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Martha's avatar

You’ve done it again Madelleine, another fantastic piece! I’m so constantly in awe of the way you show up and write such thought provoking pieces about being unwell.

The becoming your own bestfriend trope (as we’ve mentioned before) is so true I relate a lot. As you said - we end up having to spend the most time with ourselves! I resonate a lot to you saying that this level of friendship with yourself could only come with your symptoms & situations stabilised, and not feeling like you’re in a state of emergency. That too has only happened for my recently, I was definitely in a state of emergency & wanting to leave this earth because of the pain for a good 2 years. I have a much more peaceful & thoughtful relationship with myself now, but I laugh at the thought of saying this to myself a year ago. She would be fuming because she was just in so much pain. I guess she would also be slightly interested to see it has opportunity to change.

I spend a lot of my time journaling and having conversations with myself too. I often say I’m the coolest I think I’ve ever been right now, that I like myself the most I ever have after the turmoil of being so unwell. It’s an interesting place to be in. I think because the horror makes you feel like you know yourself so well. You end up having to be so connected to your body (not by choice) by monitoring your symptoms, noticing how different medications make you feel etc - I think this forces such a dramatically different relationship with yourself. And one that perhaps, for the first time, you’re connecting to yourself in ways that unless you’re stuck in a bed and can’t even shower or feed yourself don’t really happen. Like you said about the silent retreats (I’m howling at it only being all men who went.) I guess it’s about not being able to distract your mind. You’re forced to confront something so awful in complete isolation (with minimal support and basically no distractions), because you can’t move or do anything to take your mind off it. It’s like the most horrible way ever to have a spiritual awakening.

And yet, I am slightly grateful for it. Again though, at my sickest if I’d read something like that I would have screamed. It is only when things are a little safer can you mind explore such gratitude and thoughts within yourself. I’ve never trusted myself more than I do now, because after years of rigorous monitoring of my body I guess it makes me feel the most connected to it? Like I can read my body more? Even though we can appreciate it was a horrendous journey to get here. I find it makes me hold gratitude and resentment all at once for being unwell.

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Carol Riseing's avatar

I really enjoyed (?) reading this. You have articulated what I have been struggling with but have had difficulty conceptuallizing, especially the internalization of cold, cruel patriarchal capitalist “values” and how they compound the damage to our bodies.

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