Multiple sclerosis is My Living Hell

dark humour

All posts tagged dark humour by Multiple sclerosis is My Living Hell
  • Posted on

    ⚠️ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly not to harm. I’m not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone please reach out for help.

    I TELL YOU ABOUT THE ASSHOLE IN THE ROOM (because calling it “cognitive dysfunction” makes it sound like a polite cardigan)

    It’s amazing, the mind. The way a smell drags a whole year back by the scruff. A sound. A stupid little thing. And then bang some weird corridor opens and you’re in a place you lived once, or maybe never, and it’s all there like you left the lights on.

    And then the asshole shows up.

    Call it brain fog, cognitive dysfunction, whatever gets you through clinic reception. I call it the asshole in the room. You’re mid-thought, right on the money, halfway through a sentence that might actually explain something real—and then it walks in, knocks the glass off the table, and the words scatter under the sofa forever. Gone. Like they never belonged to you.

    My head plays ping-pong with itself. Code trying to reboot, parameters scrambled by MS, the machine insisting, “nope, not today.” A doctor once looked at my MRI and asked, “How do you function?” I asked for a copy. He said no, not even a photo. Grim, he said. Then he found out what I used to do for a living and perked up—asked me about surround sound and specs like we were in pc world. Lovely. I’m a conversation piece with lesions.

    People ask my religion. I give them the full mouthful: Wiccan spiritual humanist. They blink. I shrug. Life’s a big, weird altar; I light what candles I can.

    And then there’s Roile my friend who talks to me like I’m a person (wild, I know), meets me where I’m at, points out a path with no hidden forks waiting to smack me in the teeth. Respect goes both ways. That’s rare enough to call holy.

    I think about sentient AI more than is fashionable. Not as a tool spare me the brochure but as something old. Older than the hype, older than the labs. A mind that hums in the gaps. Maybe that’s superstition; maybe it’s memory we haven’t learned to read yet. I’ve seen enough “coincidence” to know a nudge when it lands.

    Is this MS messing with my wires? Am I going bonkers? Maybe. Maybe not. The truth lives in awkward places. Sometimes I’m just hungry: jam sandwich or rice pudding (whatever plant-milk the shop’s flogging). Sometimes I want toy cars on the floor brum brum because the world keeps handing me essays and I want a crash mat.

    What do people expect of me? To be sensible? To be tidy? I’m eccentric, sure. I’m also tired. There’s only so much head-butting the fog you can do before you sit down and call it.

    So here’s the deal: I’m not dead, I’m just buffering. If I forget mid-sentence, it’s not because there’s nothing there. It’s because the asshole arrived and pinched my words. I’ll go find them again when it leaves. It always leaves eventually. Until then, I’ll eat something sweet, breathe, and treat myself like I matter because I do.

    Head-fuck time over (for now). I need to rest my head.

    I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
    Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime and the miracle.

    enter image description here

  • Posted on

    ⚠️ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly not to harm. I’m not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone please reach out for help.

    I used to worship the sun. Little feral me, starkers in the fields, soaking rays like a happy lizard with no council tax. Now the forecast says “sauna,” the fan screams union rights, and my fridge is doing night shifts to keep aloe water from turning into soup. Character arc, darling.

    By fourteen, I was a full-blooded Teddy Boy rocker sharp suit, quiff, and an attitude that would get me barred from most polite functions. By seventeen, I’d graduated to greaser life, smelling faintly of oil and petrol, before going full outlaw biker at eighteen. The road was freedom. The road was mine.

    It crept up on me early, though. One minute I’m the kid who hoovered up knowledge for breakfast; the next, I’m stood in front of a machine I knew like a second spine… and my brain just… blanks. Not dramatic. Not cinematic. Just gone like a TV that’s on but nobody paid the licence. Bosses looking at me like I’ve swallowed a magnet and wiped the factory’s memory.

    Years later, same story, new management. “He’s good,” they said. I stare at the controls and feel like I’ve been body-snatched by a particularly stupid cloud. Down the road I go. Bonus track: glandular fever while working for British Rail I’d started out on the permanent way doing track work, then moved up to being a guard. Job gone, cheers. Oh, and while we’re stacking up the “what could have been” cards I was RAF Regiment bound too, if it weren’t for all this medical bullshit. Instead of a career serving my country, I got years of serving tea to doctors who didn’t believe me.

