Out with the old year, in the with the new year!
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| The view outside my window Christmas day. The fog froze to the trees! So pretty. |
But first, I'm sure that Facebook and Google collaborate to manage my Facebook feed for me. I told my Oura Ring, Clue App, and Fitbit that my period started. Now 50% of my feed is about endometriosis! It's not necessarily a bad thing, right? I get to learn all sorts of facts from surgeons and doctors making reels about it. But there really is no such thing as health privacy anymore. While I heavily rely on these apps to help me understand what is just PMS versus a sign that I'm actually about to start bleeding (therefore be sick in bed for most of a day), I also know that I'm a data mine that I'm paying to contribute to. I pick and choose my battles with technology. Do you all think it's worth using technology to monitor your health, knowing it's never going to be private? Oura probably helps me the most, but Clue's tracking is the best. Fitbit is almost useless, but I do it anyway.
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| I should write an updated blog about my Oura Ring, since it's changed a lot over the years with all their updates. I do find it very helpful in some ways, and less helpful now in other ways. |
It's the last day of 2025! I woke up in 2025 in Gaffney, South Carolina. In the middle of the year I said goodbye to the South. I will wake up tomorrow (2026) morning in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Some observations from 2025:
❄ I feel less symptomatic in the cold weather. I know it seems backwards, because my body runs cold from poor circulation, but the heat triggers more symptoms for me. I can always warm up when it's cold. I can sit in front of the fireplace cuddling with a blanket. I can wear a big snuggly hoodie. I can drink hot tea. I can use my sauna or sit in the bath. When it's hot and humid, how do I cool down? I sweat very easily with pins and needles prickles all over my body from the heat, and my heart races like crazy. I sweat just from standing up and my heart starting to race. Cold water triggers symptoms for me, unlike warm water. Removing clothes makes me too cold from the temperature change, which causes my nerves to ache. The cold weather might make me shiver, but I can manage it. I can't manage heat.
✌ The people I spend my days with have a HUGE impact on how I feel. This actually has more to do with me than them. I tend to unconsciously adjust my personality according to the people I'm around, but I also spend energy keeping a shield up to protect myself from energy I can't handle. Some people are full of anxiety, frantic high-strung vibrations, contagious depression, anger that poisons their every action, and other vibrations that I can feel, even if they don't say it. Negative energy tends to feed on my attention, which requires my energy and strength. I don't want to absorb the vibrations, but I do. I'm built that way. If I shield myself, I drain myself anyway. So it's extremely important for me to choose to be around people who are peaceful, respectful, loving, have good vibrations, and lift everyone around them. Choosing to be alone can be the healthiest thing for me too. I'm introverted, so I need that recovery time regardless of my chronic illnesses. But the right people don't drain me. The right people can help me live and enjoy being who I am, even when I'm in pain or feeling unwell. I have to choose my people very carefully.
Some observations from 2025:
❄ I feel less symptomatic in the cold weather. I know it seems backwards, because my body runs cold from poor circulation, but the heat triggers more symptoms for me. I can always warm up when it's cold. I can sit in front of the fireplace cuddling with a blanket. I can wear a big snuggly hoodie. I can drink hot tea. I can use my sauna or sit in the bath. When it's hot and humid, how do I cool down? I sweat very easily with pins and needles prickles all over my body from the heat, and my heart races like crazy. I sweat just from standing up and my heart starting to race. Cold water triggers symptoms for me, unlike warm water. Removing clothes makes me too cold from the temperature change, which causes my nerves to ache. The cold weather might make me shiver, but I can manage it. I can't manage heat.
✌ The people I spend my days with have a HUGE impact on how I feel. This actually has more to do with me than them. I tend to unconsciously adjust my personality according to the people I'm around, but I also spend energy keeping a shield up to protect myself from energy I can't handle. Some people are full of anxiety, frantic high-strung vibrations, contagious depression, anger that poisons their every action, and other vibrations that I can feel, even if they don't say it. Negative energy tends to feed on my attention, which requires my energy and strength. I don't want to absorb the vibrations, but I do. I'm built that way. If I shield myself, I drain myself anyway. So it's extremely important for me to choose to be around people who are peaceful, respectful, loving, have good vibrations, and lift everyone around them. Choosing to be alone can be the healthiest thing for me too. I'm introverted, so I need that recovery time regardless of my chronic illnesses. But the right people don't drain me. The right people can help me live and enjoy being who I am, even when I'm in pain or feeling unwell. I have to choose my people very carefully.
(I'm not saying that people are bad because I don't tolerate their energy well, and I'm not saying that people going through tough times are bad for me. It's all about how well a person can manage their emotions, because unmanaged emotions are what leak out and affect people around them. When a person who understands how to love and respect others is grieving or in pain, their energy doesn't sour and drain me. When someone hasn't worked on their emotional intelligence and is still emotionally immature, they tend to drain me no matter what their life experience is in the moment - it's not because they're bad, it's because I don't have the energy to be what they need me to be to support them.)
💸 The better I feel, the more of a sucker I am for advertisements for things I might be interested in buying. The worse I feel in the moment, the less I care. The internet is a dangerous place for me to be when I'm feeling some mental energy, because I will not use my energy well online. I might not actually buy anything, but I will window shop every sale and seriously consider some items. Then I regret spending my usable energy for the day that way. Totally wasted on being a sucker for social media ads. It's actually a big reason why I'm using Facebook less. I spend time in specific groups on Facebook, but I'm avoiding scrolling my newsfeed now. I do want to know about local businesses and events, but not at the cost at seeing loads of ads and celebrity gossip that I didn't ask for. So therefore, when I'm feeling well enough, I prefer to skip social media and go straight into gaming. If I'm going to spend my energy at my computer, gaming feels way better. If I feel well enough to do something more than sit at my computer, then I should actually physically do something like use the treadmill or clean or cook or fix something, or socialize. I've had more energy available to do things like this since moving back to ND!
