🤝 Community Munchausen's by Internet (Malingerers, Munchies, Spoonies, etc) - Feigning Illnesses for Attention

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Instead, the typical patient goes barking mad rather quickly
I guess she could be developing some other psychotic disorder (delusional disorder comes to mind). But mostly she just seems extremely neurotic and personality disordered. And fun!
Yeah there's no psych diagnosis I'm aware of where the patient goes psychotic at night like clockwork - EXCEPT severe Dementia cases where you get sun-downing.

My armchair diagnosis is insomnia, boredom and too much weed. Look at this:
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This is supposedly a "psychotic" tweet, but it's grammatically sound and understandable, even if it's weird. Spot the lighter up there on top. She's standing in front of her dishwasher ripping bong hits or some such thing, posting stoned tweets like she's special.

Couple other things I saw:

Bow sign! These bitches all love bows.
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"Trying" to draw clocks.
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Her college's motto should have been "eat sleep rape repeat"
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Diagnosed Dissociative Disorder:
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She's a kick! Also REALLY hates Americans and equates us all with Trump's regime. Which, like I was aware was a thing and know occurs (Especially in France, but obviously lots of other places, too), but haven't really seen it in action before. It's fascinating.

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"Trying" to draw clocks.

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For those unfamiliar, she's likely trying to skinwalk Susannah Cahalan, who is well-known to have written extensively about her experiences with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. Notably, Cahalan was misdiagnosed with schizophrenia before a doctor had her perform a clock drawing test.

Disease presentation and misdiagnoses
Cahalan's disease manifested in 2009 when she was 24 years old. It began with sensory issues, which she later described in her article "My Mysterious Lost Month of Madness" as experiencing the world “brighter, louder, more painful.”[4] She also began experiencing numbness in the whole left side of her body, and paranoid hallucinations of bed bug bites. Concerned by the numbness, Cahalan sought out a neurologist who ran multiple inconclusive tests, including two normal MRIs. Cahalan began experiencing severe insomnia and continued behavioral abnormalities. One night at her boyfriend's apartment, she had a grand mal seizure and woke up in St. Luke's Hospital. Cahalan describes the hospital neurologist as dismissive, and she received her first of multiple misdiagnoses: alcohol withdrawal. Psychiatrists also misdiagnosed her with schizophrenia and bipolar I disorder. Cahalan was released from the hospital, and as her disease worsened, she had another grand mal seizure.[4]

Hospital stay
After her second seizure, Cahalan's parents took her to the hospital for an EEG and demanded that she not be taken to a psychiatric floor. Unlike many anti-NMDA cases, Cahalan was never admitted to a psychiatric ward. While at the hospital, Cahalan had her third seizure and was immediately placed on the epilepsy floor of New York University's Medical Center. Her hallucinations and delusions soared during the month she spent in the hospital. Cahalan had two lumbar puncture procedures that revealed high white blood cell counts. Because high white blood cells count signify brain swelling, the case was officially passed to neuro-pathologist and epileptologist Dr. Souhel Najjar at NYU medical center.[4]

Diagnosis (anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis)
Dr. Najjar had Cahalan perform a “clock test", which involves the patient drawing the face of a clock. When Cahalan drew her clock, she was only able to recreate half of it, indicating injury to one side of her brain. After a brain biopsy, it was concluded that Cahalan's issue was not psychiatric, but the result of anti-NMDA encephalitis, a brain-inflammation disease with an unknown cause. She was only the 217th person diagnosed with this illness.[5]

Treatment and recovery
In order to treat her disease, she was given an assortment of different steroids, infusions, and plasmapheresis. She made a full recovery without suffering long-term brain damage.[9]

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"In this clock drawing task, the subject is asked to draw a clock with the hours and showing the time 2:30. Successive results show a deterioration of pattern processing ability in a subject as they progress from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to severe Alzheimer's disease (AD)."

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Recreation of Cahalan's drawing
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Miranda's account of presentation of symptoms makes it pretty clear she's got something else going on, and/or she's full of shit.
 
Fuck her. My main concern is her child. But if her partner is away or busy, and she is hallucinating on shrooms, this is serious reportable shit as she is not being a competent caregiver. It's bizarre she is advertising it on the internet.
It seems a lot of these munchie parents don't realise that when you have kids the child becomes a priority and you second. They can't even step out of their own bullshit to focus on the child.
As a reminder, she claims to be here on the Munchausen’s Scale of Chronic Shit Life Syndrome:

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”May or may not be able to tolerate human precence for brief periods”. I suppose baby-no-genders diaper has to wait until Slave comes home, mommy just needs her fix first.

