Just look at how I think* (?) many who end up with a diagnosis of fibro as well often prefer to 'identify' with that vs the ME/CFS (and whichever version). I'd guess same with joining groups (because everyone has closer to the same thing - just look at the differences the different severities mean but also the types of lives we lead and whether it affects sleep etc or you can move much etc). And perhaps they'd be more willing to support a Fibro charity - but I don't know much about those.
I think there is a massive issue that a lot of pwme think that other people within these labels have something different to them. the bps stuff about 'how people manage' and splitting the spectrum so perhaps those who can't be out and about either have something different or the psychological maybe you are better for getting up and doing things, or maybe you are worse headscrew.
You are asking people to join something we can't define as a disease and then if you go by defining it as a patient group then we've all taken a hammering reputaiton-wise in a way that probably for most of us at some point meant we thought less of some others who had the same condition that we should have
and yes the fact some get squeamish at using ME then prevails into whether they think those who are happy to use it 'believe in that' and the fact that others who can't stand CFS se some being happy to use it because of that makes them feel judged (because indeed they are assuming).
it's very difficult as well because most of us have to work, but when it gets severe enough we can't even look after ourselves, and the even if we weren't worried about the stigma then attaching ourselves to something publicly because we are trying to fly under the radar with colleagues and employment (because it does affect us and we are just hoping people don't notice our turning up late or being exhausted and so on days)
I do think there is a lot of the current charities certainly historically having just been focused on telling the patients what to do. rather than good advice and pushing for cures and understanding. They also sometimes feel both not fitting the demographic in who leads them (even if you haven't looked up who it is) and not feeling anonymous, establishment in the wrong way. a bit of a whiff of the 'do-gooders' and being seen perhaps mainly as CHarles Shepherd in the MEA (ie OK for advice but limit in 'change the world' research or getting enough people to really listen to what it is who would actually change how we are treated - I suspect however this works for them because I bet the reason most who trust them implicitly including with this latest stuff it's because they think it's mainly him) the adjectives that tends to entail, and actionforME still feels a bit like it's run by allied HCPs in branding which is unfortunate because anyone who'd been chucked through the MUS abuse and then maybe got a diagnosis having been landed at one of the 'clinics' has probably had their fill and got heebeegeebees about that yucky attitude of the certain 'school' of physios, allied psychs and psych OTs even already.
I don't think it feels like we have a genuinely big charity that is definitely independent/not 'establishment'.
I'll add that I guess this is probably the exact really important one point where you have to conclude this is where the need for a new name comes in - and if you were only focusing on this and the factors feeding in to it, then it would be 100% one way that we need a new name.
Because the issue is that people have to 'take on' and 'accept' the 'cattle brand' that the name of the illness gives to them and all the disgusting baggage that puts onto someone
I think it is one thing sponsoring a 'cure' or a discovery - which indeed you might do whether you had that condition or not (if a colleague saw you on social media)
and having to be far enough down the line on all the identity stuff and ... what is it that you are getting behind (because there are so many things you could support where even if they get the gist of offering right then the tone or 'way' is pretty damn wrong and makes you cringe, if living in this wasn't enough cringe already) is something you want to encourage more of in its 'whole'. I think we all know, almost everyone does with charities now, that if you drop £x in a pot for one then it's seen by those behind it as endorsing whatever they want to think of themselves 'as great' - and that wrangles, even if it might be a ring-fenced project within something so you at least know the money isn't being spent on the rest.
I can't think of a condition where culture matters more in what 'feel' comes off from a charity, and yes I think there is a cyclical thing happening with the big players.
I'll be honest I think a lot of people also don't want to hear about the history stuff - certainly not in the way its done. and don't want to feel dragged into being campaigners or activitists (looking 'hard done by' or 'being victims') eg like the COchrane petition and not think of that as activism but something else so I think broad-based charities where there a lot of things needing to campaign on probably will suffer from that 'fatigue' thing from people not wanting to join something that makes us look like we whinge about everything - tbf it would be better if we bundled it all up together more sometimes (because there is the same underlying problem to some of these), and think carefully about tone.
So the future looking aspect of soemthing like DecodeME or charities that have a certain focus and mission like eg science probably have a lot better explanation for what it is they choose to do and it not feeling like that etc.
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