Ten Strategies
“Have a
positive attitude.” How many times have
we heard that one? While our emotions
cannot cause fibromyalgia (chronic fatigue syndrome), they no doubt
affect our symptoms. But how can we
maintain good thoughts when our bodies feel so lousy? This challenge, of course, does not pertain
exclusively to chronic illness, but to any time when things do not go as we
wish. But in the case of ongoing
illness, seeing the positive presents a continuous struggle.
Yet our
moods are not perfectly correlated with our physical state. Most likely we can all recall times that
despite much pain or fatigue, we were able to cope and even achieve high
spirit. Perhaps the weather was perfect,
good friends visited, we just accomplished something or helped somebody, making
us feel good about ourselves. At other
times, depression seems of take hold even when our physical discomfort is at a
manageable level. Why is this? Answering this question is the key to finding
optimism.
To me, the
vicissitudes of fibromyalgia feel like a swim in the turbulent sea –
sometimes it seems we have fallen and the waves continue to crash on our heads,
as we fight to rise, only to be knocked down yet again. But that same ocean sometimes allows us to
find a wave we can ride smoothly to the shore.
What can
we do when we feel under the waves? How
can we find the strength to climb back on top, and the patience to know that we
will? Here are ten cognitive exercises I
use to maintain the most positive attitude I can.
1.
Expect bumps! It is important to acknowledge that we will
sometimes feel down. Who wouldn’t in our
condition? But by expecting rather than
dreading down time, such periods become more tolerable. In addition, recognizing that we will have
blue periods helps keep them in perspective.
We will be able to say to ourselves, “I was depressed before, and got
out of it; this time, too, it will pass.”
It is easy to forget that before our illness, there were times we felt
down. Now these periods are wrapped up
in our medical problems; but everyone gets depressed some of the time. After accepting that we will sometimes feel
sad, and even experience self-pity, we can concentrate on ways to shorten these
periods and make them fewer and farther between.
2.
Track the changes. Keeping track of moods helps put ups and
downs into perspective. During your best
times, make a conscious attempt to capture the feeling. Leave notes on your wall attesting to the way
you feel. Living with chronic illness
easily creates a Jekyll-and-Hyde persona, where your optimistic self and your
flare-up self are not sufficiently acquainted.
When we feel bad, it becomes quite difficult to imagine that things can
be otherwise. Similarly, during times of
improvement, it’s amazing how quickly we may forget how bad a previous period
was, making subsequent flare-ups not only intolerable but shocking. Counting and measuring the duration of the
bad times – as well as the good ones- can put them into perspective. It may be that over time, our worst occurs
about once a month, although it feels much more frequent. This knowledge is empowering, because we can
remind ourselves that a bad flare is, for example, our monthly temporary setback,
and find ways to ride it out until our baseline returns.
3.
Stockpile fun
distractions. We all need to keep
lists handy of the things that make us happy.
One of the cruelties of our condition is that when we need distractions
most, we are least equipped to seek them out.
For this reason it is important to compile a list of our favorite
activities when we are feeling optimistic to be used when we most need
them. People with fibromyalgia
often describe how even their worst pain can be put on a back burner, so to
speak, when they become engrossed in an activity. This is not only a
psychological but also a physiological response: our brains can only process so much input at
once. When we are engrossed in a beautiful
movie, talking to a good friend on the phone, or listening to our favorite
music while lying on a heating pad or in the bathtub, we can trick our pain
receptors into leaving us alone! Meanwhile improvements in spirit have an added
impact on our entire well-being.
Laughter is good medicine; while dwelling on our grumbles tends to compound
them.
4. Shape
your perspective. Is the glass half
empty or half full? Perspective determines,
quite literally, how we view the world.
Having a chronic illness creates an ambiguous construction of reality
for us. Am I, for example, a successful
cripple or an unsuccessful professional?
Developing a condition that makes us feel more dependent and less
productive is likely to be a huge disappointment. Yet as we get older, it becomes more likely that
we, or somebody close to us, will experience debilitating problems. People are often forced to adapt to sudden,
new conditions by adopting a perspective that accommodates change. Our perspectives are shaped by the
comparisons we make and the expectations they create. Consider for example, the immigrant who had
been practicing medicine in his home country, but flees to, say, the US to escape a
repressive political regime. After years
of medical study, he works as a janitor. He has lost a rewarding occupation. Yet he is thankful for the opportunity to
work and wakes each day driven by hope, perhaps, of a better future for his
children. Yet his difficulties are also
quite apparent. What keeps his spirits
up and makes him thankful rather than bitter?
