<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Ballastexistenz]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://ballastexistenz.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Mel Baggs]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://ballastexistenz.wordpress.com/author/ameliabaggs/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Forgetting that something is&nbsp;ongoing]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>Edited to add:  Both the ongoing severe pain and the absolute worst pain turn out to be trigeminal neuralgia that was misdiagnosed as a migraine. I do have migraines. But not constantly like I was told.</p>
<p>The Smiffy&#8217;s Place Blog, in one <a href="http://blobolobolob.blogspot.com/2006/05/blogging-against-disablism-day.html">BADD entry</a>, talks about the question, <a href="http://www.smiffysplace.com/blog/archives/166-when-will-you-get-better">When Will You Get Better?</a>.</p>
<p>This is the sort of question I get a lot.  Not for autism, really.  But, in particular, for migraines.</p>
<p>I may have mentioned before on this blog:  I&#8217;ve had an ongoing migraine now for several <em>years</em>. I didn&#8217;t realize that part of it was a migraine until I went to a migraine doctor, but it&#8217;s basically an ongoing migraine, sometimes severe, sometimes moderate. (I&#8217;d assumed the moderate pain couldn&#8217;t be a migraine.)</p>
<p>Right now, as it has been for pretty much since October, it&#8217;s in the severe range almost continually.  As in, my <em>baseline</em> level of pain is between 5 and 7 on the 1-10 pain scale of someone who&#8217;s had severe pain for a lifetime. (Translation: Most people with no experience of severe chronic pain would probably rate it higher, although I already did have to adjust my entire pain scale after I got pain treatment, since pain treatment revealed to me that my previous &#8220;1&#8221; was really a &#8220;3&#8221; or &#8220;4&#8221; at least.) I&#8217;m vomiting a lot if I don&#8217;t keep taking tons of Dramamine, and sometimes even if I do. I&#8217;m having to cut off activities I could do when the pain was at a more moderate level, and the migraine interrupts anything I&#8217;m trying to do throughout the day. It causes huge levels of fatigue and clouded thinking, too.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not saying all that to make anyone feel sorry for me, just to give an idea of how much pain I&#8217;m in on a regular basis. (And yes, I&#8217;ve tried tons of migraine treatments, I don&#8217;t really want to hear everyone&#8217;s migraine advice. The last migraine prophylactic med I was on actually worked, as in it took my pain down to moderate instead of severe, but it also did a lot of unpleasant and dangerous things to my body, so I had to stop it.)</p>
<p>Anyway, this is something that&#8217;s always here.  It&#8217;s always affecting me.  It&#8217;s never gone.</p>
<p>What I notice is that unless I broadcast some signal of pain, people seem to forget I&#8217;m <em>in</em> any pain at all. If I don&#8217;t talk about it, and I don&#8217;t grimace or vomit or lie down in a dark room with ice packs on my head, people assume it&#8217;s not there. And then they attribute all kinds of things that are pain-related, to other things entirely.</p>
<p>And then when I do show it, it&#8217;s &#8220;Oh, do you have a headache today?&#8221;</p>
<p>And I keep thinking, &#8220;Okay, how many times have I explained to you that I&#8217;ve <em>always</em> got a headache?  If I <em>don&#8217;t</em> have a headache, that will be news.&#8221;</p>
<p>In <a href="http://wwcoco.com/cfids/carolyndyke.html">So You Know a Dyke with CFS</a>, Carolyn Gage writes:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>DO</strong> ask me how I am when we get together for an activity. That lets me know that you are willing to be my ally in confronting the challenges I am meeting during the time we are together. I have come to learn that when you don&#8217;t ask, it means you don&#8217;t want to know. <strong>It means that your plan is to grant me the &#8220;privilege&#8221; of being considered your able-bodied peer for the duration of our activity. In other words, my illness will only be real for you if I bring it up.</strong> Experience has taught me that this attitude results in your equating my mentioning of symptoms with my causing those symptoms. And you will oppress me accordingly.</p></blockquote>
<p>(Emphasis mine.) That seems, to me, to be exactly what is happening. People seem to expect this migraine business to be something that just goes away. Even if they&#8217;re told that it&#8217;s ongoing, I&#8217;m not sure they believe it. So, it&#8217;s only real when I mention it or give some indication that it&#8217;s going on.</p>
<p>In October, my roommate mentioned, also, that people who don&#8217;t have migraines seem to think that since they&#8217;re common, they must be mild. She said that a lot of people don&#8217;t even believe the degree of pain and other unpleasantness a migraine can cause, let alone that a migraine could last a long time. Others, including especially people who get migraines only temporarily, don&#8217;t believe a person could function with a migraine, so would disbelieve this from a totally different angle.</p>
