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Long Hauler? What’s your story about life with chronic illness?

May 11, 2021 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

A good story starts with an opener that sets the stage for what’s ahead, develops a plot that creates tension and builds the story line, and closes with the conflict or tension reduced and/or resolved. Each of us has a multitude of stories within us and often multiple stories about the same event. As you share your story, you might realize things that you hadn’t noticed before. You might experience the story becoming more expansive within you. You might find new meaning to the event.   

And you might find that those who listen deeply will see you more clearly, get to know you a bit better, and perhaps even shift their perspective about the world around them.

In what follows, I am sharing just one of my stories about illness onset and it’s impact on my current work life. 

I was 27 years old when I had my first urinary tract infection (UTI).  Two months later, my left hand was numb. A few months after that, numbness methodically creeped through my body.  I wondered, how can I look the same while my body is being inhabited by a creature from outer space?  Soon after, I lost vision in one eye and was immobilized.  I was grateful for the diagnosis, multiple sclerosis (MS).  It was a tremendous relief to get confirmation that I wasn’t exaggerating what was going on and, most importantly, it had a name. 

I had no idea what I didn’t know.  In 1980, there was no effective MS treatment, little written about or for patients and few support resources for living with any chronic illness.  Worse yet, people cringed when I said I had MS.  It seemed like anyone with this disease ended up paralyzed and in a wheelchair.  

I was lucky though.  In time, I recovered my vision and my strength.  I had no idea what was ahead so I shut the thoughts, the worry and nightmares, out of my consciousness.  Denial was my coping tool and I believe it kept me alive.  I went on with my life as it was.  How could I know that this was just the first plunge in a lifelong roller coaster ride of living with chronic illnesses?  

Forty + years later, I’ve had more experiences than I can count with new diseases and medical conditions. Each time there’s a new symptom and diagnosis, I face a blank canvas that  eventually gets filled in. I’ve learned what it’s like to live with illness that brings life to a halt but doesn’t kill you. I know the isolation in this journey. I’ve been immobilized, ground down in pain. And I’ve experienced the joy of experiencing my body healing stronger than I had allowed myself to hope for. Sheer grit has allowed me to thrive, to find my passion. I found my calling as a coach, a guide to ‘fellow travelers’  who believe that they, too, have the capacity to develop the resources they need to continue living in this world as best they can.  

 Let’s face it.  “It’s not a group you would ever choose to join… ”.  Women, Work and Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working, Girlfriend!, p xi

 Since March 2020, the number of folks who have entered this world has exploded. They’re called long haulers.  The closest explanation of what this is like comes from Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, “… long COVID likely is the same as or very similar to myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). …”   Before the pandemic, the National Academy of Medicine estimated that as many as 2.5 million people in the US are living with ME/CFS”.  This article in the journal Frontiers in Medicine says that the pandemic could well double that number in the next year.”

Sharing my story of my slide into this space invariably helps me see something new, something of value, in my experience.  You might that you are already developing your own stories. Hopefully, this helps you make sense of or put a frame around your experience. And, when you listen deeply to someone else’s story, you validate their experience.

Recently, I was talking with a colleague who has been living with the effects of long haul Covid since early March 2020. One month after getting sick, she was rushed to the Emergency Room because her heart rate was dangerously high. They couldn’t find anything, told her she probably had sleep apnea and sent her home. She thought the doctors believed that she was a hypochondriac. She wondered if she was going crazy. In time, she found physicians who listened and validated her experience. I asked her to imagine that she was gazing down at herself when she left the Emergency Room that winter night. I asked her what message she would give to that self.   

She thought for a while and then said softly, “Hold on tight.  This is going to be a long, bumpy ride with no end in sight.” 

Amen

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Are You Ready to Take Action?

July 15, 2020 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

I think you’ll find this post is different from my typical format.  But then, these aren’t typical times, are they? It’s in 2 parts and each offers information and suggestions for action.  First. This is a political issue that might be impacting you or those you know.  I’m sharing it in the hope that  itRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Do you practice your fundamentals?

January 8, 2019 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

It’s been one year since I’ve posted here. Taking a break after more than a decade of writing this blog had nothing to do with the activity itself.  I enjoy writing and between my clients’ stories and my own, there’s never a loss for what to write about. And let’s face it, I love hearingRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Are you a professional patient?