His perspective.
5.
Create a new self. If we hang on tightly to the “old self’
we were, finding the value of our “new self” becomes increasingly
difficult. (We may even exaggerate how
fit that person was: “I didn’t need any
sleep, I never felt bad, I could do anything!’). This does not mean we should totally discard
our previous conception of self; rather, we need to find a way to integrate the
two. In other words, we should seek to
find in our new bodies, new ways to enjoy and experience the things that we had
done before. Consider all the aspects of
yourself that you like, and the things that you most want to do; then step by
step, find ways to achieve as many of these as you can. At the same time, recognize that our
expectations must shift so that we can once again meet them.
6. Don’t forget the
good stuff. While the physical
symptoms of fibromyalgia can feel all encompassing, there are other
parts of our life – our social relationships, passions, family – that also
exist. By focusing on the positive
aspects of our life, we become more aware of how many there are: the friends
that stuck by us, the things we still enjoy, and the accomplishments we have
been able to make, however small, under very different conditions. Because each task now represents a challenge,
we should celebrate whatever we manage to accomplish. As we have been told many times, if we
shorten the list and pace ourselves whatever we do eventually adds up to
something to be very proud of.
7.
“Oy, it could be worse.”
As comparisons shape our view, it is
helpful to find comparisons that will provide a fuller appreciation for what
has befallen us. OK, the “eat because
children are starving in (fill in the developing country)” did not work for you
as a child. But try to think of it this
way: many bad things happen in the world.
The odds are that some of them will happen to us. Not because of anything that we have done,
but because, as the saying goes, shit happens.
It takes only a short view of the evening news to remind us of the
horrors occurring every day. So, this is
what has happened to us. We too were
caught. Let us examine what we have: (a)
We know our condition is not terminal, so we need not begin contemplating our
pending mortality. (b) As bad as we sometimes
feel, our underlying condition is not going to get worse. We have already experienced the worst, and to
our credit, have gotten through it. (c)
Although few people achieve permanent remission, many improve
significantly. As we understand how our
actions and emotions influence our general well being, we can find ways to
partake in more and more activities.
8. Keep the hope
alive! There is so much room for
hope. It has only been since the 1990s
that our condition has acquired any legitimacy from the medical community. We are in a far better position than the
generations before us who suffered without ever receiving validation. We know much more about the important roles
of exercise, medication, stretching, pacing and meditation to bring relief and
a sense of control. Furthermore, as
medical research increase, it is only a matter of time before better therapies
(and perhaps even a cure!) are introduced.
9. Lean on me! A single most important predictor of how
we do is the support network we create.
We certainly appreciate what it means when someone helps us when we feel
especially lousy. Make sure to
give. During a good moment, write to a
friend that you are thinking about her.
Help your family and friends find ways to maintain their relationship
with you. Invite them to your place to
eliminate traveling (and do not worry what your place looks like! They came to
see you, not your housecleaning abilities).
Try to be open with family members, while at the same time supportive of
their needs. Put yourself is their shoes
as often as possible – it can be scary to have someone you love be sick! Also make sure to seek help outside of your
immediate circle so as not to drain your closest friends and family. In short ‘network’ with family and friends.
10.
Indulge whenever you can. We have lots of time to focus on our
thoughts. Most people do not have the
luxury of taking time to relax and think.
OK, we did not ask for these “time outs.” They are demanded by the needs of our bodies. Nevertheless, we have control over how we use
this extra time. Instead of dwelling on
what our bodies are not doing, give your fantasy full liberty. Turn these rest periods around to be
indulgent time. In our mental
playground, we can practice dance steps we used to know (for there will be some
times we can dance!). We can use the
time to think through problems we face and how we want to spend time when we
are feeling ready, or we can analyze a movie we recently saw, say prayers, or
mentally write a letter to a friend.
The
article you have just read is a product of a spell in the middle of the night,
when I lay in bed, unable to sleep.
After taking steps to make myself more comfortable, I decided to think
about what I would write next. I figured
that if I fell asleep, great! But if
not, I’d have thought through my next articles.
It was about this point when I, satisfied, went off to dreamland.
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