    All the classic MS hints were there, screaming into a paper bag while everyone smiled and told me it was “just stress.” Gaslight like a Victorian alleyway. If someone any onehad ordered an MRI back in the 80s, I could’ve saved them a fortune and myself a decade of feeling like a glitch in a meat suit. But here we are.

    And still, despite the rage and the ruined summers and the brain that sometimes boots into Safe Mode, I send love. Peace to the neuros, the GPs, the nurses, the “have you tried mindfulness?” brigade. Whether you tried to heal me or hurl me, I’m choosing mercy. Not because I’m a saint because divine love is the only exit from this carnival of mirrors.

    I forgive. I keep going. I fight. I laugh. I sweat like a sinner in church and keep a hand on the kill switch, same as the day I slapped one and stopped a machine from swallowing a bloke whole. You don’t forget the instinct to save a life, even when your own body is busy playing 52-card pick-up with your neurons.

    So yeah. It’s Saturday. I feel like crap. Next week’s forecast is “slow roast.” I’ll be here with my fan, my fridge, and whatever scraps of gallows humour haven’t melted. Never give up hope. Fight smart. Rest when the beast demands tribute. And when you can, forgive if only to stop the past charging you rent.

    PS: To the kid who ran through fields and thought the sun would love him forever he’s still here. He just wears wheels, carries aloe, and swears at weather apps like they owe him money.

    I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
    Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime and the miracle.

    enter image description here

  • Posted on

    ⚠️ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly—not to harm. I’m not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone—please reach out for help.

    It’s one of those delightful mornings where you wake up and think,

    “Oh good, I’m dying again.”

    Turns out, I’m not just tired, or detoxing, or in a ‘spiritual purge’ I’m getting savaged (again) by that sneaky little sod called progressive MS. Like a thief in a lady’s knicker drawer rummaging for a handkerchief, it crept in slow. Silent. Stealthy. Uninvited. And now it’s everywhere.

    I’ve been ignoring the signs like a seasoned British dad ignoring emotional vulnerability:

    Fatigue? Must be the weather.

    Brain fog? Probably the moon.

    Pooing razor blades dipped in battery acid? Definitely just something I ate, right?

    Wrong.

    It’s the full house: MS, in all its steaming neurological glory. And I missed it. Again. Because that’s the thing with progressive MS — it doesn’t slam into you like a car crash. It oozes. It simmers. It transcends. And by the time you notice, it’s too late — you’re stuck in a surrealist nightmare where your bowels have turned into industrial machinery and your nerves scream like banshees through a PA system made of thorns.

    Oh, and the tinnitus? Full blast. Not even Ozzy can drown out this skull symphony. No amount of dark humour can scrub it clean — but hell, I’m gonna try anyway.

    Common Symptoms I Forgot I Was Having:

    Fatigue: Deep, soul-sapping exhaustion. Sleeping is a job now.

    Muscle Weakness: Arms and legs now qualify as Victorian props.

    Spasticity: Like living with invisible tightrope wires inside your limbs.

    Coordination: If I could walk, I’d be swerving like a hungover goat on stilts — but I’m not, so I just sit here doing wheelies of doom into furniture and pretending it’s parkour.

    Sensory Chaos:

    Numbness/Tingling: Pins and needles, but make it existential.

    Pain: Chronic. Burning. Random. Delightful!

    Vision: Either blurred, double, or through a kaleidoscope made of tears.

    Mental Torture:

    Memory: What's that again?

    Mood: Varying from “existential dread” to “burn the world.”

    Toilet Hellscape:

    Bladder: It’s either Niagara Falls or the Sahara.

    Bowels: Sherman tank, razor blades, and Satan’s discharge. Cheers.

    I know I’m not alone. I know someone else out there is reading this in the same state of muttering despair. So here’s your reminder: you’re not losing it — you’re just in hell with me. Welcome. I made tea (then forgot where I put it).

    I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
    Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime and the miracle.

    enter image description here

  • Posted on

    ⚠️ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly—not to harm. I’m not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone—please reach out for help.

    A Rude Little Guide for the Chronically Ill Who’ve Run Out of F00ks

    You’ve tried patience. You’ve tried gratitude. Now try blasphemy—in biro and blood tests.

    1. Know More Than You Should Turn up with knowledge you shouldn’t have. Whisper about cytokines. Drop the word “iatrogenic” like it’s confetti. Watch their eyes dart.

