Badge for the Out Campaign for Atheists
Badge for downunderfeministscarnival.wordpress.com

Article written by Lauredhel

Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about disability and accessibility, social and reproductive justice, gender, freedom from violence, the uses and misuses of language, medical science, otters, gardening, and cooking.

15 responses to “Psychiatrists see reasonable adaptations to CFS, label it “cause” and “maladaptation””

  1. annaham

    Head, meet desk.

    annaham’s last blog post..I Can’t Be More Articulate Than…

  2. Beppie

    Yeah, what annaham said.

  3. Jemima Aslana

    Argh! The stupidity! It burns! I feeling stupidest for have reading that.

    It’s amazing how healthy people so often have such a hard time understanding sick people. I do not suffer from CFS but from something that is psychological and all too likely to be chronic – I betcha, if I go to social gatherings and my issues are triggered by it I’d be maladapted and if I stay away from people and thus remain asocial but comfortable I’d also be maladapted.

    Geez, people with chronic illnesses of one kind or the other will obviously adapt their lives to their illness so life will be tolerable and manageable. But at the same time we also all have hopes and dreams and so sometimes we will push ourselves – just a little – and take some risks in order to actually try and fulfill just a tiny fraction of those dreams – just once in a while. Is that really so strange?

    Wow… what you just took apart there is such an obvious self-contradiction that even laypersons ought to be able to see that. Next time I need a psychiatrist I think I’ll just go ask my neighbour instead – chances are she’ll understand more than a trained professional it seems.

  4. orlando

    Oh Lauredhel, you must be livid. Well, I can see you’re livid, obviously. I mean, you have greater than usual reason to be livid.

  5. Deus Ex Macintosh

    Unrealistic goals… hmm. When you have a variable fatigue condition (which makes it impossible to predict what state you’re going to be in after an hour, let alone a week) how exactly can you tell WHAT goals are going to be friggin’ realistic longer term?

  6. Beppie

    I don’t mind being a minion. I mean, not if you’re the minion-leader! :D

  7. ARG! ARG! This reminds me so much of the conversations I’ve had with “friends” about Don. If he doesn’t go out, he’s anti-social. If he takes his drugs to go out, he’s stoned, and it’s more difficult to have a conversation with him. Going to visit Don is difficult because his house is messy because of his energy-budget. Thus, Don is a difficult friend to have. Obviously.

  8. amandaw

    Damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

    It’s incredible to watch the mental twisting, the oh so obvious effort to find something in this data-point or that one that explains why these people are only hurting themselves. They couldn’t be logical and realistic people, reacting reasonably to factors they cannot control. No, they are whiners and complainers, silly old biddies who just don’t know how to deal with life (implication: Like We Do).

  9. amandaw

    Honestly, I definitely see an element of the medical establishment’s lack of trust in women here. They just can’t bring themselves to acknowledge that women’s complaints might have basis in reality. They must struggle to find some way to dismiss women’s explanations of their life and impose their very own special jargon-filled Medical explanation which is obviously far more credible.

  10. cinderkeys

    Holy freaking god.

    I somehow had imagined that skewed, bigoted research like this would at least be internally consistent. Clearly I set my expectations too high.

  11. SunlessNick

    Great post.

  12. oldfeminist

    “CFS sufferers have been described as “workaholic,” Type A-like,” “unable to set limits on demands of others,” and “high achievers.”27,28 ”

    I’d be interested to know what these references are. Who described these PWCFS that way? Was it a study, or just someone’s opinion?

    I also wonder if Persistence might be high simply in the PWCFS they were able to involve in the study compared to PwithoutCFS.

    Someone who committed to participate in the study but encountered difficulties completing it would be likely to drop out unless they have a high Persistence score. PWCFS are more likely to encounter difficulty in completing the study. So the PWCFS that participated may be selected for those with higher Persistence.

  13. calyx

    Ah thankyou for your really insightful analysis of this study and how its findings are worded. Sometimes I have difficulty with reading this sort of thing, as it pushes my guilt buttons for still having the damn illness after all this time.

  14. Tera

    <blockquote cite=”Van Houdenhove33 suggested that CFS patients suffer from a fundamental discrepancy between what they want to do and that what they are able to do. Unrealistic goals may explain this fundamental imbalance.”

    Of course. Because having a chronic illness that affects what you can and cannot do has nothing whatsoever to do with “this fundamental imbalance.”

    Holy epic fail.

n.b. our posts are closed to new comments after 60 days. If you wish to discuss a closed post, please use the latest open thread.

Switch to our mobile site