Wednesday, October 20, 2010

The Spoon Theory

When a person has a chronic illness, a disabling illness or condition, life becomes very difficult. Energy is limited. For a person who has Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), lack of energy is the problem. It's very difficult to explain to people why you can do this thing but not that thing. If you can do one thing, surely you can do it all? Well, yes. I can do 'anything', but not 'everything.' The Spoon Theory is a graphic illustration of just how that works. Devised by a woman with lupus, it applies to anyone else struggling with a disability. Abled-bodied people don't have any idea how time consuming and difficult it is to cope with a disability.

I make choices: I'm a terrible housekeeper because I'd rather do things like working as a sailor on a tall ship and read books. I wear the same clothes day after day because it minimizes the amount of laundry and simplifies the complex process of figuring out what to wear today. All my work pants are tan, and all my work shirts are blue or black. It's impossible not to be presentable if the options are eliminated. It's like wearing a uniform; you don't have to think anymore. Of course, self-expression, variety, and fun disappear, but that's a small price to pay for being able to get dressed decently and not have a crisis when I'm supposed to be getting ready for work. There are things more important to me than deciding what shirt to wear.

You can read about The Spoon Theory at: http://www.butyoudontlooksick.com/articles/written-by-christine/the-spoon-theory-written-by-christine-miserandino/

I have also been listening to the CSFAC meeting on the Internet. Day One presents the science we already know, but having it all together in one place in digestible pieces is very handy. It certainly made an impact on some of the attendees -- the representatives from the CDC seems to finally be tuning in to what's been said for years. The committee also addressed the question of recommending the name be changed to ME/CFS, for myalgic encelphalitis/chronic fatigue syndrome in order to underscore the seriousness of the illness. As it was remarked, people don't take it seriously if you sound like you could have a problem that could be cured by taking a nap.

Also useful was the information on Day Two about how to document disability for a disability claims to the Social Security Administration and private disability insurance. Especially helpful were the exercise physiologists describing their tests and how they correlate to function and the evidence they use to make recommendations about level of activity. They also discussed how the great majority of work tolerance examinations do not follow any standardized procedures and are not based on evidence directly derived from the patient's actual condition. In other words, they are the opinions (or fantasies) of the examiner.

The videos can be viewed at: http://hhs.granicus.com/viewpublisher.php?view_id=5

Day Three has more procedural and political information about funding, etc, that is of less interest to patients, but probably useful to researchers and clinicians seeking resources.

4 comments:

  1. I wonder if you would encapsulate The Sopon Theory here... maybe edit the post?

    You make a point I often try to make to people about what a disabililty is like. I am, as you know, legally blilnd. Spcifically, I have no central vision at all -- sort of the opposite of tunnel bision. And you are right.. you can do everything with the right tools.. but it is time consuming and exhausting. People say of me, "I don't know how you do it!" and frankly, neither do I. I suppose one of these days I am just going to collapse.

    Thanks for this post!

    Nan Hawthorne
    That's All She Read
    www.nanhawthorne.com

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  2. If you click on the title it will take you to the article. I hesitate to summarize because I think it would trivialize. The narrative that accompanies the Spoon Theory is powerful in and of itself.

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  3. I was just hoping to hear your take on what it meant.. I am suitably chastened.

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  4. OK, I read it... and it took one spoon to sit and listen to the entire article because I had to highlight it, copy it to my computer's clipboard, then hit the right keys to get my speech output to read it to me. No scanning for the paragraph most explanatory.. since the author was slow to get to the point. Then listening to the article I was confronted with several spoons to give up... driving home after going out. That means driving to go out too. The job... even though I am highly qualified, I have been turned down for job after job -- though of course my blindness was never cited openly. I expect the author had to go to the grocery store.. never mind getting there, how to find the items I need without reading labels is a challenge. Then there is the fun of working the card reader. Oh and knowing that though I have an advanced degree I could never expect to get even the job of the bagger, no less the cashier. Once home I had to give another spoon away for not being able to read the cooking instructions...

    Even sitting here typing this... I have to have bought a $900 spoon for the software that allows me work at all. I accept the likelihood of typos because I am just tooo tired to go through and reread what I wrote.

    Then the last spoon.. the captcha I had to read, the code at the bottom where I have to fill it in to be allowed even to comment. Which would you rather do? Just click submit or have to wait and listen to the audio code first?

    So.. I get it.

    Nan

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