Health

  • December Wrap Up: Preparing For the New Year—Highlights of what I made, how I celebrated, and how I was challenged by chronic illness. | cassiecreley.com
    Blog,  Health

    December Wrap Up: Preparing For the New Year

    Happy New Year! I’m sharing a wrap up post with highlights from my December, including what I made, what I found challenging, and festive photos. Looking back can help us move forward. So I’m reviewing the last month of 2020 before next year’s fresh start.

    This post is inspired by A Chronic Voice’s linkup party, which is a way for bloggers to connect and write about similar themes. I’ve decided to write on three of the linkup themes: Beginning, Enduring, and Revealing. I’ve also decided to add two themes of my own: Creating and Celebrating.

  • Easy Christmas Light Alternatives: Simplify Christmas Decorating. Merry and bright DIY ideas that use colorful bits of nature and other décor. These easier decorations will help you whether you’re looking for less stress due to chronic illness or a desire for more free time with family this holiday season.
    Create,  Health

    Easy Christmas Light Alternatives: Simplify Christmas Decorating

    I love decorating for the holidays, but due to chronic illness, I need some easier Christmas light alternatives. I’m sharing some creative and festive ways to simplify Christmas decorating. This way, the outside of your house can shine, but you won’t have to untangle a bunch of light cords in cold weather!

    The annual tradition of decorating outdoors is such a beautiful way to brighten up the dark Pacific Northwest winters and herald the coming of Christmas. I want the outside of my house to look festive, but it’s too cold out for me to put up lights (asthma and fibromyalgia are not forgiving of the cold). And the last place I need to be is on top of a ladder with my dizziness and balance issues caused by dysautonomia, an autonomic nervous system disorder.

  • Practical Gift Ideas for Someone with Chronic Illness or Invisible Illness: A helpful gift guide, plus 4 tips for choosing a gift for someone with health conditions. Useful for Christmas, birthday, or “just because” gift suggestions.
    Blog,  Health

    Practical Gift Ideas for Someone with Chronic Illness

    I hope this list of practical gifts for chronic illness is a helpful guide, whether you’re looking for Christmas, birthday, or “just because” gift suggestions. I’m also sharing four tips for choosing practical gifts for chronic illness. 

    My health conditions include fibromyalgia, POTS (a form of dysautonomia), myalgic encephalomyelitis (aka chronic fatigue syndrome), and asthma. I know that it can be challenging to know what will be helpful for those of us dealing with limitations due to our health, especially those of us with a lot of allergies. I’m sharing some things I’ve found particularly helpful, things I’ve been gifted, and things on my wishlist. (You can read more about my health journey here.)

    Before we dive into gift suggestions, here are helpful tips for gift giving to keep in mind when your recipient has chronic health conditions.

  • Holiday Stay Connected from a Distance
    Blog,  Health

    How To Stay Connected From A Distance-Holiday Edition

    The holiday season is coming, and I want to share some fun and creative ways to stay connected even from a distance. It can be challenging to stay connected while apart. Chronic illness can limit our ability to travel or visit, and risk due to the pandemic adds another layer of restrictions.

    Thankfully, technology provides a lot of ways to keep in touch so we’re not isolated. I’m going to share ideas for virtual Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas parties.

    I’ve been thankful to be able to meet up with a few friends outdoors in the last month or so for socially distanced get-togethers. Now the weather is getting colder (too cold for this asthmatic to be outdoors here in Washington). So I’m thinking about ways to make virtual get-together’s into holiday parties. 

    I hope these ideas inspire many fun celebrations!

  • The Helpful Chart My Doctor Recommended I Create: Prepare for a doctor's visit. Tips on putting information together for doctor’s appointments. Here’s how reviewing your supplements and medications and other health information can help you and your doctor work together on your treatment plan. Especially useful if you have multiple chronic illnesses or health conditions.
    Health

    The Helpful Chart My Doctor Recommended I Create

    Do you ever discover a useful resource for your health that just makes you want to share it? That’s the way I felt when my doctor recommended I create this chart. This is a helpful way to prepare for a doctor’s visit. It led to a lot of light bulb moments as I considered the future direction of my treatment plan, especially when it comes to medication and supplements.

    This chart will help you streamline appointments by having more information at your fingertips, whether you’re meeting with your doctor in person or doing televisits. (I’ve actually found televisits practical because I use up less energy and can pull up documents about my health history on my computer…or ask my mom to run into the next room to check the dosage on my supplements, LOL! What do you guys think of them?)  

