“Living with ME is a bit like living
in a prison. The size of your cell depends on how ill you are. It can be your
bed, it can be your home and when you leave your cell it comes at a high price,
because you risk the chance of relapse.”
It is
International Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) Awareness Month and today’s ME
Awareness post is dedicated to Retha Viviers, founder of the ME CFS Foundation
South Africa.
We have never met you but feel that we know you through your endless and selfless advocacy work to raise awareness for people with ME in South Africa.
Retha
founded the ME CFS Foundation South Africa, the only
ME charity in South Africa, in 2016 because there are an estimated ± 110 000
patients in South Africa; there is no other private or government assistance
for patients; 75-85% of patients are too ill to work; and there are no
disability benefits available for South African ME/CFS patients. Retha has made
it her life mission to raise awareness for ME and to practically support
patients in dire need.
Retha
started her career in Market Research and moved onto Business Analysis and
Strategic Planning. She worked in the petroleum, cement and construction
industries. Projects ranged from Market Research, Health and Safety compliance,
Feasibility Studies and Project Management. She was diagnosed with ME and a few
years later formed a closed support group for people with ME (and Fibromyalgia)
on Facebook in November 2012. She then went on to establish the ME CFS Foundation
South Africa, a new purpose in life, one of helping others in the same or worse
situation her family was in. It has been her passion to make a positive
difference in the lives of others with ME.
“I’ve lost
my identity to a large extent, and my memory and other cognitive abilities have
deteriorated significantly. Physically I have become weak. Getting ME/CFS is
like a jail sentence. The time you spend in your cell and how big your cell is
depends on how severely ill you are. A cell can be your bed, a room, or your
house. Leaving your cell comes at a high price and you risk the chance of a
relapse. It is called post exertional malaise.
ME/CFS is
also an isolating illness. Telephone calls can be exhausting, so socialising is
very difficult if not impossible. Going over your energy limit (some call it
the number of spoons you have available to use per day) leaves you feeling very
ill for a few days, if not longer, after an event. There is no room for doing
things on the spur of the moment, etc. People need to understand ME/CFS is a
disability, it is just the level thereof that varies. In terms of an ME/CFS
disability scale, I am around 50 – 60% disabled.
From a
gaining point of view, despite all the heartache and hardship, ME/CFS has
enriched my life. I started a support group on Facebook in November of 2012 and
over the years saw the dire need of patients for hope, companionship, financial
assistance, medical treatment, special care facilities, and basic living
necessities. I have come across the most amazing people, very ill and in severe
pain, but still very kind and as positive as can be.
Why did I co-found The ME CFS Foundation South Africa? I realised something had to be done and co-founded The ME CFS Foundation South Africa. I found a new purpose in life, one of helping others in the same or worse situation we’re in. I function from home, sometimes on bad days from the bed. I always have to religiously stick to my resting schedule and there are still days where I am too ill to do anything. Fortunately, there are 3 other co-directors. Each person reached makes all the hard work and sacrifice more than worth it.”
~
Retha Viviers (from ME CFS Foundation South Africa’s website)
Here is
Retha talking about how she lives with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis in a short film about life with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)
Retha has
worked with determination and dedication to help people with ME in South Africa
by creating awareness and giving physical and emotional support. She and her
foundation go above and beyond to assist patients in need with the following medication,
food and basic necessities, visits to health care practitioners, airtime, and
data (as many patients are housebound and have no other means of communication).
All assistance is completely resource dependent. The foundation receives no
government assistance and is completely dependent on donations.
The ME CFS Foundation South Africa’s aim is to transform
lives and advocate for appropriate healthcare and dignity for people living
with ME. ‘The ME CFS Foundation South Africa is the first entity of its kind in
South Africa (and Africa) founded in response to a devastating multi system
disease that causes dysfunction of the neurological, immune, endocrine and
energy metabolism systems. If you’d like to know more about The ME CFS Foundation
South Africa, please visit their website www.mecfssa.org
At the start of ME Awareness Month we were saddened to hear that you are seriously unwell Retha. We hope you know that we are thinking of you every day.
We are grateful for all that you do for people with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) in South Africa, and for your ME education and awareness raising which has reached all corners of the globe.