I don't know what 'mild' means? I'm disabled mostly from autonomic impairment (cognitively and physically) and get PEM when I go over my limit. I can't stand or walk for very long during the day mostly, but I do feel improved in the evenings if I don't overdo during the day. I also get viral reactivations with myalgias and other symptoms, but they're not permanent except when I took immune modulators in 2001 and relapsed.
Every relapse makes us worse and reduces our baseline.
Well, a dictionary definition of it is "not violent, severe, or extreme",
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/mild
In relation to ME. the new NICE guideline offers this description of mild ME which, broadly, is in line with most other descriptions of mild ME.
"People with mild ME/CFS care for themselves and do some light domestic tasks (sometimes needing support) but may have difficulties with mobility. Most are still working or in education, but to do this they have probably stopped all leisure and social pursuits. They often have reduced hours, take days off and use the weekend to cope with the rest of the week."
In the opening post of this thread I asked,
"I [when still suffering from mild ME] would not have recognised these descriptions [of PEM that are in the CCC and ICC criteria] as describing why I would need to take occasional days off from work to recover from what, at the time, I best described as a heavy 24-hour cold.
Now not all studies will want to recruit mild patients, so it won't be an issue all the time, but for those studies that do it could be useful to look at alternative ways to describe PEM.
So, as the title says, if you are, or have been, mild, how would you describe your episodes of PEM?"
So the intention of this thread is to discuss how mildly affected patients described their PEM when they were still mild, and in my opinion, from what you describe, it wouldn't seem that you were mildly affected.