Chronic illness doesn't live by a set of rules | Freaks No More!
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0:00 There was a neurologist that called me a drama queen.
0:04 [music]
0:03 While I have my CSF leak, it's so much work to be a disabled
0:07 person when you're already disabled and or chronically ill.
0:10 It shouldn't be so hard.
0:11 Chronic illness doesn't live by a a set of rules.
0:14 It's not like, oh yes,
0:15 today every Tuesday I can do this, but every other day I can't do this.
0:22 Freaks No More.
0:27 Hey everyone, I am Vicky and this is Freaks No More,
0:29 the show where we tackle myths about
0:31 visible and invisible disabilities and hopefully show you
0:34 how you can be a bit more kind to people who experience the world differently.
0:37 Today I'm speaking to someone who has turned her lived
0:40 experience of living with chronic illness into powerful advocacy.
0:43 She's many things.
0:44 She is a model, content creator, and also blogger from England in the UK.
0:48 And through her platform chronically Jenny,
0:51 she shares what it is like to live with a chronic illness
0:53 and tips and tricks for other people to help them navigate that.
0:58 I'm very happy to welcome Jenny, aka chronically Jenny, in our studio.
1:02 Hi Jenny.
1:02 Hi Vicky.
1:03 Hi.
1:04 Super nice for you to be here.
1:05 Thank you for coming all the way from England.
1:07 No, thank you for having me.
1:08 Flying to Berlin.
1:09 You're very vocal online about having chronic illness,
1:13 but how did that chronic illness journey start?
1:16 Walk me through from the day you got diagnosed.
1:19 I was diagnosed about 10 years ago with my conditions,
1:21 but I kind of got sick before that.
1:24 I was at university when all my different symptoms started starting.
1:29 And it started with a headache basically.
1:31 I had something called a cerebral spinal fluid leak,
1:35 which was unbeknownst to me and is
1:36 quite rare even with my connective tissue disorder.
1:39 Basically, it took kind of two years of figuring out what was going on with me,
1:44 eventually leaving university to go in in search of a diagnosis.
1:49 And I just happened to see a doctor who was like,
1:52 I don't know what's wrong, but I know who will.
1:55 And they sent me on to this doctor and basically got diagnosed
1:58 with all the conditions that I live with basically in one nice little cocktail.
2:03 [laughter] Was it scary?
2:03 Like that first very first time when you thought maybe I should
2:07 go and seek a doctor to the point where you got diagnosed actually?
2:11 Were you scared or Yeah, 100%.
2:15 You know, I think you go through so many emotions
2:17 when you know that something is wrong or you know
2:21 that something isn't right and you're doing all that you
2:24 can to try and express that, but people just aren't
2:28 being receptive to it and it can be a very
2:31 lonely and very scary place to be and it was
2:35 strange when I got my diagnosis because it was like
2:38 a big relief as well as this, oh my goodness,
2:42 these are supposedly rare conditions that I now have to live
2:45 with for the rest of my life and I have no idea what's next.
2:48 So you kind of have those two two sides to it.
2:52 And how has it changed I mean that perception of like
2:54 past few years from the when you received the diagnosis to now?
2:56 I mean, I think I've become a lot more understanding of myself and my body
3:00 and my limits very slowly over time
3:02 and it's something that I'm still working on today.
3:05 When you have a chronic illness and you've got all these different symptoms
3:08 and your symptoms are changing over over time
3:10 and different ones flare up at different points,
3:13 you kind of have to like I think once I learned to live
3:17 with my body and with my conditions rather than fight against them,
3:22 that's when things really changed for me.
3:24 For people that don't know, what is actually EDS and what is POTS?
3:27 So EDS, I have hypermobile EDS,
3:30 Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, but there's lots of different types.
3:32 All of them are connective tissue disorders.
3:34 The stuff that makes our body up and helps it kind of stick together,
3:38 it's often too stretchy, which means it can be really fragile.
3:41 So it means that we can like dislocate joints really really easily.
3:44 It means that we've got quite stretchy skin.
3:46 It means that we bruise easily and that kind of thing.
3:49 Our bodies are working extra hard to keep ourselves in place.
