Blog Detail
Chronic Illness Articles to Reprint
http://chronicillnessarticles.wordpress.com
This blog features articles about living with chronic illness, invisible illness, disabilities and more. Each article is free to reprint and widgets are available for people to have on their own web site or blog, which is updated weekly. Articles are by Lisa Copen, founder of National Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week.
Recent Posts
Chronic Illness: How Much Do You Share with Your Spouse?
“I feel like there are thumb tacks in my bed!” I say to my husband as he crawls into the other side of our bed. “I know there is nothing there, but I just feel bruised all over.” “I’m sorry,” he offers with a...
You are Too Young to Be That Sick!
Image via Wikipedia At the age of twenty-four, a thousand miles away from my family, living in a new city, I was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. Over a period of four weeks and about eight doctor’s visits, I finally found a physician wh...
10 Reasons When it Makes Good Sense to Fire Your Doctor
Image via Wikipedia by Lisa Copen We will never find the perfect doctor, as they are all human and none of them are perfect. It comes as no surprise to most of us that they call their profession “the practice of medicine.” One of the l...
7 Outdoor BBQ Planning Ideas When You Are Ill or Tired
Image by kristiewells via Flickr Whether you plan to serve steaks or hot dogs, having friends over for an evening of fun in your backyard doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Just because you may have a chronic illness doesn’t mean you hav...
5 Steps to Use Twitter as a Pain Log Tool
This article is free to reprint on your blog, ezine, web site, etc. Just leave everything “as is” including the resource box at the bottom. Thank you! If chronic illness or pain is a part of your life, the odds are that at one point you h...
Invisible Illness and Friends Who Don’t Get It: What to Do
by Lisa Copen If you live with an invisible illness, you may find the emotions of coping with people’s doubts about it can be harder to manage than the disease itself. Most of us with a chronic illness must eventually accept our condition. In o...

