Don’t Do Your Best, Do Less: How To Avoid The Boom And Bust Cycle

Anybody who has ME or CFS (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) will be very familiar with the boom and bust cycle. ME’s main characteristic is Post-Exertional Neuroimmune Exhaustion (PENE) also commonly referred to as Post Exertional Malaise (PEM). Feeling really ill, weak and exhausted after any physical, emotional or mental exertion. 

This means brushing my teeth, getting excited about a visitor coming, answering the phone or writing this post is exhausting and will cause an increase in a variety of symptoms. The problem is that when I feel better on a particular day, I tend to want to do more because I feel able and would like to participate more in life, but this can be detrimental.

The Effects of PEM or PENE In ME/CFS

Pushing oneself to do more simply because you feel okay in the moment, is not really an option for people with ME (pwME). Our payback is often delayed for up to 48 hours which means that I might feel capable in the moment, and may even have no increase in symptoms for hours later, but then 2 days later I am completely incapable of doing the most basic things. 

Let me explain how this works in a practical way: if I go out today (and I don’t generally leave the house much at all, even for months at a time) I might be okay while I’m out. I’ll be wearing my noise cancelling headphones, sunglasses, and sitting in my wheelchair. I’ll probably have mild symptoms including pain, shakiness, sensory overload and some confusion and irritability due to the cognitive dysfunction that makes it hard to process things happening around me.

This is my new normal, this is my “okay”. I might even be okay the next day. With exhaustion, slight increase in pain and shaking after even the tiniest exertion (PENE), but if I rest in bed or on the sofa for most of the day, I’d manage quite well. 

Then comes the second day after the outing, my Day 2, and all of a sudden I’m in so much pain! Every bone and muscle hurts, my skin hurts, sometimes my throat and my teeth hurt too. I wake up stiff, numb and tingling all over. I feel utterly exhausted and weak. This is payback (PENE) for something I did two days ago. This is delayed payback and it can last anything from a day to a few months. It’s anybody’s guess. It’s that unpredictable.

ME/CFS Avoid the Boom & Bust Cycle, Don't do your best, do less

Avoid The Boom & Bust Cycle

Due to the very nature of this illness, “just pushing through” is a sure way of falling into the boom and bust cycle:

Doing too much when you feel good (boom) and then paying for it dearly afterwards (bust). For this reason, my new motto is: don’t do your best, do less.

Finding Your Baseline Or Energy Envelope

Just because you might feel like you can do an extra bit today, doesn’t mean you should. A better way to manage things is to find your baseline and slowly work your way up from there.

Your baseline is the amount of activity you can consistently do without making your symptoms flare up.

This means first reaching a place where you are comfortable, feeling okay, while doing nothing all day except resting, then stabilising there before attempting to increase activity levels. More severely affected patients, like myself, might have trouble in this area too.

I have had months where I am so ill that even while I am lying down in bed all day, only rising to go to the toilet, I am unable to sit up, hardly able to talk, cannot turn myself over in bed and in constant pain and shaking with heart rate soaring as though I’m doing a cardio workout!

It is important to listen to your body and rest as much as your body requires. Rest in such severe cases usually means silence, darkness and no stimulation like movies, music or visitors. Just breathing and sleeping until your body recovers from whatever it is dealing with. All this is near impossible if you do not have the support of other people who can cook and clean for you and bring to your bed anything you might need without making any noise or letting in much light.

Less severe patients might be able to do one chore a day over and above their daily self-care, perhaps in 20-minute sessions with an hour rest between. Or perhaps they manage better doing different activities on alternating days, for example they might shower on Monday, then cook a huge pot of stew on Tuesday (which can be portioned and eaten for the next few days), then wash dishes on Wednesday before their next shower on Thursday and so on. Spreading activities out with lots of resting between.

I have personally fluctuated through all these varying degrees of disability and have had to reestablish my baseline and routine many times over the years. It is a personal issue, so what works for me will not necessarily work for you, and what works for you today might not work next month. So you must listen to your own body and work within your own energy envelope without overspending and going into energy debt because that will cause an increase in symptoms and can cause a prolonged increase in severity.

Once you have found your baseline of activity, the amount you can consistently do without worsening your symptoms, and remain stable for a few weeks, you can increase your activity levels slightly. So if you were walking 100 steps a day, you can try 110 a day for the next few weeks and see how your body responds. If you were washing dishes for 10 minutes, try 12 then 15. 

Such small increments help you to accurately assess your body’s response over time before increasing again.  Remember PENE can be delayed for 24-72 hours, so allowing your body ample time to adjust and respond to your new routine is vital. 