In reality, I assume most of these CF girlies get on just fine when there’s no one around to watch them suffer. At least I hope so for the sake of the bxby (gender neutral baby).
 
It seems a lot of these munchie parents don't realise that when you have kids the child becomes a priority and you second. They can't even step out of their own bullshit to focus on the child.
It goes two ways depending on how they view themselves in relation to others.

For someone like Ace, her child becomes a piece of furniture. She thinks very little of others around her, so she doesn't care for their approval. In fact, she views herself at odds with them and actively seeks their disapproval. Ace is a mother, but I don't think she would use the term "mother" in relation to her self-identity. Rather, she'd list some bullshit ideological terms (e.g., "communist," "revolutionary," "survivor," etc.) because she likes to feel different from those around her and believes that identity-politics and victim-hood are appropriate vehicles towards that goal.

Inversely, for someone like, say, Gypsy Roses' mother, her child becomes a prop for her own fantasy. She cared so much about what other people thought of her that she ruined her child's health so as to be seen as a sacrificing, doting, hardworking caregiver. She isn't just a mother, she wants to be the Mother, the paragon of motherhood and representative of all its sacrificial trappings so as to have others look towards her in deference and admiration.

In either situation, the child in is exposed to horrible mental suffering, whether it be outright neglect or being the object of hysterical delusions.
 
Speaking of feeling rage towards fakers who brought kids into their shitshow, theanne_girl Sydney Anne posted this:




So glad this person cares for small children. Very small children. I truly hope that when the camera is off she stops pretending to be this weak/unstable. I know, rainbows.

Katrina/Emmy hasn't been too prolific lately. These are over the past 5 days or so. She's still gunning for a GI tube despite being very clearly overweight. Good stuff.
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Is it me, or did she lighten her hair? Maybe it's a filter.
 
Fuck her. My main concern is her child. But if her partner is away or busy, and she is hallucinating on shrooms, this is serious reportable shit as she is not being a competent caregiver. It's bizarre she is advertising it on the internet.

It goes two ways depending on how they view themselves in relation to others.
List of reasons I'm very concerned about Ace's baby, which was going to be short, but has gotten out of hand:
  • Can't even grow tomatoes, so how is she planning to grow a healthy child
  • Forces it to wear a mask everywhere, and everyone to wear a mask around it, so the baby probably will have trouble reading expressions. Even in 2020 everyone knew babies shouldn't wear masks. There's serious concern some kids are messed up from everyone else wearing them
  • I don't know exactly how, but I'm sure being raised genderless is going to fuck this kid up. I have a feeling if her kid goes to school and says "I want to be a boy!" Or girl, whatever it is. She won't be happy.
  • Lost her gummy weed somewhere in her home. Just begging for her kid to eat some
  • Literally constantly stoned out of her gourd tweeting, so baby cannot be getting much attention
  • Does mushrooms when taking care of a baby. Not microdoses, trip doses. What would happen if she freaked out? How scary would that be for the baby? Can't even wait until she has some time alone.
  • Introduced firearms into the mix, despite being obviously angry and unstable
  • Exactly like kawaiikat420 says, munching is a HUGE red flag for MBP. Studies show pretty much every MBP mom is a munchie. Ace's persecution fetish would so easily carry over. How high off her own supply would she be? Screaming at whites, albeists and libs, for giving long covid to her black baby?
  • Spouse seems functional, but most stay at home moms at least take care of the baby and themselves. He works full time AND takes care of the baby, AND Ace. Like toileting Ace. He must be royally checked out to not see what bullshit her "disability" is, which is also a precondition for MBP.
  • Even if she doesn't MBP her kid, she's a terrible role model. Most kids of self-absorbed lazy people become self-absorbed and lazy.
I would love to be a fly on the wall for an average day at home with her, but it would probably be better if CPS did that instead. I don't know if she's ever talked about people being concerned for her kid, but I wouldn't be surprised!!! Hopefully if she does start down the MBP path, doctors catch it early because her own files are rife with notes about how she's full of shit.
 