3:53 POTS or postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome,
3:55 which I love to say fast is my [laughter] little party trick.
3:58 Is a form of dysautonomia.
4:00 So most people when they stand up, their heart rate will rise,
4:04 but people with POTS, our heart rate will go really really fast when we stand.
4:09 I can be dizzy, feel faint, you know, just struggle getting around in the world.
4:14 I can overheat really easily.
4:16 You were lucky I guess to find a medical professional from the very
4:18 beginning that knew what EDS is and knew what POTS is,
4:21 but have you ever encountered people who are not so
4:24 nice and medical professionals that are that can be even dismissive?
4:27 I mean, it took me two years to even get to that point of of finding someone.
4:31 And I had medical professionals that just MRI'd the wrong bit of me.
4:35 Like I was complaining about headaches, right?
4:37 And they MRI'd like my neck down and it was like that's not the problem.
4:40 They're just like it's a headache.
4:43 [laughter]
4:43 There was a neurologist that called me a drama queen while I had my CSF leak.
4:48 And I always wish I could go back to that doctor and be like,
4:51 no, no, you missed something, not not me.
4:55 Talking about frustrating things,
4:56 probably you've encountered many comments from people
4:58 that do not understand what it
4:59 is like to live with a chronic illness or to be a disabled person.
5:02 Behind us we have a spinning wheel that we always have
5:05 in the show and this time I thought we'd do something different.
5:07 I thought we're going to do comments that you, Jenny, might have encountered.
5:11 So whenever you're ready,
5:12 spin the wheel and then and see [laughter] what we land.
5:15 Go.
5:19 Oh.
5:21 But you don't look sick.
5:23 Ugh.
5:23 One of the the very typical things.
5:26 That people think that you have to look sick to be sick.
5:29 Yeah.
5:29 And I think as disabled people and as someone who's neurodivergent,
5:32 you'll understand this too that like we've got so good at masking and just
5:35 getting on with our lives that people don't realize how much is going on.
5:39 Happens inside.
5:40 For me I have to always explain to people,
5:42 especially at work, this is what I need as accommodations.
5:45 And I assume it's like similar for you,
5:47 like you always end up in the situations where you have to explain yourself.
5:49 What does looking ill or looking disabled look like?
5:53 There there is no look.
5:54 You know, disability is so diverse.
5:56 Come on, something different.
5:58 Uh okay.
6:00 Green.
6:00 When people say, but you were fine yesterday.
6:03 This is another really common misconception.
6:06 Again, it's based on the look, right?
6:08 They think that you looked fine yesterday so you'll be fine today.
6:10 But often we might have been doing something yesterday that we can't do today
6:14 and it's because of the thing we did yesterday that we can't do it today.
6:18 You know, like if I go for a really long wheel in my manual chair,
6:23 I'll be exhausted and I can't do that the next day.
6:26 If someone's ambulatory, they might be able to walk one day and not the next.
6:29 So you can't judge it like chronic illness doesn't live by a a set of rules.
6:35 It's not like, oh yes,
6:36 today every Tuesday I can do this, but every other day I can't do this.
6:42 Or blue?
6:42 Blue.
6:43 Red.
6:43 Okay.
6:44 My migraine is just a simple headache.
6:46 People assume it's just like a simple as like, okay, so then that's fine.
6:49 Then like you just take a rest for like 1 hour and then you'll be fine.
6:53 And actually it's a very different story, isn't it?
6:55 So migraines are not just simple headaches.
6:56 No, and it's a very common condition that affects a lot
6:59 of people and it affects more women than it does men as well.
7:02 And I think that's something to to highlight
7:04 is because that symptom is downplayed.
7:07 Like, oh, it's just a headache.
7:08 Like you can get on with stuff.
7:10 But you know, with a migraine there's symptoms before the actual headache hits.
7:14 There's often symptoms after the headache hits.
7:16 Sometimes people with migraine don't have a headache at all.
7:19 It's this big misconception and it has so many different symptoms and I
7:23 think it's important to remember that there
7:25 are so many different types of headaches.
7:27 And migraines can have you out for a week or more.
7:30 You know, people with chronic migraine,
7:31 it's it can be you know, the whole month.
7:34 How do you manage it on particularly difficult days?