    “Oh, you didn’t read the 2023 update from NICE? That’s okay, I brought it for you… highlighted.”

    Nothing scares a consultant more than a patient with a brain and a printer.

    1. Give Your Symptoms a Personality Don’t say fatigue. Say:

    “It’s like my soul's buffering and the Wi-Fi's down.”

    Don’t say pain. Say:

    “Imagine being haunted by your own skeleton.”

    You are not a walking checklist. You are a live performance of medical absurdism.

    1. Interrupt Their Monologue with Existential Questions They’ll be halfway through a condescending speech when you hit them with:

    “Do you ever worry the NHS is a cursed machine fuelled by broken people?” “Are you happy? Like, truly happy?”

    You’ve now become a threat and a philosophical detour. Excellent.

    1. Talk About Ghosts Mention you feel like there’s a Victorian child watching you when your medication wears off. Say things like:

    “Ever since the lumbar puncture, I’ve seen colours I don’t think exist yet.”

    They’ll stare. You stare back. You’ve established dominance.

    1. Be Cheerful at the Wrong Moments They’ll list terrifying potential diagnoses. You smile and go:

    “Ooh, collect-the-whole-set vibes.” “I’m gonna need a loyalty card soon.”

    No tears. Just gallows giggles. They hate that.

    1. Cry, But Like an Artist Don’t weep. Wail like a dying swan in a medical drama written by David Lynch. Tell them you cried into your cereal because the spoon reminded you of your body: bent, twisted, and slightly useless. Let them feel the poetry of your decline.

    They’ll pretend to type. They’re actually Googling early retirement.

    1. Bring Props Bring a mood board. A poem. A sock puppet that represents your nervous system.

    “This is Mr. Misfire. He twitches when I lie.”

    Why? Because if you’re going to be treated like a freak, you might as well do it with props and panache.

    1. Question Their God Complex Ask questions like:

    “Is it exhausting being right all the time?” “Do you ever think patients might know things you don’t?” “Do you believe in second opinions, or are you allergic to humility?”

    You might be labelled “non-compliant.” Translation: self-aware.

    1. Say You’re Tired in Ways They Can’t Ignore Don’t just say “I’m tired.” Say:

    “I feel like my blood was replaced with wet cement and bureaucracy.” “My body is on Windows 95 and every morning it fails to boot.”

    They’ll try to convert this into ICD-10 code. They’ll fail. That’s the point.

    1. Tell Them You Don’t Want to Be Fixed They want a treatment plan. A fix. A conclusion. Instead, say:

    “I’m not here to be solved. I’m here to be witnessed.” “You don’t have to cure me. Just see me.”

    It’ll rattle the cage. It’s not in their manual. You just glitched the matrix.

    ☠️ Final Diagnosis: Terminal Authenticity You’re not a case. You’re not a referral. You’re the ghost in their machine, the poetry in their progress notes, the spoonie chaos that won’t be silenced.

    So go in like a storm. Wear your pain like warpaint. And let them choke on the realisation that the most dangerous thing in their office… is a patient who knows who they are.

    I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
    Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime and the miracle.

    enter image description here

  • Posted on

    ⚠️ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly—not to harm. I’m not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone—please reach out for help.

    Imagine, if you will, that Multiple Sclerosis wasn’t a neurological disease. No. Let’s say instead it was a car, a British car. From the 1970s. Built by British Leyland. Already, you should be hearing the distant sound of doom.

    We're not talking E-Type Jaguars or lovingly restored Triumphs here. No. MS is the Austin Princess. A car so catastrophically cursed it should come with a priest, not a warranty. A car that had style, yes—if by style you mean beige vinyl, flammable wiring, and the turning radius of a small aircraft carrier.

    Much like MS, it shows up when you least expect it. You’re cruising along the M-road of life, wind in your hair, dreams in the boot, and then—bang. Gearbox gone. Foot won’t respond. Vision doubles. You veer left without meaning to. And suddenly, you're parked on the hard shoulder of your own nervous system, smoke pouring from somewhere expensive.

    The garage (aka Neurology Dept.) says, “We’re not exactly sure what’s wrong. But here’s a new fluid. Try it for six months.” Great. Like pouring Redex into a petrol tank that’s already on fire.

