serious pain. I have terrible, mind-numbing, bone-crushing fatigue. My mobility is deteriorating. There are signs that my heart isn't working as well as it should. I live in a constant state of 'brain fog' where confusion and forgetfulness make me seem completely stupid, even though I'm really not. I don't sleep properly. I get migraines and dizziness and I pass out. My joints aren't working. And lots of other things are wrong.
Doctor: Don't you have a history of mental health problems?
Me: Yes.
Doctor: You are neurotic and over-anxious. Go away.

It was only by sheer power of persistence - I'm very good at being irritating - that a GP finally agreed to send me to someone who specialises in the disorder that I suspected, thanks to my medical history, that I might have. And so it turns out that neglect from all these doctors, starting from the age of two and going on for twenty-seven years after that, has led to the pain, fatigue and mobility problems I'm having now, and more. I'm not a neurotic hypochondriac - all the 'random little symptoms' that have bothered me for years are related to something bigger, not to mention the much bigger ones that have developed recently. And yes, it should be a relief to find that out, and to know that there are possible directions of treatment, even if the prognosis isn't all that great. But I'm not relieved. I'm pissed off. Mostly at doctors whose cheery assumptions have left me in much more of a pickle than if I'd had treatment as a child. But also at life. Which sometimes just sucks.

I know that disability is not a tragedy: that impairments don't have to ruin our lives, and (of course) that it's very good that I don't have something more serious. But sometimes even Social Model thinking and having a positive, determined, rights-focused outlook don't help you feel better about the years of pain, mobility problems and other complications that you've just found out you're going to live with from now on. Nothing has changed - I'm in exactly the same situation I was in this time last week, when I thought I had a condition that wasn't necessarily permanent. But that doesn't change the fact that I feel really rubbish.

So you can see why I'm finding it a bit tricky that I am now having the opposite problem to the ones I used to have when communicating life and health issues to members of my (small, but beautifully weird) social circle. My adorable, well-meaning friends are too accepting, too open-minded, too keen to tell me how wonderful this all is. I should be pleased to hear them saying that it's good that I know what I'm dealing with now. They're not going off at the deep end because I might be a wheelchair user for the rest of my life, they're not too upset by seeing me in pain, they're not afraid of the 'illness' concept, and I do appreciate all that. They, like me, have adjusted to the idea that disability isn't the worst thing in the world, which is a great improvement on the attitude of the friends (when I was much younger) who ran away screaming when they found out I had mental health problems. But still, I'm frustrated that no one can see my frustration. I need a week (or six) to have a strop, cry, worry about the future, get stressed out with the present, and be really irritated about the past. Even if that reaction is completely out-of-proportion, or just downright silly.

So there.

Comments

God, I know the anger and frustration. I've lost count of the times I've tried to get diagnosed with something, only to have the doctor brush it off. 95% of the time, I am right. The other 5% it's something else, but something similar. The worse thing is, in your case, tons of damage could have been prevented with an early diagnosis. Story of my life, too. Why are doctors so lazy and patronizing?

  • 2.
  • At 03:38 PM on 20 Oct 2007, Kira wrote:

I wish I had the energy to get angry at the doctors who just dimissed all my aches and never going away pains over the past ten years. I too have discovered I have a genetic condition that is responsible for all the little "not quite rights" that contribute to a much bigger mess. I too ended up doing the footwork of my own diagnosis.
Stupid thing is, they are doing the exact same thing to my brother, who's 8 years younger than me, and in the exact same knee pain I was in about 8 years ago. Will they listen, amazingly.....NO they won't!!!

{{{hugs}}} Thoughts and prayers are with you.

I think I was very lucky with my GP. I saw a tv program with someone featuring the same symptoms as me, as others have described, a batch of minor problems I thought were unrelated. So I marched off to see a doctor (I could still march then). I met a similar response, ("So you saw this on telly and now you think you have it? Well dear, it's my job to diagnose...") but I badgered him till I got a referral to a neurologist. Same story with the neurologist, but I badgered him to send me to a movement disorder specialist. Movement disorder specialist (after the inevitable six month wait!) agreed with my diagnosis. Unfortunately there is very little treatment, but that's another story.

So it was a relatively quick turnaround for me, but I doubt I would have got anywhere near that far had I:

a) not see that tv program and
b) been quite agressive with the GP.

  • 5.
  • At 09:45 AM on 25 Oct 2007, Dave wrote:

I wonder why it is that we need to know "what's wrong wth us" even when our social model understanding tells us that nothing is wrong with 'us' - it's society that wrong! It's all of those barriers and lack of access to practically everything that is 'wrong'. Even when we 'know' what is effecting us impairment/illness wise, we still seem to need to hear it from a Doctor or a Specialist. Pehaps this sort of labelling that we look for, this corrupt identity of ourselves is just another barrier that we need to challenge?

This post was double edged for me - on the one hand, it is probably my greatest fear come true, when it comes to my health: that there IS something that they could've done something about from the beginning, if only they'd paid more attention/I'd been pushier/they'd been smarter. I'm sorry to hear that that is the case with you. It's so frustrating.

On the other, I also needed this because I burst into tears yesterday, during an appt. with yet another specialist, who kept badgering me about why I wasn't walking... What do I mean I'm not walking? At all? Well, but I'm just a baby! I've got 70-80 years left on earth, and do I want to be in this chair all that time??? I've got to walk! The fact that I CAN'T walk did not seem to mean anything at all, and eventually, through my tears I just said,"Listen, this is not what I am here for... I need your help with this specific thing, and you have already admitted you don't know about my other illnesses, so why don't you just focus on that?"

I wanted to punch her in the face, but then felt so useless, afterwards, because I'd cried - I hate crying! But you're right... why shouldn't I have the right to be upset at the treatment I was getting? Bah for feeling guilty!

  • 7.
  • At 10:51 PM on 26 Oct 2007, Em wrote:

This is my first ever post on this site. Bit new to me this blogging business.
But reading all the posts here I felt I had to add the following.
I have had RSD for about 14 years now (2 periods of remission, not in last 5 years though).
Yesterday I met a consultant who said that 95% of doctors are ill informed and arrogant and basically don't understand the way chronic pain works and therefore can give no daignosis or advice on it - let alone understanding. Apparently all to do with them practising with acute condition model (slice, dice, prescribe, wam bam thank you mam approach) rather than chronic condition model. This is how they are taught. He further went on to say this is a politicial matter - that government timescales for seeing patients etc do not even allow for chronic condition model to be practised - so even if some doctors were interested in finding out more - the fear of not meeting gov. targets (and the penalties for not doing so) deter them further.
So basically - we suffer at the hands of a medical world that is not even for the most part taught how to treat chronic conditions - let alone diagnose and support people with them ....
good hey!

I did the same thing. I heard about EDS from other people...put the pieces together...and asked my GP for the referral. She hadn't even thought I could have EDS but she agreed to it because she knows I'm smart and that I know a lot about medicine with my mum as a nurse...and me and my disability activist life :) I was diagnosed with EDS in fifteen minutes by the geneticist. And the docs who thought I was just chasing something were shocked to hear I was right.

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