Trawled GFM for munchies when I couldn’t sleep tonight. Found this gem:

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Her name is Jenny Rowbory and she wants YOU to take responsibility for her ”recovery” by any, and she does mean any, means possible:

We just need 400 people, 400 of you reading this, to try to raise £1000 each in the next 40 days before I turn 40 on the 29th April.

Whether you do that through a bake sale, a pub quiz, a walk, a run, a cycle, a swim, a sail, a danceathon, a coffee morning, a mini golf tournament, hosting a meal and charging per head, a raffle, a knitathon, a concert, a talent show, or a fundraiser of your own choosing, is up to you. Or you could do a combination of these.

Wow, what a humble ask (for only £750 000!). She must truly be in dire straits. What’s wrong with her? From the description of her symptoms she is suffering from the rare and devastating disorder of pingponging head syndrome (PHS):

Jenny used to be able to raise her hospital bed up at an angle with her head and neck supported by the bed and sit like that for a few hours. Now, it’s extremely dangerous for her to raise the bed as the movement causes further damage and deterioration to her neck. It can cause catastrophic changes. Now, she has to try to raise the bed at an angle once every day for as long as it takes to try and get some food down her and then quickly go down again. It’s very unstable and her skull slides off her neck and her neck slides off her shoulders when she’s raised up; the pillow can’t seem to support her head or neck and her skull appears flattened from the piece of skull that was removed for the decompression surgery. Her skull just slips and slides and sinks down the pillow, jamming down on something it shouldn’t be and also cuts off air more. The neck pain is overwhelming (worse than immediately after surgery). Using the bedpan is dangerous too (even though she has to do it while fully lying down, sliding it under her by lifting her hips up; it still moves her head too much). She also now has frequent urinary incontinence since the operation.

I’m putting her GFM text under a spoiler so you can read her plight sperging for yourself. Tried archiving but mobilefag and timed out from all the sites I tried for some reason.

We never expected to be here again, asking for help.

The craniocervical fusion surgery and posterior fossa decompression surgery that Jenny had in January 2020 have had a devastating and dangerous outcome. She has been left even more severely disabled and in a relentless intense state of suffering, unable to move her neck and head because it isn’t safe.

What is wrong?

Jenny has Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS), which is a genetic disorder that causes her to produce faulty collagen. A lot of the human body is made up of collagen so it affects many systems. The biggest problem for Jenny is that the faulty collagen causes the ligaments and connective tissue in her neck to be lax, which means that it can’t support the spine. So the vertebrae and skull move around and subluxate (subluxation is like dislocation). This means that she has CCI (craniocervical instability) and AAI (atlanto-axial instability).

Jenny’s operation in January was meant to help support the skull and vertebrae below so that they didn’t move around anymore. Other people with M.E. have found that they have the same structural problems and when their instabilities were fixed with a fusion, they were also cured of their M.E. and their reduced blood flow (due to the structural problems), returned to normal when the structure was fixed, and so they instantly had their energy back. So not only was Jenny expecting to wake up from surgery with her life saved from having the structural problems fixed, she thought the severe M.E. would potentially be gone too. Neither of these things happened. In fact, her neck became more destabilised, not only at the fusion site but in additional places all the way down, and the M.E. got worse because the operation blocked the place where she was managing to get a bit more blood through to her head. We all have been devastated.

What we’ve found out is that, unfortunately, Jenny’s fusion didn’t involve intraoperative traction, which is necessary in some EDS patients to make the fusion effective and curative. Before the operation she should have been tested with invasive cranial traction, where bolts are attached to the skull and then the skull is lifted incrementally by a machine to determine the exact amount of traction that is needed in the fusion and to determine exactly where the skull needs to be placed in surgery. We did not know this before and this test was not done.

A brilliant EDS-experienced neurosurgeon in America, has proposed what needs to be done for Jenny now, though there are no guarantees. The “fix” that he proposes involves:

1. Removal of the hardware (the metal plate, rods and screws) from the surgery in January.

2. Use bolt traction testing to find the exact amount of intra-operative traction needed and the position to place the skull in.

3. Redo the craniocervical fusion, using his own technique (condylar screw fixation) and using the results of the traction testing to place Jenny’s skull and neck in the correct position with the right amount of traction.