October 4, 2017 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

https://www.audioacrobat.com/email/EsB7cqp6F Defintion  PA-TIENT:   Someone who is receiving needed professional services that are directed by a licensed practitioner of the healing arts toward maintenance, improvement or protection of health or  lessening of illness, disability or pain. (US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) If you’re healthy, it’s unlikely that you spend time thinking about what beingRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Uncategorized

Tomorrow is Rosalind’s first “Ask Me Anything!” We hope to connect with you there!

September 20, 2016 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

  We are so excited for tomorrow’s event. Hope to connect with you at Rosalind Lerner Joffe‘s first “Ask Me Anything!” ciCoach Founder, Rosalind Joffe, will host a Reddit AMA Wednesday, September 21st at 11:00am ET Reddit AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) is a free chatroom where reddit.com users (fyi: you must create a reddit account toRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Health Info, Job hunting, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Starting a business, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

We are only one week away from Rosalind’s first “Ask Me Anything!”

September 14, 2016 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

ciCoach Founder, Rosalind Joffe, will host a Reddit AMA on Wednesday, September 21st at 11:00am EST! An AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) is a free, live, open-source interview where reddit.com users can ask Rosalind her thoughts and learn from her personal experience in living with multiple chronic illnesses and coaching clients living with chronic illness. RSVP soRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Health Info, Job hunting, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Starting a business, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

You’re Invited! ciCoach Founder, Rosalind Joffe, will host a Reddit AMA

September 7, 2016 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

An AMA (“Ask Me Anything”)  is a free, live, open-source interview where reddit.com users can ask Rosalind her thoughts and learn from her personal experience in living with multiple chronic illnesses and coaching clients living with chronic illness. RSVP so you can join our international conversation… Click “create an account” at the top right corner of reddit.com  Make a username and passwordRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Health Info, Job hunting, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Starting a business, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

Are you nuts to disclose chronic illness before starting the job?

August 26, 2015 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

I can’t count how many times a reporter’s first question is,  “Should someone with a chronic illness disclose in the interview process?”   They  seem to think it’s the most pressing issue on a reader’s mind.  Maybe so. But focusing on this question alone confuses the issue. Even for people with no limitations on their work lives, the interview process can feelRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Is work a safe haven for you?

July 17, 2014 by Rosalind Joffe 14 Comments

NEWS FLASH . . . A new study shows that  ” … people find work to be less stressful than their home lives. Work was, in fact, a haven.”  (WBUR.org/NPR).    That same news report cited a poll conducted by NPR, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Harvard School of Public Health found that,  … “health problems, the deathRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Opting out but wishing it was a choice?

September 8, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Frustration drove me to write a book.  I wanted to debunk a message that too many of my female clients  told me was wrecking havoc in their lives.  Family, friends, healthcare team and co workers told them that continuing to work was harmful to their health.   The ‘prevailing wisdom’ goes like this:   workRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

Is Working Good for Your Health?

May 22, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Twenty years ago,  at age 42 and after 22 years of continuous employment,  I exited the workforce.  I’d been living with a diagnosed illness and then second one for 13 years.  But I had never made any conscious choices regarding my career plan based on my increasingly limited health.  Now within a matter of weeks,Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

How springy are you?

June 25, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

Last week, it was the 1st heat wave of the summer and I was seriously drooping.  Just walking to my car in the sun knocked me out. Prior to the first mutiple sclerosis episode 32 years ago, heat wasn’t an issue.  Since then,  I melt in heat and my function drops dramatically. But here’s theRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Suggestions or advice? You choose.

October 13, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Several recent emails have either asked for my ‘advice’ on a topic or  angered with the ‘advice’  I’d given.  Funny thing is — I don’t see myself in the business of giving advice,  either as a blogger/writer or in my coaching practice. So what’s this about?   I asked myself,  what does it mean ‘to giveRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it

Do you need to talk about illness?

October 5, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 7 Comments

(Names and details have been changed to protect privacy) Chronic illness can mean that we have to grow and change in ways we couldn’t have expected.  In my experience, the ability to communicate effectively is fundamental to being able to thrive, not just survive, when living with illness. One reason is that most symptoms fromRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Talking about it, Working with chronic illness

Is this Duo Doable?