7:36 Like on on days where like you say, okay, my body really cannot do this today.
7:40 When you have like a really intense migraine or headache,
7:42 how do you how have you learned how to manage it?
7:45 Oh, if I have a migraine, I'm going to bed.
7:46 Like there's no [laughter] there's no question.
7:49 I think when you have a chronic illness, it's hard to say, no,
7:52 I'm really like I need to take the day off sick because you know,
7:55 we function at a level that most people would take the day off sick.
7:59 Yeah, [laughter] yeah, yeah.
8:00 So your baseline is already higher than most people's baseline.
8:03 Exactly.
8:03 So saying, okay, no, I'm actually having a sick day is quite hard.
8:07 It can be quite hard and I think a lot of my harder days,
8:11 mainly with fatigue or pain, I'll just curl up on the sofa and you know,
8:15 my my support worker will read the emails to me and I'll just say roughly
8:20 the beginning when you still were figuring out, okay, what your body needs,
8:25 were you afraid of like, yeah,
8:27 how your family, friends, close people would react?
8:29 For example, when you say like, okay, I can't do this now.
8:31 I need I need some rest.
8:32 I can't work on this day.
8:33 I need I need time off.
8:34 Were you ever like thinking, oh,
8:36 I don't know how my close people would react to that.
8:38 I mean, it's something that still scares me sometimes to this day.
8:42 And what I've learned is that you know, you don't owe anyone an explanation.
8:46 You know, no is a full sentence and also just saying, hey,
8:50 I just need a bit of more time as an accommodation, as an access need.
8:54 You don't have to say, oh, I had a headache and I didn't have support
8:57 and I didn't have this and I didn't have that.
8:58 We all know that there are a lot of reasons why flare-ups might happen,
9:02 but we don't need to like express all of that to someone when we're just asking,
9:09 hey, can I just have an extra day?
9:10 What you say, no is a full sentence.
9:12 I think a lot of people don't really get that and they keep pushing.
9:14 I remember once I got called out on in a meeting that I was coming
9:18 in on on my day off in in a previous job because I was yawning.
9:22 And they were like, oh, are we keeping you up, Jen?
9:24 Like to the whole group.
9:26 As a joke and it it hurt.
9:28 Like it really hurt because I had been doing my other job on the Sunday,
9:32 which is why Monday was my day off.
9:34 I'd come in on a meeting on my day off and I was exhausted.
9:37 But you shouldn't call anyone out.
9:39 It doesn't matter the reason, you know,
9:41 whether someone has chronic fatigue like me or you know,
9:44 they might have just been up all night
9:45 with a sick relative or a child or you know,
9:48 there's there's no we don't need this kind of culture in in work and we
9:52 should all be a little bit kinder
9:53 and more understanding that you know, we're people.
9:56 When you mentioned it a little bit about relationships,
9:58 people can assume that your partner is your caretaker.
10:02 If you've heard comments like these, how do you navigate around them?
10:05 I mean, I think my partner, Ian and I have been quite lucky that we
10:08 don't get a lot of these comments like directly,
10:09 but it kind of comes from the more like, "Oh, he's so good.
10:13 He can He does all this." And it's like,
10:16 but it's like the thing that um parents get, right?
10:19 It's like if the if the dad's looking after the kids,
10:22 he's babysitting, whereas if the mom's looking after the kids, she's parenting.
10:25 And it's like, come on.
10:27 [laughter]
10:27 You know, it's similar in that way with disability cuz it's like, "Oh,
10:30 well, he must do everything for you." And whereas we have our own things.
10:35 Like, yeah, Ian does most of the physical
10:37 stuff because I can't do so much of that.
10:39 But the planning and the organizing, like, that's my hyperfocus brain is like,
10:43 "Yeah, okay, I'll do that." You know, like we're getting married uh in May.
10:47 Congratulations.
10:49 [laughter] And I've planned everything for the wedding.
10:50 Like, what's he done?
10:52 Like, he turned up to a wedding meeting and was like,
10:55 uh "So, what food are we having?" [laughter]
10:58 I was like, "We're not at that bit yet." But you know,
11:00 we all have strengths and our weaknesses
11:01 that we bring to Like in any relationship, really.