Unfortunately the fusion in January has caused extra structural problems in the vertebrae beneath the fusion, as well as a suspected tethered cord, so the “fix” above might not solve all the additional problems. These things won’t be able to be determined until Jenny actually gets to the hospital in America and the neurosurgeon does all his various tests and figures out exactly what has happened in her neck and if/what other surgery is needed too. Obviously we need to have the money ready for these surgeries too, as well as raising money for the the three invasive surgeries involved in the “fix”. There would be a gap between the “fix” and any additional surgery that Jenny may need, so we also need to raise the money to stay in America for months, somewhere with a hospital bed for Jenny (and potentially nursing care, depending on what state she’s in after the surgeries), between the “fix” and whatever other surgery might be needed.

We also need to raise money for Medevac flights to and from America, as that is the only way that Jenny can be transported. It will be very risky for Jenny to be transported at all in her current condition. We also need to raise money for intense rehabilitation and physiotherapy that will be needed afterwards too.

American healthcare is notoriously expensive with lots of hidden costs. We have been given quotes for some of the procedures and other costs but we’ve been told that until Jenny gets there to hospital, we won’t know precisely what money we need to have available. The sum of money that we’re trying to raise involves our best guesses and estimates for the rest. What we don’t want to happen is to get to America and the neurosurgeon to recommend something that we can’t afford and just be stuck. The amount of money feels overwhelming. It is the only hope that Jenny has though. She is worth it.

Jenny recently had to go to the NHS, after we had to call 999 as she couldn’t breathe because a vertebra in her neck moved and almost completely obstructed her airway. She stayed five days in hospital and there was nothing the NHS could do for her. They don’t have the specialist knowledge, expertise or experience of this. There are only a handful of neurosurgeons in the whole world who have this specialism. None of whom are in the NHS or in this country.

Jenny is at death’s door and is trying so hard to stay alive. It feels impossible that she can survive a few more days or weeks like this, let alone the months it might take to raise the money. She is deteriorating constantly. She cannot support her head or neck since the operation and has been horizontal with her head supported by a pillow ever since. She hasn’t been able to move off that pillow since the operation.

Ever since the operation, there are massive cracks, snaps and clunks from her neck and skull that are accompanied by a movement/subluxation in her vertebrae/skull and they are left in a new position and structure. Each crack is pulling her further in a particular direction.

Her skull is being pulled downwards and inwards so hard (this is either being caused by a tethered cord or not enough traction) and being jammed into other hard things in her neck, which is intensely painful and unsafe. Whenever she tries to pull her head up and out a little from where it has sunk, the skull just rolls and slides by itself, pinging back down with a force she can’t stop. There is probably severe cranial settling resulting from this vertical AAI.

Jenny can’t even move a millimetre anymore without a massive crack/subluxation/snap and accompanying movement, without vertebrae being pulled out of their correct position. She can’t move the rest of her body because that causes her head and neck to move or wobble, which causes more cracks and subluxation. She can’t have anyone (or herself) touch her neck or head because even the tiniest amount of pressure against it causes the vertebrae to move wrongly and go further inwards and the skull to sublux, popping inwards.

Due to her not being able to have anyone touch her and due to not being able to access the back of her head (because both are too dangerous), and due to not being able to lift her head or roll onto her side, nurses and caters haven’t been able to wash her hair since January 2020.. It’s awful for her and we wish we could help her but we’re just left helpless. When she was in hospital, they weren’t able to wash her hair either. It’s hard to be a carer and not be able to meet her basic care needs because it would kill her.

Jenny used to be able to raise her hospital bed up at an angle with her head and neck supported by the bed and sit like that for a few hours. Now, it’s extremely dangerous for her to raise the bed as the movement causes further damage and deterioration to her neck. It can cause catastrophic changes. Now, she has to try to raise the bed at an angle once every day for as long as it takes to try and get some food down her and then quickly go down again. It’s very unstable and her skull slides off her neck and her neck slides off her shoulders when she’s raised up; the pillow can’t seem to support her head or neck and her skull appears flattened from the piece of skull that was removed for the decompression surgery. Her skull just slips and slides and sinks down the pillow, jamming down on something it shouldn’t be and also cuts off air more. The neck pain is overwhelming (worse than immediately after surgery). Using the bedpan is dangerous too (even though she has to do it while fully lying down, sliding it under her by lifting her hips up; it still moves her head too much). She also now has frequent urinary incontinence since the operation.