May 4, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 8 Comments

Recently I was asked:  Do you really believe that continuing to work is really harder when you live with a chronic illness? I answered, Yes, naturally. Soon after, several times during our call, a client asked if other people struggle as she does at working with an illness.  That’s when I realized that my kneeRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

6 Ideas To Put In Your Toolbox

September 27, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 15 Comments

This month’s  Career Collective Bloggers are writing about their favorite career resources.  Scroll down to see what others have written on this topic. My clients primarily live with chronic illness.  For the most part, the challenges they face fall into the same “categories” that healthy people face.  The story and degree of difficulties might shift. Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Working with chronic illness

Why not look for help before you leap?

July 15, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

I’ve noticed a trend.  Over the past few years, the number of  inquiries that I get from people looking for help with their career has increased.  But until recently the mix was pretty equal between the currently employed and unemployed. Over the past year,  the requests  I get are overwhelmingly from the unemployed. I’m wondering: Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Good grief, charley brown.

April 7, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

Do you live with debilitating chronic illness that has led to significant life changes?  If you’re nodding “yes”,  most likely you’ve felt a strong sense loss. But have you  experienced grief?  I thought about the importance of grieving after reading two articles recently. The first was a news article about James Levine, the  Metropolitan OperaRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Can we hope health care "reform" will help the chronically ill?

March 23, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 7 Comments

Is the  health care reform bill a step toward ensuring that anyone living with chronic illness will  receive  “adequate” medical  treatment? Or is it just more help for the healthy? I don’t have the answer.  But I’m delighted that in the increased attention on the burden that chronic illness places on individuals and society whenRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

You can lose insurance benefits because you didn't disclose

March 18, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

Since hanging my shingle as a “chronic illness career coach”, the question I get asked most often is:   “Should I disclose my illness when interviewing for a job?” Naturally, as a coach,  I have more questions than answers.  But there is one guideline I’ve found is worth following: If  symptoms get in the  way ofRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Job hunting, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Is it "evident" that flex is key?

January 13, 2010 by Rosalind Joffe 12 Comments

A reporter was interviewing me about chronic illness and working.  She was very surprised when I said, “The single most important factor that helps a chronically illl person continue to work is to work in a flexible environment.” She asked me what “evidence” I have to support this.   (Have you noticed how popular that wordRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Health Info, Job hunting, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Does working help you be healthier?

December 21, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

Living  with chronic illness isn’t easy, under the best of circumstances. And working can seem like it makes it tougher. But the alternative is usually worse. It was a dear friend’s 60th birthday party.  And, once again, my body was in revolt. I was feverish, tired,  nauseous —  with  numb feet and awful balance  (multipleRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Job hunting, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Chronic Illness and self employment. A Day At The Beach?

November 9, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 14 Comments

Here’s a question I get frequently but you wouldn’t have heard 20 or even 10 years ago:  Is self employment the best option for people living with chronic illness? It seems that most employed people dream of working for themselves.  It certainly sounds  freeing and creative, doesn’t it? No one makes a more compelling caseRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Starting a business, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Working With Impairment Without Disability Can be Possible

September 29, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Last week,  I spoke at a conference called, “Impairment Without Disability” at the Mayo Clinic. It was targeted to help physicians and supervisors  understand what they can do to help people with impairments stay at work (SAW) or return to work (RTW). In the world of Occupational Medicine — (the field is actually called theRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

At Work: What to say and when living with chronic illness

September 22, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

Take a minute to ask someone, anyone:  “Do you know what the Americans with Disabilities Act is?”   Most likely you’ll hear Yes. Now ask,  “What does the ADA do?” Maybe you’ll hear that  it protects people with disabilities from discrimination.  Funny how many people, with and without disabilities, know about this Act but don’tRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Don't wait to make those career plans

September 8, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Are you  living with a chronic illness and under 40? If you’re saying, YES, regardless of how debilitating or not your symptoms are, now it the time to take stock of your  future in the workplace. Don’t wait until your hand is forced and you have no choice. I know  because that’s what I did. Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Starting a business, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

Avoiding the minefields when your resume has employment gaps

August 13, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 14 Comments

Resumes look different than when my parents were job hunting – – or for that matter, when I was first in the game.  For most of the 20th century,  a person took a job expecting to die in that job. But sometime in the early 1990’s,  job security  and employee loyalty were pushed aside inRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Can you protect your job living with a chronic illness?

