Monday, 29 November 2010

50 Stories as ebook

The fabulous fundraising anthology 50 Stories for Pakistan is now available as an ebook from Smashwords.com. (I wish I could say the same for The State of Me, but it is still not up on Amazon or The Book Depository, though my understanding is the revised ebook was submitted weeks ago. I am told the delay is with the retailer end of things. I had hoped it would be up by Christmas so that all those young modern people out there could read me on their new Kindles, but I fear now this may not happen.)

*Just seen that 50 Stories has made £439 for Red Cross in its first month. This is wonderful news!

Saturday, 27 November 2010

Miranda & Voltaire

I don't watch I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here. I can't watch the spiders, that big one that they have between shots (the camera zooms in and I freeze). And I find it undignified eating insects unless you are actually starving. I happened to glimpse the quite awful not really a doctor Gillian McKeith, in the opening episode. I believe she has been pretending to faint. I do watch Miranda, though always forget it's on. I like the all too knowing nods and winks to seventies' comedy. And she is funny. Also enjoyed, on Monday, The Essay, Radio 3, on Voltaire. I listened in the dark with my eyes shut and a cup of Earl Grey (which I stopped drinking for years, it gave me a headache, but I recently restarted and remember how much I love it). I quite often sit in the dark and silence with a cup of green or black tea, just to completely rest my senses. I never take milk (in tea or coffee) and I hate herbal tea. This episode of The Essay had extracts from Candide, one of my favourite books. I still have my well-thumbed copy from uni, 1982. It is pink with a yellow trim, faded now.

Wednesday, 17 November 2010

Vol-au-vents

Dear Media, No one with a brain gives a toss about the royal wedding. Cover it on the day, if you must but please stop all this nauseating foreplay, it is excruciating. And I imagine that, in deference to the cuts, the reception will be taking place in the local Scout Hall with vol-au-vents and sausage rolls. (I thought Kate and William had broken up, that is how much attention I pay to these people.)

Tuesday, 16 November 2010

A very long post on balance & pain & beauty

People tell me they enjoy this blog because it gets the balance of ME and non-ME right, how do I manage it? I'm not sure I know. My impulse to write - when I am able - is what has saved me from this illness, even just a couple of sentences. My posts are often short. I constantly have words banging together in my head, I would prefer if they were gently colliding. Still, I could never blog about ME all the time, it would bore the arse off me - remember I've had this since 1983 - but of course I must mention what is important, and my rage and disgust at the non-believers never goes away and intensifies periodically.

But neither can I bear undiluted self-absorption - and you do find it on some ME blogs, ironically those who are less ill tend to be the most solipsistic. You will come across this 'monopolisation of suffering' on non-ME blogs too, I guess it's human nature. Of course, there is a therapy to blogging, and we all construct masks when we blog or FB or tweet - unconsciously or not - but when some people - the least isolated, the most supported - seem constantly unable to see beyond themselves, that depresses me a little.

Unfortunately, those with very severe ME are usually too ill to blog much, they are too busy surviving the day, hoping tomorrow might be slightly less awful. Greenwords is a wonderful example of someone severe blogging, her posts are infrequent, but she does it so bloody well. And she is a dabhand on Twitter. Gardening is her passion, she is mostly unable to do it herself, but she is a 'passive gardener' and I learn stuff from her blog/tweets. (I like blogs where I learn something.) Other (ME) blogs I dip into are Digitalesse (photograpy); Ciara writes gorgeous posts on motherhood and Dr Speedy updates us on all the lunacy with just the right amount of scathing.

There was no blogging when I was very severe, I do wonder what I would have expressed of my illness back then if the internet had been around. Intense chronic symptoms distort your view, it can be hard to think of anything else. I remember I used to write my symptoms down to keep track of them and make bargains with God, whom I've never believed in. I'm no saint but I somehow manage(d) to keep hold of the fact that terrible things - and beautiful things - are going on elsewhere, no matter how much this illness has impacted on me. Like Helen Fleet, my character, I have a sense of absurdity, which no doubt helps me cope. But I can't blog solely about my life when children are being bombed in Lebanon/Gaza, flooded in Pakistan . . . take your pick of the horrors.

Still, some days you just want everything to be good for yourself and that is okay. There are still days my heart could shatter at what I have lost. And those with unremitting, severe ME deserve fucking trophies, they really do. I don't tend to put my worst days and hours up here, I think because a lot of that is in my novel, which is my weapon, and I feel I don't have to fight anymore (though I do, really, we all do).

Life can be extraordinarily painful and extraordinarily beautiful, there is luck and there is bad luck. It is how we respond that makes the pain bearable or unbearable. And how we respond depends on who we are at the core, and also on the support we have. Without support, this illness could very easily undo you.