It feels like an impossible amount of money to raise but, as Jenny has communicated to us, she’d rather try and fail than not try at all. She would rather die trying than just slowly die doing nothing.

In full transparency, the neurosurgeon has warned us that there are no guarantees of a successful outcome and that the outcome of good clinical results are less likely than it would be if it were her first surgery. But she can’t be left suffering this intensely. She can’t be left like this. Every second is unbearable; she can’t cope. We need to try to fix it. This is the only option left to us. We need a miracle to raise this kind of money. Any contribution, however small or large, we’d be eternally grateful for.

Please share the fundraising link far and wide with your contacts and on social media. Thank you so much, in advance.


***

Jenny desperately wants to stay alive and regain an acceptable quality of life.

This is a video of what Jenny’s life was like before she became ill:

https://youtu.be/MwT-zAcJ0EA?si=kgffrbPqRgJFNptU

This video shows a fraction of what Jenny’s daily life is like now:

https://youtu.be/j09KuknjrXY
Bio from the GFM and boy, have we seen this arc before…

Jenny Rowbory is 38 years old and very much wants to stay alive!
She has been severely ill and bed-bound for 20 years after suddenly becoming ill in her first term at university. She’s been diagnosed with very severe, multi-systemic Myalgic Encephalomyelitis for most of this time but it wasn’t until 2015 that she was also diagnosed with EDS and it wasn’t until May 2017 that she began to get overt symptoms of instability of the cervical spine and atlas, with numbness, temporary paralysis, lymphatic fluid stagnation and severely impaired blood supply to her head, neck and later, the whole body. In October 2018 she was diagnosed with AAI (atlantoaxial instability) and CCI (craniocervical instability), which have continued to deteriorate. The reduced blood and lymph circulation to the whole body has continued to diminish as a result.

A bit more about Jenny:

Jenny is a poet. Her poetry collection ‘We Are The Winter People’ is raising money for the surgery too. It’s available as a paperback, audiobook and ebook
here.

I have to go to work now, so I haven’t even had time to check out her YouTube, but she could be a very entertaining specimen. Too bad she’s conned people into donating hundreds of fucking thousands of ££££, though.
 
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Huh. Isn't AAI usually only found in Down Syndrome? Or with known trisomies (other than physical injury to the atlas or axis, I mean). I know we have a few ladies here claiming CCI, but AAI is...not that. She wouldn't be able to hold her head up on her own with AAI, right?

I wonder if they're fundraising for Spain, Germany or Maryland lol.
 
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Can't help but think that if it were really that bad, they'd put her in a halo until they could figure something out
 
I'm fucking collapsing at this.
It's Jessie 2.0! Her head is going to fall off!
Her GFM has even more nuggets like this.

She also has a Twitter with a hilarious tale of the Markhoff-esque TORRRR…TURE the council exposes her jiggly skull to by doing pneumatic drilling in the vicinity, I almost died reading that.

Too busy to cap right now, unfortunately.
 
She has been severely ill and bed-bound for 20 years […] it wasn’t until May 2017 that she began to get overt symptoms of instability of the cervical spine and atlas, […] which have continued to deteriorate.
If Jenny has truly been bed-bound for 11 years at that point, I would not be surprised if she did start having some serious issues from that. Even if she was not totally “bed-bound” and only spent a mere 70% of her time in bed, that will fuck you up. It’s also not uncommon for someone to get a spinal fusion and then end up with more issues further down and require more surgery (they call it back surgery because you keep coming back for more!), and I’m sure that laying in bed and refusing to move even a millimeter is contributing even more. To be clear she is absolutely a munchie and is outrageously over dramatic, and she probably does have some amount of genuine health problems from her self-imposed bedbound lifestyle.

Congratulations, you have real problems and they are all self-induced! Go do some PT. Your skull is not going to slip-n-slide to death. Wow, what a poet.

If she’s having such severe symptoms of instability, why doesn’t she have one of the rigid plastic neck braces? The other girls just buy them off of Amazon.
 
the skull just rolls and slides by itself, pinging back down with a force she can’t stop.
The whole time I am reading about this I keep thinking of Nearly Headless Nick. Henceforth she shall be my Nearly Headless Jenny.
Also, Jenny, get a cervical neck collar off Temu to at least seem a little bit more believable.
 
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