THE PAIN OF NOT LOOKING SICK

in health •  7 years ago  (edited)

When you suffer from an invisible illness things are more challenging because you need to deal also with the pain of not looking sick. It feels awful being in pain, living in pain and not being believed. When you have to constantly explain yourself and convince others that your sickness is real and you are not hypochondriac, it is a horrible feeling.

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Take a look at my photo above. At a superficial glance, there’s nothing wrong with me. I look just fine! That’s where everyone is wrong! Little you or others know about the war going on under my skin, about the long list of invisible symptoms I experience. I used to get annoyed whenever I was judged based on my appearance, while I was struggling to look “normal”. A few years back I took another approach: I started to Lyme educate everyone. I did my best to explain all that entails being a Lyme sufferer.

Once in a way when I attended a social gathering or when I met someone new, I was faced with the the same issue: everyone kept on telling me I looked healthy and that I may had a wrong diagnosis. At one point I had given up using makeup just because I could not stand one more comment regarding my appearance. I wished to look sick, just to be in line with everyone else, to make it easier for others to believe me. Their disbelief and ignorance made me feel worse than I already was.

Whenever asked what was the most annoying symptom that I had to put up with, I said that it depended on the day I was having. That’s when I saw people raising an eyebrow in disbelief. Those who took an interest in finding out more about the details of my invisible illness know that I always tried not to burden them with my daily cocktail of pains and symptoms. Once they heard me describing how the burning felt like, they understood my misery.

The burning under my skin is by far one of the most disturbing symptoms. It never leaves me. It simply increases or decreases its intensity depending on my other symptoms. I also get shifting pain in the muscles, joints and bones, combined with electrical pulses, twitching prickly tingly muscles. All of these things happen within my body on a daily basis. Despite all this, I still manage to put a smile on my face and carry on with my day. Life goes on! I learnt how to deal with all these.

Neurological Chronic Lyme Disease (Neuroboreliosis) takes things to another level. Once the illness starts to affect your nervous system, you have to deal with a new ordeal of symptoms. Some of them are quite strange and bizarre, though not everyone gets to experience all of them in the same time. Some people have these sensations during a flare, a herx (Herxheimer reaction) while others have to deal with them on a daily basis. I count myself among the “lucky” ones who still have them.

When Borrelia Burgdorferi (the main culprit for Lyme) and Bartonella (co-infection) are hijacking your nervous system, you get to experience some unusual sensations, unknown before like:

  • crawling sensation – a creepy feeling that something is crawling around on or under your skin, throughout your body
  • freezing or burning sensation
  • buzzing or vibrating – better described as a TGV train passing through your body making each single cell vibrate
  • numbness
  • tingling (mostly in the limbs)- being pricked at once with thousands of needles. It does not feel anything like acupuncture. It is a totally different sensation.

How can I translate into words the burning sensation? Imagine that you went to the beach and got a severe sunburn which is making your body and skin ache. What do you do? You avoid touching your skin in order not to feel the pain or the tingling burning sensation. Now try to picture how it feels applying a frozen ice cube on your skin, all over that area that just got sunburnt. I am sure you just shrug your shoulders trying to visualize it. This is the best explanation I could come up with for the burning under my skin. Only difference is that it feels that way throughout the entire body. Some days it might shift from one area to another and it can change its intensity.

The craziest sensation is when you experience this burning on your head. Generally when you have neurological Lyme (Neuroborreliosis) , you get the “privilege” to feel it. That is a bit different. It feels like you have a slug or an army of ants moving slowly leaving an icy trail on your skull.

After reading about my daily ordeal, next time you meet someone touched by an invisible illness, please don’t tell him he looks good or healthy! Refrain yourself from saying something that would make him feel worse. Try to be creative. Make an effort and come up with something new!


This post was originally published on https://a-zlyme.com


Image source: Lavi Picu


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@2018 LaviPicu aka The Lyme Poet. All rights reserved.


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I'm glad to see posts like this. As a cancer survivor who never lost their hair, I can relate. Everyone assumed I was visiting someone when I went into the chemo ward for my treatments. No one can see past themselves and their own pain sometimes. It's definitely harder to feel supported when you feel like the way you look is being judged just because you don't happen to fit a stereotypical "Hollywood" tragedy aesthetic.

The society we live in teaches to label and judge without taking a moment to think or check what lies beyond appearances.

It's a sad reality. The truth of it though, is I was this way too, until I lived in that world. It taught a lot of tough lessons about self-evaluation of assumed perspective. It's given me a new attitude on the world as a whole and those who are ignorant of things. If I could go back in time and change things so I never had cancer...I wouldn't. This gift it gave me is that of a more compassionate life.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Same goes for me. Lyme changed me. It enabled me to discover my real self and become a better person, more compassionate and humble.

It sounds awful and terrible. Despite constant pain and fluctuating Irritation based on the day you bear it well, not grimacing or squeezing eyes shut.

Thank you for sharing your experience and perspective; it will help me consider my words when I encounter others in similar circumstances.

Thanks for stopping by and reading my post!

Invisible illnesses, physical or mental, are such an awful extra challenge. Thank you for sharing this.

Everyone struggles with something at one point.

Thank you for sharing. I live with very mild chronic pain because of a broken vertebrae, but I'm well aware of your situation since my SO has Fibromyalgia. For her, I think, the worse thing about it is the unpredictability of it. She can never tell if she's going to have a good day or a terrible day up until the very moment. I do my best to be accepting and as accommodating as possible. I hope I'm doing a good job.

I understand your situation. Being a patient and a caregiver in the same time ain't easy.
Here's an article that I wrote on this topic a few weeks back. I am hoping it might help some how:
https://steemit.com/health/@lymepoet/9-ways-to-keep-a-relationship-going-when-both-partners-are-ill

I admire your strength to share your struggles, it has to be difficult dealing with this illness when as you say many people only judge based on what they see on the outside, ignoring the pain and suffering on the inside. I hope you are able to get some relief from this suffering in the future.
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#thealliance

Having and meeting new compassionate friends helps me going on. ;0)

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I am sorry for your struggles.
I feel blessed that @rensoul17 featured your writing. For your writing ofcourse but particularly because I am struggling with an invisible illness. Struggling so much, and tiring of the struggle.
Then you talk about having a little dude and choosing between play dough and acrylics and preferring the acrylics you describe my day.
Trying to put your illness aside and parent. And drawing and writing to express that. And your books!
Thank you ren. I am grateful to meet @lymepoet. Ren knows how grateful I am.
Lyme poet... Hello.

Hello @girlbeforemirror! Thank you for stopping by and leaving a comment. I am grateful to @rensoul17 for inviting me to the Steemit Writer's Studio. I am sorry to read that you as well are touched by an invisible illness. I hope that you manage to find comfort somehow, relieving you from your burden.