    I feel I’ve hit a dead end with my health and haven’t been seeing improvement (so I’ve been trying to focus on the little things I can do).

    That’s why I recently saw my naturopathic oncologist to get a new perspective. I hadn’t seen him in awhile—I had thyroid cancer three years ago and have other chronic health conditions including dysautonomia, fibromyalgia, an autoimmune disease, and asthma.

  • Ups And Downs: Summer, Chronic Illness, and a New Normal: July Linkup—Here’s what is helping me adjust to the new normal, plus an update on how I’m while dealing with health flare ups and making time for creativity. This month’s themes: Bothering, Demanding, Telecommunicating, Tolerating, and Nourishing
    Blog,  Health

    Ups And Downs: Summer, Chronic Illness, and a New Normal

    Hello friends, I’m so excited to be able to join A Chronic Voice’s link up this month. Summer is finally here, but unfortunately, that doesn’t mean a vacation from chronic illness. So I’m going to share what I’ve found helpful and how I’m coping with the new normal.

    This link up is a way for chronic illness bloggers to connect by writing posts based on the same prompts. I found it so helpful last month to use the prompts as a jumping off point to not only write a blog post, but also to do some journaling for myself to process everything going on in the world and my own life.

    This month, I’m using the prompts to share a little bit about what I’ve been up to lately creatively, what I’ve been struggling with healthwise, and how I’m continuing to adjust to the new normal.

    The prompts for this month are Bothering, Demanding, Telecommunicating, Tolerating, and Nourishing.

  • Mid-Year Reflections In A Year Of Pandemic: June Linkup—A look at how quarantine has affected people with chronic illness, as well as thoughts on looking ahead with hope to the rest of the year. This month’s themes: Searching, Hoping, Honoring, Traumatizing, and Responding. | cassiecreley.com
    Blog,  Health

    Mid-Year Reflections In A Year Of Pandemic: June Linkup

    I can’t believe it’s been over a year since I joined A Chronic Voice’s linkup for the first time! I’ve been meaning to join this way for chronic illness bloggers to connect since, but life intervened (aka symptoms have severely limited my writing time). This month, I was thrilled that not only did I have the mental bandwidth to participate, but also that the prompts aligned with several things bouncing around in my head. Chronic illness in a pandemic presents its own unique challenges. (PS here’s my last linkup post.)

     I hope you all are doing as well as you can be. Those of you who love the sunshine, I hope that you are also enjoying the warmer days. I love that the weather will be warmer (in upper 60s or 70s) for about three days, and then rainy for two days—this gives me a good dose of vitamin D when I can sit and walk a little outside.

    The rain gives me a break from feeling like I *have* to get outside; we call that pressure to soak up as much warmth as we can “sun guilt” in the Pacific Northwest. The cottonwood trees had the air filled with tufts of white that looked like slow-drifting snow up until recently. Everything is blooming early, including my beauty bush, which is covered in bees and hummingbirds. (Ok, I’ve seen THREE hummers at once, so not exactly “covered!”)

    In the world beyond my yard, things are moving ahead as Washington counties move into Phase 2 of coming out of quarantine/social distancing. (My county was added to the list June 5.) High risk populations are to “Stay Home, Stay Healthy” through Phase 3. I’ll talk more about this below.

    Let’s dive in. The themes for this month are Searching, Hoping, Honoring, Traumatizing, and Responding.

  • Empty Calendar image
    Blog,  Etc,  Health

    Empty Calendar While Stuck At Home? Record The Good Things!

    A lot of us are stuck at home or stuck inside right now, and if you’re like me, facing an empty calendar might make you feel blue. I originally envisioned this post for people who spend most of their time at home due to chronic illness, and I hope this topic will be helpful to even more people while we’re experiencing social distancing and self-quarantine.

    While staying at home a lot over the last three years due to my health, I’ve found it helpful to look at my blank calendar as an opportunity—it’s the perfect place to record the good things. After all, we don’t have to be busy to be joyful.

    This post will help you brainstorm ways your calendar can help you look forward to the future with a sense of anticipation, and look back on memories with a sense of joy and gratitude.

    I know not everyone keeps a physical calendar, but if you keep a calendar on your phone or computer, you can use these tips too. Families can use these tips when using the calendar to keep a schedule and sense of normalcy for kids. You could also use this post as a prompt for bullet journaling if that’s the way you prefer to capture what you’ve been up to lately.