crunchygranola
Songster
- May 6, 2024
- 258
- 547
- 141
I just stopped getting invited to things, too. I had a good friend cancel on me because I asked if we could stay at my house and do something fun instead of go out— and she just canceled.I wish people understood how hard having POTS can be. My last year as a teenager have been stuck in a doctor’s office with needles in my arms and the constant “your bloodwork is fine, you’re making it up in your head” doesn’t help.
It has completely taken away every aspect of my social life. I used to have so much fun and go travel and go to events with my friends, but now, after people heard I got sick, they just leave. They get frustrated after a month because I’m not better, but they don’t bother to understand the term “chronic illness”. It’s zapped so much out of me— my bubbliness, my energy, my hope for the future… I’m so tired.
And it gets so lonely so quickly. I have a loving partner, but I want my friends, too. My parents are upset when I have flare ups, but they don’t understand that this is a real issue and that making me eat vegetables isn’t going to cure it.
I eat well and have a healthy lifestyle, but that’s not going to cure me of this. I’m doing what I can when I can, but it is so lonely.
It’s scary, too— especially when I’m alone. When I pass out, sometimes it’s for long periods of time. This morning, I completely lost mobility in my legs and had to use a wheelchair to get around the upstairs. Moreover, I hate when people say that POTS isn’t as bad as other illnesses. It’s not about what it is, but it’s about how it affects an individual.
I was only 17.
I asked another friend why he didn’t invite me to an event and he just said that i “would’ve said no anyways”.
It makes me not even want to have friends because it hurts so badly to be excluded from everything.