Still struggling to fill in my "ESA 50" aka "Limited Capability For Work Questionnaire" and send it back to the DWP before December 8th.
Briefly stopped crying and dying inside at the humiliating catalogue of all that's wrong with me being revealed on the dreaded unhelpful and endless 20 page form (again!) as I watched the Channel 4 news with Jon Snow tonight. New benefit system dogged by 'endless appeals' Stopped sobbing to see the spectacle of masterful Jon Snow ripping at the flabby underbelly of Employment Minister Chris Grayling's defence of the slow car crash that is the Welfare Reform Bill.
"You could halt this reassessment failure now," Mr Snow pressed Grayling like a bulldog worrying a wasp.
At long last, instead of the BBC's propaganda and outright lies, Channel 4 tells it like it is. Pray God it's not too late.
Elsewhere today, Lord Freud in the Lords sounded like a smug puppet who had lost his script as other peers asked him questions about the Bill for which he had no answers. Again. Questions he tried to sidestep or in the face of which he seemed to be trying to hypnotise his opponents into a stupor with his whining, ingratiating but wholly compassion-free voice. Slowly but surely, the tide must turn. Mustn't it?
This on the same day Channel 4 News also revealed proof government plans to privatise NHS. Well done, Channel 4. A voice in the wilderness, calling for the proud and privileged to turn around at the brink of the precipice. A call for those in power to avoid another national disaster, the outrageous scapegoating of the hardest hit and most vulnerable citizens. A call to sort out these flawed Work Capability Assessments and prevent a return to the dark ages of stigma and more suicides for those wrongly labelled the "undeserving poor," left with no scrap of hope or means to face the future.
Thanks, Jon Snow and the Channel 4 team for helping me wipe the tears from my eyes and see more clearly again.
Back to the form. Courage. I can do this, whatever the outcome. Just knowing the truth is out there, whatever double speak and spin Big Brother Cameron chooses to put on it.
A blog about living with M.E. A blog about living with me. A blog about living. A blog... for when your spark plugs keep firing but your battery stays flat.
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Monday, 21 November 2011
Wednesday, 5 October 2011
Angel in Disguise?
Not the best of days, health-wise, but who's counting?
Still very weak, feverish, sick, sore and with added palpitations since the massive hypoglycemic episode I reported a few weeks ago, plus my immune system going ape after the flu jab. Bad news everywhere, politicians carving up our lives, press gloomily gloating, crises and uncertainties in research have got the worldwide M.E. community punch-drunk this week.
Angels have the habit of slipping in when you're looking the other way, though, don't they? Had a visit, very rare and very welcome, from my Methodist superintendent minister, my colleague when I was still able to work full time. Since my collapse six years ago, I've been a junior supernumerary minister, an uncomfortable anomaly for those not yet retirement age, too ill to work as a full-time itinerant minister working 24/7, or to work reliably at all.

Then he talked about the new more flexible working patterns and new emphases in ministry that the church is being challenged to embrace. Much has changed in the years I have been forced out of the calling I so love. He talked of how many missed my ministry.
He spoke of lakes and rivers. Deep still places and streams that flow faster between them, sharing the same water, functioning differently, yet as one. He gave me hope that, even so limited as my strength, energy and cognitive function is, there may in future be a place for me to offer more than the occasional service.
He knows all my limitations. He knows I will never be fit to drive with my lack of hypo awareness and frequent blood glucose dips. He knows I can't do things to a deadline any more. He knows he may possibly lose me from the working sphere for days, weeks or months at a stretch. He knows work needs to be something I can do at my own pace and completed when I am well enough.
He talked of things that could be done over the internet, using all my skills. Things that could happen from home, or within a very short distance in supportive surroundings. He talked of one to one jobs where I could sit or lie, not needing more than a whisper, just using the pastoral, people and teaching skills I was born with and trained for.
He helped me glimpse places my ministry could slot in again within new and established outreaches and communities. He saw me as I really am, who I need to be. Ministry isn't a job or a 9-5 profession. It's open ended and often all-consuming. It's a calling and a longing and your whole identity that can't be put on a shelf somewhere when your body gets in the way. With all these frustrations, limitations and agonies of M.E., he could still see where I could be me, with much to offer.
It won't be easy. It might not happen quickly. There are no guarantees. God never called me to being sure, only to being faithful and open. There are still many obstacles to overcome. Things to think through, pray through. People who also need to be brought into the circle of understanding so we can all support each other with our own unique strengths. This may be the beginning of a journey with precious few signposts or maps.
I can't tell you how good this feels. After so long in the nightmare wilderness, in the church's vision I glimpsed a possible model for how other jobs and businesses could try to make this support, adaptation and flexibility work for all those with severe life-limiting illnesses and very special challenges to tackle.
What I've gone through healthwise all my adult life, and even before that in my father's stroke at 45, places me in a uniquly blessed position to be part of the solution for others, or at least compassionate to hear what they are saying, or not able easily to express.
Only time will tell, but that my "company" is beginning to even contemplate what it means to enable its broken children to ease into making their unique contribution again, while remaining less than wholly able, is a miracle almost too amazing and beautiful to take in.
Half way through his visit, my toilet cistern outlet exploded noisily, drowning our conversation, pouring a flood of water onto the tiles. It had been overflowing in drips for some weeks, but today it came to a head. And he fixed it! Right place, right time, or the whisper of a loving provision?
My colleague knows he can't "fix" me. But he is open to finding the round hole instead of the square one, into which this round peg can somehow, day by fluctuating day, gradually fit herself again.
Till then, my body is sick, my head is throbbing, but my heart and my spirit is singing!
Labels:
adaptation,
calling,
church,
colleague,
Diabetes,
employment,
flexibility,
hope,
job,
MECFS,
methodism,
Myalgic encephalomyelitis,
spoonie,
work
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