11:03 It's not very relationship.
11:05 There are going to be people that do more
11:06 of one thing and less of the other thing.
11:07 That's exactly how it is in a is it in an interabled relationship.
11:11 Can you tell me a bit more about
11:12 how specifically Chronically Jenny started as a project?
11:15 to go and see my um friends in what would
11:18 have been my final showcase at uni um before I left.
11:21 And my friend Becky just said to me,
11:23 "You know, you'd make a really good vlogger, Jenny." [laughter]
11:27 And I was like, "Yeah, okay." And I'd had a bit of a bad experience with YouTube
11:30 in the past when I was a kid and like just some some nasty comments.
11:33 But I was like, "No, okay, this is the time to Try it out.
11:37 to try it out again." And it was helping me get back
11:39 into deadlines cuz I knew I was going back to uni that September.
11:43 And I was like, "Okay, I need to get back in the swing of things." Yeah,
11:46 and it just started in my bedroom talking about my conditions.
11:49 I wanted to give people the guidebook that I never have.
11:53 Yeah.
11:53 Because when you become chronically ill disabled, they don't go, "Here you go.
11:56 Here's a Here's a pamphlet.
11:57 Here's all the things.
11:59 [laughter] These are all the tools that you can use.
12:00 These are all the websites you can visit.
12:01 And these are all the hacks that you can Yeah.
12:03 Literally.
12:03 So, that's what I wanted to create and be a resource for people that, you know,
12:07 newly diagnosed or whether they've, you know,
12:09 lived with a condition for their whole lives.
12:11 I wanted them to be able to come to Chronically Jenny and be like,
12:14 "I can find something that's going to help me today."
12:17 And I think what you do is lovely because this is
12:18 exactly what the mission of Freaks No More is as well.
12:20 We want to reach out to people who might not
12:22 know actually what it is like to live with EDS.
12:25 Yeah.
12:25 They might have never met a person.
12:26 That's maybe the first time that they're hearing the show now.
12:28 They'll be like, "Okay,
12:29 I didn't know." How do you decide the parts of of your life that you want
12:33 to share online and the parts that you
12:35 might not want to share online and keep private?
12:37 How do you How do you navigate that as a content creator?
12:40 I think that's a really hard one.
12:41 And I think when I was younger and newly diagnosed, I was overwhelmed.
12:46 And I had probably overshared.
12:47 Like, there's probably stuff [laughter] in my old YouTube videos.
12:49 Like, if you go back and watch my old old vlogs,
12:51 like, I'll just be crying on the internet.
12:53 And like, I know that exists, and that's [laughter] fine.
12:56 So, that's okay for you.
12:56 Like, you don't mind that these These are the past
12:59 me and this is okay and That's what I mean.
13:00 It was the past.
13:01 It's not something I would do today.
13:03 Like, I I have people in my life.
13:05 I have a therapist that I would I would go and do
13:08 my my crying um overwhelmed moment to rather than the internet.
13:15 [laughter]
13:15 But I know that exists of me and I don't want to erase that.
13:18 Now I have more personal ways of of managing that kind of thing.
13:22 I just want to enjoy a break with my partner and my dog rather than being like,
13:27 "Oh, well, I have to get this for content
13:28 thing." And you need a break for yourself.
13:29 So, that's also something I'm trying to learn and put
13:32 my phone away when I'm not on a work trip.
13:36 [laughter] So, you also do modeling for all sorts of brands and commercials.
13:38 How did that start?
13:40 It was kind of just off of the back of um of my Instagram, really.
13:44 And especially, I love working with um disabled-owned brands where I can.
13:48 I have a great disabled-owned business directory on my website
13:51 um because I really want to support small disabled-owned businesses.
13:55 I started um working in adaptive fashion and stuff.
13:58 And it's so nice seeing adaptive fashion really start to come out
14:03 of its shell and not be this kind of, you know, ugly poncho.
14:07 Yeah.
14:08 [laughter] And be a really nice stylish trench coat.
14:10 kind of thing.
14:11 It's like starting to be more Exactly.
14:13 Do you sometimes get not so nice comments from people that follow you?
14:18 It can be really hard sometimes because,
14:20 you know, some of the time it's just trolls.
