The Fibro Fairytale
Scene 1: I'll be going to a meeting where it's a good idea
to look reasonably professional. I'm wearing my fancy new camisole under a sweater,
looking as if I’ve actually planned what to wear (I work from home – looking put
together is rare). I say goodbye to my attendant and start my breakfast
routine. After about 5 minutes, I notice that the right shoulder strap is
putting pressure on the edge of my shoulder blade. I fidget in my wheelchair,
trying to find a slightly different position, but there's no real alternative
to back resting against backrest. After 10 minutes my right shoulder is
screaming in pain.
Scene 2: I just said goodbye to my attendant after a trip to
the washroom and go back to my computer. It takes a little while to realize
that something is wrong, but when I do, I dread what's coming. The left leg
opening of my underpants is positioned slightly wonkily so the bone in my arse
is resting right on the edge of the material. Within 10 minutes or so my entire
left side is on fire.
Scene 3: lest you think it's all about the undergarments… There
was something wrong with my foot rest. The doohickey that kept it elevated was
slipping, just a millimeter or two. It took three days before I figured out why
I'd gone from being perfectly fine to the pain in my entire body blaring so
loud I couldn't think.
Fibromyalgia makes you hypersensitive. Sensitive to
pressure, to change, to medication. To pretty much anything. You put pressure
in the wrong area or on the wrong day and before you know it, you're in a flare.
All your pain receptors are wide open, telling you that it isn't pressure after
all, it's pain and screaming pain at that. It's not just the never-ending quest
for underwear without seams (these are wonderful), bras that don't aggravate the trigger points or realizing you'll never again wear jeans because they are
simply too tight, the pressure sending your body into hysterics. It is also
sensitivity to temperature – for some heat, for some cold. This prompts endless
games of musical chairs at restaurants. The goal of the game is to avoid the AC
vent, because if you sit underneath it with cold air hitting your shoulders,
it'll trigger a flare that won't subside for days. It’s sensitivity to
medication, having a quarter of a normal dose suffice, something that’s
impossible for most doctors to comprehend. I’ve taken to nodding in a friendly manner at their
instructions and cutting everything in half (or quarters) at home. Often, it's enough.
I love many of the fairytales written by Hans Christian
Andersen. Abrupt segue, perhaps, but relevant in a moment. The Little Mermaid
is by far my favourite, with its story about pain, the power of love and
sacrifice. But one of the stories that always made me laugh with its imagery
was The Princess and the Pea. In this story, the girl knocks on the door of a
castle in the middle of a rainstorm, claiming to be a princess. The Queen,
being a clever woman, knew how to test this. She put a pea on the bed and piled
20 mattresses on it and 20 feather comforters on top of those and send the girl
to the skyscraper bed. The next morning, the girl came to breakfast complaining
of something hard being in the bed, making it impossible for her to have slept
a wink, claiming tobe being black and blue all over. And because she was the
sensitive, they knew she was a real princess.
So basically, I figure everyone who has fibromyalgia is
royalty. Because, based on my experience of lying on half a cat treat last
night and now feeling black and blue all over, the girl might have been
royalty, but she also had fibromyalgia. And this is what gave me an idea:
A diagnosis of fibromyalgia should come with a welcome
package put together in a lovely basket. In the basket would be scarves to keep
your neck warm, seamless underpants, a list of helpful medications, a resource
guide of things to do and not do to control the flares. On top of it all should
be a sparkling tiara.
The only question is whether the tiara should be worn at all
times or only during flares. What say you?
Comments
I'm also very particular about the fabric of my clothes and even pillowcases. I've got a pair of washed-to-death, misshaped pillowcases made of t-shirt material and I absolutely refuse to let my Mum throw them out cos I haven't been able to find any more and I just cannot sleep on anything else!
I am now contemplating what a 'Father Comforter' might look like (read your blog again) and chuckling to myself ;).