Pacing For ME/CFS Recovery

It is common for all people to pace themselves in life: pacing activities and responsibilities, making sure they create a balance between activity and inactivity, stress and rest. This simple habit is often neglected in our fast paced life these days, but for people with ME/CFS, it is a vital skill to reacquire.

Once you have found your baseline as described above, the aim is to slowly build up with tiny steps, allowing a few weeks to stabilise at a certain level of activity before increasing ever so slightly for the next few weeks and monitoring any change in symptoms.

Distinguishing Between Natural Side Effects Of Exercise And Symptoms Of M.E.

You should remember though, that some symptoms are normal when increasing activity levels.

Things like muscle aching in your legs from walking or aching in your hands from drawing or writing are natural. I would keep an eye on these side effects while continuing at the same level of activity. 

PENE would make you feel ill and increase various, seemingly unrelated symptoms. If no other symptoms appear, then I would assume it simply a matter of exercise pain, which healthy people get too, and carry on at that level for about 2 weeks.

If I remain stable, with the muscle pains resolving as the muscles strengthen at that level of activity, I would then attempt to increase, but if other symptoms start to flare too, then I’d know to cut back again.

It’s a long, slow process that I have yet to master. I tend to do my best in everything, and in this case, my best can have devastating consequences. I am determined to get it right!

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I’d love to hear from you!

  • Do you find you’re spending good days catching up on things and then paying for it until the next time?
  • Have you found ways to avoid this boom and bust cycle?

Thank you for stopping by. Hugs, Char xx

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Chronically Hopeful
Chronically Hopeful

Char was born and raised in South Africa, but has been settled in Europe for over 20 years. She's passionate about finding ways to live well, despite chronic illness.

Apart from blogging, she enjoys art, cooking, reading, gardening, gaming and learning new things. She speaks English, Italian and Afrikaans fluently and is slowly learning French too.

She used to be a teacher, but has been housebound with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis since 2015. Since then, she's focused on spending the little energy and strength she has each day on the people and activities she loves. Finding joy in the little things and celebrating the ordinary.

6 Comments

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  1. Thank you for this post, for willing to be vulnerable, honest, and real. So many of us with chronic illnesses play the pretend game – almost as though there should be shame attached to the diagnosis. And if we pretend long enough, or we’re “good” enough, people will think we’re just like them. ‘Normal’, healthy, strong. So thank you for reminding us that our first priority is self-care. Sound advice, which I wish I’d read over 25 years ago! And thank you for this blog, which will educate those who are unaware of the seriousness of this disease. ?

    • Dear Maureen, thank you for your beautiful words of encouragement.

      It is tough to show ourselves completely to those healthy people around us, we are still the strong, independent characters we were before our illnesses, but like you said, self-care is the priority here.

      Slowing down to take care of yourself and asking for support are such hard lessons to learn, aren’t they?

  2. Wow, thank you so, so much for sharing. This really resonated with me right now; must be a God thing that I stumbled on it! Growing up, my parent’s only expectation on me was to do my best at everything. They didn’t care if I got all A’s, but I should be getting A’s in the subjects I was good at, because that was doing my best. I grew up believing that the only way to glorify God through my work was to always give my 110 percent.

    And that worked, for a while. I graduated in the top 10 percent of my highschool class; 3.8 in undergrad, graduated a semester early; full ride to grad school, completed the program in the minimum time–with pregnancy and a baby!, with a 3.9.

    But during that time, I was getting sicker and sicker and sicker, and once I graduated, it all really went to a head. I have gotten so many new diagnosises in the last year!! And I can no longer operate anywhere near that breakneck pace I used to. My best isn’t healthy. Just because I can operate like that, doesn’t mean I should. So I’m going to try to adjust my definition of “best” and create healthy limits on myself, so i can still things I care about without making myself sicker.

    • Wow! You did so much all at once. My parents had exactly the same expectation of me. “Just do your best” they’d say.

      It is common among people with chronic illness though, I have found most people I encounter were super busy, high achievers before they fell ill.

      Your plan sounds good, changing our perception and adjusting the bar is for our benefit and in turn will benefit those who care about us since when we suffer, they suffer too.

  3. I’m experiencing a mystery illness at the moment and we’re starting to look into the possibility of it being an autoimmune disorder. Some of your symptoms are like mine and I’ve had to adopt a keto diet too. So this post is like a breath of fresh air to me, a feeling that it’s okay to take it easy and preserve what’s left of my health. Thank you!