More often than not when living life with a chronic illness, you tend to look ânormalâ to outsiders looking in. They donât see the reality of what your life is like. Even when we take pictures of what weâre going through â documenting hospital visits, testing procedures, flare ups and changes to our appearance â these arenât always the pictures we post on social media. They typically go unseen to the outside world since we feel like we have to keep them to ourselves. Until now. Here are 26 photos that you may be able to relate to if youâre a spoonie.
1. âPosing and making funny faces to post on social media because youâre in the hospital again while in reality youâre having a breakdown because youâre so scared.â â Kaitlyn R.

2. âWhen the power is out, itâs summer, youâre surrounded by wildfires⦠Oh! And a lyme flare/herx so you feel super sick on top of being super stressed.â â Misty W.

3. âMe and my pregnancy pillow! Iâm not pregnant⦠but it helps so much with sleep and pain. Plus also for anxiety and feeling safe.â â Sally A.

4. âVIG infusion days via a power port for the treatment of CIDP (chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy)â â Hurtado-Palomo

5. âI generally have beautifully painted toenails. Why? Because Iâm often looking at them as Iâm stuck on the sofa, even though I would rather be doing other things.â â Gabbie J.

6. âHaving to lay down because I took my kids to school and that simple act drained all of my energy. Some days even just going across the house can seem like a marathon.â â Bonnie P.

7. âThis one at least made us laugh! The radiologists couldnât find my newly relocated kidney on the imaging and this is what they said to me.â â Meghan W.

8. âThis is for my spoonies still working the floor as medical professionals ourselves. Especially with all the PPE during COVID we so easily blend into the background at work and look like every other tech/nurse/doctor. They donât see the abdominal compression and compression stockings underneath the scrubs or the stash or salty snacks and electrolyte drinks in my locker. I may look like just another nurse, but when you come in exasperated desperate for answers Iâll always actively listen and try to get you answers because I know that feeling.â â Leanna T.

9. âMy fur babies giving me comfort after having several seizures.â â Lorrie J.

10. âThe simple joy of getting dressed even if it is in pjs that donât match lol and Iâm cuddled up on the bed.â â Leefern C.

11. âHospital woesâ¦heart going crazy and having severe chest pain.â â Jae M.

12. âWe are not alone. My family are superheroes to me! I have spent years going in and out of doctors, ER and the ICU. The people you love are the reason why you push through situations you just donât have the strength for. Being so ill for so long I can feel trapped in the darkness of my illness, my love ones are my light! I fight for them and every moment in this battle is worth every moment I get to spend with them!â â Kat W.

13. âYour favorite movie on a bad day.â â Morgan N.

14. âPatch testing for systemic contact dermatitis and feeling like a science experiment. Induced anaphlyaxis, an ER trip and figuring out how to calm that flair down all by myself as usual. Known I have papillary thyroid cancer and hashimotoâs thyroiditis. Ruling out mast cell activation syndrome, POTS and now systemic contact dermatitis. I am allergic to life.â â Chloé R.

15. âHere I am propped up in my bed with a heating pad, wrist splint and my CPAP machine. Was in pain, having heart palps and having difficulty breathing.â â Misty L.

16. âThis is my monthly pill case set up day. It usually takes me one to 1.5 hours from start to finish, but then I can (usually) not worry about it for a month. Unless I have a procedure, which might change my med schedule. Or if a doctor adds, changes or removes a medication. Iâve had to try half a dozen different pill cases to find a system that worked for me. I take a (large) handful of pills three time a day, both medication and supplements (all monitored by doctors of course). That doesnât include the weekly injection I take for my lupus, or my monthly injection for my migraines or my insulin pens. I had to process through instinctive âmedication guilt,â which is compounded when someone tries to tell me Iâll be better off without medication because (insert reason). Side affects suck, I hate feeling reliant on medication to get through each day. But the thing is⦠they work. So I no longer pay attention to those who try to guilt me about it. It is what it is, and Iâm grateful for the medication that can help me recoup some of my quality of life.â â Nina H.

17. âLiterally a month apart⦠first one after a flare of autoimmune disease the second four weeks earlier. Life can and does change in a heartbeat when you live with chronic illness.â â Michelle F.

18. âA weekâs holiday from work: two days gently exploring countryside and resting in between short walks = three days in bed to recuperate from the exertion. Life with chronic migraine and autoimmune flare up.â â Lieu L.

19. âSitting on my futon upside-down because of swollen feet.â â Alicia W.

20. âGetting told you are not really a candidate for a liver transplant and yours are quickly declining. Nothing like receiving news that devastates when your support system canât be with you.â â Brittany H.

21. âCrying in the ER. ER doctor didnât know what to do with my rare illness so instead he invalidated and pushed me aside. Which resulted in me being sent home and nearly losing my life in another ER later that day.â â Kendra J.

22. âBruises for being stuck so many times for IVs and blood work while in the hospital.â â Jacqueline E.

23. âOne script â over $2k a month. All of my meds over $5k a month. Thank goodness for amazing insurance! I feel awful for those who are not as fortunate.â â Veronica T.

24. âIn an intestinal failure unit and trying to get my feelings and needs across!!â â Katie B.

25. âJust a few months ago I was having a fibro flare/ intense migraine combo. I know we all have weird ways to relive pain. Mine that night was wrapping a towel around my head and put lots of menthol patches on my face.â â Jojo S.

26. âI use video games as a distraction when Iâm having a bad dayâ¦but do I look like Iâm having a bad day? I have makeup on, Iâm smiling, and my hair is fixed up. When you donât feel the way you look on the outside.â â Jennifer M.

source https://www.programage.com/news/26_Photos_of_Spoonie_Life_You_Might_Be_Able_to_Relate_To_1600716612964417.html

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