JoannaOhio
17-Year Cancer Survivor!!!
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2000
- Messages
- 477
I live in Ohio, my grown daughter lives in Maryland, and her fiancee lives near Pittsburgh. (They met online through eHarmony.) He has muscular dystrophy, and is unable to drive. Although he is employed full time, his mother needs to come to his house every morning and evening to get him out of bed and dressed, pack his lunch, prepare his evening meal, get him undressed and back in bed at night - along with all the other smaller accommodations. My daughter drives to spend 2 or 3 (or 4 or 5)
weekends a month with him, and I have driven over from Ohio for a "family" weekend several times.
His disabilities are very obvious, and although I had talked with him about my problems with CFS, fibromyalgia, et al, I don't think he really understood the scope of it until this past weekend. We convened in PA, and spent most of 4th of July at his mother's house. She lives a few blocks away, and also cares for her older son with MD.
Anyway, I had purposely planned to stay over until Tuesday, 7/5, so I could spend all day Monday there and not have to drive home at night. I slept in on Monday - partly to just be out of the way of his normal daily routine of getting off to work. I had been up for a couple of hours, when I felt like I needed an "emergency nap". I lay down at 11:30am - even set the alarm - but the next thing I knew it was 2:30pm, and I could barely get myself out of bed. For those who live with this "invisible" disability, you've probably experienced a similar kind of fatigue. No matter how much I sleep, I feel "drugged". At 2:30, I realized there was absolutely no way that I could make a safe drive home that day.
Fortunately, my future son-in-law is a real sweetie, and he didn't mind at all that I needed to stay over another night. He was very concerned about whether I was "okay", and it gave me the opportunity to describe to him what CFS fatigue and fog are really like. Since we're planning to all be living together in Maryland within the next year (including my 14-year-old granddaughter), it's probably good that he's beginning to have a better understanding of my disabilities. Too bad most of our friends and acquaintances don't really get the chance to witness our problems firsthand.

His disabilities are very obvious, and although I had talked with him about my problems with CFS, fibromyalgia, et al, I don't think he really understood the scope of it until this past weekend. We convened in PA, and spent most of 4th of July at his mother's house. She lives a few blocks away, and also cares for her older son with MD.
Anyway, I had purposely planned to stay over until Tuesday, 7/5, so I could spend all day Monday there and not have to drive home at night. I slept in on Monday - partly to just be out of the way of his normal daily routine of getting off to work. I had been up for a couple of hours, when I felt like I needed an "emergency nap". I lay down at 11:30am - even set the alarm - but the next thing I knew it was 2:30pm, and I could barely get myself out of bed. For those who live with this "invisible" disability, you've probably experienced a similar kind of fatigue. No matter how much I sleep, I feel "drugged". At 2:30, I realized there was absolutely no way that I could make a safe drive home that day.
Fortunately, my future son-in-law is a real sweetie, and he didn't mind at all that I needed to stay over another night. He was very concerned about whether I was "okay", and it gave me the opportunity to describe to him what CFS fatigue and fog are really like. Since we're planning to all be living together in Maryland within the next year (including my 14-year-old granddaughter), it's probably good that he's beginning to have a better understanding of my disabilities. Too bad most of our friends and acquaintances don't really get the chance to witness our problems firsthand.