r/mildlyinfuriating 1d ago

"I'm Sorry, I Have to Cancel"

31.5k Upvotes

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7.1k

u/penfoldsdarksecret 1d ago

My wife's hairdresser did that for around 6 months. Then she announced she was quitting. Then passed away (she was 35 or so) a few weeks later. Sometimes it's excusable.

3.0k

u/pyxiedust219 23h ago

not technically a provider of a service but i remember having an instructor for a class i was really excited for, who NEVER graded my work, i think at one point he was 8 weeks behind on grading in a 16 week course. around week 14 i was annoyed bc the final was coming up and he hadn’t even graded my midterm yet… and then i got the email he had died. definitely changed my perspective on what I view as important vs what ACTUALLY matters at the end of your life

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u/scarletnightingale 20h ago

I don't know what happened to my OChem professor in college but the guy was a great professor, clearly loved the subject, very animated and busy (jumped on a desk at one point to properly display a chemical attachment), then suddenly 3 weeks before the end of the semester he disappeared. We were just told he was ill. He wasn't around the next semester either. The semester after that he finally came back and was a completely different person. People who took his class said he had to sit in a rolling chair and push himself back and forth in front of the board, pointing at things with a yardstick to explain things all while just seeming exhausting and tired.

I hope he's doing better now but it made me incredibly sad to know someone who was so happy and vibrant and active got hit with something so hard that all he could do was push himself around in a rolling chair while getting out of breath. Dude was dedicated to his subject.

162

u/drinkacid 17h ago

Sounds like a stroke or heart attack.

122

u/ChocolateKey2229 15h ago

Or MS or Fibromyalgia or Chronic Fatigue. Any of them can be devastating including stroke or MI.

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u/SnowflakeSorcerer 11h ago

Known to be Lively animated and enthusiastic, then gone suddenly for a semester and comes back exhausted and deflated sounds a like it was a little more than chronic fatigue, would the onset be that sudden and drastic? How would you even find this out?

9

u/Money_Beyond_9822 8h ago

I developed chronic fatique from my covid infection and it was literally over night so definetly possible

2

u/SnowflakeSorcerer 8h ago

I think I might have chronic fatigue but how would I know? Did u get tests done or something or is it self diagnosed? Not trying to be a prick, I just don’t know enough about ir

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u/Money_Beyond_9822 8h ago

Unfortunately its a differential diagnosis, like any other causes get ruled out and then if your symptoms persist its probably cfs. But i developed a plethora of symptoms over night after my infection and cfs is only of them. It certainly got better over time but at the beginning of it id be exhausted all the time and could easily sleep more than 16 hours but even after sleeping id feel tired

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u/diniefofinie 14h ago

Yeah this isn’t fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue.

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u/Katililly 11h ago

I have both of these. It definitely could be. It could be a bunch of different things. Any chronic illness or extreme acute issue could cause this. Unless you have inside info that we don't have, it's a stretch to just say you know for sure that it isn't either of these.

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u/sarahfclark1982 9h ago

If it was MS, they would have told you—I have it, and if it was the reason for MY delay, I would have owned up to it… but maybe that’s just me…

1

u/plonkydonkey 1h ago

Yikes, nothing to "own up to" here. People get unwell, for all sorts of reasons, controllable and uncontrollable. Don't ever need to disclose to others what the details of your health condition might be, it's nobody else's business shrug 🤷‍♂️.

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u/Armenian-heart4evr 1h ago

How did they diagnose you! What tests were done? Did you have a spinal tap?

u/sarahfclark1982 50m ago

Yes to all of this. I was in a coma for two weeks in 2010… but yeah… diagnosed… didn’t get MS until 7 years later.

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u/scarletnightingale 11h ago

He was fairly young, still in his 30s, so while that's possible, it didn't seem as likely and he didn't really act like a stroke patient after he got back.  It wasn't any one sided weakness, it was just he was overall just... seemed like someone who was fighting for every bit of energy he had. That was the other thing that made it sad, he was still very young and at the start of his career. 

u/Armenian-heart4evr 59m ago

It could have been ALS -- "Lou Gherig's disease"!

1

u/Excellent_Yak365 1h ago

I had this issue after chemo and pulmonary embolism. Still messed up