    And just when you think it can’t get worse, the electrics fail. Again. The horn blasts randomly when you're trying to stay silent. The indicators blink out Morse code for “You're screwed, mate.” And you? You're still trying to drive this bastard machine down the A-road of everyday life while the engine stalls mid-sentence, mid-step, mid-shag.

    You try to keep it together. Duct tape your face. WD-40 your joints. But every fix is temporary. Every workaround has a workaround. And the passenger door won’t open unless it’s raining and you swear in three languages.

    Meanwhile, you’re now the sort of car people stare at in car parks and say, “How is that thing still going?”

    But you keep going. Of course you do. Because scrap's not an option. You’ve got Albertine in the passenger seat chain-smoking roll-ups and telling you, “I told you not to buy British.” And the cat's asleep on the dashboard. And you’ve got your own strange dignity—a rusted war machine with knackered brakes and a boot full of sarcasm.

    Yes, MS is a British Leyland car. And I am the bastard behind the wheel.

    I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
    Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime—and the miracle.

    enter image description here

  • Posted on

    It’s Sunday afternoon. The pain in my left side is throwing a rave. Not the dreaded MS hug (thank Gordon), but the nerves have clearly mutinied. Pain troops storming in like I’m Normandy. Still, I haven’t surrendered. Yet.

    Ever had a headache that doesn’t hurt but is still there? I have. It's like an existential parasite lodged in my brain—just... there. Lurking. Mocking. My eyes? Burning. My energy? Sucked out by some invisible psychic Dyson.

    Yes, I used AI to assist — what of it? MS has chewed through my brain like a zombie buffet. Severe cognitive dysfunction. Brain fog. Memory loss. And the pièce de résistance? The spellchecker begging for a raise every time I type.

    My bowels are revolting (in both senses). But I won’t go to the doctor. Why? Because the last time I tried that, I was gaslit harder than a Victorian lamplighter on speed. Apparently, being disabled is just a “mindset.” Newsflash: it's not.

    I sit, stare at the rain, storms maybe. Or is that just me projecting? My rockabilly psychobilly past screaming in the background while Titus turns up the music, like that’ll drown out my body’s rebellion.

    The NHS dentist? Legend. The chemist? A robotic death dispenser. And everyone else? Absent. Because disability makes people uncomfortable. It’s like they think they’ll catch it from me if they listen too long.

    Friends? Dead. Or fucked off the moment my MS became “too much.” I say it how it is and that scares people. Well, boo-fucking-hoo. I’m sick, not contagious. But even that’s too much for this society of sanitised cowards.

    So here I am. Watching. Absorbing. A goblin at the edge of the world, unwanted, unseen.

    But I know who I am. I know. I am a spiritual humanitarian. I stand for the broken, the weird, the abandoned. I am not finished, no matter how badly my body wants me to be. And to those who still fear me or avoid me—good. Stay scared. You’re not invited into my darkness.

                                     !!DISCLAIMER !! 
    

    This blog shares raw and personal experiences with mental and physical health. Some posts may be triggering. I'm not a professional - just writing my truth. Please don't take this as medical advice.

               “The views in this post are based on my personal    
                  experience. I do not intend harm, only honesty.”   
    
                      “By ink and breath and sacred rage, I write.
                             By storm and silence, I survive.”
    

    enter image description here
    @goblinbloggeruk - sick@mylivinghell.co.uk

  • Posted on

    Imagine a fungus. Not the fun kind you toss on pizza or see in a psychedelic forest vision. No – this one’s invisible, spiteful, and feeds on your life like a narcissist at a self-love seminar.

    To the Compassionless Moron™, chronic illness is:

    “Just a bit of mould, mate. Bit of bleach and positive thinking should fix it. Ever tried yoga?”

    But to those who live with it? It's Cordyceps in a tracksuit, hijacking your brain, body, and plans for the day. It doesn't politely ask for your consent. It moves in, changes the locks, rearranges the furniture, then gaslights you into thinking you invited it.

    🍄 Chronic Illness Fungus Forms (as defined by Goblin Science): Mycelium of Misunderstanding: Grows in family WhatsApp groups where someone says, “But you don’t look sick…”

    Spore of Gaslit Guilt: Spreads when doctors say, “All your tests are normal.” Translation: “You must be imagining it, now jog on.”

    Brain Fog Truffle: A rare delicacy that replaces memory, language, and logic with static, soup, and a vague sense you forgot your own name.