14:22 Like, trolls will be trolls.
14:24 And other times it can be really difficult
14:26 because especially something that I come across relatively frequently
14:30 is like people wanting answers from me immediately because
14:35 I've been able to help them in some way.
14:36 And like, I always want to do my best to help, but You can't do everything.
14:40 do everything.
14:41 I can prepare the content that I've got, but I'm not a medical professional.
14:45 I can't answer that kind of question.
14:46 I can't I can only speak from my lived experience.
14:49 And I can't solve every issue for every person.
14:52 Like, I'm trying my hardest,
14:53 but I'm also chronically ill and I don't have that capacity.
14:57 And how do you deal with people who like,
14:58 let's say they love your content and they're not criticizing it,
15:00 but people that say like,
15:02 "Oh, you're such an inspiration." And these kind of like
15:05 a little bit condescending comments
15:06 that maybe people think that they're well-meaning, but they're actually not.
15:10 I make a video about it.
15:13 [laughter] It's a good solution.
15:13 Yeah, I have done content about the inspirational kind of trope.
15:17 And then I have like disabled and chronically ill people saying, "Oh,
15:20 but I find you really inspirational as a content creator
15:24 and as someone with a disability." And it's like, that's different.
15:27 It's understanding the nuance of like people saying, "Oh,
15:31 you're so inspirational." When all I've done is made a cup of tea for myself.
15:34 And like saying, "Oh,
15:36 you're really inspirational to me as a speaker, as a model."
15:40 because you do public speaking, because you educate others,
15:42 and so on versus you just living your life.
15:46 Exactly.
15:45 But you happen to be chronically ill.
15:47 Yeah.
15:48 So, that's the inspirational part because you can do
15:50 all of these things that everyone else can do.
15:52 But is it that that boundary, I guess, that you need to
15:55 You do history content, a lot of history content.
15:57 And everyone that listens to the show knows that we have a time machine with us.
16:02 So, we have a button.
16:04 I love the button.
16:04 When we press the button, [laughter] we're going to go back in time.
16:07 And I thought it would be cool to explore a little
16:10 bit about how the disability rights movement in the UK,
16:14 where you're from, evolved.
16:15 So, whenever you're ready, we're going to press the button together.
16:19 And then we're going to go back in time.
16:20 Okay, are you ready?
16:21 3 2 1.
16:26 Disabled people in the United Kingdom have
16:28 been organizing protests for over a century.
16:31 In the 1920s, the National League of the Blind staged
16:34 marches to London to demand better working conditions and pay.
16:38 Through the 1970s, disabled people campaigned to have
16:41 better support with mobility and accessible cars.
16:44 In [music] 1972, Paul Hunt wrote a letter
16:47 to the Guardian newspaper calling for equality for disabled people.
16:50 His words helped ignite a collective movement against discrimination.
16:54 In the early '90s, buses in the UK generally lacked ramps,
16:58 making it impossible for wheelchair users to use public transport.
17:02 Activists Barbara Lisicki and Alan Holdsworth
17:05 co-founded Disabled People's Direct Action Network.
17:08 Disabled people organized sit-ins, handcuffed themselves to buses,
17:12 and chained their wheelchairs to underground station entrances to force change.
17:17 In 1992, disabled people gathered to protest against the TV show Telethon
17:22 as they felt that images shown portrayed disabled people as objects of pity.
17:26 Protesters wore T-shirts and carried signs bearing the now iconic slogan,
17:31 "Piss on pity." After years of campaigning by disability activists,
17:35 in 1995, the Parliament passes the Disability Discrimination Act,
17:40 making it illegal to discriminate against
17:42 disabled [music] people in the workplace.
17:44 From sit-ins to street blockades,
17:46 the disability rights movement was never quiet.
17:49 It was loud and relentless.
17:51 And it is still shaping the world we move through today.
17:57 So, we're now back in the real world.
17:59 [laughter] Back in 2026.
18:00 Back in 2026.
18:01 How did you decide to do history content
18:03 and talk about disability history uh in your platforms?
18:06 Again, it was just the more I learned and the more things I found interesting,
18:11 the more I wanted to share.
