Tracking my chronic illness symptoms has been very valuable for spotting trends and just understanding my illness overall. But did you know I also track other habits and self-care routines that affect my overall well-being outside of my lupus flares? I track some of these on the Flare Symptom Tracker<\/a> and some of them I look at more closely or track completely separately on their own pages. My sleep & energy tracker is an example of something I keep on a separate page. Why?<\/p>\n The simplest reason is because when I\u2019m not in a flare, I have a lot of control over my energy from day to day. It\u2019s super empowering to realize that decisions I make will help me have more energy and feel more like a productive human! Let\u2019s take a peek at how and why I track my energy.<\/p>\n The purpose of tracking my energy is to help me see patterns and to keep myself accountable when I am not in a flare. Outside of a flare, I know I have some control over what affects my energy because tracking has taught me this! I can easily see the pattern between nighttime sleep, naps, water intake and food choices and how it affects my energy levels. During a flare, I still want to be on track with these habits because they will help my overall well-being and they do play a role in how I get through a flare.<\/p>\n For me, the biggest factor affecting my daily energy outside of a flare is the amount of sleep I got the night before and whether or not I\u2019ve napped. I need a ton of sleep, so if I start to see the amount of sleep I am getting fall off, and I don\u2019t make time for naps, I will definitely see a drop in my energy levels.<\/p>\n Two other major factors that affect my sleep are my hydration level and whether or not I\u2019m making good food choices. These are two things I do actually track on the flare tracker as well, partly because when I\u2019m in a flare I really want those two self-care habits to be front and center in my mind. Some may feel that\u2019s overkill, but I like it this way. \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n If you\u2019re starting to track your own daily energy levels, you may want to start by identifying the things that affect your personal energy. For most of us, sleep will easily be on this list, but there may be other factors, such as:<\/p>\n If I\u2019m in a flare, fatigue will be the number one reason my energy is low. While I should definitely be making good self-care choices, sometimes all the sleep in the world or other self-care habits won\u2019t bring my energy level up if I\u2019m fatigued.<\/p>\n First, I should start by saying that the word \u201cfatigue\u201d can mean different things to different people. But in the chronic illness world, it is generally understood that \u201cfatigue\u201d is NOT tiredness. Here\u2019s the difference:<\/p>\n Taking a nap, going for a walk, changing your activity to something more stimulating, or drinking caffeine will typically relieve tiredness. It may be short-lived, but you will generally feel refreshed or have renewed energy for a time if you do something to address your tiredness.<\/p>\n But none of these activities will relieve fatigue.<\/b><\/p>\n If I am having a lot of fatigue, a nap is not going to make me feel less fatigued. I\u2019ll wake up feeling the same as when I went to sleep (sometimes worse). Walking doesn\u2019t help\u2026 caffeine doesn\u2019t even dent it\u2026 in fact, there is very little I can do during the day to wipe the fatigue away. All I can do is modify my day to cope with the fatigue.<\/p>\n Fatigue can be caused by illness symptoms, medication side effects, inflammation, brain changes, depression\/anxiety, and pain. It can affect your quality of life. It can stop you from doing things you love, spending time with friends and family, or being able to work. Fatigue affects your energy (like tiredness), but it also affects you physically, mentally, and emotionally.<\/p>\n Because fatigue is actually a symptom of so many chronic illnesses and mental illnesses, it\u2019s something that is treated medically and is not something that typically fluctuates from hour to hour the way tiredness can. For me, all of the factors I listed above (especially pain and medication side effects) can affect my fatigue level.<\/p>\n I hope that helps clarify the difference and why I don\u2019t compare my \u201ctypical\u201d daily energy levels to my flare symptom fatigue levels! Let\u2019s look a bit closer on how I track both and why they are in different trackers.<\/p>\n Two of my trackers are back-to-back in my journal — my water\/veg tracker and my sleep\/energy tracker live right next to each other so I can look at any given day and see how things are related. (I\u2019ll admit it took me a few months to realize they should be next to each other!) Here\u2019s how these trackers look in my bullet journal:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n I track how much water I drink during the day (I track glasses, not ounces), and how many times I ate vegetables or fruit. I am not currently tracking how much sugar I eat but I am making changes to include this soon since I know it plays a big part in my energy levels (can we say sugar crash!!?)<\/p>\n For my sleep tracker, I keep tabs on how many hours I slept at night and how long I napped during the day. And the last column here is a simple rating system for how much energy I had during the day. Five hearts means I had great energy and felt very productive and alert. One heart means I was dragging, felt tired and had a hard time accomplishing my tasks.<\/p>\n One thing to note here is that if you were to look over any of my monthly trackers by themselves, you would see that energy levels for any given day may not correlate to the other things on my tracker. For example, I might have done everything \u201cright\u201d one day and still had terrible energy. What isn\u2019t really shown here are other factors like schedule changes, life stuff (family in town, a draining doctor appointment, etc.) or illnesses. Those are generally noted in other places in my journal and I try to only focus on overall patterns here and not individual days.<\/p>\n Understanding the monthly patterns and not getting bogged down with the daily details is why I created the Tracker Summary page (check it out on the Printables page here<\/a>). When the month is over, I go through my trackers and summarize trends, what I learned and what I could do differently. Being intentional about this has really helped me find patterns!<\/p>\n Since fatigue is a symptom and side effect of my illness, it is tracked in my Flare Symptom Tracker<\/a>. If my fatigue levels are going up, then it\u2019s quite possible I\u2019m heading into a flare. I can see this because my past flares have shown my fatigue levels rise and stay high while I\u2019m in a flare and lower when I\u2019m not.<\/p>\n <\/p>\nDay-to-day choices and habits that affect my energy levels<\/h3>\n
\n
How fatigue symptoms affect my energy levels<\/h3>\n
So, what is fatigue?<\/h5>\n
Tracking Energy in my Bullet Journal<\/h3>\n
Tracking fatigue in my bullet journal<\/h3>\n