Beware a month of travel and pushing past your exertion limit may chronic your fatigue more than normal.
It's like a month of Post-Exertional Melaise has been stored up & dumped on me the last two weeks.
It's no surprise, I did this to myself, but that doesn't make it any more pleasant when it hits.

Mostly just sharing to highlight / represent invisible disabilities.

I have Long COVID / Chronic Fatigue /
Post-Exertional Malaise

It'd be very easy to see my timeline and think im healthy & everything’s amazing all the time.

When I'm fine I seem "normal" but that's because l've done a load of work managing my energy budget, leaving early, adding multiple rest days into my calendar, & having very slow months during bad periods

Obviously I can't ignore the fact that l'm able to manage it so well because of my privilege.

I'm financially stable, have a relatively good safety blanket, and my online work and freelance schedule are flexible enough to work around it all.

If I had to work a 40 hour week to afford to live then I’d have no room to accommodate it never mind recover.

And thats how most people with this kind of thing have to deal with it, especially with the govt making disability assistance harder to get, & barely/not recognising disabilities like this!

What about you?
I have a visible disability
4.2%
I have an invisible disability
47.5%
Actually what I have might count as a disability
28.1%
I have no disability
20.2%
Poll ended at .
@mattgrayyes are we counting glasses? (maybe that’s the third option?) 🤔
@LucasWerkmeister @mattgrayyes this. I was unsure how to answer, then realized glasses are a visible indicator or a vision disability, but it's so accepted in society that most people don't think about it as a disability. Maybe because it doesn't require other people to accommodate or make changes for that particular disability.
@karaksindru @mattgrayyes yeah, I remember when Stephen Hawking died there was a cartoon going around that showed him at the pearly gates and god (or st peter?) helping him out of his wheelchair – and then someone pointed out that the cartoonist had still drawn Hawking wearing glasses, because apparently he didn’t need to be “freed” from *that* assistive technology 
@LucasWerkmeister @mattgrayyes I guess it depends how much or little you can see with or without them...
With glasses I'm above 100%, but that does include having to switch to reading glasses or multifocal lenses. This doesn't really count, I'd say, annoying as it can be... But then my eyesight really is not great if I don't have the glasses and it does impact my life at times.
If you show a colour gradient from red to yellow, at which point does it turn from red to yellow?