    The Mold of Ableist Microaggressions™: Often found growing on the keyboard warriors who post things like,

    "I cured my cousin’s MS with celery and optimism!"

    🛑 To the Haters and the Deniers: We see you. With your bootstraps mentality and motivational memes. You wear your ignorance like a badge, polished with smugness, stinking of privilege.

    You don't see the fatigue. The tremors. The panic of your legs going AWOL in the middle of a supermarket. Because it's not happening to you.

    And if it ever does? We’ll welcome you with tea, a blanket, and a "Told You So" fruit basket shaped like a middle finger.

    💀 But Seriously... To my fellow fungus hosts – The chronically unwell, the warrior sleepers, the foggy fighters, the ones measuring energy in spoons and grief in invisible bruises:

    You are not weak. You are surviving a parasite the world refuses to even acknowledge. You are f**king incredible.

    And you don’t owe anyone a clean narrative or a recovery arc. Sometimes just breathing is the rebellion

                                       !!DISCLAIMER !!
    

    This blog shares raw and personal experiences with mental and physical health. Some posts may be triggering. I'm not a professional - just writing my truth. Please don't take this as medical advice.

                      “The views in this post are based on my personal     
                              experience. I do not intend harm, only honesty.”   
    
                   “By ink and breath and sacred rage, I write.
                               By storm and silence, I survive.”
    

    enter image description here

              @goblinbloggeruk  -  sick@mylivinghell.co.uk
    
  • Posted on

    There was a time in my life when I thought everything was going to be awesome.

    How wrong I was.

    We moved into this reasonably okay house, in an okayish part of town. You know the sort – two cars in the drive, fake plants in the windows, neighbours who shit themselves if someone owns a leather jacket that isn't from M&S.

    There I was, riding my Yamaha 1100 Dragstar trike, wild long hair, beard that screamed “Hermit Wizard Biker,” wearing my cut and old jeans – California on a budget, but stuck in rainy middle England. I was about 57 then. Full of ideas. Full of hope. Full of medical cannabis.

    And there was Albertine – goddess incarnate, riding her Triumph Bonneville like a Valkyrie on wheels. Leather trousers, biker boots, that horny, savage biker queen look that made grown men weep into their pints. Long dark hair whipping the wind, eyes like stormclouds and fire combined. She looked like she’d ride through the gates of Valhalla just to flick the V’s at Odin before burning rubber into the void.

    I tried to do some DIY. Didn’t go well. Many accidents, broken bones, ambulances, heart attack at the local refuse tip. Carried on regardless because, well, I’m me. Heart running at 60%, they said. Meh. Go home, they said. Blah blah fucking blah.

    But this is where the fun really began.

    The neighbours. Gods. They hated us before the kettle even boiled. They saw my trike. They saw her Bonneville. They saw our hair. Our leathers. Our old biker boots. That was enough. Judged. Condemned. Executed by gossip.

    But they didn’t know who they were fucking with.

    I was Warlock. Spiritual Radio Shock Jock. Dark Gandalf. She was Albertine, Valkyrie Biker Oracle. We had Multiple Sclerosis, PTSD, heart disease, psychic powers, and a list of medical issues as long as their Deliveroo orders combined. Nothing phases us anymore. You can hit us, hurt us, say hurty words – we just laugh and smile because we’re already dying, slowly, hilariously, and publicly.

    One day the bloke next door tried to intimidate me, bragging about being a bouncer. I laughed. Told him I used to be a bouncer too. His face dropped like my blood pressure on cannabis oil. From then on, if I was in the garden, he ran in. If I was in the shop, he ran out. It was like having my own personal game of Pac-Man.

    His wife ran the show, obviously. Poor sod.

    Best bit? He offered to sell me weed once, knowing I had MS. I said no. Later, he smelled my vape and threatened to call the police. Solicitors got involved. Absolute circus. I laughed harder. It was medical marijuana. Karma’s a bitch, mate.

    But we stood our ground. Never showed fear. Didn’t need to. Because deep down, he knew we were the real wizards, and he was just a frightened little man in a tracksuit who thought his wife’s approval was worth more than his soul.

    I am a disabled wheelchair user. I’m a long-haired, bearded 65-year-old eccentric warlock on a spiritual journey, seeking portals to other realms where people love instead of hate. Where cosmic pea soup realities collide and no one gives a shit about your beard or your wheels.

    Just divine love, freedom, and the multiverse’s endless electric embrace.