When I see my wee aunt (who is fifty, she has Down's Syndrome and now dementia) I get the extraordinary pain and beauty at the same time. My heart breaks every time I see her, but when she smiles, it unbreaks and the world lights up. I saw her recently and fed her a miniature Milky Way and helped her drink a small carton of Ribena with a straw. It took over an hour. She is strapped into a wheelchair during the day. I hugged her and kissed her and sang a few verses of the Hokey Cokey, once her favourite song/dance. She can no longer walk or speak or read or write or colour in. I was in a state of total exhaustion for the next few weeks from this visit up north, that scary, jetlagged, all muscles compressed into a tin sensation, clumsy and forgetful, but all that mattered was I'd spent precious time with her.

Even taking the wide and bizarre spectrum of ME into account, if you look around the internet and see just how many claim to have (or have had) ME, I still fear that it is being over-diagnosed in some places, some seem to wear it as a badge, inappropriately. This is the fault of GPs and self-diagnosers who are - understandably - stumbling in the dark because of the nonsense peddled for so long by the Wesselyites. (Yeah, we don't actually know what's wrong with you, let's just call it ME. Now, be a good girl/boy, go and do some star jumps and we will train you not to feel pain.)

With any longterm illness comes much pain and chaos - and moments of beauty. We need balance to cope with it all. I don't always get the balance right in real life, but I hope I can do it on this blog.

*I meant to add this blog before but got distracted, have been tweaking this post for a week, it started as a post about my wee aunt and went in another direction. Holey Vision writes with grace (literally, her dog is called Grace) and humour about life with progressive loss of vision. Her spirit and lack of self-pity are quite something.

Thursday, 11 November 2010

Two writers

This made me laugh out loud. Fabulous. 'Wasp in a Wine Glass' by Alan Bissett in the recent issue of Glasgow University online literary magazine From Glasgow to Saturn.

Elsewhere, writer Mischa Hiller experiments with low dose Naltrexone for ME. I know very little about LDN, more on its uses, here.

Wednesday, 10 November 2010

Unreliable narrators

In fiction, there is the concept of the unreliable narrator, a character you cannot trust, some characters more duplicitous than others. Many of the powerful figures who legislate over ME are unreliable narrators. I'm a little surprised she knows so little about XMRV but Nicola Sturgeon strikes me as a decent enough politician and I hope she actually takes on board what the very fine Sarah Lawry was trying to tell her.

Twitter seems to have something of the unreliable narrator, it has doubled my tweets from 90 to 180. It has done worse elsewhere, adding or subtracting thousands of tweets from others. There seem to be many bugs with the new Twitter layout. Disturbing that a microblogging tool, an instrument of reporting, is telling so many lies.

Saturday, 6 November 2010

Friday, 5 November 2010

Is the Wizard of Oz the magic behind ebooks?

Epublishing seems so random, I think there is a drugged up Wizard of Oz behind it all. I heard today - through Twitter - that The State of Me is now available in the Australia iBook store. I had no idea! Meanwhile, the corrected Kindle version for Amazon UK (there were glitches in the original) is still in a queue, and The Book Depository, for reasons I cannot fathom, has just removed the ePub/Sony link to my book. (I also see the one review displayed there used to be five star but is now demoted to three star.) All of this makes me dizzy, best not to think about it. And, yesterday, the Guardian asked, Is the ebook the new hardback?

Thursday, 4 November 2010

The blinkered ones keep their blinkers on

Just saw that the blinkered ones - also known as the National Institute of Clinical Excellence - are at it again. I really don't have energy to get enraged, just wonder how long the fun & games will go on. The Scottish Guideline at least acknowledges the recently discovered XMRV and the blatant damage of graded exercise reported by patients - and by comparison may almost merit the Nobel Prize for Medicine. I'm truly curious to know how many people have cured themselves of ME - and I mean the illness I know as ME , not pretend ME - by following NICE's orders since August 2007. Coincidentally, I came across NICE earlier this evening in another context, on the London Review of Books blog - before I 'd seen the ME Association post above. I left a comment over at LRB. I must've known in my bones NICE was up to something.

And I have just seen this over at the beautifully named blogging not jogging. We are treated to the stupidity of two women named Esther - Esther Rantzen and Dr Esther Crawley, both devoted fans of the Lightning Process. As I said on my comment over there - they sound more like they are presenting Blue Peter, they totally lack gravitas, especially Dr Crawley. And I mean no offence to Blue Peter, just that these women seem more about sticky back plastic than neuro-immune illness.