My job was very stressful and I worked very
long hours. I didn't take lunch breaks or holidays and I often
worked at weekends. In order to prop up my flagging energy levels
I ate lots of junk food, including sweets and chocolate. When
I went home I would drink a bottle of wine to numb the exhaustion
and slow down my racing brain and I would heat up a ready-prepared
meal in the microwave.
The first warning I got that all was not well
were panic attacks. For no apparent reason I would start to feel
shaky, anxious and very strange, as if I wasn't really there.
I would have difficulty getting my breath. This was followed
by chronic insomnia; sometimes I went for two or three nights
without sleeping at all. I thought the answer was to ignore the
distress signals my body was sending me and work harder. I also
joined an aerobics class, which I squeezed in to my lunch hour.
The fatigue was incredible - I was always tired - but I just
ignored the exhaustion and got on with running my business. In
fact, I didn't really thing about the fatigue - I just assumed
that it was normal, that life was like that and it was something
I just had to accept.
Then I got what I thought
was flu. After three days in bed I dragged myself back to work.
I was totally wiped out and dizzy, but I thought I had to work
or my world would cave in - especially as I owed the bank £50,000
and had a huge mortgage of at least treble that amount. My
doctor took some blood tests and later told me I had glandular
fever caused by the Epstein-Barr virus. She advised me to rest,
so I slowed down a bit - but not enough. Three months later
I sold my business. I then started working as a television
researcher but then developed some unnerving symptoms that
I couldn't ignore. The exhaustion would get so bad that sometimes
I couldn't even speak, and I would have to go and lie down.
One day my husband found me on the floor - I couldn't move!
If I rested I was still tired. I managed to struggle on with
my job, even though it meant lying down during the lunch hour
rather than socialising with others in the production team.
This way, I managed to keep my condition secret from my work
colleagues. To admit to being tired or ill was something that
wasn't allowed in our hard-driven consumer society. I existed
on chocolate for a quick boost of energy but that soon wore
off.
Eventually I became so ill that I had to give
up work. Resting didn't make me any better and if I exercised
it took me days to recover. My muscles ached. I had a permanent
fog in my head and I just couldn't sleep Eventually I was diagnosed
with M.E. or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. If only I had listened
to my body when it had first sent me signals to slow down,
My health deteriorated until in 1992 I was in
a wheelchair. At this point I was too tired even to hold a conversation.
I was also facing some prejudice, in those days some of my friends
and family, encouraged by bad press and ignorant doctors were
very scathing and didn't believe that I had a real physical illness.
However, simple things like making a cup of tea were like climbing
a mountain and if I over-exerted myself it would take days to
recover. I was taken into hospital for three months and put on
various drugs, which, in hindsight, made me much worse. I was
also given Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. This didn't improve my
energy but it did make me much more positive about life and my
outlook. I also met a wonderful woman in hospital called Nancy
Farley who introduced me to meditation.
In 1993 my local yoga teacher, Angela Stevens,
asked me if I would help her to set up a yoga group for people
with CFS. She had noticed that this was a common problem and
thought that remedial yoga would help. I wasn't so sure - strenuous
exercise was the last thing that I needed - but Angela assured
me that yoga would be beneficial. So I got together a group of
people and we started. Almost immediately I began to feel better.
Angela concentrated on yoga breathing, relaxation and meditation.
There were some gentle stretching exercises to get our systems
going and to build up our muscle groups but we took these very
slowly and at our own pace. Sometimes I over-estimated my health
and did too much but that was usually because I was trying to
keep up with someone on a higher level of ability. The first
rule of yoga is to listen to the body and work with it, not against
it!
I started visiting the Yoga for Health Foundation,
which was, in 1993, the largest residential yoga centre in Europe.