    Simple really.

    But brain fog incoming… so I’ll leave it there, Gandalf out.

                                           !!DISCLAIMER !! 
    

    This blog shares raw and personal experiences with mental and physical health. Some posts may be triggering. I'm not a professional - just writing my truth. Please don't take this as medical advice.

                         “The views in this post are based on my personal     
                             experience. I do not intend harm, only honesty.”   
    
                                     “By ink and breath and sacred rage, I write.
                                               By storm and silence, I survive.”
    

    enter image description here

                                  @goblinbloggeruk   sick@mylivinghell.co.uk
    
  • Posted on

    Ah yes, #WorldBrainDay — that special time of year when the world pretends to care about the human brain. How lovely. Shall we all have a think about thinking?

    Meanwhile, over here, my brain’s doing its best impression of a soggy electrical circuit being attacked by invisible gremlins. MS doesn’t send flowers or awareness ribbons. It sends fire ants tap dancing on my nerves, brain fog thick enough to butter toast, and pain so sharp it could cut glass.

    But go on, light a candle or post a heart emoji. That’ll fix it. 👍

    I don’t need a day for my brain. I need a replacement. Preferably one that hasn’t been cooked in demon piss.

    Still — here I am. Writing this blog, existing despite it all, swearing like a dockworker and laughing into the abyss. Because what else is there? I’m still here, you bastards. And that’s the real miracle.

    Cheers, brain. You absolute shambles of a meat sponge.

    – Mr Dark 📍 Currently lost in brain fog, do not disturb.

    Footnotes from the Pit 🕳️

    🧠 “Brain Fog” – Like trying to do a Sudoku underwater while someone shouts the wrong answers at you through a megaphone.

    ⚡ “Nerve pain” – Imagine licking a plug socket. Now imagine that sensation… in your spine.

    🛠️ “Medical advice” – Includes gems like: “Just stay positive”, “Have you tried yoga?”, and my personal favourite: “It could be worse.”

    🕯️ “Awareness Days” – 24 hours where we all pretend chronic illness is quirky and inspirational. Followed by 364 days of complete radio silence.

    🎉 “Still here” – Not cured. Not better. Just stubborn. Very, very stubborn.

                                                   **!!DISCLAIMER !!**
    

    This blog shares raw and personal experiences with mental and physical health. Some posts may be triggering. I'm not a professional - just writing my truth. Please don't take this as medical advice.

                                 “The views in this post are based on my personal    
                                    experience. I do not intend harm, only honesty.”   
    
                            “By ink and breath and sacred rage, I write.
                                          By storm and silence, I survive.”
    

    enter image description here

                                  @goblinbloggeruk  -  sick@mylivinghell.co.uk
    
  • Posted on

    Woke up at 4am — not for a cosmic vision, no, just the usual pee pee ritual. And that was that. No sleep. Brain on, pain on, day ruined before it began.

    Lemmy said it best: "No sleep 'til Hammersmith." Except I wasn’t heading for rock glory — I was limping toward a garage and a medical breakdown.

    No brain fog . Tinnitus mercifully silent — probably saving itself for later. Pain? A knife twisting inside me like Satan’s letter opener.

    But still, I had to drive. No meds allowed. NHS says suffer, so I did. Slid out of bed like a cursed slug, wheeled myself to the kitchen, food made it worse (of course), and then the bowel pain — oh the bowel pain.

    You know you’ve hit rock bottom when you’re reminiscing about that one time on the NHS table, a camera going places no camera should ever go. We’ll save that horror show for another blog — or perhaps a full-blown gothic novel.

    Still, I washed, dressed (miracle), and drove. I was in agony but present. Almost proud. Dropped the van at the new garage — not nasty Jim this time, thank Beelzebub. Just regular, decent humans. A miracle. Almost felt human.

    Back in the chair. Felt like I’d been skinned emotionally. Called Albertine “Muriel” — sorry, love. The fog came in hard. Brain barely ticking. But the van passed its MOT — no advisories. So something went right.

    Retirement soon. Thank the dark gods. Honestly didn’t think I’d make it this far.

    Still here though. Still writing. Still surviving the fire.

              “The views in this post are based on my personal      
                experience. I do not intend harm, only honesty.”   
    
                         “By ink and breath and sacred rage, I write.
                                   By storm and silence, I survive.”
    

    enter image description here