

Guest blog by Greg Crowhurst.

This is new blog looking at pertinent issues regarding Very Severe ME and builds on Greg’s own experiences caring for his wife, Linda. It follows his recent contribution to Severe ME week.

I have cared day and night for my wife who has lain in unspeakable torment, torture and agony, for twenty-six years. The personal cost to us both because of M.E. has been enormous.

“People I have known, dying of cancer, have still enjoyed a better quality of life than my wife.”

Communication is broken on every level. As soon as she has spoken, she forgets what she has said.

If I speak or ask a question it can cause unimaginable confusion and head-pain, shaking spasms, and deterioration.

Thoughts and memories are mostly beyond access. I must represent her and speak for her whenever the need arises.

Literally everything hurts her and risks deterioration to partial or total paralysis. One wrong movement or noise and the whole day is ruined before it has begun. People simply do not understand.

Who can possibly imagine living in such an assaulting and broken world for decades, without adequate investigation, care or support?

We receive no support from the Church or local community

We have had been forced to live below the poverty line

Society has lost out on our professional skills (I am an award-winning Nurse, my wife is a qualified Social Worker, Counsellor and Teacher)

We live in almost complete isolation, as my wife’s agony and hypersensitivities are so intense, that she cannot bear contact or interaction

We have not been able to have children of our own

I was in my 30’s when my wife became ill, shortly after we got married, I am now in my 60’s

We were both highly respected professionals, but I have openly been called a “waste of space” as a carer

My wife’s profound suffering goes unrecognised and ignored as if she does not exist

Nieces and nephews have grown into adulthood, married, had children who we do not know and who do not know us

Parents have got old and people have gotten sick without being able to visit them even when dying or to attend their funerals

We live in a hamlet, four miles from what is regularly voted the best beach in England. My wife has never even seen it, let alone put her feet in the endless sand, felt the sea splash over her toes, heard the pines whisper above the dunes.

“I have had to learn to take a Moment by Moment

Every aspect of care, including how and when I move, how and when I act, how and when I speak, not just in the room – for it still has impact in any part of the house – needs to be carefully thought through and brought into my awareness.

We can never do the things other people take for granted, like:

go on holiday

out for a meal

a coffee at a cafe

a show

a concert

a film

to see a band

for a walk together with the dog

cycle

shop

sail

swim

play games, like badminton, tennis, or volleyball

walk hand in hand

entertain friends

have dinner parties

go to church, although our faith is immensely important to us

I have had to learn to take a Moment by Moment approach, to ensure the need is met in the right moment in the right way.

This is much harder than it sounds and needs the right attitude, a person-centred, partnership approach, understanding and focus.

My wife cannot:

read a book, play guitar, study or, learn

listen to the radio

follow conversation or engage in normal two-way conversation

have anyone in the house due to perfume, noise and movement sensitivity

tolerate virtually any contact at all

have anyone making noise in the room with her

bear even the simplest thing like having a cuddle or holding hands

find rest ever, for rest increases her physical suffering

Our days are spent, without exception, struggling to cope from moment to moment in the most awful suffering anyone could imagine; except you couldn’t possibly imagine just how bad it is.

People I have known, dying of cancer, have still enjoyed a better quality of life than my wife. I simply cannot bear the thought of anyone else with M.E.:

having to endure the agony, the mistreatment, the abuse of power, the misrepresentation, the incompetence, the ignorance, the denial, the lack of accountability, the not being able to access safe, aware, medical advice or tests that would help show up the physiological dysfunction, the physical harm, the ongoing suffering that has no end in sight, down all these many years.

having to cope, as we have, somehow, from the devastating consequences of wrong treatment that caused an irreversible deterioration.

having to fight, as we have, every step of the way against the Establishment’s entrenched psychosocial mind set.

Caring for M.E. A Pocketbook Course for Carers

It is surely time for a quantum-leap change in attitude towards identifying, investigating, testing, diagnosing and supporting people with M.E.

It is surely time to stop using the label M.E. to mean anything other than the specific disease Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, classified by the WHO as a neurological disease and with multi-system dysfunction.

It is time to stop the misuse of the name Myalgic Encephalomyelitis to mean an umbrella term, incorporating a wide range of unidentified conditions and illnesses including mental health conditions and/or those either referred to as idiopathic chronic fatigue or medically unexplained symptoms (MUS).

It is vital that those who are most ill – especially the estimated 2% of M.E. patients diagnosed with Very Severe M.E. – are recognised, kept safe from wrong treatment and misinterpretation, protected from further deterioration or needless suffering, and cared for in the most appropriate way.

It is surely time for the creation of an appropriate medical pathway that honours the person and their disease. We need something new!

Footnote:

The ME Association greatly appreciates all those who come forward to share their stories and experiences of living with M.E.

Talking about Real People with M.E. and the issues that affect them is arguably one of the best ways we have of raising awareness and it can help to bring us closer together as a community.

If you would like us to consider your story for future press releases, news-media articles, guest blogs on our website, social media posts, or as features in ME Essential magazine; then please contact either: john.siddle@meassociation.org.uk or russell.fleming@meassociation.org.uk

The ME Association

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