Living Prepared: A Gentle Guide for Women with Chronic Pain or Health Challenges
A Note from Me to You
While I don’t personally live with chronic pain or health challenges, I have precious women in my life who do. I’ve watched them navigate their days with strength, creativity, and quiet perseverance—and I’ve also seen the hidden weariness they carry.
This article was written with them in mind, and with you in mind, too.
If you’re a woman who wakes up some days wondering how you’ll manage the basics, please know this: you are seen. You are not alone. And while I may not fully understand the path you're walking, I hope these suggestions offer a little bit of help, a little bit of hope, and a reminder that your worth is not tied to your productivity.
You are deeply loved—on your best days and your hardest ones.
For women living with chronic pain or ongoing health issues, no two days are ever quite the same. Some mornings begin with strength and energy, while others feel like a mountain to climb before your feet hit the floor. On the hard days—the ones when energy is scarce and the “spoons” are few—it’s easy to feel overwhelmed and unprepared. But there are ways to set up your home, your routines, and your support system so that even on those days, you are not without options.
This isn’t about doing more—it’s about living prepared, so that you can do less when you need to, and still keep life flowing gently around you.
1. Teach Your Children to Help Themselves (and You)
One of the best long-term strategies is raising capable, compassionate kids who know how to pitch in. This isn’t about giving them extra burdens—it’s about equipping them with life skills and fostering empathy. Depending on their age, children can:
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Make their own breakfast or snacks
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Pack their own lunches
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Set the table or load the dishwasher
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Start a load of laundry or carry it to the laundry room
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Fetch and carry light things when you're in bed or resting
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Use a daily “What Can I Do?” chart for simple tasks that help the family
📝 Bonus Tip: Create a visual checklist or magnet board of things they can do without asking—like filling the pet’s water, putting shoes away, or prepping a snack plate.
2. Build a No-Cook & Low-Energy Meal Strategy
Food is a daily need, and feeding a family when you're in pain can feel impossible without a plan. Try building your kitchen around 3 tiers of effort:
✅ Tier 1: No-Cook Meal List
(Keep it on your fridge for emergencies.)
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Crackers, cheese, and fruit plate
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Yogurt parfaits with granola
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Peanut butter sandwiches or tortilla roll-ups
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Pre-washed salad mix + rotisserie chicken + dressing
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Cereal and milk (yes, this counts!)
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Cottage cheese and fruit
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Deli meat, cheese, and baby carrots
✅ Tier 2: Low-Energy Meals
Meals that require 5–10 minutes of prep:
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Freezer lasagna or enchiladas
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Crockpot dump meals (frozen stew, chili, BBQ chicken)
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Sheet pan sausage and veggies
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Pasta tossed with olive oil, garlic, and frozen peas
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Scrambled eggs and toast
🧊 Bonus Tip: Once a month, ask for help with freezer stocking. A friend, spouse, or older child can help prep easy meals to freeze flat in zip bags for later.
3. Be Ready When Someone Asks, “How Can I Help?”
This is so important. Many women say they freeze when asked—so let’s change that. Keep a running list on your phone or planner. Here are real-life, commonly appreciated offers of help:
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Bring a fruit and cheese tray (washed, cut, and ready to eat)
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Drop off a simple hot meal (with disposable containers)
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Grocery pick-up or delivery (send them your cart!)
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Run an errand like pharmacy pickup
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Help with housework (vacuum, dishes, or sweeping the porch)
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Sit with the kids or take them to the park for an hour
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Deliver cold drinks, snacks, and paper plates for a low-effort day
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Provide a gift card for gas, takeout, or delivery services
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Drop off a favorite drink (a surprise iced tea or latte can feel like love)
💡 Tip: Make a “yes list” and keep it in your Notes app. That way, when someone offers, you’re ready to receive.
4. Structure Your Home for Ease
When your house works with you, not against you, it can be a game-changer on low-energy days.
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Create a rest basket near your bed or chair: books, water bottle, meds, snacks, tissues, phone charger
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Stock a snack drawer or bin for the kids—safe, easy-to-grab items so they can help themselves
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Keep a “grab & go” pantry bin for no-cook meals (crackers, canned soup, peanut butter, etc.)
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Use baskets or bins to corral clutter—tidy by tossing things in, not organizing in detail
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Designate a “help yourself” zone for drinks, cups, paper goods, and utensils
🧴 Optional: Store backup hygiene supplies near your rest space (wipes, dry shampoo, face wash, deodorant wipes) for freshening up when showering isn’t possible.
5. Give Yourself Permission to Receive Help
You weren’t meant to carry everything alone. Let go of guilt. Chronic illness is not a character flaw. You are allowed to ask for help. You are allowed to do less. You are allowed to rest without justifying it. Preparing ahead doesn’t mean expecting failure—it means choosing grace in advance.
You Are Still the Heart of Your Home
Chronic illness doesn’t take away your value. It simply invites you into a more intentional rhythm—one rooted in preparation, grace, and trust. With a few systems in place and the willingness to accept help when offered, you can live with greater peace, even on the low-spoon days.
So let your home be filled not with hustle, but with margin. Not with chaos, but with simplicity. Not with shame, but with love.
And always—be kind to yourself. That matters most of all.
One thing you are perhaps unaware of since you don’t personally face the struggle of chronic illness is the painful comments that come your way. When your disability is not something that can be seen sometimes people will treat you like you are making things up. Praise God I have a husband who understands well what I face. There are times my Menieres can put me in bed on my side for up to 19 hours. Only moving to occasionally get up and vomit. But then there are days where my stability is just off. Where the world just is a little lopsided. There are days where it is just difficult to focus. I know folks with other disabilities and illnesses face the same things. If someone tells you, “I just can’t today”, please believe them. Ask if there is some way you can assist, but please please don’t tell them “you just have to press on thru” as if they are lazy or weaklings or have no desire to help you do things. That is in no way encouraging and in fact is flatly cruel. So offer to pray for them. Remind them that the Lord has helped them thru on other days and there will be better days. And please call and check in a couple days to see if they are better. I have recently been through a hard stretch of several months of health troubles, some of which could not be seen on the outside. I have been very hurt by the words of someone I thought was a friend. But at the same time I have discovered two others who I never realized were so compassionate and encouraging and they have been a sweet balm and sweet friends. I like your suggestions for having some meals set aside for the hard days and that is an excellent idea. But let me add that it is important to have those in a list so your husband knows about them and where to find the stuff. Most of my cooking is done from scratch. I had some prepped meals on hand. And although my husband can cook some things I realize now I need to train him in some other meals.
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