🎶 I love specific music at specific times, but silence is actually my favorite for regulating my nerves. Music stimulates or blocks my senses, which can be really helpful at times, especially while driving or cleaning. But the best way to preserve my energy is to be in silence, without the need to feel alert. I can't recover well unless I'm in silence. I used to use ambient music to help me rest, but mainly I did that to block out everything else I could hear so I could dull my senses. Silence is better. This isn't a negative comment about my husband, but it is just a fact: he always needed something playing in the background. Music, TV, radio, podcast, just anything to focus on. That was fine for him, but I needed a lot more silence in my life. I can get that here in ND.
🐔 I really loved my pet birds. I had 2 cockatiels (that's why I chose the chicken emoji, ha!) One was at least 30 years old, and I've had him since I was 7 years old. The other was 12 years old and she bonded to me. I had to give them to a new home (I don't want to explain, but I had no choice.) I loved them so much. But they were a lot of work, and I often didn't have the energy to take care of them properly. I felt a lot of guilt about how little attention and care I gave them sometimes. As much as it broke my heart to give them to a new home, I also felt some relief. They went to a home where they get more attention. I don't have to drain myself on cleaning their cages, which was a big ordeal! I don't have to run to them every time they call for help. I don't have to be on alert 24/7 for their sakes. I am my only responsibility now. Right now, this is therapeutic. I'm getting to have a break. Please understand that birds are like 3 year olds that never grow up, and I've been caring for them my entire life. They're not like children who have needs that evolve over the years. I'm happily accepting the rest from the responsibility right now. I lost my ability to be alert. I'm burned out. I do know that I'm going to be deeply sad about losing them once I recover though. I don't want a new pet as a rebound... I want a family. I want a husband and children. That's another story. I'm choosing not to feel guilty. My birds are with a good family now, and I'm where I need to be to heal.
🛣 So many people say it's brave to choose to leave my marriage. I've been reflecting on that a lot, because I don't know if "brave" is the right adjective for me. He wasn't abusive, bad, mean, or anything of that nature. I wasn't completely dependent on him, because I was always able to come home to my parents, which is a great situation (not a last resort like for many people.) It wasn't brave, it was simply just difficult to leave because it required effort. It was easier to stay because it was familiar, and we didn't have problems getting along on a day-to-day basis because we're both nice people-pleasers. But South Carolina taught me that it wasn't actually easier to stay. He said my illness was like the 3rd person in the marriage, but I think his career was the 4th person in the marriage. His career was most important to him, and his career was not easy for me because it meant a lot of instability, uncertainty, and unnecessary stress. It costs a lot of money to move - SO much money. His career isn't stable enough and doesn't pay enough, so the risk of moving for jobs often is too high. He was sad that I didn't make more money than him so that he could afford his career, but the reality is that he always wanted a job that would require relocating to places that I didn't necessarily want to live. A job that is fading away with budget cuts. I couldn't continue living in a high-stress situation just so he could live out his dream, which wasn't my dream. I wanted him to be happy, but I wasn't, because I was only along for the rocky ride. Even if he switched careers, I knew I would be along for a very stressful and uncertain ride. It wasn't brave of me to leave, it was mostly just practical. I needed to realign myself with my own values, goals, and needs. And so as I enter into 2026, I look forward to planning for my own future!
🎇 So as I enter into 2026, I'm choosing gratitude. I'm not entering into the new year with fear, uncertainty, bad vibes, depression, anger, resentment, or anything negative. It's all in the past. This is my fresh start. The future isn't something to fear. The future doesn't need my past baggage. I'm hopeful!
Another thought...
Another thought...
As I read through what I wrote, I realize that I might sound neurodivergent. I talk a lot about stimulation, feeling alert, and trying to maintain calm nerves. I have never been tested for neurodivergence, but I've seen the changes in myself from before and after getting sick and know that this illness caused these sensory issues. I wasn't like this until I caught H1N1 in 2012. I've had to do a lot of work on myself over the years to tolerate sensory issues better. In the first few years, lights, noises, textures, temperature changes, and everything sensory really bothered me. Sometimes noises and changes in lights were really painful. I'm not as fatigued now as I was back then, and I have a higher tolerance now, but sensory issues can still trigger some pain for me. My primary issue now is that I'm always feeling "alert" and I need to be able to stop sensing everything so my nerves can calm down. It might be psychological - a defense mechanism, maybe. But I do know that my need to feel "alert" isn't within my control, and when something "alerts" me I get a lot of nerve pain and waves of freezing cold through my body. It's something I hope will calm down with time, now that I've parted ways with the majority of the stress in my life.
Eivor - Let It Come
Sometimes
I overthink the most simple things
I go blind
I don't see the solutions in front of me
But today, the sky looks different
And I am wide awake, my heart is quivering
(Let it come, bring it on)
There is something in the air, it's liberating
I can feel it moving
This time, it's coming for me
Something I've been waiting for, I can't explain it
I can feel it moving
This time, I'm ready for it
It's time
To trust the voice in me
Synchronize
Every part of me to this moment
Today, the sky looks different
And I am wide awake, my heart is quivering
(Let it come, bring it on)
(Bring it on, bring it on)
(Bring it on, bring it on)
(Bring it on, bring it on)
(Let it come, bring it on)
There is something in the air, it's liberating
I can feel it moving
This time, it's coming for me
Something I've been waiting for, I can't explain it
But I know I'm changing
This time, I'm ready for it
Ready for it
This time, I'm ready
Let it come, bring it on