<p>The truth is that if you have something every day, you learn to function better than if you&#8217;re hit with it intermittently. Not that I&#8217;m doing things as well as I do when the pain is milder, but I&#8217;m doing more than I would if this were temporary and could be expected to go away. One time I tried lying in a dark closet for the duration of a migraine and realized after three days that this wouldn&#8217;t work. At the moment, I have to lie down several times a day, and I&#8217;m probably going to have to go vomit again after I finish writing this, but I also get up and do stuff sometimes. With chronic migraines, the pain fluctuates, it doesn&#8217;t stay at total hell level all the time, just mostly-hell level. And with severe pain in general, if it lasts long enough, there are times when it seems to fade out a bit, even when it&#8217;s still there as much as before. Plus you develop all kinds of ways of detaching from your body (up to and including, in my case, full-immersion hallucinations and/or total disorientation and/or unconsciousness if the pain gets bad enough; I&#8217;ve experienced this with migraines, with the other kind of pain I get, and with post-surgical pain when the hospital screwed up and forgot painkillers).</p>
<p>Or in other words, as <a href="http://blobolobolob.blogspot.com/2006/05/my-blog-against-disablism.html">Diary of a Goldfish describes in their blog entry for BADD</a>, the sick role doesn&#8217;t work for those of us who have one of these supposedly &#8220;temporary&#8221; things that refuses to go away. I may still be trying for a migraine cure, or at least a migraine &#8220;beat it back a fair bit until it&#8217;s manageable&#8221;, but I can&#8217;t put my entire life on hold until I do. Certainly there&#8217;s a lot of things I do less now than I would otherwise, but I still do more during a migraine right now than I probably would if I only got one of these a couple times a month.</p>
<p>My thought, with this and so many other things that people don&#8217;t notice, is often something like, &#8220;I bet if the people who have trouble believing this is ongoing, had to live in my body for one hour, they wouldn&#8217;t be able to function. At all.&#8221; They&#8217;re probably not used to the degree of pain that I&#8217;ve been used to as long as I can remember (from things other than migraine). They&#8217;re not at <em>all</em> adapted to my perceptual setup, and would probably just collapse in overload. They don&#8217;t know how to pace themselves for stamina problems like the kinds I have, and would rapidly end up what staff used to refer to as &#8220;fully catatonic&#8221;. I have a lifetime of figuring out how to function in this body. They don&#8217;t.</p>
<p>But regardless of this, many hold me to standards that would probably be impossible to hold themselves to. And when it comes to migraines, or other things like that, I am pretty sure that what I experience is not &#8220;real&#8221; to them until I mention it, and then it&#8217;s not &#8220;real&#8221; anymore until the next time I mention it.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve even had medical professionals become skeptical when I talk about not reporting severe pain (that probably is <a href="http://www.painonline.org/intro.htm">central pain</a> or something similar) for twenty years. Central pain (or other pain like it, since there are neuropathic pains besides that that act the same, I&#8217;m just assuming since no nerve damage has been found that it&#8217;s probably central pain) tends to be under-reported anyway, because it&#8217;s so alien to any form of pain that most people ever experience, and because it&#8217;s so often associated with communication trouble. It&#8217;s most often reported as debilitation rather than pain. If you&#8217;ve had it <em>as long as you can remember</em>, then what? How are you supposed to know? But, at any rate, apparently that pain wasn&#8217;t real until I reported it either, and continues to be unreal even if I do report it.</p>
<p>While I was writing this, my case manager walked in the door and said, &#8220;Uh&#8230; do you have a migraine today?&#8221; I told him about this blog entry and said &#8220;The day I <em>don&#8217;t</em> have a migraine, you&#8217;ll be among the first to know.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve also had staff assume, not just once but many times, that if something wasn&#8217;t happening on their shift, it just plain wasn&#8217;t happening to me, even if I mentioned it.</p>
<p>I do wonder if the notion of something <em>not</em> going away, makes people uncomfortable. If it&#8217;s more than just &#8220;forgetting,&#8221; but &#8220;not wanting to think about&#8221;. At any rate, regardless of what intentions are behind it, I do notice that if people are likely to &#8220;forget&#8221; that I&#8217;m experiencing something, they&#8217;re also likely to &#8220;forget&#8221; the different ways I might need to do things, the access problems, and so forth. And to become almost irritated, if I bring those things up, as if, yes, mentioning them is causing them.</p>
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