They were doing a lot of work with M.E. as well as with other
chronic conditions - and I learned more about the importance
of proper diet and meditation During my time there studying and
practising yoga, the improvement in my health became so dramatic
that I realised that yoga was having a profound effect on my
well -being. Pranayama - or yoga breathing - was really important
in my journey back to health, as were the relaxation and stretching
postures. Gradually I became physically stronger. I also became
much more spiritually aware as the more I practised yoga; the
more I was getting in touch with the 'real' Fiona. One of my
teachers, Bill Feeney, says that the ego is like a large parrot
on the shoulder and we should aim to reduce this to a small sparrow,
in order that the ego and attachment to the material world are
not driving us and that we can listen in to the true self.
As I started to study the
sutras of Patanjali in order to learn more about the philosophy
of yoga. I tried to incorporate the yamas and niyamas (moral
codes of conduct and restraints) in to my every day life.
In studying the sutras I was also interested to learn how
yoga is about quietening the mind. Since, like many people
with M.E. I always had a hyperactive mind that used to drive
me crazy and which was, no doubt, stimulating the whole of
my nervous system, this touched a chord with me. Living in
the present moment is a very important lesson and so the process
of calming the mind, connecting with the real self within and working towards liberation, which Patanjali talks about, is, I think,
vital for recovery from chronic fatigue. A mind, which is
always active, is so exhausting. Staying in the here and now
reduces so much tension and worry and allows us to be happy.
Also, being present helps us to be much calmer about the future.
For example, if I had a relapse, I would always panic about
how that would affect me, what I would have to cancel and
not be able to do. This worry would then lead to further illness
and exhaustion. By learning to surrender - a key lesson in
yoga - I was able to just accept that this is how I was for
the time being and let go of any anxieties about the future.
I could choose to be ill and unhappy, or ill for now, and
happy. This state of mind got me out of relapse faster than
any pill I could have popped.
By 1999 I was beginning to teach yoga to other
people with M.E. and I started a teacher training course with
the Yoga for Health Foundation, which I completed in 2002, In
2003 I was contacted by Alex Howard who wanted to interview me
for a CD he was making to go with his book 'Why ME?' I
read Alex's book and it really resonated with me. Alex is over
20 years younger than me and yet he was giving me a lesson, which
I had understood intellectually but not actually put in to action.
This was that, if you want to get better, then you have to live
an authentic and happy life. In other words, you have to be true
to yourself and be your real self. At around the same
time I read Ekhart Tolle's book 'The Power of Now' ,
a book I continue to refer to and which inspires me.
In 2004 I left my marriage after 24 years. My
yoga journey and the lessons I learnt woke me up. I had been
locked for years in an unhappy, destructive relationship, which
left me permanently on edge and stressed. I realised I would
never truly recover until I was in a situation where I could
be true to the real Fiona.
I went to work at the Yoga for Health
Foundation - doing a bit of teaching but mainly working in
the kitchen, which I loved. Meditation becomes so easy when
doing uncomplicated tasks. In 2005 I went to do some more teaching
in India and then returned to London, where I taught yoga full-time
in various yoga centres for two years, before going off to
travel to India in 2007 to
study again. I now teach in the UK and abroad taking
yoga retreats and workshops for all kinds of people - for those
who are healthy and for those who have chronic health challenges.
I am a huge admirer of the teacher TKV
Desikachar and am now studying for an advanced teaching diploma
in the KHYF (Krishnamacharya) tradition. I
am particularly interested in yoga philosophy and how we can
take this in to our every day lives. I am now based near
Portsmouth in Hampshire and am blessed to have more energy
than before I was ill; I went trekking in Nepal in 2008,
which is something I could never have dreamt of doing when I
was so ill with ME.
All this has contributed to
my recovery. I have learnt a lot more about prana since I wrote
the first edition of the book. I know that, for example, when
Patanjali recommended that we control our senses that, had he
lived in the 21 st century, he would probably advise that too
much materialism, or overloading of the senses by continual TV,
noise or stimulation, wears us down and takes us away from our
spiritual core. I now know that my illness was sent to wake me
up to my spiritual truth, and in that sense my M.E. although
very traumatic, was a blessing. |