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December 16, 2025

How To Accept Chronic Illness or Disability Gracefully?


Maybe it happens all of a sudden: you're crossing the street in a clearly marked crosswalk and a car runs a red light and hits you. And your body is never the same again.

Or maybe it's the onset of a peculiar minor symptom, followed by more strange little symptoms, all of which get more alarming and eventually turn out to have a common, unfixable cause.

Possibly it's just the inevitable, but still disagreeable, result of getting older. Organs and other body parts begin to fail in ways that are not reversible.

But the bottom line is: you are no longer "healthy" in the way you used to be, and you probably never will be again, and the best you can do is try to accept this and move forward.

But how?

Oh wait... maybe you thought I was proposing an answer? No, I was asking YOU, because I seem to really suck at this whole acceptance thing. 


Quick Recap: What The Hell Am I Complaining About Now?

It's Hypoparathyroidism! And no need to bother learning how to say it or spell it--it's really rare so you'll have no use for your newfound knowledge.

My handful of regular readers may recall that after having surgery in Spain to deal with thyroid cancer, my doctor didn't just remove my thyroid, he somehow managed to render all my parathyroid glands completely nonfunctional. Parathyroids are a different animal than a thyroid, they're just tiny little things the size of a grain of rice. When they don't work, the body can't regulate calcium, which, as it turns out, screws up all kinds of things other than just your bone health. Calcium is crucial for nerve and muscle functioning, and it's probably worth noting that a heart is just a big ol' complicated muscle, and it needs to contract correctly or Bad Things can happen.

Almost a year later, I still have no parathyroid function and the condition appears to be permanent. In the short term, it means muscle twitching and other weird neuromuscular sensations, nasty cramps, and fear of seizures or heart problems if levels get too low, or the queasy knowledge that kidneys and other organs are suffering damage if they get too high. It takes me about a million pills a day to try to reach equilibrium.

The most annoying part for me is that it's been preventing me from doing cardio. When I give it a go, even in the gentlest way possibly, my calves revolt: first they start twitching, then aching, and then they wake me out of sound sleep at night with those horrible "oh fuck fuck fuck fuck" sort of cramps. It's creepy, too, because it implies my body is likely experiencing other less visible, signs of distress that could mean serious trouble.

I do realize that many 65 year-olds have given up on cardio already, for a variety of reasons, but I really don't want to be one of them. Yet every failed attempt to return to my normal routines leaves me feeling bitter and depressed, sulking like a toddler denied a lollipop.

Recently I had a brief respite from symptoms when my Spanish endocrinologist upped my calcitriol to a higher dose than my American endocrinologist had me on, and I was thrilled to be able to return to working out with my vr holofit app!

 

Until my lab results came back and I discovered I was dangerously high in both blood and urine calcium, and already starting to lose kidney function. (Note to self: having two different endocrinologists in two countries advising totally opposite approaches is not optimal).

Can I Get Some Advice, Chatty? 

There are of course much better resources for confronting discouragement and angst than Chatgpt. I should probably do some serious soul-searching with the help of my favorite science-based spiritual gurus, Rick Hanson and Shinzen Young.

But what the hell, my faithful research assistant Chatty McClanker is right here by my side!

So what would you do, Chatty, if you were feeling defeated by chronic illness?

 

 

So here is some of the handy advice she came up with, paraphrased. As much as she would prefer I let her write the entire damn blog post herself. Down, girl.

Give Up the Pressure to Fix Things

She points out that trying to return to a previous version of yourself can create more distress than the illness itself. "Learning to live with limits, rather than constantly fighting them, is often the real work."

Instead of asking why you can’t do something anymore, it helps to ask what version of it might still be possible. 

Manage Energy

She says to learn what drains you, what restores you, and pay attention to pacing, even if it feels inefficient or even lazy.

Attend to Grief, but Don't Wallow

So you can't escape it, but realize that the painful feeling of loss tends to come in waves rather than tidy stages. Lost abilities, lost identities, lost predictability, and sometimes a shorter life. But you can still have plenty of humor, joy and gratitude.

Redefine Productivity and Self-Worth 

Okay, I have to agree with Chatty here: "Chronic illness exposes how tightly worth is often tied to output... but worth doesn’t disappear when productivity changes. A flexible sense of identity makes coping easier. Rigid before-and-after narratives can trap people in constant comparison with a past that’s no longer accessible."

Guilty as charged. 

Find Community

Chatty advises caution and flexibility with this: sometimes connecting with others who share the same concerns can be deeply comforting, but a constant focus on illness can turn you into a neurotic puddle of anxiety and hopelessness. And yeah, she didn't use those words exactly.

Get Used to Uncertainty

Because there often aren't clear time frames or answers, try to just focus on the next manageable step.

Reimagine Pleasure and Meaning

Hmm, probably no one is still reading at this point, so why not just let Chatty have the floor? "Joy doesn’t have to be big or exhausting to be real. Small rituals, sensory comforts, creative outlets, or quiet routines can carry a lot of weight. A life that looks smaller from the outside isn’t necessarily a diminished one."