June 22, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Check out the very useful information in The New York Times, Patient Money column, Protecting Your Job When You Live with Chronic Illness by Lesley Alderman. And, yes, there are several quotes from me. On reading this, a client emailed to let me know that she’s  worried that now that I’m famous, I wouldn’t haveRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

How do you stay flexible like wire coils?

June 10, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Chronic Illness demands that we stay flexible, like wire coils. If we don’t we can crash and burn, can’t we? It was 2:00am when I woke with a headache & felt like I was burning with fever.  I was convinced it was the H1N1 virus (aka swine flu).  As I lay in bed, too tiredRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Now you can get the info you need

May 11, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Fifteen years ago, I stopped working for two years when ulcerative colitis and multiple sclerosis, chronic illnesses, made working — and even leaving the house  — difficult.  With two children in elementary school, a husband with a demanding job and disabling disease, work became the added burden I couldn’t carry. Tell me.  Does this soundRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Working with chronic illness

What do you do when you have to keep going?

May 6, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

Recently I experienced, yet again, how hard it is to work and live with waxing/waning chronic illness. And this just reinforces why I think that that working is the smartest thing I can do for myself. When we traveled  to California to visit friends, I knew it would tire me. The time change and longRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Starting a business, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Chronic illness often means deciding when you're too sick to work

April 28, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

Do chronic illness symptoms – -multiple sclerosis, colitis, fibromylagia or cancer, fill in the blank  — crop up when you least expect them? Doesn’t it always seem to happen when there’s that big presentation at work or a major meeting requiring a plane flight and overnight stay? Or maybe it’s a regular day at workRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Avis had it right

March 19, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Wouldn’t you know it would take “March Madness” to show us that coming from behind can make you a winner? Two guys at Wharton Behavioral Lab explored the idea that losing can lead to winning because of the strong  motivational effects of being close to your goal (When Losing Leads to a Win). They appliedRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Starting a business, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Working for yourself isn't always a choice

February 12, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Randy Duermyer writes, How Working At Home Found Me.  This is a useful  blog about working at home  – check it out.   People email me asking about starting their own home businesses as I did. They’re say they’re tired of showing up when they’re so sick.  What does it take, they want to know.Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Starting a business, Working with chronic illness

Will new skills make you more marketable?

February 9, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Have you recently lost your job  – – and live with a chronic illness? Recently I heard a career specialist on CNN give advice about what you can if you lose your job and you’re in an industry hit hard in this recession. The interviewer wasn’t focusing on the chronically ill — but it doesn’t Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Job hunting, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Self employment, Virtual employment and Being the boss when you live with chronic illness

February 5, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Are you thinking:  it’s got to be easier to work for myself  rather than dragging myself into work every day?  A reader asked me to write about this:  I would really like to see more profiles with people who own their own business like you.  I am so demanding on myself, that when I amRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Starting a business, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

What do you learn from chronic illness or pain?

February 3, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

A few weeks ago I blogged about my own sinus surgery to improve rinitis . I’ve felt worse post  surgery than before – and it’s been 4 weeks.  This was not expected and caught me unprepared. What happened?  I was supposed to “naturally” shed the scabbing that occurs from breaking nasal passages.   But it  hasn’tRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Just in Time Career Coaching Is Here

January 22, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

There was a problem with the blog and I am resending yesterday’s email.  My sincere apologies for sending two emails to subscribers — in a row! Are you stuck on ONE ISSUE that keeps you up at night? One issue, caused by chronic illness, that keeps you from work success? Working with chronic illness isRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Working with chronic illness

What gets you through the times of pain/fatigue or just plain, can't do?

January 11, 2009 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

I had sinus surgery last Monday. Six days later and I’m very tired and not “myself”. Well, there’s a silver lining. After living with chronic illness for 30 years, I’ve been healthy enough over the past 5 years to develop a baseline for normal. Only if you’ve lived with chronic illness that waxes and wanesRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it Tagged With: www.boston.com/news/health/articles/2008/03/17/a_sinus_

Special holiday offer

December 4, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Are you looking for that special gift for someone you know with chronic illness? A good friend, a loved one? Maybe something just for you? Something that will help you Kick Butt in 2009? The Women, Work and Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working, Girlfriend! virtual book tour is over. It was a smashing success with 18Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease

Don't let chronic illness lead to mistakes

December 1, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

FYI: If you get this as an email, you can click on the title and read this post on the internet blog site. A reader wrote that he couldn’t figure out the image I put in yesterday’s post. Looking at the post again, I could see why he was confused. It was supposed to implyRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

More Book Tour Stops

November 19, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

I thought I’d gotten this post out for Monday but didn’t realize that my server wasn’t working right! So, let me take you back a few days on the tour and tell you what’s coming Monday Nov 17 — We were at Shauna’s Life In Pain. I wrote about how people seem to respond toRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease Tagged With: http://a-migraineur.blogspot.com/, http://Beingchronicallyillisapill.blogspot.com, http://linzworld.wordpress.com/, http://www.restministries.org, http://www.theiciexperience.org/, Rest Ministries [rest@restministries.org]

More book tour stops

November 10, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Great stops so far. If you’ve missed them, go back and see where we’ve been. This is what’s coming up: Tues Nov 11 – achronic dose, Laurie Edwards interviews me about the book’s focus, the warrior spirit and more. Wed Nov 12 – despite lupus, asked me to respond to this question: Why do youRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease Tagged With: http://achronicdose.com, http://despitelupus.blogspot.com, http://fightingfatigue.org, http://gettingclosertomyself.blogspot.com/, http://www.marlyn-stuff.blogspot.com/, http://www.mylifeworkstoday.com/blog/

Election over, Diabetic Gets Harrassed and Book Tour is On

November 5, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

Yes, it’s finally over. We can get back to whatever we were doing before this started … what was it, two years ago? And now the work, to open healthcare access for all, begins. ***************************************************************************** Read how one young woman handled poor treatment when the proctor almost didn’t let her take the GRE’s because ofRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease Tagged With: http://achronicdose.com, http://celiacchicks.typepad.com, http://despitelupus.blogspot.com, http://muchtomysjogren.blogspot.com, http://rhymeswithmigraine.blog, http://somebodyhealme.dianalee.net/

Presidential Candidates stand on healthcare

November 3, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

A reader told me that Web MD has put together a comprehensive chart to compare how the candidates stand on health issues. This is useful information! Here are some questions for you: Would you vote solely on one issue – this or any other? Would you vote for a candidate who supports your issue butRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness Tagged With: http://www.webmd.com/election2008/comparecandidates

Join the Book Tour — no lines and no wait!

November 2, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Tuesday is voting day and I bet you’re wondering: How am I going to get to the voting booth, wait on those long lines? Here we go again, I look fine so I can’t say I’m too tired to stand on long lines and still get to work on time (or not — if you’reRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease Tagged With: http://chronicbabe.com, http://rhymeswithmigraine.blogspot.com/, http://somebodyhealme.dianalee.net/

Where do they stand?

October 30, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

It might not be the top story on CNN, but at least they’re running the ads, Vote Like Your Health Depends On It, which ask our presidential candidates: Where do you stand on healthcare and spending for chronic illness? HOO – RAY! The ads were created by The Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease. The PFCDRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info Tagged With: http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2008/10/28/celebrities-pres

The Blog Virtual Book Tour Starts Soon

October 27, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

I’ve written about the virtual book tour for my book, Women Work and Autoimmune Disease:Keep Working, Girlfriend! It kicks off next week, Monday November 3. Those bloggers who have asked me to write a guest post for the day that they’re highlighting the book have suggested a topic to write on. That’s more difficult thanRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Working for others

Book Reading in Newton MA

September 18, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

If you’re a subscriber and get this is an email, you can comment either by clicking on today’s headline or scroll down to below today’s post to where it says comment. ********************************************************* I’m giving a “lecture/reading” of my book, Women, Work and Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working Girlfriend, (co-authored with Joan Friedlander) this evening at aRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

The Virtual Book Tour, a special price and a special opportunity

September 3, 2008 by Rosalind Joffe 1 Comment

the Women, Work and Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working Girlfriend! Virtual Book Tour I’m thrilled that some of the best read bloggers (see the list) in the online disease community are participating. TO KICK OFF THE BOOK TOUR: (and let’s face it, I know money is tight but I’ve seen how valuable this information can be),Read More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Working with chronic illness

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Rosalind Joffe

rosalind@cicoach.com

617.969.1930
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Women, Work and
Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working Girlfriend!

by Rosalind Joffe
with Joan Friedlander
© 2025 Rosalind Joffe, ciCoach | Photograph by Meri Bond