18:12 And I think there's so little known about this kind of history.
18:16 And And equally, it's because disability history is is kind of so new,
18:20 really, because a lot of the activism was kind of, you know,
18:23 in the '70s and, you know,
18:25 post-war was really when kind of disabled people became more common.
18:31 [laughter] But it became more more known and more
18:32 talked about and therefore more activists kind of appeared.
18:35 And I think there's such interesting things that have happened all over
18:38 the world in kind of disability history terms that is so interesting to, yeah,
18:41 learn about and and share.
18:43 I think it makes people realize as well, oh well,
18:45 it was only in the '90s that people were fighting for access to get on a bus.
18:49 Like It's so recent in history when you think about it.
18:52 That's like, what is the future of Chronically Jenny?
18:55 So, what do you [laughter] on doing with uh with uh What do you Do you
18:59 want to continue doing what you're doing and be a content creator?
19:02 Yeah, 100%.
19:03 Like, you know, I've been one of those people that's very lucky
19:05 to kind of accidentally fall into a job that they they love.
19:08 Last year, I did my big like 30
19:09 for 30 challenge where I tried like 30 new things.
19:13 I, you know, and it took me from, you know,
19:16 kind of simplish things to things like adaptive skiing and flying a plane.
19:22 And saw that series What was it called?
19:25 Like Average Disabled Jenny versus Average Disabled Jenny.
19:28 I still do.
19:29 And I'd love to do a bit more of that, trying different sports.
19:31 Oh, I've done wheelchair basketball.
19:33 That was one I really wanted to do.
19:35 Wheelchair tennis is high on my list.
19:37 I'd love to go to the next Paralympics in LA, not competing and everything.
19:40 I am Average Disabled Jenny for a reason.
19:42 I always want to try something new that people
19:44 don't expect disabled people to be able to do.
19:47 And then show other disabled people like, "Hey,
19:48 you can You can go and to this." Uh you might have to travel a little way,
19:52 but you can you can do it.
19:54 What do you think still needs to change?
19:56 Not not in relation to just sports, but in general in in the UK.
20:00 What is still missing?
20:01 The biggest misconception is that like when you become disabled you
20:05 get handed everything you need and that's not the reality at all.
20:09 As I say even with the sports like you have
20:11 to really search and there's sometimes you know we've contacted
20:14 people for like a year just to try and play
20:16 wheelchair basketball which you think would be like Just sign up.
20:20 Yeah, yeah, applying for benefits is a nightmare.
20:24 All the bureaucracy.
20:25 Yeah, the forms like it's so much work to be
20:28 a disabled person when you're already disabled and or chronically ill like
20:33 and that's what I I really wish wasn't a thing because
20:36 it shouldn't it shouldn't be so hard to get support in place.
20:40 It shouldn't take years.
20:41 It shouldn't take loads of money like
20:43 no not everyone has those kind of resources.
20:45 Now that you've been through that path,
20:47 what would be your advice to a person who's
20:50 just now starting their journey with EDS or POTS
20:54 and they don't know what to do and they're
20:56 a bit overwhelmed maybe and a bit scared.
20:58 It's when you stop fighting against your illness
21:00 and learn to work with it that things really change.
21:04 I will still have days like I'll still have days where I do everything that I
21:08 shouldn't be doing like I'll I'll overdo it and and I know I I'm I'm very aware,
21:15 but it still happens and I think it's learning
21:17 that we have to adapt and and life will change,
21:20 but it doesn't mean that we can't have joy and we can't have relationships
21:25 and we can't have friendships and we can't do like have all these adventures.
21:28 We just have to prioritize ourselves is something
21:31 that I wish I'd learned a bit sooner.
21:35 [laughter] That's a brilliant advice, Jenny.
21:36 Thank you so much for our conversation and for you being here in our studio.
21:40 No, thank you so much for having me.
21:40 It's been so fun.
21:43 [laughter] I learned so much from Jenny today and I hope you did too.
21:46 Make sure to follow her on @chronicallyjenny and if
21:49 you have any questions or comments to us,
21:50 write to us on our email freaks@dw.com.
21:53 Bye from me and as always be patient, [music] be kind and be understanding.
22:02 Freaks no more.