My Take 

So it's not a bad list, although like all self-help advice, it's much easier said than done. I'm especially struggling with this one:

"Learning to live with limits, rather than constantly fighting them, is often the real work."

But here's the thing: despite the long-term repercussions, my day-to-day quality of life is still super high.  There are so many other people out there suffering with scarier, more unpleasant symptoms and diseases--battling constant pain or nausea, bedridden or incontinent, losing their memory, vision, hearing, or... well, the list goes on.

I'm really lucky, and deep down I know it. And yes, I have a stubborn attachment to my identity as a bit of a fitness freak. I've been trying to operate under the false assumption that if I just do the right workouts, eat the right food, pop the right supplements, get the right amount of sleep... that I'll live forever, strong and fit and mentally sharp.

Yet as someone entering the "third age" (as they charmingly call Being Old in Spain), isn't the real work psychological rather than what happens at the gym? Failing bodies, compromised cognition, and ultimately death, they're coming for all of us. I'm not special. How can I learn to be happy and grateful for every day I have?

Anyway.

Anyone else have any thoughts or advice on moving on from sulking and griping to graceful acceptance? 

6 comments:

  1. Feck. Not really an answer to the question but it seems to me that all of us who are still here are in the same boat to a greater or lesser degree, we all started reading this blog because we were interested in health and fitness and none of us are getting any younger.

    I keep telling myself I won't start talking too much about the various bits of me that don't work like they used to (I don't have a blog, so it's optional 😂), but we're all carrying a cross of one size or another. Mine's not that heavy so far but there's time yet.

    It wouldn't be the worst thing if all we can do from here is carry each other some of the way.

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  2. You're exactly right, old duck--enough years go by and stuff starts to go wrong. My problem is I can accept that intellectually, but my 3 year old emotional self just thinks that maybe if I throw a big tantrum it will help make my body do what I want it to? Oddly enough, it doesn't work! But somehow it does help to whine a little and get it out of my system. I do encourage everyone to bitch a little about all those disobedient body parts, as in my mind this is the perfect place for it.

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  3. (Raising my hand) I totally understand what you're saying! My brain throws a hissy fit sometimes, then a total meltdown fit, then giddiness, sometimes uncontrollable crying fits, and pity parties, and and and.....
    I recently turned 71. I am older than my parents and 3 of the four grandparents were, when they passed . . . and they all passed in their 60's. I lost a sister when she was only 48 (liver disease). A neighbor down the street was bed ridden for a year and recently passed away. She was 10 years older than me.
    I get a stabbing pain and think, "OH MY GOD I'M HAVING A HEART ATTACK"! Or an ache in the bionic knee and think it's failing me. I could go on and on. And some days I can handle these thoughts just fine. Some days I can't.
    I hate waiting for the 'other shoe to drop'. What will be the major health issue that signals the beginning of the end of me?
    Once in a while, I look in the mirror and admire my still naturally brown, long hair and think I don't look so old, so I can't really BE this old, right? Does not being very grey mean I have longevity?
    I recently joined a FB group of women over 70. We (you and I) are not alone. We are normal. We have it better than some and worse than some. Sometimes that is comforting and sometimes it's irritating.
    How often do I go for my daily walk and wonder how much longer I will be able to do this? (every time) Then I see some 80 year old body builder and wonder why I am such a slacker?
    I think this is all a process that is normal as we age. The thing is, we don't have the luxury of time that we had years ago. We know our time is finite. We also know that we never will know how much longer we have to live, or to live the life we want.
    In my case, I really work the mental exercise of 1st, I am alive today. I HAVE today, at least so far. 2nd, I recognize that I am not alone. It is a normal passage into our last years. 3rd, I accept (as much as I can) that life will be what it will be and there isn't much I can do to change how it happens, so just do what I can do, for now, for today, for the rest of my life.
    I cannot imagine being the 81 year old neighbor who passed away. She was bed ridden for over a year. Her life was tv and watching out the window of her room. I waved at her, every time I walked by. I visited her as much as I could, having to sneak in her house when her asshole daughter wasn't home. (long story there) She was always so happy to have me stop by. The last time I saw her was on her birthday.
    Crabby, I don't know where I am going with all this, other than to say, I get it. This aging shit sucks sometimes.
    Graceful acceptance? F*ck that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, I'm not Anonymous, I am WalkerLady lol

      Delete
    2. Walker Lady, first let me just say how much I always love your thoughtful comments. And this one is particularly awesome in the way it both validates the frustration I'm feeling, normalizes the shitty process of aging/failing, and reminds me of how great it still is to be alive and kicking. I love your list of three things. May your bionic knee take you many many many more miles!

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  4. There are so many ways to contribute to the world, and to making it a better place, than just being a health and fitness guru (which you can still be, just from a different angle). Maybe finding one of those ways and doing it would help. What we mostly want to feel, I think, is wanted and needed in some fashion.

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Thanks, I love hearing from you! Ignore the stupid google warning about needing an account. Just use the dropdown that starts wiith Anonymous.

And feel free to be Anon, that's cool! Or even better, keep going and drop a name in the name field. Made-up is fine! Even include an url if you're not spammy. You can find nice people here, I swear. Anyone nasty gets deleted.

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